Click the Exhibit button.
Referring to the exhibit. Internal BGP between R1 and R2 is not establishing.
What is the problem in this scenario?
Click the Exhibit button.
Referring to the exhibit. Internal BGP between R1 and R2 is not establishing.
What is the problem in this scenario?
Internal BGP (iBGP) requires the neighbors to be in the same autonomous system (AS). In this scenario, R1 and R2 are using the same AS number (64512), so option B is incorrect. The 'Active' state in BGP indicates that the router is seeking a connection with the neighbor, but no connection has been established. This typically happens if the router does not have a route to the neighbor's IP address. The configuration does not mention any route to 192.168.200.2, which suggests that R1 does not have a route to this IP. Therefore, the problem in this scenario is that R1 does not have a route to 192.168.200.2.
It makes no sense to have internal BGP and demand for different ASNs.. It's C!
The question asks for internal BGP, so ASN should be the same. A and D are also wrong, so it should be C
It can't be B as the question states it's an iBGP peering
active stats means it tried to establish the tcp session so the NH was found before.
answer B In BGP Idle State, the router searches the routing table for a valid route for the neighbor's IP address. If it does not have a route for its neighbor's IP address, it remains in the Idle State. No or negligible BGP resources are allocated in this state.