Provided by: openbgpd_8.5-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       bgpd.conf — BGP routing daemon configuration file

DESCRIPTION

       The bgpd(8) daemon implements the Border Gateway Protocol version 4 as described in RFC 4271.

       The bgpd.conf config file is divided into the following main sections:

       “MACROS”
             User-defined variables may be defined and used later, simplifying the configuration file.

       “GLOBAL CONFIGURATION”
             Global settings for bgpd(8).

       “SET CONFIGURATION”
             Various lookup tables are defined in this section.

       “NETWORK AND FLOWSPEC ANNOUNCEMENTS”
             Networks which should be announced by bgpd(8) are set in this section.

       “MPLS VPN CONFIGURATION”
             The definition and properties for BGP MPLS VPNs are set in this section.

       “NEIGHBORS AND GROUPS”
             bgpd(8)  establishes  sessions  with  neighbors.  The neighbor definition and properties are set in
             this section, as well as grouping neighbors for the ease of configuration.

       “FILTER”
             Filter rules for incoming and outgoing UPDATES.

       With the exception of macros, the sections should be grouped and appear in bgpd.conf in the  order  shown
       above.

       The  current  line  can  be  extended  over  multiple lines using a backslash (‘\’).  Comments can be put
       anywhere in the file using a hash mark (‘#’), and extend to the end of the current line.  Care should  be
       taken when commenting out multi-line text: the comment is effective until the end of the entire block.

       Argument names not beginning with a letter, digit, or underscore must be quoted.

       Additional configuration files can be included with the include keyword, for example:

             include "/etc/bgpd/bgpd-10.0.0.1.filter"

MACROS

       Macros  can  be  defined  that  will later be expanded in context.  Macro names must start with a letter,
       digit, or underscore, and may contain any of those characters.  Macro names may  not  be  reserved  words
       (for example, AS, neighbor, or group).  Macros are not expanded inside quotes.

       For example:

             peer1="1.2.3.4"
             neighbor $peer1 {
                     remote-as 65001
             }

GLOBAL CONFIGURATION

       These settings affect the operation of the bgpd(8) daemon as a whole.

       AS as-number [as-number]
               Set  the  local  autonomous system number to as-number.  A fallback 2-byte AS number may follow a
               4-byte AS number for neighbors that do not support 4-byte AS numbers.  The standard  and  default
               fallback AS number is 23456.

               The AS numbers are assigned by local RIRs, such as:

               AfriNIC   for Africa
               APNIC     for Asia Pacific
               ARIN      for North America and parts of the Caribbean
               LACNIC    for Latin America and the Caribbean
               RIPE NCC  for Europe, the Middle East, and parts of Asia

               The AS numbers 64512 – 65534 are designated for private use.  The AS number 23456 is reserved and
               should not be used.  4-byte AS numbers may be specified in either the ASPLAIN format:

                     AS 196618

               or in the older ASDOT format:

                     AS 3.10

       connect-retry seconds
               Set  the  number of seconds to wait before attempting to re-open a connection.  This timer should
               be sufficiently large in EBGP configurations.  The default is 120 seconds.

       dump [rib name] (table-v2|table-mp|table) file [interval]
       dump (all|updates) (in|out) file [interval]
               Dump the RIB, a.k.a. the routing information base,  or  dump  ongoing  BGP  activity,  in  Multi-
               threaded Routing Toolkit (MRT) format.  The file is subject to strftime(3)-expansion.

               The  table-v2  and table-mp RIB formats store multi-protocol RIBs correctly, but the table format
               does not.  The latter two are provided only to support third-party tools lacking support for  the
               recommended table-v2 format.  Dump an alternative RIB by specifying name.  Specify an interval in
               seconds for periodic RIB dumps.

               The following will dump the entire RIB table, at startup and every 5 minutes thereafter, to a new
               file:

                     dump table-v2 "/tmp/rib-dump-%H%M" 300

               Dumps  of  ongoing  BGP  activity  include all BGP state transitions, and all BGP messages in the
               specified direction.  Use updates to dump only BGP UPDATE messages,  without  state  transitions.
               Specify an interval in seconds to restart periodically with a new file:

                     dump all in "/tmp/all-in-%H%M" 300

       fib-priority prio
               Set the routing priority to prio.  The default is 48.

       fib-update (yes|no)
               If  set  to  no,  do not update the Forwarding Information Base, a.k.a. the kernel routing table.
               The default is yes.

       holdtime seconds
               Set the announced holdtime in seconds.   This  is  exchanged  with  a  neighbor  upon  connection
               establishment, in the OPEN message, and the shortest holdtime governs the session.

               The  neighbor session is dropped if the session holdtime passes without receipt of a KEEPALIVE or
               an UPDATE message from the neighbor.  The default is 90 seconds.

       holdtime min seconds
               The minimum acceptable holdtime in seconds.  This value must be at least 3.

       listen on address [port port]
               Specify the local IP address and optional port for bgpd(8) to  listen  on.   The  default  is  to
               listen on all local addresses on the current default routing domain.

       log updates
               Log sent and received BGP update messages.

       nexthop qualify via (bgp|default)
               If  set  to  bgp,  bgpd(8)  may verify nexthops using BGP routes.  If set to default, bgpd(8) may
               verify nexthops using the default route.  By default bgpd(8) uses only static  routes  or  routes
               added by other routing daemons, such as ospfd(8).

       rde evaluate (default|all)
               If  set  to all, keep evaluating alternative paths in case the selected path is filtered out.  By
               default if a path is filtered by the output filters then no alternative  path  is  sent  to  this
               peer.

       rde med compare (always|strict)
               If set to always, the MULTI_EXIT_DISC attributes will always be compared.  The default is strict,
               where the metric is only compared between peers belonging to the same AS.

       rde rib name [no evaluate]
       rde rib name [rtable number]
               Create  an  additional  RIB  named  name.   The  degree  to  which  its routes may be utilized is
               configurable.  They may be excluded from the decision process that selects usable routes with the
               no evaluate flag, and this precludes their export to any kernel routing table.   By  default  its
               routes  will  be  evaluated,  but  not  exported  to  the kernel.  They may be both evaluated and
               exported if associated with a given rtable number, which must belong to the routing  domain  that
               bgpd(8)  was  started in.  This table will not be consulted during nexthop verification unless it
               is the one that bgpd(8) was started in.  It is unnecessary  to  create  Adj-RIB-In  and  Loc-RIB,
               which are created automatically and used by default.

       rde route-age (ignore|evaluate)
               If  set  to  evaluate,  the  route  decision  process  will also consider the age of the route in
               addition to its path attributes, giving preference to the older, typically  more  stable,  route.
               This renders the decision process nondeterministic.  The default is ignore.

       reject as-set (yes|no)
               If  set  to  yes,  AS  paths  attributes containing AS_SET path segments will be rejected and all
               prefixes will be treated as withdraws.  The default is no.

       router-id dotted-quad
               Set the BGP router ID, which must be non-zero and should be unique within the  AS.   By  default,
               the router ID is the highest IPv4 address assigned to the local machine.

                     router-id 10.0.0.1

       rtable number
               Work  with  the given kernel routing table instead of the default table, which is the one bgpd(8)
               was started in.  For nexthop verification, bgpd(8) will always consult the default  table.   This
               is the same as using the following syntax:

                     rde rib Loc-RIB rtable number

       socket "path" [restricted]
               Create a control socket at path.  If restricted is specified, a restricted control socket will be
               created.   By  default  /run/openbgpd/bgpd.sock.<rdomain>  is used where <rdomain> is the routing
               domain in which bgpd(8) has been started.  By default, no restricted socket is created.

       transparent-as (yes|no)
               If set to yes, AS paths to EBGP neighbors are not prepended with the local AS.   The  default  is
               no.

SET CONFIGURATION

       bgpd(8)  supports  the  efficient  lookup  of  data  within  named sets.  An as-set, a prefix-set, and an
       origin-set store AS numbers, prefixes, and prefixes/source-as pairs,  respectively.   Such  sets  may  be
       referenced by filter rules; see the “FILTER” section for details.  It is more efficient to evaluate a set
       than a long series of rules for filtering each of its members.

       One  single  roa-set  may be defined, against which bgpd(8) will validate the origin of each prefix.  The
       roa-set and the aspa-set are merged with the corresponding tables received via rtr sessions.

       A set definition can span multiple lines, and an optional comma is allowed between  elements.   The  same
       set can be defined more than once, in this case the definitions are merged into one common set.

       as-set name { as-number ... }
               An as-set stores AS numbers, and can be used with the AS specific parameter in “FILTER” rules.

       aspa-set { customer-as as-number [expires seconds] provider-as { as-number ... } ... }
               The aspa-set holds a collection of Validated ASPA Payloads (VAPs).  Each as AS_PATH received from
               an  eBGP  peer  is  checked  against  the  aspa-set,  and the ASPA Validation State (AVS) is set.
               expires can be set to the seconds since Epoch until when this VAP is valid.

                     aspa-set {
                             customer-as 64511 provider-as { 64496 65496 }
                             customer-as 64496 provider-as { 65496 64544 }
                     }

       origin-set name { address/len [maxlen mlen] source-as asn ... }
               An origin-set stores prefix/source-as pairs, and can be used to  filter  on  the  combination  by
               using the origin-set parameter in “FILTER” rules.

                     origin-set private { 10.0.0.0/8 maxlen 24 source-as 64511
                                          203.0.113.0/24 source-as 64496 }

       prefix-set name { address/len ... }
               A prefix-set stores network prefixes and can be used in place of the prefix parameter in “FILTER”
               rules, and in network statements.  A prefix can be followed by the prefixlen operators listed for
               the prefix parameter in the “PARAMETERS” section.

               The  first example below creates a set of prefixes called “private”, to hold a number of RFC 1918
               private network blocks.  The second example shows the use of prefixlen operators.

                     prefix-set private { 10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12,
                                          192.168.0.0/16, fc00::/7 }
                     prefix-set as64496set { 192.0.2.0/24 prefixlen >= 26,
                                             2001:db8::/32 or-longer }

       roa-set { address/len [maxlen mlen] source-as asn [expires seconds] ... }
               The roa-set holds a collection of Validated ROA Payloads (VRPs).  Each received prefix is checked
               against the roa-set, and the Origin Validation State (OVS) is set.  expires can  be  set  to  the
               seconds since Epoch until when this VRP is valid.

                     roa-set { 192.0.2.0/23 maxlen 24 source-as 64511
                               203.0.113.0/24 source-as 64496 }

       rtr address { ... }
               The  rtr  block  specifies a RPKI to Router (RTR) session.  RTR sessions provide another means to
               load VRP sets into bgpd(8).  Changes propagated via the RTR protocol do not need a config  reload
               and are immediately applied.  The union of all VRP sets received via rtr sessions and the entries
               in  the  roa-set  is  used  to  validate the origin of routes.  The rtr session properties are as
               follows:

               descr description
                       Add a description.  The description is used in logging and status  reports,  but  has  no
                       further meaning for bgpd(8).

               local-address address
                       Bind to the specific IP address before opening the TCP connection to the rtr server.

               port number
                       Specify the TCP destination port for the rtr session.  If not specified, the default port
                       is 323.

NETWORK AND FLOWSPEC ANNOUNCEMENTS

       network statements specify the networks that bgpd(8) will announce as its own.  An announcement must also
       be permitted by the “FILTER” rules.  By default bgpd(8) announces no networks.

       network address/prefix [set ...]
               Announce the specified prefix as belonging to our AS.

       network (inet|inet6) connected [set ...]
               Announce routes to directly attached networks.

       network prefix-set name [set ...]
               Announce all networks in the prefix-set name.

       network (inet|inet6) priority number [set ...]
               Announce routes having the specified priority.

       network (inet|inet6) rtlabel label [set ...]
               Announce routes having the specified label.

       network (inet|inet6) static [set ...]
               Announce all static routes.

       Each network statement may set default AS path attributes:

             network 192.168.7.0/24 set localpref 220

       See also the “ATTRIBUTE SET” section.

       flowspec statements specify the flowspec rules that bgpd(8) will announce as its own.  By default bgpd(8)
       announces no flowspec rules.

       flowspec (inet|inet6) rule [set ...]
               Announce  an  IPv4  or  IPv6 specific flowspec rule including the AS path attributes specified by
               set.

       The following rule parameters can be set.  Most number arguments in the below rules can be specified as a
       list of ranges enclosed in curly brackets using these operators:

             =       (equal, default)
             !=      (unequal)
             <       (less than)
             <=      (less than or equal)
             >       (greater than)
             >=      (greater than or equal)
             -       (range including boundaries)
             ><      (except range)

       ‘><’, and ‘-’ are binary operators (they take two arguments).

       from source [port list]
       to dest [port list]
               This rule applies only to packets with the specified source or destination addresses  and  ports.
               Addresses  can  be  specified  in  CIDR  notation  (matching netblocks) or using any to match any
               address.  In most cases a to address must be specified and be part of the announced networks.

               Ports can be specified either by number or by name.  For example, port 80  can  be  specified  as
               www.  For a list of all port name to number mappings see the file /etc/services.
       flags a/b
               This  rule  only  applies  to  TCP  packets  that  have  the flags a set out of set b.  Flags not
               specified in b are ignored.  The flags are: (F)IN, (S)YN, (R)ST, (P)USH, (A)CK, (U)RG, (E)CE, and
               C(W)R.
       fragment a/b
               This rule only applies to fragmented packets which match the specified  flags.   The  flags  are:
               (D)on't fragment, (I)s fragment, (F)irst fragment, and (L)ast fragment.
       icmp-type type [code code]
       icmp6-type type [code code]
               This rule only applies to ICMP or ICMP6 packets with the specified type and code.  Text names for
               ICMP types and codes are listed in icmp(4) and icmp6(4).
       length pktlen
               This rule applies only to packets matching the specified pktlen.
       proto protocol
               This  rule  applies only to packets of this protocol.  Common protocols are ICMP, ICMP6, TCP, and
               UDP.  For a list of all the protocol name to number mappings see the file /etc/protocols.
       tos string|number
               This rule applies to packets with the specified TOS bits set.  string may  be  one  of  critical,
               inetcontrol,  lowdelay,  netcontrol, throughput, reliability, or one of the DiffServ Code Points:
               ef, af11 ... af43, cs0 ... cs7; number may be either a hex or decimal number.

       The action taken when a flowspec rules matches depends on extended communities.  For example to block all
       traffic either ext-community flow-rate as-number:0 or ext-community flow-pps as-number:0 need to be set.

MPLS VPN CONFIGURATION

       A vpn section configures a router to participate in an MPLS Virtual Private  Network.   It  specifies  an
       mpe(4) interface to use, a description, and various properties of the VPN:

             vpn "description" on mpe1 {
                     rd 65002:1
                     import-target rt 65002:42
                     export-target rt 65002:42
                     network 192.168.1/24
             }

       bgpd(8)  will not exchange VPN routes with a neighbor by default, see the “NEIGHBORS AND GROUPS” section.
       The description is used when logging but has no further meaning to bgpd(8).

       The mpe(4) interface will be used as the outgoing interface for routes to the  VPN,  and  local  networks
       will  be  announced  with  the  MPLS  label  specified  on  the interface.  The interface can provide VPN
       connectivity for another rdomain by being configured in that  rdomain.   The  required  rdomain  must  be
       configured  on the interface before bgpd(8) uses it.  Multiple VPNs may be connected to a single rdomain,
       including the rdomain that bgpd(8) is running in.

       An example hostname.if(5) configuration for an mpe(4) interface providing connectivity to rdomain 1:

             rdomain 1
             mplslabel 2000
             inet 192.198.0.1 255.255.255.255
             up

       The VPN properties are as follows:

       export-target subtype as-number:local
       export-target subtype IP:local
               Classify announced networks by tagging them with an extended community of  the  given  arguments.
               The  community  subtype  should be a route target, rt, to ensure interoperability.  The arguments
               are further detailed in the  “ATTRIBUTE  SET”  section.   More  than  one  export-target  can  be
               specified.

       fib-update (yes|no)
               If  set  to  no,  do not update the Forwarding Information Base, a.k.a. the kernel routing table.
               The default is yes.

       import-target subtype as-number:local
       import-target subtype IP:local
               The  rdomain  imports  only  those  prefixes  tagged  with  an  extended  community  matching  an
               import-target.   The  community subtype should be a route target, rt, to ensure interoperability.
               The arguments are further detailed in the “ATTRIBUTE SET” section.  More than  one  import-target
               can be specified.

       network argument ...
               Announce the given networks within this VPN; see the “NETWORK ANNOUNCEMENTS” section.

       rd as-number:local
       rd IP:local
               The  Route  Distinguisher  rd supplies BGP with namespaces to disambiguate VPN prefixes, as these
               needn't be globally unique.  Unlike route targets, the rd neither identifies the  origin  of  the
               prefix  nor  controls  into  which  VPNs  the prefix is distributed.  The as-number or IP of a rd
               should be set to a number or IP that was assigned by an appropriate authority, whereas local  can
               be chosen by the local operator.

NEIGHBORS AND GROUPS

       bgpd(8)  establishes  TCP  connections  to  other  BGP  speakers  called  neighbors.   A neighbor and its
       properties are specified by a neighbor section:

             neighbor 10.0.0.2 {
                     remote-as 65002
                     descr "a neighbor"
             }

       Neighbors placed within a group section inherit the properties common to that group:

             group "peering AS65002" {
                     remote-as 65002
                     neighbor 10.0.0.2 {
                             descr "AS65002-p1"
                     }
                     neighbor 10.0.0.3 {
                             descr "AS65002-p2"
                     }
             }

       An entire network of neighbors may be accommodated by specifying an address/netmask pair:

             neighbor 10.0.0.0/8

       This is a template that recognises as a neighbor any connection from  within  the  given  network.   Such
       neighbors  inherit  their  template's  properties,  except  for  their  IP  address.  A template may omit
       remote-as; bgpd(8) then accepts any AS presented by the neighbor in the OPEN message.

       The neighbor properties are as follows:

       announce (IPv4|IPv6) (none|unicast|vpn|flowspec) [enforce]
               For the given address family, control which subsequent address families are announced during  the
               capabilities  negotiation.   Only  routes for that address family and subsequent address families
               will be announced and processed.

               At the moment, only none, which disables the announcement of that address family,  unicast,  vpn,
               which  allows  the  distribution of BGP MPLS VPNs, and flowspec, which allows the distribution of
               Flow Specification Rules, are supported.

               The default is unicast for the same address family of the session.

       announce add-path recv (yes|no|enforce)
               If set to yes, the receive add-path capability is announced, which allows reception  of  multiple
               paths per prefix.  The default is no.

       announce add-path send (no|all) [enforce]
       announce add-path send (best|ecmp|as-wide-best) [plus num] [max num] [enforce]
               If  set  to  all,  best,  ecmp, or as-wide-best, the send add-path capability is announced, which
               allows sending multiple paths per prefix.  The paths sent depend on which mode is selected:

               no            do not advertise add-path send capability
               all           send all valid paths
               best          send the best path
               ecmp          send paths with equal nexthop cost
               as-wide-best  send paths where the first 8 checks of the decision process match

               plus allows the inclusion of additional backup paths and works for best, ecmp, and  as-wide-best.
               max  can  be  used  to limit the total amount of paths sent for ecmp and as-wide-best.  Right now
               ecmp and as-wide-best are equivalent.  The default is no.  If add-path send is  active  then  the
               setting of rde evaluate is ignored.

       announce as-4byte (yes|no|enforce)
               If  set  to  no,  the  4-byte  AS  capability is not announced and so native 4-byte AS support is
               disabled.  If enforce is set, the session will only be established if the neighbor also announces
               the capability.  The default is yes.

       announce enhanced refresh (yes|no|enforce)
               If set to yes, the enhanced route refresh capability  is  announced.   If  enforce  is  set,  the
               session  will  only be established if the neighbor also announces the capability.  The default is
               no.

       announce policy (yes|no|enforce)
               If set to yes, add the open policy role capability.   If  the  role  of  the  neighbor  does  not
               correspond  to the expected role then the session will be closed.  If enforce is set, the session
               will only be established if the neighbor also announces the capability.  The default is no.

       announce refresh (yes|no|enforce)
               If set to no, the route refresh capability is not announced.  If enforce is set, the session will
               only be established if the neighbor also announces the capability.  The default is yes.

       announce restart (yes|no|enforce)
               If set to no, the graceful restart capability is not announced.  Currently  only  the  End-of-RIB
               marker is supported and announced by the restart capability.  If enforce is set, the session will
               only be established if the neighbor also announces the capability.  The default is yes.

       as-override (yes|no)
               If  set to yes, all occurrences of the neighbor AS in the AS path will be replaced with the local
               AS before running the filters.  The Adj-RIB-In still holds the unmodified AS path.   The  default
               value is no.

       demote group
               Increase  the  carp(4)  demotion  counter  on  the  given interface group, usually carp, when the
               session is not in state ESTABLISHED.  The demotion counter will be increased as soon  as  bgpd(8)
               starts and decreased 60 seconds after the session went to state ESTABLISHED.  For neighbors added
               at  runtime,  the  demotion  counter  is only increased after the session has been ESTABLISHED at
               least once before dropping.

               For more information on interface groups, see the group keyword in ifconfig(8).

       depend on interface
               The neighbor session will be kept in state IDLE as  long  as  interface  reports  no  link.   For
               carp(4)  interfaces,  no  link  means  that the interface is currently backup.  This is primarily
               intended to be used with carp(4) to reduce failover times.

               The state of the network interfaces on the system can be viewed using the show interfaces command
               to bgpctl(8).

       descr description
               Add a description.  The description is used when logging neighbor events, in status reports,  for
               specifying neighbors, etc., but has no further meaning to bgpd(8).

       down [reason]
               Do  not  start  the session when bgpd(8) comes up but stay in IDLE.  If the session is cleared at
               runtime, after a down reason was configured at runtime, the  reason  is  sent  as  Administrative
               Shutdown Communication.  The reason cannot exceed 255 octets.

       dump (all|updates) (in|out) file [interval]
               Dump  ongoing  BGP  activity  for  a  particular  neighbor.  See also the dump setting in “GLOBAL
               CONFIGURATION”.

       enforce local-as (yes|no)
               If set to no, AS paths will not be checked for AS loop detection.  This  feature  is  similar  to
               allowas-in in some other BGP implementations.  Since there is no AS path loop check, this feature
               is  dangerous,  and  requires  you  to  add  filters to prevent receiving your own prefixes.  The
               default value is yes.

       enforce neighbor-as (yes|no)
               If set to yes, AS paths whose leftmost AS is not equal to the  remote  AS  of  the  neighbor  are
               rejected  and  a NOTIFICATION is sent back.  The default value for IBGP peers is no otherwise the
               default is yes.

       export (none|default-route)
               If set to none, no UPDATE messages will be sent to the neighbor.  If set to  default-route,  only
               the default route will be announced to the neighbor.

       holdtime seconds
               Set the holdtime in seconds.  Inherited from the global configuration if not given.

       holdtime min seconds
               Set the minimal acceptable holdtime.  Inherited from the global configuration if not given.

       ipsec (ah|esp) (in|out) spi spi-number authspec [encspec]
               Enable  IPsec  with  static  keying.   There  must be at least two ipsec statements per peer with
               manual keying, one per direction.  authspec specifies the authentication algorithm and  key.   It
               can be

                     sha1 <key>
                     md5 <key>

               encspec  specifies  the encryption algorithm and key.  ah does not support encryption.  With esp,
               encryption is optional.  encspec can be

                     3des <key>
                     3des-cbc <key>
                     aes <key>
                     aes-128-cbc <key>

               Keys must be given in hexadecimal format.  After changing settings, a session needs to  be  reset
               to use the new keys.  The ipsec flows only work with session using the default port 179.

       ipsec (ah|esp) ike
               Enable  IPsec with dynamic keying.  In this mode, bgpd(8) sets up the flows, and a key management
               daemon such as isakmpd(8) is responsible for managing the session keys.  With isakmpd(8),  it  is
               sufficient  to copy the peer's public key, found in /etc/isakmpd/local.pub, to the local machine.
               It must be stored  in  a  file  named  after  the  peer's  IP  address  and  must  be  stored  in
               /etc/isakmpd/pubkeys/ipv4/.  The local public key must be copied to the peer in the same way.  As
               bgpd(8)  manages  the flows on its own, it is sufficient to restrict isakmpd(8) to only take care
               of keying by specifying the flags -Ka.  This can be done in rc.conf.local(8).  After starting the
               isakmpd(8) and bgpd(8) daemons on both sides, the session should be established.  After  changing
               settings,  a  session  needs  to  be  reset  to use the new keys.  The ipsec flows only work with
               session using the default port 179.

       local-address address
       no local-address
               When bgpd(8) initiates the TCP connection to the neighbor system, it normally does not bind to  a
               specific  IP  address.   If  a  local-address  is given, bgpd(8) binds to this address first.  no
               local-address reverts back to the default.

       local-as as-number [as-number]
               Set  the  AS  number  sent  to  the  remote  system.   Used  as  described  above  under  “GLOBAL
               CONFIGURATION” option AS.

               Since  there  is no AS path loop check, this option is dangerous, and requires you to add filters
               to prevent receiving your ASNs.  Intended to be used temporarily, for migrations to another AS.

       log no  Disable neighbor specific logging.

       log updates
               Log received and sent updates for this neighbor.

       max-prefix number [restart number]
               Terminate the session when the maximum number of prefixes received is exceeded (no such limit  is
               imposed  by  default).   If  restart  is  specified,  the  session will be restarted after number
               minutes.

       max-prefix number out [restart number]
               Terminate the session when the maximum number of prefixes sent is  exceeded  (no  such  limit  is
               imposed  by  default).   If  restart  is  specified,  the  session will be restarted after number
               minutes.

       multihop hops
               Neighbors not in the same AS as the local bgpd(8) normally have to be directly connected  to  the
               local  machine.   If  this  is  not the case, the multihop statement defines the maximum hops the
               neighbor may be away.

       passive
               Do not attempt to actively open a TCP connection to the neighbor system.

       port port
               Connect to the peer using port instead of the default BGP port 179.

       reject as-set (yes|no)
               If set to yes, AS paths attributes containing AS_SET path  segments  will  be  rejected  and  all
               prefixes  will  be  treated as withdraws.  The default is inherited from the global reject as-set
               setting.

       remote-as as-number
               Set the AS number of the remote system.

       rde evaluate (default|all)
               If set to all, keep evaluating alternative paths in case the selected path is filtered  out.   By
               default  if  a  path  is  filtered by the output filters then no alternative path is sent to this
               peer.  The default is inherited from the global rde evaluate setting.

       rib name
               Bind the neighbor to the specified RIB.

       role role
               Set the local role for this eBGP session.  Setting a role is required for ASPA verification,  the
               open  policy  role  capability and Only-To-Customer (OTC) attribute of RFC 9234.  The role can be
               one of none, provider, customer, rs, rs-client, or peer.  If the role is set to none the announce
               policy will also be disabled.  On iBGP session the role setting is ignored and forced to none.

       route-reflector [address]
               Act as an RFC 4456 route-reflector for this neighbor.  An optional cluster ID can  be  specified;
               otherwise the BGP ID will be used.

       set attribute ...
               Set the AS path attributes to some default per neighbor or group block:

                     set localpref 300

               See  also  the “ATTRIBUTE SET” section.  Set parameters are applied to the received prefixes; the
               only exceptions are prepend-self, nexthop no-modify and nexthop self.  These sets  are  rewritten
               into filter rules and can be viewed with “bgpd -nv”.

       tcp md5sig password secret
       tcp md5sig key secret
               Enable  TCP  MD5 signatures per RFC 2385.  The shared secret can either be given as a password or
               hexadecimal key.

                     tcp md5sig password mekmitasdigoat
                     tcp md5sig key deadbeef
               After changing keys, a session needs to be reset to use the new keys.

       transparent-as (yes|no)
               If set to yes, AS paths to EBGP neighbors are not prepended with the local AS.   The  default  is
               inherited from the global transparent-as setting.

       ttl-security (yes|no)
               Enable or disable ttl-security.  When enabled, outgoing packets are sent using a TTL of 255 and a
               check  is  made against an incoming packet's TTL.  For directly connected peers, incoming packets
               are required to have a TTL of 255, ensuring they have  not  been  routed.   For  multihop  peers,
               incoming  packets  are  required to have a TTL of 256 minus multihop distance, ensuring they have
               not passed through more than the expected number of hops.  The default is no.

FILTER

       bgpd(8) filters all BGP UPDATE messages, including its own announcements, and  blocks  them  by  default.
       Filter  rules  may  match  on  neighbor,  direction, prefix or AS path attributes.  Filter rules may also
       modify AS path attributes.

       For each UPDATE processed by the filter, the filter rules are evaluated in sequential order,  from  first
       to  last.   The  last matching allow or deny rule decides what action is taken.  The default action is to
       deny.

       The following actions can be used in the filter:

       allow     The UPDATE is passed.

       deny      The UPDATE is blocked.

       match     Apply the filter attribute set without influencing the filter decision.

PARAMETERS

       The rule parameters specify the UPDATES to which a rule applies.  An UPDATE always comes  from,  or  goes
       to,  one  neighbor.   Most  parameters  are  optional,  but  each can appear at most once per rule.  If a
       parameter is specified, the rule only applies to packets with matching attributes.

       as-type [operator] as-number
       as-type as-set name
               This rule applies only to UPDATES where the AS path matches.  The part of the AS  path  specified
               by the as-type is matched against the as-number or the as-set name:

               AS           (any part)
               peer-as      (leftmost AS number)
               source-as    (rightmost AS number)
               transit-as   (all but the rightmost AS number)

               as-number  is  an  AS  number  as explained above under “GLOBAL CONFIGURATION”.  It may be set to
               neighbor-as, which is expanded to the current neighbor remote AS number, or  local-as,  which  is
               expanded to the locally assigned AS number.

               When specifying an as-set name, the AS path will instead be matched against all the AS numbers in
               the set.

               The  operator can be unspecified (this case is identical to the equality operator), or one of the
               numerical operators

                     =       (equal)
                     !=      (unequal)
                     -       (range including boundaries)
                     ><      (except range)

               >< and - are binary operators (they take two arguments); with these, as-number cannot be  set  to
               neighbor-as.

               Multiple  as-number  entries for a given type or as-type as-number entries may also be specified,
               separated by commas or whitespace, if enclosed in curly brackets:

                     deny from any AS { 1, 2, 3 }
                     deny from any { AS 1, source-as 2, transit-as 3 }
                     deny from any { AS { 1, 2, 3 }, source-as 4, transit-as 5 }

       avs (valid | unknown | invalid)
               This rule applies only to UPDATES where the ASPA Validation State (AVS) matches.

       community as-number:local
       community name
               This rule applies only to UPDATES where the community path  attribute  is  present  and  matches.
               Communities  are  specified  as  as-number:local,  where as-number is an AS number and local is a
               locally significant number between zero and 65535.  Both as-number and local may be set to ‘*’ to
               do wildcard matching.  Alternatively, well-known communities may be given  by  name  instead  and
               include  BLACKHOLE, GRACEFUL_SHUTDOWN, NO_EXPORT, NO_ADVERTISE, NO_EXPORT_SUBCONFED, and NO_PEER.
               Both as-number and local may be set to neighbor-as, which is expanded  to  the  current  neighbor
               remote AS number, or local-as, which is expanded to the locally assigned AS number.

       large-community as-number:local:local
               This  rule  applies  only  to  UPDATES  where  the  Large community path attribute is present and
               matches.  Communities are specified as as-number:local:local, where as-number is an AS number and
               local is a locally significant number between zero and 4294967295.  Both as-number and local  may
               be  set  to  ‘*’  to do wildcard matching, neighbor-as, which is expanded to the current neighbor
               remote AS number, or local-as, which is expanded to the locally assigned AS number.

       ext-community subtype as-number:local
       ext-community subtype IP:local
       ext-community subtype numvalue
       ext-community ovs (valid | not-found | invalid)
               This rule applies only to UPDATES where the extended community  path  attribute  is  present  and
               matches.   Extended  Communities  are  specified by a subtype and normally two values, a globally
               unique part (e.g. the AS number) and a local part.  Both  as-number  and  local  may  be  set  to
               neighbor-as,  which  is  expanded to the current neighbor remote AS number, or local-as, which is
               expanded to the locally assigned AS number.  Wildcard matching is supported for  local,  numvalue
               and  subtype.   If wildcard matching is used on the subtype then numvalue also needs to be set to
               ‘*’.  See also the “ATTRIBUTE SET” section for further information about the encoding.

       (from|to) peer
               This rule applies only to UPDATES coming from, or  going  to,  this  particular  neighbor.   This
               parameter must be specified.  peer is one of the following:

               any          Any neighbor will be matched.
               ibgp         All IBGP neighbors will be matched.
               ebgp         All EBGP neighbors will be matched.
               address      Neighbors with this address will be matched.
               group descr  Neighbors in this group will be matched.
               AS as-number
                            Neighbors with this AS will be matched.

               Multiple  peer  entries  may also be specified, separated by commas or whitespace, if enclosed in
               curly brackets:

                     deny from { 128.251.16.1, 251.128.16.2, group hojo }

       (inet|inet6)
               Match only routes in the IPv4 or IPv6 address families,  respectively.   inet  is  an  alias  for
               "prefix 0.0.0.0/0 prefixlen >= 0"; inet6 is an alias for "prefix ::/0 prefixlen >= 0".

       max-as-len len
               This rule applies only to UPDATES where the AS path has more than len elements.

       max-as-seq len
               This rule applies only to UPDATES where a single AS number is repeated more than len times.

       max-communities|max-large-communities|max-ext-communities num
               This  rule  applies  only  to UPDATES where the Basic, Large, or Extended Community attribute has
               more than num elements.

       nexthop address
               This rule applies only to UPDATES where the nexthop is equal to address.  The address can be  set
               to  neighbor  in which case the nexthop is compared against the address of the neighbor.  Nexthop
               filtering is not supported on locally announced networks and one  must  take  into  consideration
               previous rules overwriting nexthops.

       origin-set name
               This rule applies only to UPDATES that match the given origin-set name.

       ovs (valid | not-found | invalid)
               This rule applies only to UPDATES where the Origin Validation State (OVS) matches.

       prefix address/len
       prefix address/len prefixlen range
       prefix address/len or-longer
       prefix address/len maxlen mlen
               This rule applies only to UPDATES for the specified prefix.

               Multiple  entries  may  be  specified,  separated  by  commas or whitespace, if enclosed in curly
               brackets:

                     deny from any prefix { 192.168.0.0/16, 10.0.0.0/8 or-longer }

               Multiple lists can also be specified, which is useful for macro expansion:

                     good="{ 192.168.0.0/16, 172.16.0.0/12, 10.0.0.0/8 }"
                     bad="{ 224.0.0.0/4 prefixlen >= 4, 240.0.0.0/4 prefixlen >= 4 }"
                     ugly="{ 127.0.0.1/8, 169.254.0.0/16 }"

                     deny from any prefix { $good $bad $ugly }

               Prefix length ranges are specified by using these operators:

                     =       (equal)
                     !=      (unequal)
                     <       (less than)
                     <=      (less than or equal)
                     >       (greater than)
                     >=      (greater than or equal)
                     -       (range including boundaries)
                     ><      (except range)

               >< and - are binary operators (they take two arguments).   For  instance,  to  match  all  prefix
               lengths >= 8 and <= 12, and hence the CIDR netmasks 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12:

                     prefixlen 8-12

               Or, to match all prefix lengths < 8 or > 12, and hence the CIDR netmasks 0–7 and 13–32:

                     prefixlen 8><12

               This will match all prefixes in the 10.0.0.0/8 netblock with netmasks longer than 16:

                     prefix 10.0.0.0/8 prefixlen > 16

               or-longer is a shorthand for:

                     prefix address/len prefixlen >= len

               maxlen mlen is a shorthand for:

                     prefix address/len prefixlen <= mlen

       prefix-set name [or-longer]
               This  rule  applies  only  to  UPDATES that match the given prefix-set name.  With or-longer, the
               UPDATES will match any prefix in the prefix-set where

                     address/len prefixlen >= len

       quick   If an UPDATE matches a rule which has the quick option set, this  rule  is  considered  the  last
               matching rule, and evaluation of subsequent rules is skipped.

       rib name
               Apply  rule  only to the specified RIB.  This only applies for received updates, so not for rules
               using the to peer parameter.

       set attribute ...
               All matching rules can set the AS path attributes to some default.  The  set  of  every  matching
               rule is applied, not only the last matching one.  See also the following section.

ATTRIBUTE SET

       AS path attributes can be modified with set.

       set  can be used on network statements, in neighbor or group blocks, and on filter rules.  Attribute sets
       can be expressed as lists.

       The following attributes can be modified:

       community [delete] as-number:local
       community [delete] name
               Set or delete the COMMUNITIES AS path attribute.  Communities are specified  as  as-number:local,
               where as-number is an AS number and local is a locally significant number between zero and 65535.
               Alternately,  well-known  communities  may  be  specified  by name: GRACEFUL_SHUTDOWN, NO_EXPORT,
               NO_ADVERTISE, NO_EXPORT_SUBCONFED, or NO_PEER.  For delete, both as-number and local may  be  set
               to ‘*’ to do wildcard matching.

       large-community [delete] as-number:local:local
       large-community [delete] name
               Set   or   delete   the   Large   Communities  path  attribute.   Communities  are  specified  as
               as-number:local:local, where as-number is an AS number and local is a locally significant  number
               between  zero  and  4294967295.   For  delete,  both  as-number and local may be set to ‘*’ to do
               wildcard matching.

       ext-community [delete] subtype as-number:local
       ext-community [delete] subtype IP:local
       ext-community [delete] subtype numvalue
       ext-community [delete] ovs (valid | not-found | invalid)
               Set or delete the Extended Community AS path attribute.  Extended Communities are specified by  a
               subtype  and  normally  two values, a globally unique part (e.g. the AS number) and a local part.
               The type is selected depending on the  encoding  of  the  global  part.   Two-octet  AS  Specific
               Extended   Communities   and   Four-octet   AS  Specific  Extended  Communities  are  encoded  as
               as-number:local.  Four-octet encoding is used if the as-number is bigger than  65535  or  if  the
               AS_DOT  encoding  is  used.   IPv4 Address Specific Extended Communities are encoded as IP:local.
               Opaque Extended Communities are encoded with a single numeric value.  The ovs subtype can only be
               set to valid, not-found, or invalid.  Currently the following subtypes are supported:

                     bdc      BGP Data Collection
                     defgw    Default Gateway
                     esi-lab  ESI Label
                     esi-rt   ES-Import Route Target
                     l2vid    L2VPN Identifier
                     mac-mob  MAC Mobility
                     odi      OSPF Domain Identifier
                     ort      OSPF Route Type
                     ori      OSPF Router ID
                     ovs      BGP Origin Validation State
                     rt       Route Target
                     soo      Route Origin / Source of Origin
                     srcas    Source AS
                     vrfri    VRF Route Import

               Not all type and subtype value pairs are allowed by IANA and  the  parser  will  ensure  that  no
               invalid combination is created.

               For  delete, subtype, numvalue, or local, may be set to ‘*’ to do wildcard matching.  If wildcard
               matching is used on the subtype then numvalue also needs to be set to ‘*’.

       localpref number
               Set the LOCAL_PREF AS path attribute.  If number starts with a plus  or  minus  sign,  LOCAL_PREF
               will  be  adjusted  by  adding  or  subtracting  number; otherwise it will be set to number.  The
               default is 100.

       med number
       metric number
               Set the MULTI_EXIT_DISC AS path  attribute.   If  number  starts  with  a  plus  or  minus  sign,
               MULTI_EXIT_DISC  will  be  adjusted  by adding or subtracting number; otherwise it will be set to
               number.

       origin (igp|egp|incomplete)
               Set the ORIGIN AS path attribute to mark the source of this route as being injected from  an  igp
               protocol, an egp protocol or being an aggregated route.

       nexthop (address|blackhole|reject|self|no-modify)
               Set  the  NEXTHOP  AS  path  attribute  to a different nexthop address or use blackhole or reject
               routes.  blackhole and reject only affect the FIB and will not alter the nexthop  address.   self
               forces  the  nexthop  to be set to the local interface address.  If set to no-modify, the nexthop
               attribute is not modified for EBGP multihop sessions.  By default EBGP multihop sessions use  the
               local  interface  address.   On  other  IBGP  and  directly  connected EBGP sessions no-modify is
               ignored.  The set address is used on IBGP session and on directly connected EBGP session  if  the
               address  is  part  of the connected network.  On EBGP multihop session no-modify has to be set to
               force the nexthop to address.

                     set nexthop 192.168.0.1
                     set nexthop blackhole
                     set nexthop reject
                     set nexthop no-modify
                     set nexthop self

       pftable table
               Add the prefix in the update to the specified pf(4) table, regardless of whether or not the  path
               was selected for routing.  This option may be useful in building realtime blacklists.

       prepend-neighbor number
               Prepend the neighbor's AS number times to the AS path.

       prepend-self number
               Prepend the local AS number times to the AS path.

       rtlabel label
               Add the prefix to the kernel routing table with the specified label.

       weight number
               The  weight  is used to tip prefixes with equally long AS paths in one or the other direction.  A
               prefix is weighed at a very late stage in the decision process.  If number starts with a plus  or
               minus sign, the weight will be adjusted by adding or subtracting number; otherwise it will be set
               to number.  Weight is a local non-transitive attribute, and is a bgpd(8)-specific extension.  For
               prefixes with equally long paths, the prefix with the larger weight is selected.

FILES

       /etc/bgpd.conf  bgpd(8) configuration file.

SEE ALSO

       strftime(3),   ipsec(4),   pf(4),   rdomain(4),  tcp(4),  bgpctl(8),  bgpd(8),  ipsecctl(8),  isakmpd(8),
       rc.conf.local(8)

HISTORY

       The bgpd.conf file format first appeared in OpenBSD 3.5.

Debian                                           April 24, 2024                                     BGPD.CONF(5)