■ Use the no version to enable the route storage. Use the default version to remove
the explicit configuration from the peer or peer group and reestablish inheritance
of the feature configuration.
■ See neighbor rib-out disable.
rib-out disable
■ Use to disable storage of routes in the Adj-RIBs-Out tables (disable rib-out) for
all BGP peers.
■ Route storage is disabled by default.
■ This command takes effect immediately and automatically bounces the BGP
session if the command changes the current configuration.
■ Example
host1(config)#rib-out disable
■ Use the no version to enable the route storage. Use the default version to remove
the explicit global configuration from all peers and reestablish inheritance of the
feature configuration.
■ See rib-out disable.
Configuring the Address Family
The BGP multiprotocol extensions specify that BGP can exchange information within
different types of address families. The JUNOSe BGP implementation defines the
following different types of address families:
■ Unicast IPv4—If you do not explicitly specify the address family, the router is
configured to exchange unicast IPv4 addresses by default. You can also configure
the router to exchange unicast IPv4 routes in a specified VRF.
■ Multicast IPv4—If you specify the multicast IPv4 address family, you can use
BGP to exchange routing information about how to reach a multicast source
instead of a unicast destination. For information about BGP multicasting
commands, see “Configuring BGP Routing” on page 3. For a general description
of multicasting, see JUNOSe Multicast Routing Configuration Guide.
■ VPN IPv4—If you specify the VPN-IPv4 (also known as VPNv4) address family,
you can configure the router to provide IPv4 VPN services over an MPLS
backbone. These VPNs are often referred to as BGP/MPLS VPNs. For detailed
information, see “Configuring BGP-MPLS Applications” on page 379.
■ Unicast IPv6—If you specify the IPv6 unicast address family, you can configure
the router to exchange unicast IPv6 routes or unicast IPv6 routes in a specified
VRF. For a description of IPv6, see JUNOSe IP, IPv6, and IGP Configuration Guide.
■ Multicast IPv6—If you specify the multicast IPv6 address family, you can use
BGP to exchange routing information about how to reach an IPv6 multicast
source instead of an IPv6 unicast destination. For a general description of
multicasting, see JUNOSe Multicast Routing Configuration Guide.
Configuring BGP Peer Groups ■ 43
Chapter 1: Configuring BGP Routing