Take the arrow pointer on the link joining the 2 routers and then you will know which router has the clock and which doesn't. There is a clock sign which appears at one of the router.
hi bro thanks for the vid. Just wondering why you also built a BGP neighbor to the PC. It will not be built as PC is not forming BGP. BGP to each router should be enough.
Do we need to specify the connected computer as neighbors? Is it not enough with specifying the connected routers as neighbors so that they can exhange info regarding their connected networks?
No need as PC wont form BGP. And even it can, what if you have thousands of PC, does it mean router needs to form one by one. BGP to each router is enough and let the internal routing do its job to reach the PC. Cos once the traffic reach the router, it already have its arp entries/routing table on whats connected to him. Hope this clarifies.
Am baffled with your method of adding the computers as neighbors. So if we have 1000 pcs you should add them as neigbours in the BGP each? what is the point of advertising the networks of the PCs then ? Confusing man
Thank You very much for the tutorial. I have 2 questions. 1. Why we use Cross Over cable, not Straight Thorough? As I know we should use Cross Over if we have two same devices, for example, two switches etc. My second question is about BGP. In this example, we have not a public IP, but we use BGP for connection with our ISP. So which IP should I type as neighbor IP? If Internet provider router's IP address then how can I know which remote-as they have? Or i can type whatever I want fpr remote-as?
yes you have to configure every PC with an ip address. also you can use dhcp in the configuration page to automatically assign ip addresses, but the problem with dhcp is that ip addresses does not remain the same.
why is the clock not set for router 1?
Take the arrow pointer on the link joining the 2 routers and then you will know which router has the clock and which doesn't. There is a clock sign which appears at one of the router.
understood ! thanks :)
Still a cracking video 6 years later, thank you!
this is the only good video i found for the configuration of BGP on packet tracer
thought it was athlean x, but this vid crack my rusty thoughts on BGP to understand it well, thank you sir for a great exercise vid..
hahahah lmao. me too.
good video 🧐🥶
hi bro thanks for the vid. Just wondering why you also built a BGP neighbor to the PC. It will not be built as PC is not forming BGP. BGP to each router should be enough.
thank you for the videos it helps me to finish my assignment
Your video is very much helpful to me.Thank you bro!!
Thank you :)
very nice and good
Thank you
Cute voice , funny and informative as wel !
😊 good vedio
awesome video. Thanks.
Thank you 😊
Thank you, very easy lab to follow.
Do we need to specify the connected computer as neighbors? Is it not enough with specifying the connected routers as neighbors so that they can exhange info regarding their connected networks?
No need as PC wont form BGP. And even it can, what if you have thousands of PC, does it mean router needs to form one by one. BGP to each router is enough and let the internal routing do its job to reach the PC. Cos once the traffic reach the router, it already have its arp entries/routing table on whats connected to him. Hope this clarifies.
@@christianflores6186 on the routers I configured OSPF other than the BGP. Do you think it is a correct approach?
Nice
design two different autonomous system and interconnection them using the border gateway protocol in cisco packet
thanks man
Welcome
Thanks my bro
Am baffled with your method of adding the computers as neighbors. So if we have 1000 pcs you should add them as neigbours in the BGP each? what is the point of advertising the networks of the PCs then ? Confusing man
you don't need to peer to the computer networks. unnecessary.
Thank You very much for the tutorial. I have 2 questions. 1. Why we use Cross Over cable, not Straight Thorough? As I know we should use Cross Over if we have two same devices, for example, two switches etc. My second question is about BGP. In this example, we have not a public IP, but we use BGP for connection with our ISP. So which IP should I type as neighbor IP? If Internet provider router's IP address then how can I know which remote-as they have? Or i can type whatever I want fpr remote-as?
The cable is chosen automatically by Packet Tracer.
The normal computers and consumer routers don't participate in BGP.
Does BGP work with OSPF? If so would the command use area instead of autonomous number when advertising networks?
OSPF interior gateway protocol working in AS area only. BGP working between AS areas. Exterior Gateway protocol
What if i give clock rate for both the routers??
if i had 20 pc connection to same router? should i write all PC's ip down?
nvm i shouldnt use bgp for intranet
yes you have to configure every PC with an ip address. also you can use dhcp in the configuration page to automatically assign ip addresses, but the problem with dhcp is that ip addresses does not remain the same.
Bro mi serve la versione di Cisco Packet Tracer che hai usato, altrimenti la relazione di Vantini per domani non è completa
For me too
Bro, non la so
what is having a clock and not having a clock means?
what it will do?
sets the speed of the line
where is LOOPBACK ?
Why it doesn't work ? I did everything like you and it doesn't work.
Oye switch kyu ni lgaye tu ny
that music is also used by athleanx....lol
peer in wrong AS occur to me
im sure ur a fan of athlean x lol