Version 9.0.2.0 Introduced on the S6000.
Version 
8.3.19.0
Introduced on the S4820T.
Version 8.3.11.1 Introduced on the Z9000.
Version 8.3.7.0 Introduced on the S4810.
Version 7.8.1.0 Introduced on the S-Series.
Version 7.7.1.0 Introduced on the C-Series.
Version 7.6.1.0 Introduced
Usage 
Information
BGP uses regular expressions (regex) to filter route information. In particular, the 
use of regular expressions to filter routes based on AS-PATHs and communities is 
common. In a large-scale configuration, filtering millions of routes based on 
regular expressions can be quite CPU intensive, as a regular expression evaluation 
involves generation and evaluation of complex finite state machines.
BGP policies, containing regular expressions to match as-path and communities, 
tend to use much CPU processing time, which in turn affects the BGP routing 
convergence. Additionally, the show bgp commands, which are filtered through 
regular expressions, use up CPU cycles particularly with large databases. The Regex 
Engine Performance Enhancement feature optimizes the CPU usage by caching 
and reusing regular expression evaluation results. This caching and reuse may be at 
the expensive of RP1 processor memory.
Examples
Dell(conf-router_bgp)#no bgp regex-eval-optz-disable
Dell(conf-router_bgp)#do show ip protocols
Routing Protocol is "ospf 22222"
  Router ID is 2.2.2.2
  Area              Routing for Networks
  51                10.10.10.0/00
Routing Protocol is "bgp 1"
  Cluster Id is set to 10.10.10.0
  Router Id is set to 10.10.10.0
  Fast-external-fallover enabled
Regular expression evaluation optimization enabled
  Capable of ROUTE_REFRESH
  For Address Family IPv4 Unicast
    BGP table version is 0, main routing table version 0
    Distance: external 20 internal 200 local 200
Dell(conf-router_bgp)#
Related 
Commands
show ip protocols — views information on all routing protocols enabled and active 
on the E-Series.
400
Border Gateway Protocol