show route advertising-protocol bgp detail (Layer 2 VPN) on page 2981
show route advertising-protocol bgp detail (Layer 3 VPN) on page 2981
show route advertising-protocol bgp extensive all (Next Hop Self with RIB-out IP
Address) on page 2981
Output Fields Table 214 on page 2978 lists the output fields for the show route advertising-protocol
command. Output fields are listed in the approximate order in which they appear.
Table 214: show route advertising-protocol Output Fields
Level of OutputField DescriptionField Name
All levelsName of the routing table—for example, inet.0.routing-table-name
All levelsNumber of destinations for which there are routes in the routing table.number
destinations
All levelsNumber of routes in the routing table and total number of routes in the following
states:
• active (routes that are active)
• holddown (routes that are in the pending state before being declared inactive)
• hidden (routes that are not used because of a routing policy)
number routes
brief noneDestination prefix.Prefix
detail extensiveDestination prefix. The entry value is the number of routes for this destination,
and the announced value is the number of routes being announced for this
destination.
destination-prefix
(entry , announced)
detail extensiveBGP group name and type (Internal or External).BGP group and type
detail extensiveUnique 64-bit prefix augmenting each IP subnet.Route Distinguisher
detail extensiveIncoming label advertised by the Label Distribution Protocol (LDP). When an
IP packet enters a label-switched path (LSP), the ingress router examines the
packet and assigns it a label based on its destination, placing the label in the
packet's header. The label transforms the packet from one that is forwarded
based on its IP routing information to one that is forwarded based on information
associated with the label.
Advertised Label
detail extensiveFirst label in a block of labels and label block size. A remote PE router uses this
first label when sending traffic toward the advertising PE router.
Label-Base, range
detail extensiveVirtual private network (VPN) label. Packets are sent between CE and PE routers
by advertising VPN labels. VPN labels transit over either a Resource Reservation
Protocol (RSVP) or a Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) label-switched path
(LSP) tunnel.
VPN Label
Copyright © 2017, Juniper Networks, Inc.2978
ACX Series Universal Access Router Configuration Guide