Berkeley CSUA MOTD:Entry 12231
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2025/05/24 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
5/24    

2004/2/12-13 [Computer/Networking] UID:12231 Activity:nil
2/12    Does anyone know much about Juniper Networks router policy? I have
        the router configuration for the Internet2's Abeline network
        (http://csua.org/u/5z5 and what I want to get out of it is
        some sort of DB that will tell me if a given IP is connected
        to the network. I've tried looking over Juniper's docs
        (http://csua.org/u/5z6 but they all talk about routes and not
        hosts. the route-filter command seems to be the most relevant.
        Thanks. --jhs
        \_ you're not going to get anyting useful out of that configuration
           file.  What you need is going to be a bgp route dump from the
           actual router.
2025/05/24 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
5/24    

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Cache (304 bytes)
csua.org/u/5z5 -> loadrunner.uits.iu.edu/%7Egcbrowni/Abilene/vn/configs/configs.html
Abilene - Router Configuration Show Configuration These are the configurations used on each of the Abilene backbone routers. Certain sections, such as the filters, SNMP, and user login portions, have been removed for security purposes. This data is not XML rich, so it is nothing more than a simple list.
Cache (1328 bytes)
csua.org/u/5z6 -> juniper.net/techpubs/software/junos/junos62/swconfig62-policy/html/policy-extend-match-config22.html
It can be one or more of the actions listed in Table 10 and Table 11 . In route lists, you can specify actions in two ways: In the route-filter or source-address-filter optionThese actions are taken immediately after a match occurs, and the then statement is not evaluated. In the then statementThese actions are taken after a match occurs and if an action is not specified in the route-filter or source-address-filter option. The upto and prefix-length-range match types are similar in that both specify the most significant bits and provide a range of prefix lengths that can match. The difference is that upto allows you to specify an upper limit only for the prefix length range, while prefix-length-range allows you to specify both lower and upper limits. For more examples of these route list match types, see Examples: Configure Route Lists . All the following are true: The route shares the same most-significant bits described by prefix-length of the first destination prefix. The route shares the same most-significant bits described by prefix-length of the second destination prefix for the number of bits in the prefix length. The number of bits in the routes prefix length is less than or equal to the number of bits in the second prefix. You do not use the through match type in most routing policy configurations.