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As-path list, Community list, Extended community list – H3C Technologies H3C SR8800 User Manual

Page 410: Routing policy

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An IP prefix list is configured to match the destination address of routing information. You can use the

gateway option to allow only routing information from certain routers to be received. For gateway option
information, see the chapters “Configuring RIP” and “Configuring OSPF.”
An IP prefix list, identified by name, can comprise multiple items. Each item, identified by an index

number, can specify a prefix range to match. An item with a smaller index number is matched first. If one

item is matched, the IP prefix list is passed, and the packet will not go to the next item.

AS-PATH list

An AS-PATH list, configured based on the BGP AS PATH attribute, can only be used to match BGP routing

information.
For more information about AS-PATH list, see the chapter “Configuring BGP.”

Community list

A community list, configured based on the BGP community attribute, can only be used to match BGP
routing information.
For more information about community list, see the chapter “Configuring BGP.”

Extended community list

An extended community list, configured based on the BGP extended community attribute (Route-Target

for VPN, and Source of Origin), can only be used to match BGP routing information.
For more information about extended community list, see MPLS Configuration Guide.

Routing policy

A routing policy is used to match routing information and modify the attributes of permitted routes. It can

reference the filters to define its own match criteria.
A routing policy can comprise multiple nodes, which are in logic OR relationship. Each routing policy

node is a match unit, and a node with a smaller number is matched first. Once a node is matched, the

routing policy is passed and the packet will not go to the next node.
A routing policy node comprises a set of if-match, apply, and continue clauses.

The if-match clauses define the match criteria. The matching objects are some attributes of routing
information. The if-match clauses of a routing policy node is in a logical AND relationship. A
packet must match all the if-match clauses of the node to pass it.

The apply clauses of the node specify the actions to be taken on the permitted packets, such as
modifying a route attribute.

The continue clause specifies the next routing policy node to be matched. With this clause
configured, when a route matches the current routing policy node, it continues to match against the

specified next node in the same routing policy. The continue clause combines the if-match and

apply clauses of the two nodes to improve flexibility of the routing policy.

When you configure if-match, apply, and continue clauses, follow these guidelines:

If you want to implement route filtering only, you do not need to configure apply clauses.

If you do not configure any if-match clauses for a permit-mode node, the node permits all routes to
pass.

Configure a permit-mode node containing no if-match or apply clauses behind multiple deny-mode
nodes to allow unmatched routes to pass.