I feel confident about this one. The route reflector is meant to keep iBGP routes internal and not share them with external eBGP peers. So the answer that breaks that rule is B.
Okay, let me walk through this step-by-step. The route reflector is supposed to propagate routes received from clients to all other iBGP peers. So the answer that doesn't follow the rules must be B, propagating to eBGP peers.
Hmm, I'm a bit confused on this one. I know the route reflector has some special rules, but I can't quite remember the details. I'll have to think this through carefully.
I'm pretty sure the answer is B. The route reflector is supposed to propagate routes received from eBGP peers to all iBGP peers, not to other eBGP peers.
Wow, this question really makes me question my BGP knowledge. I'll have to review the route reflection rules again before the exam. At least I can laugh at the joke about the route reflector who got lost and ended up in the wrong neighborhood.
Aha! I've got it. The answer must be D. A route reflector should not propagate routes received from a client to eBGP peers. That's the one rule that's not followed.
Hmm, this is a tricky one. I'm not sure if the route reflector is supposed to propagate routes to eBGP peers or not. I'll have to think about this a bit more.
I think the correct answer is B. Propagating the best route received from an eBGP peer to all eBGP peers would not be a standard route reflection rule.
Norah
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