On Sat, Jul 13, 2019 at 09:44:28PM -0700, BSD user wrote:
> Hello,
> 
> My apologies for sending this email multiple times.
> 
> I was so mortified by Tutanota's awful text formatting that I created a
> new mail account that supported IMAP so that I could load it up in
> Thunderbird with text only mode enabled.
> 
> Once again, my apologies for my rookie mistake choosing Tutanota for use
> on an international mailing list such as this one. I hope you guys will
> give me one more chance.
> 
> My (hopefully) unmangled message is below.
> 

You did not include which version you are running, I'll assume this is 6.5.
It seems you do not have any filter, OpenBGPD denies everything by default.

> 
> ----------------------------------
> 
> 
> Hello,
> 
> 
> I’m having some trouble configuring OpenBGPD to replace my Bird deployment.
> 
> I’m trying to set up redundant web infrastructure for a few websites I
> host with Vultr. To do so, I followed this guide:
> 
> https://www.vultr.com/docs/high-availability-on-vultr-with-floating-ip-and-bgp
> 
> It works flawlessly with Bird running on OpenBSD, but I obviously prefer
> to run utilities from the base system wherever possible. I’ve spent more
> time than I’d like to admit trying to get this setup working on OpenBGPD.
> 
> The only thing I did different from the above guide was use lo1 rather
> than a dummy interface, as dummy interfaces appear to be a linuxism as
> per this mailing list thread I found:
> 
> http://openbsd-archive.7691.n7.nabble.com/Dummy-Interface-In-OpenBGPd-td34009.html
> 
> Basically, all I’m trying to do is port my Bird config over to OpenBGPD.
> At this point I’m just banging my head against a wall. I’ve spent
> several days googling, reading man pages and trying different configs. I
> must be missing something basic, and it’s likely something obvious I’m
> missing, as I am by no means a BGP expert.
> 
> My bird config looks like this:
> 
> 
> log "/var/log/bird" all;
> 
> router id xxx.xxx.224.9;
> 
> protocol device
> {
>     scan time 60;
> }
> 
> protocol direct
> {
>     interface "lo1";
> }
> 
> protocol bgp vultr
> {
>     local as 65xxx;
>     source address xxx.xxx.224.9;
>     import none;
>     export all;
>     graceful restart on;
>     next hop self;
>     multihop 2;
>     neighbor 169.254.169.254 as 64515;
>     password "xxxxxx";
> }
> 
> 
> My attempt at a bgpd.conf looks like this:
> 
> 
> # Global Configuration
> 
> AS 65xxx
> router-id xxx.xxx.224.9
> 
> # Our Address Space
> network xxx.xxx.0.141/32
> network inet connected
> 
> # IPv4 Peers
> 
> neighbor 169.254.169.254 {
>         remote-as               64515
>         tcp md5sig password     xxxxxx
>         set nexthop self
>         multihop                2
>         descr                   Vultr
>         local-address           xxx.xxx.224.9
>         announce                IPv4 unicast
> }
> 
> 
> 
> Any assistance you fine folks could provide to help me get this working
> would be hugely appreciated.
> 
> I've also attached my config files to eliminate any chance of them being
> mangled.
> 
> Thanks so much for your time.
> 

> # Global Configuration
> 
> AS 65xxx
> router-id xxx.xxx.224.9
> 
> # Our Address Space
> network xxx.xxx.0.141/32
> network inet connected
> 
> # IPv4 Peers
> 
> neighbor 169.254.169.254 {
>         remote-as               64515
>         tcp md5sig password     xxxxxx
>         set nexthop self
>         multihop                2
>         descr                   Vultr
>         local-address           xxx.xxx.224.9
>         announce                IPv4 unicast
> }

> log "/var/log/bird" all;
> 
> router id xxx.xxx.224.9;
> 
> protocol device
> {
>     scan time 60;
> }
> 
> protocol direct
> {
>     interface "lo1";
> }
> 
> protocol bgp vultr
> {
>     local as 65xxx;
>     source address xxx.xxx.224.9;
>     import none;
>     export all;
>     graceful restart on;
>     next hop self;
>     multihop 2;
>     neighbor 169.254.169.254 as 64515;
>     password "xxxxxx";
> }
> 

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