Quagga is not only a BGP routing software, it's a collection of many routing
daemons.

The syntax is almost comparable to the Cisco syntax, which makes it possible
to let Quagga-routers be maintained by almost everyone who knows to handle
Cisco products.

Nevertheless the OpenBSD port of Quagga is out of date and has no support
for TCP-MD5. So if possible, it's probably a better idea to use the OpenBSD
routing daemons on OpenBSD systems as long as no-one seems to actively
maintain the Quagga port for OpenBSD...

-Flo

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Demuel I. Bendano, R.E.E
Sent: Thursday, November 30, 2006 6:41 PM
To: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Quagga and OpenBGP

All,

I cannot still see the logic as to why Quagga is part of the OpenBSD ports
tree when it has OpenBGP at all in the default install? The documentation
of OpenBGP tells us that it is far superior in design as compared to
Zebra/Quagga.

Side comments?

dems

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