Scenario: a regional ISP preparing to cutover to a new upstream BGP provider at 
one of my POPs.  Want minimal or no network disruption, and want to ensure 
everything is ready to go prior to the cutover.

 I'm planning to use the following order of operations:
1. Establish IP connectivity to the new ISP (already done)
2. Configure my BGP router and shutdown the new neighbor (ISP says their side 
is already configured and ready)
3. During the maintenance window for this change, activate the new BGP 
connection (remove neighbor shutdown)
4. Do the appropriate tests (sh bgp nei, login to my upstream's route server 
and check route advertisements, sign in to looking glass and/or route servers 
from other providers to see if my routes from the new ISP are being advertised, 
and I'm open to any other tests)
5. Turn down the old connection (neighbor shutdown)
6. Watch the old connection get removed from route servers/looking glasses from 
step 4

A. Does that order make sense or does it need some tweaking, additions, or 
"other"?

B. I'd like to test the new upstream BGP configuration without passing traffic 
to and through it.  What can I do (if anything) on my configuration end to put 
up the BGP configuration, establish a neighbor connection, and NOT actually 
pass any traffic through it?  After putting my configuration up, I'd like to do 
a show bgp nei 1.1.1.1 advertised-routes to ensure my routes are going out, and 
then shut the neighbor down until the cutover.



thanks for your input
Eric

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