Route flap damping

Route Flap Damping (RFD) is a mechanism supported by 7450, 7750, and 7950 routers, as well as other BGP routers, that was designed to help improve the stability of Internet routing by mitigating the impact of route flaps. Route flaps describe a situation where a router alternately advertises a route as reachable and then unreachable or as reachable through one path and then another path in rapid succession. Route flaps can result from hardware errors, software errors, configuration errors, unreliable links, and so on. However not all perceived route flaps represent a true problem; when a best path is withdrawn the next-best path may not be immediately known and may trigger a number of intermediate best path selections (and corresponding advertisements) before it is found. These intermediate best path selections may travel at different speeds through different routers because of the effect of the min-route-advertisement interval (MRAI) and other factors. RFD does not handle this type of situation particularly well and for this and other reasons many Internet service providers do not use RFD.

In SR OS route flap damping is configurable; by default, it is disabled. It can be enabled on EBGP and confed-EBGP sessions by including the damping command in their group or neighbor configuration. The damping command has no effect on IBGP sessions. When a route of any type (any AFI/SAFI) is received on a non-IBGP session that has damping enabled.