Unlabeled IPv6 unicast routes

SRĀ OS routers never send or receive IPv6 routes with 32-bit IPv4 next-hop addresses.

When an IPv6 BGP route is advertised to an EBGP peer, next-hop-self always applies (except if the third-party-nexthop command is applied, as described in the following note). Next-hop-self results in one of the following outcomes.

Note: Configuring third-party-nexthop allows an IPv6 route received from one EBGP peer to be advertised to another EBGP that is in the same IP subnet with an unchanged BGP next-hop.

When an IPv6 BGP route is re-advertised to an IBGP or confederation-EBGP peer, the advertising router does not modify the BGP next-hop by default; however, this can be changed as follows.

When an IPv6 BGP route is locally originated and advertised to an IBGP or confederation- EBGP peer, the BGP next-hop is, by default, copied from the next-hop of the route that was imported into BGP, with specified exceptions (for example, black-hole next-hop). When a static route with indirect next-hop is re-advertised as a BGP route, the BGP next-hop is a copy of the indirect address, however with route-table-import policies BGP can be instructed to take the resolved next-hop of the static route as the BGP next-hop address.