B
B-MAC
A source and destination backbone MAC address (B-AA and a B-DA) in a Provider Backbone Bridging (PBB) header.
B-TAG
backbone
The part of a network used as the primary path for transporting traffic between network segments.
backbone core bridge (BCB)
A device that bridges frames based on backbone VLAN (B-VLAN) and backbone MAC address (B-MAC) information in a Provider Backbone Bridging (PBB) network core.
backbone edge bridge (BEB)
A device that encapsulates customer frames for transmission across a Provider Backbone Bridging (PBB) network. There are two types:
B-BEB (B type BEB): Contains a B-component for bridging in the provider space based on backbone MAC address (B-MAC) and backbone VLAN (B-VLAN) information.
I-BEB (I type BEB): Contains an I-component for bridging in the customer space based on customer MAC address (C-MAC) and service VLAN (S-VLAN) information.
backbone VLAN (B-VLAN)
A field in a Provider Backbone Bridging (PBB) header that carries the backbone VLAN identifier information. The format is the same as a service VLAN (S-VLAN) tag. Also called B-VID tag, B-TAG.
backhaul
The part of a hierarchical network that connects small subnetworks at the edge of the network to the core or backbone network.
In wireless backhaul, the part of the network that transports traffic from a cellular base station to a core network that routes and switches voice and data traffic.
bandwidth
A measure of the data transfer rate of a communications transport medium.
base station
An earth-based transmitting/receiving station for cellular phones and other wireless transmission systems.
Bellman-Ford algorithm
Used in distance-vector routing protocols such as Routing Information Protocol (RIP) to determine the best path to all routes in the network. Contrast with Dijkstra algorithm.
best effort
Traffic class in which the network forwards as many packets as possible in as reasonable a time as possible. By default, packets not explicitly assigned to a specific traffic class are assigned to the best-effort class.
BGP confederation
A method to solve scaling problems created by the iBGP full-mesh requirement. BGP confederations effectively break up a large autonomous system (AS) into subautonomous systems (sub-ASs). Each sub-AS must be uniquely identified within the confederation AS by a sub-AS number.
Within a sub-AS, the same iBGP full mesh requirement exists. Connections to other confederations are made with eBGP, and peers outside the sub-AS are treated as external. To avoid routing loops, a sub-AS uses a confederation sequence, which operates like an AS path but uses only the privately assigned sub-AS numbers.
BGP neighbor
Another device on the network that is running Border Gateway Protocol (BGP). There are two types of BGP neighbors: internal neighbors in the same autonomous system (AS) and external neighbors in different autonomous systems.
BGP peer
A remote Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) speaker that is an established neighbor of the local BGP speaker. BGP peers do not have to be directly connected to each other to share a BGP session.
BGP speaker
A router configured to run the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) routing protocol. A BGP speaker must be explicitly configured with a set of BGP peers with which it exchanges routing information.
Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD)
Protocol that reduces the reliance upon the relatively slow hello mechanism in routing protocols to detect failures where no hardware signaling is available. BFD works with Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) v2, and Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) to enable them to receive failure notifications. Defined in RFCs 5880 and 5881.
bit error rate (BER)
The ratio of error bits to the total number of bits transmitted. A BER is generally shown as a negative exponent (for example, 10-7, which means one out of 10,000,000 bits is in error).
Border Gateway Protocol (BGP)
An Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP) that maintains a table of IP networks, or prefixes, which designate network reachability among autonomous system (AS) instances. BGP uses path-vector routing that makes decisions based on path, network policies, and/or rule sets. BGP is the primary protocol for the global Internet. First defined by RFC 1163.
BGP Version 4 (BGP4) defined in RFC 4271 supports Classless Interdomain Routing (CIDR) and route summarization.
BGP performs these tasks:
Collects information about reachable networks from neighboring autonomous systems
Advertises its reachable networks to routers inside the AS and to neighboring autonomous systems
Selects routes if there are multiple routes available.
Each BGP device can have both external and internal connections to other BGP devices:
Internal BGP (iBGP) connections are within the same autonomous system
External BGP (eBGP) connections are between different autonomous systems
The configuration and behavior is slightly different between eBGP and iBGP.
You can use iBGP for multihomed BGP networks (with more than one connection to the same external autonomous system).
To avoid routing loops, iBGP does not advertise routes learned from an internal BGP peer to other internal BGP peers. Instead, BGP requires that all internal peers be fully meshed so that any route advertised by one router is advertised to all peers within the autonomous system (AS). As a network grows, the full-mesh requirement becomes difficult to manage. To combat scaling problems, BGP uses route reflection and BGP confederations.
Multiprotocol BGP (MP-BGP) allows different types of addresses (address families) to be distributed in parallel. MP-BGP supports IPv4 and IPv6 addresses as well as unicast and multicast variants of each. Defined in RFC 4760. See also IPv6 Provider Edge (6PE).
See also community.
bridge
A device operating at Layer 1 (L1) and Layer 2 (L2) of the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) Reference Model that forwards frames from one network segment to another based on the MAC address.
The term bridge also describes a device that connects collision domains. Collisions that appear on one side of a switch are not allowed to propagate to the other.
Originally, bridges only had two ports, with each one connected to a network segment. Later, bridges had multiple ports that could connect more than two network segments as well as directly connecting hosts. As bridges evolved, they were also able to filter frames, that is, forward only certain traffic from one network segment to another. This type of device is sometimes called an intelligent bridge, but the more modern term is switch. The term “bridge” is somewhat archaic but is still often used in standards documents.
bridge protocol data unit (BPDU)
A protocol data unit (PDU) sent by switches running the Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) to learn about other switches in the network and maintain the spanning tree.
broadcast
The process of a single host simultaneously sending the same message to all nodes on a network. Compare to multicast, where a only a subset of the receivers are addressed. See also unicast.
bursty
The tendency of the bandwidth needed in a network to vary greatly from one moment to the next.
Last modified date: 07/13/2023