BGP triggered IP-in-GUE Encapsulation provides a mechanism for dynamically creating tunnels in a core network using an IP underlay.  IP-in-GUE (Generic UDP Encapsulation) encapsulates IP traffic in an IPv4/UDP header.  IP unicast routes to destinations reachable across the core network are learned via BGP at the ingress edge.

ACL based traffic management often requires matching packets’ destination addresses against one or more sets of IP prefixes. This can become difficult to manage when the prefix sets need to be consistently maintained on several devices and either change too frequently or are very large. When the prefixes for the prefix sets are learned by BGP, this feature provides an alternative to maintaining unwieldy sets of statically configured IP prefixes. Instead the prefix sets are populated by BGP based on the BGP communities that are assigned to learned prefixes. BGP can manage IP prefix field sets for use with Traffic Policies.

Segment Routing Traffic Engineering Policy (SR-TE) aka SR Policy makes use of Segment Routing (SR) to allow a headend to steer traffic along any path without maintaining per flow state in every node. A headend steers traffic into an “SR Policy”. Class Based Forwarding (CBF) for SR-TE is a means for steering IP traffic into an SR Policy based on the ingress DSCP values. This mechanism is described in the section on Per-Flow Steering in the Segment Routing Policy Architecture Internet draft.

RIB Route Control is a collection of mechanisms for controlling how IP routing table entries get used.  FIB Policy

This feature is provided on all platforms. The BGP listen range command has been modified to optionally allow