From: Simon Baxter (Simon.Baxter@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Tue Aug 22 2000 - 22:08:38 GMT-3
Title:
Sorry, I put you wrong. The last answer I sent was for show ipx route
detailed - here's the correct one...
Router# show ipx route
Codes: C - Connected primary network, c - Connected secondary network
S - Static, F - Floating static, L - Local (internal), W - IPXWAN
R - RIP, E - EIGRP, N - NLSP, X - External, s - seconds, u - uses
9 Total IPX routes. Up to 1 parallel paths and 16 hops allowed.
No default route known.
L D35 is the internal network
C E001 (SAP), Et0
C D35E2 (NOVELL-ETHER), Et2
R D34 [02/01] via E001.0000.0c02.8cf9, 52s, Et0
N D36 [20][02/01] via D35E2.0000.0c02.8cfc, 594s, Et2
NX D40 [20][03/02][02/01] via D35E2.0000.0c02.8cfc, 594s, Et2
R D34E1 [01/01] via E001.0000.0c02.8cf9, 53s, Et0
NX D40E1 [20][02/02][01/01] via D35E2.0000.0c02.8cfc, 594s, Et2
N D36E02 [20][01/01] via D35E2.0000.0c02.8cfc, 594s, Et2
Table 20-16 describes the fields shown in the display.
Table 20-16: Show IPX Route Field Descriptions
Field Description
Codes Codes defining how the route was learned.
C Directly connected primary network.
c Directly connected secondary network
R Route learned from a RIP update.
E Route learned from an Enhanced IGRP update.
S Statically defined route via theipx route command.
W Directly connected route determined via IPXWAN.
L Internal (local) network.
N Route learned from an NLSP update.
X NLSP external route (XROUTE).
F Floating static route.
9 Total IPX routes Number of routes in the routing table.
Up to 1parallel paths Maximum number of parallel paths for which the
router has been configured with the ipx maximum-paths command.
16 hops allows Maximum number of hops allowed.
No default route known. Indicates whether a default route is known
and, if so, what it is.
D35 Internal network number.
E001, D35E2, and so forth Network number.
(SAP), (NOVELL-ETHER) Encapsulation in use on the network.
Et0 Interface through which the destination is reachable.
via Router through which the destination is reachable.
52s Age of the entry, in seconds. For RIP and SAP, this is normally a
value from 0 to 59. For NLSP, this is normally a value from 0 to 7200.
[20] Cost of the route (NLSP only). For interior NLSP routes (marked
"N"), this is the cost to the destination network. For exterior NLSP
routes (marked "NX") this is the equivalent NLSP cost to the edge of
the NLSP area. You can override default cost with the ipx nlsp
hello-multiplier command.
[03/02] Ticks/hops to the destination network. For RIP routes, this is
the cumulative ticks and hops to the destination network. For NLSP
routes, this is the equivalent ticks/hops computed from the NLSP cost
to the destination network. For NLSP exterior routes, this is the
equivalent ticks/hops computed by adding the RIP ticks/hops advertised
at the edge of the NLSP area to the equivalent ticks/hops computed
from the NLSP cost to the edge of the area.
[02/01] Ticks/hops external to the NLSP cloud. These numbers are the
tick and hop values advertised by RIP at the point where it entered
the NLSP cloud.
-----Original Message-----
From: Aaron DuShey [mailto:aaron.dushey@dushey-consulting.com]
Sent: Wednesday, August 23, 2000 8:37 AM
To: CCIE (E-mail)
Subject: nlsp routing table
OK, so i setup nlsp, can someone tell me what the numbers in the
routing
table mean? I am used to the standard delay/tick for RIP? Why are
there
multiple entries?
thanks,
I looked through the guides but found no specific answer to nlsp-
r1#sh ipx route
Codes: C - Connected primary network, c - Connected secondary
network
S - Static, F - Floating static, L - Local (internal), W -
IPXWAN
R - RIP, E - EIGRP, N - NLSP, X - External, A - Aggregate
s - seconds, u - uses, U - Per-user static
15 Total IPX routes. Up to 1 parallel paths and 16 hops allowed.
No default route known.
L 1 is the internal network
C 107 (NOVELL-ETHER), Et0/0
C 2001 (HDLC), Se0/0
N 2 [27][02/01] via 2.0000.0000.0001, 408s, Se0/0
N 205 [27][01/01] via 2.0000.0000.0001, 408s, Se0/0
NX 300 [27][10/02][09/01] via 2.0000.0000.0001, 408s,
Se0/0
NX 400 [27][10/02][09/01] via 2.0000.0000.0001, 408s,
Se0/0
NX 600 [27][10/02][09/01] via 2.0000.0000.0001, 408s,
Se0/0
R 700 [02/01] via 107.0010.7967.ac10, 56s,
Et0/0
NX 5003 [27][02/02][01/01] via 2.0000.0000.0001, 408s,
Se0/0
NX 5004 [27][02/02][01/01] via 2.0000.0000.0001, 409s,
Se0/0
NX 5006 [27][04/02][03/01] via 2.0000.0000.0001, 409s,
Se0/0
NX 30000 [27][10/02][09/01] via 2.0000.0000.0001, 409s,
Se0/0
NX 30001 [27][10/02][09/01] via 2.0000.0000.0001, 409s,
Se0/0
NX 60000 [27][10/02][09/01] via 2.0000.0000.0001, 409s,
Se0/0
r1#
Aaron DuShey
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Thu Jun 13 2002 - 08:24:29 GMT-3