From: Jim Newton (jnewton@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Tue Feb 19 2002 - 22:50:37 GMT-3
In the NLSP external example below there are three sets of brackets, not
one. What is the significance of the other two sets? There are two of them
that have what looks like metric/delay info and one that just has one
number.
Thanks
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of Frank
Jimenez
Sent: Tuesday, February 19, 2002 3:17 PM
To: 'Shadi'; 'ccielab'
Subject: RE: IPX Routing protocols and the Routing Table?
All is found on the web :-)
>From (watch word wrap):
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ssr83/rpc_r/554
62.htm
Following is sample output:
Codes: R - RIP derived, C - connected, S - static, 2 learned routes
Maximum allowed path(s) are/is 1
R Net 1001 [1/1] via 1006.aa00.0400.6508, 94 sec, 0 uses, Ethernet0
R Net 1003 [1/1] via 1006.aa00.0400.6508, 94 sec, 0 uses, Ethernet0
C Net 13A is directly connected, 0 uses, Ethernet1 (down)
C Net 1006A is directly connected, 0 uses, Ethernet0
In the display, the leading character R indicates routes learned via
RIP, C indicates connected entries, and S indicates statically defined
entries. The square brackets contain the metric/delay field reports. The
first number is the metric used to make a routing decision; the second
number is the delay expressed in IBM clock ticks. The field is not used
to make routing decisions, however, the Novell server will use this
field to decide which of two equal metric routes to use, thereby giving
it a tie-breaking function.
Frank Jimenez, CCIE #5738
Systems Engineer
Dallas Commercial
Cisco Systems, Inc.
franjime@cisco.com
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Shadi
Sent: Tuesday, February 19, 2002 12:40 PM
To: ccielab
Subject: IPX Routing protocols and the Routing Table?
Hi all,
NX 97 [45][14/02][09/01] via 300.0000.0000.0001, 697s,
Se0/1
What do we mean by the [45][14/02][09/01] in the above part from the IPX
routing table?
How IPX prefers the routes? based on distances or metrics or both? I see
it prefers EIGRP over RIP and NLSP over RIP.
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