- Table of Contents
-
- H3C S3610[S5510] Series Ethernet Switches Command Manual-Release 0001-(V1.02)
- 00-1Cover
- 01-Login Command
- 02-VLAN Command
- 03-IP Address and Performance Command
- 04-QinQ-BPDU Tunnel Command
- 05-Port Correlation Configuration Command
- 06-MAC Address Table Management Command
- 07-MAC-IP-Port Binding Command
- 08-MSTP Command
- 09-Routing Overview Command
- 10-IPv4 Routing Command
- 11-IPv6 Routing Command
- 12-IPv6 Configuration Command
- 13-Multicast Protocol Command
- 14-802.1x-HABP-MAC Authentication Command
- 15-AAA-RADIUS-HWTACACS Command
- 16-ARP Command
- 17-DHCP Command
- 18-ACL Command
- 19-QoS Command
- 20-Port Mirroring Command
- 21-Cluster Management Command
- 22-UDP Helper Command
- 23-SNMP-RMON Command
- 24-NTP Command
- 25-DNS Command
- 26-File System Management Command
- 27-Information Center Command
- 28-System Maintenance and Debugging Command
- 29-NQA Command
- 30-VRRP Command
- 31-SSH Command
- 32-Appendix
- Related Documents
-
Title | Size | Download |
---|---|---|
09-Routing Overview Command | 162 KB |
Chapter 1 Routing Overview Commands
1.1.1 display ip routing-table
1.1.2 display ip routing-table acl
1.1.3 display ip routing-table ip-address
1.1.4 display ip routing-table ip-address1 ip-address2
1.1.5 display ip routing-table ip-prefix
1.1.6 display ip routing-table protocol
1.1.7 display ip routing-table statistics
1.1.8 display ipv6 routing-table
1.1.9 display ipv6 routing-table acl
1.1.10 display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-address
1.1.11 display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-address1 ipv6-address2
1.1.12 display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-prefix
1.1.13 display ipv6 routing-table protocol
1.1.14 display ipv6 routing-table statistics
1.1.15 display ipv6 routing-table verbose
1.1.16 reset ip routing-table statistics protocol
1.1.17 reset ipv6 routing-table statistics protocol
Chapter 1 Routing Overview Commands
& Note:
l The term “router” in this document refers to a router in a generic sense or a Layer 3 switch running a routing protocol.
l Verify that the system already operates in IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack mode before displaying the information about IPv6 routing. For dual-stack mode configuration, see the part covering dual-stack in the IPv6 Configuration module.
1.1 Routing Overview Commands
1.1.1 display ip routing-table
Syntax
display ip routing-table [ verbose | | { begin | exclude | include } regular-expression ]
View
Any view
Parameter
verbose: Displays detailed routing table information, including that for inactive routes. With this argument absent, the command displays only summary information about active routes.
|: Uses a regular expression to filter output information.
begin: Displays routing table entries starting from the one specified by the regular expression.
include: Displays routing table entries specified by the regular expression.
exclude: Displays routing table entries other than those specified by the regular expression.
regular-expression: Regular expression, a string of 1 to 256 characters.
Table 1-1 Special characters for regular expressions
Character |
Meaning |
Remarks |
_ |
Underscore, functions similarly as a wildcard and matches one of the following: (^|$|[,(){}]) or a space, the beginning of a string, the end of a string. |
If it is not the first character in a regular expression, it can appear as many times as the command line length permits. If it is the first character in a regular expression, it can be followed with up to four underscores. If it appears intermittently in a regular expression, only the first group takes effect. |
( |
Left parenthesis, represents a stack push operation in a program. |
It is not recommended to use this character in a regular expression. |
. |
Full stop, a wildcard that matches any character, including a space. |
— |
* |
Asterisk, indicates that the character(s) to its left can appear 0 or more times. |
zo* matches z and zoo. |
+ |
Plus, indicates that the character(s) to its left can appear one or more times. |
zo+ matches zo and zoo, but not z. |
Description
Use the display ip routing-table command to display brief information about active routes in the routing table.
Use the display ip routing-table verbose command to display detailed information about all routes in the routing table.
Example
# Display brief information about active routes in the routing table.
<Sysname> display ip routing-table
Routing Tables: Public
Destinations : 4 Routes : 4
Destination/Mask Proto Pre Cost NextHop Interface
127.0.0.0/8 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
127.0.0.1/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
192.168.0.0/16 Direct 0 0 192.168.0.52 Vlan1
192.168.0.52/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
Table 1-2 Description on the fields of the display ip routing-table command
Field |
Description |
Destinations |
Number of destination addresses |
Routes |
Number of routes |
Destination/Mask |
Destination address/mask length |
Proto |
Protocol that presents the route |
Pre |
Priority of the route |
Cost |
Cost of the route |
Nexthop |
Address of the next hop on the route |
Interface |
Outbound interface for packets to be forwarded along the route |
# Display detailed information about all routes in the routing table.
<Sysname> display ip routing-table verbose
Routing Table : Public
Destinations : 5 Routes : 5
Destination: 0.0.0.0/0
Protocol: Static Process ID: 0
Preference: 60 Cost: 0
NextHop: 192.168.3.1 Interface:
RelyNextHop: 0.0.0.0 Neighbour: 0.0.0.0
Tunnel ID: 0x0 Label: NULL
State: Inactive Adv WaitQ Age: 1d19h58m11s
Tag: 0
Destination: 127.0.0.0/8
Protocol: Direct Process ID: 0
Preference: 0 Cost: 0
NextHop: 127.0.0.1 Interface: InLoopBack0
RelyNextHop: 0.0.0.0 Neighbour: 0.0.0.0
Tunnel ID: 0x0 Label: NULL
State: Active NoAdv Age: 1d19h58m14s
Tag: 0
Destination: 127.0.0.1/32
Protocol: Direct Process ID: 0
Preference: 0 Cost: 0
NextHop: 127.0.0.1 Interface: InLoopBack0
RelyNextHop: 0.0.0.0 Neighbour: 0.0.0.0
Tunnel ID: 0x0 Label: NULL
State: Active NoAdv Age: 1d19h58m14s
Tag: 0
Destination: 192.168.0.0/24
Protocol: Direct Process ID: 0
Preference: 0 Cost: 0
NextHop: 192.168.0.52 Interface: Vlan-interface1
RelyNextHop: 0.0.0.0 Neighbour: 0.0.0.0
Tunnel ID: 0x0 Label: NULL
State: Active Adv Age: 1d19h58m10s
Tag: 0
Destination: 192.168.0.52/32
Protocol: Direct Process ID: 0
Preference: 0 Cost: 0
NextHop: 127.0.0.1 Interface: InLoopBack0
RelyNextHop: 0.0.0.0 Neighbour: 0.0.0.0
Tunnel ID: 0x0 Label: NULL
State: Active NoAdv Age: 1d19h58m13s
Tag: 0
Displayed first are statistics for the whole routing table, followed by detailed description of each route (in sequence).
Table 1-3 Description on the fields of the display ip routing-table verbose command
Field |
Description |
Destination |
Destination address/mask length |
Protocol |
Protocol that presents the route |
Process ID |
Process ID |
Preference |
Priority of the route |
Cost |
Cost of the route |
NextHop |
Address of the next hop on the route |
Interface |
Outbound interface for packets to be forwarded along the route |
RelyNextHop |
The next hop address obtained through routing stack. |
Neighbour |
Neighboring address determined by Routing Protocol |
Tunnel ID |
Tunnel ID |
Label |
Label |
State |
Status of the route, which could be Active, Inactive, Adv, or NoAdv. |
Age |
Time that the route has been in the routing table, in the sequence of hour, minute, and second from left to right. |
Tag |
Route tag |
1.1.2 display ip routing-table acl
Syntax
display ip routing-table acl acl-number [ verbose ]
View
Any view
Parameter
acl-number: Basic ACL number, in the range of 2000 to 2999.
verbose: Displays detailed routing table information, including that for inactive routes. With this argument absent, the command displays only brief information about active routes.
Description
Use the display ip routing-table acl command to display information about routes permitted by a specified basic ACL.
This command is intended for the follow-up display of routing policies.
& Note:
If the specified ACL does not exit or it has no rules configured, the entire routing table is displayed.
Example
# Define basic ACL 2000 and set the route filtering rules.
<Sysname > system-view
[Sysname] acl number 2000
[Sysname-acl-basic-2000] rule permit source 10.1.0.0 0.0.255.255
[Sysname-acl-basic-2000] quit
# Display brief information about active routes permitted by basic ACL 2000.
[Sysname] display ip routing-table acl 2000
Routes Matched by Access list : 2000
Summary Count : 3
Destination/Mask Proto Pre Cost NextHop Interface
10.1.1.0/24 Direct 0 0 10.1.1.2 Vlan1
10.1.1.2/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
10.1.2.1/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
For detailed description of the above output, see Table 1-2.
# Display detailed information about both active and inactive routes permitted by basic ACL 2000.
[Sysname] display ip routing-table acl 2000 verbose
Routes Matched by Access list : 2000
Summary Count : 3
Destination: 10.1.1.0/24
Protocol: Direct Process ID: 0
Preference: 0 Cost: 0
NextHop: 10.1.1.2 Interface: Vlan-interface1
RelyNextHop: 0.0.0.0 Neighbour: 0.0.0.0
Tunnel ID: 0x0 Label: NULL
State: Active Adv Age: 02h13m21s
Tag: 0
Destination: 10.1.1.2/32
Protocol: Direct Process ID: 0
Preference: 0 Cost: 0
NextHop: 127.0.0.1 Interface: InLoopBack0
RelyNextHop: 0.0.0.0 Neighbour: 0.0.0.0
Tunnel ID: 0x0 Label: NULL
State: Active NoAdv Age: 02h13m21s
Tag: 0
Destination: 10.1.2.1/32
Protocol: Direct Process ID: 0
Preference: 0 Cost: 0
NextHop: 127.0.0.1 Interface: InLoopBack0
RelyNextHop: 0.0.0.0 Neighbour: 0.0.0.0
Tunnel ID: 0x0 Label: NULL
State: Active Adv Age: 00h03m13s
Tag: 0
For detailed description of the above output, see Table 1-3.
1.1.3 display ip routing-table ip-address
Syntax
display ip routing-table ip-address [ mask-length | mask ] [ longer-match ] [ verbose ]
View
Any view
Parameter
ip-address: Destination IP address, in dotted decimal format.
mask-length: IP address mask length.
mask: IP address mask in dotted decimal format.
longer-match: Displays the route with the longer mask.
verbose: Displays detailed routing table information, including that for inactive routes. With this argument absent, the command displays only summary information about active routes.
Description
Use the display ip routing-table ip-address command to display information about routes to a specified destination address.
Executing the command with different parameters yields different output:
l display ip routing-table ip-address
The system ANDs the input destination IP address with the subnet mask in each route entry; and ANDs the destination IP address in each route entry with its corresponding subnet mask.
If the two operations yield the same result for an entry and this entry is active, it is displayed.
l display ip routing-table ip-address mask
The system ANDs the input destination IP address with the input subnet mask; and ANDs the destination IP address in each route entry with the input subnet mask.
If the two operations yield the same result for an entry and the entry is active with a subnet mask less than or equal to the input subnet mask, the entry is displayed.
Only route entries that exactly match the input destination address and mask are displayed.
l display ip routing-table ip-address longer-match
The system ANDs the input destination IP address with the subnet mask in each route entry; and ANDs the destination IP address in each route entry with its corresponding subnet mask.
If the two operations yield the same result for multiple entries that are active, the one with longest mask length is displayed.
l display ip routing-table ip-address mask longer-match
The system ANDs the input destination IP address with the input subnet mask; and ANDs the destination IP address in each route entry with the input subnet mask.
If the two operations yield the same result for multiple entries with a mask less than or equal to the input subnet mask, the one that is active with longest mask length is displayed.
Example
# Display brief information about active routes in the routing table..
<Sysname> display ip routing-table
Routing Tables: Public
Destinations : 13 Routes : 13
Destination/Mask Proto Pre Cost NextHop Interface
10.1.2.0/24 Static 60 0 0.0.0.0 NULL0
10.1.2.16/28 Static 60 0 0.0.0.0 NULL0
10.1.2.32/28 Static 60 0 0.0.0.0 NULL0
10.1.3.0/24 Static 60 0 0.0.0.0 NULL0
10.1.4.0/24 Static 60 0 0.0.0.0 NULL0
127.0.0.0/8 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
127.0.0.1/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
192.168.0.0/24 Direct 0 0 192.168.0.52 Vlan1
192.168.0.52/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
192.168.100.1/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
192.168.200.0/24 Static 60 0 192.168.0.36 Vlan1
192.168.220.0/24 Static 60 0 192.168.0.236 Vlan1
192.168.220.0/28 Static 60 0 192.168.0.25 Vlan1
# Display route entries for the destination IP address 192.168.0.220.
<Sysname> display ip routing-table 192.168.220.0
Routing Table : Public
Summary Count : 2
Destination/Mask Proto Pre Cost NextHop Interface
192.168.220.0/24 Static 60 0 192.168.0.236 Vlan1
192.168.220.0/28 Static 60 0 192.168.0.25 Vlan1
For detailed description about the output, see Table 1-2.
# Display route entries by specifying a destination IP address and the longer-match keyword.
<Sysname> display ip routing-table 192.168.220.0 longer-match
Routing Table : Public
Summary Count : 1
Destination/Mask Proto Pre Cost NextHop Interface
192.168.220.0/28 Static 60 0 192.168.0.25 Vlan1
# Display route entries by specifying a destination IP address and mask.
<Sysname> display ip routing-table 192.168.220.0 32
Routing Table : Public
Summary Count : 2
Destination/Mask Proto Pre Cost NextHop Interface
192.168.220.0/24 Static 60 0 192.168.0.236 Vlan1
192.168.220.0/28 Static 60 0 192.168.0.25 Vlan1
# Display route entries by specifying a destination IP address and mask and the longer-match keyword.
<Sysname> display ip routing-table 192.168.220.0 32 longer-match
Routing Table : Public
Summary Count : 1
Destination/Mask Proto Pre Cost NextHop Interface
192.168.220.0/28 Static 60 0 192.168.0.25 Vlan1
For detailed description of the above output, see Table 1-3.
1.1.4 display ip routing-table ip-address1 ip-address2
Syntax
display ip routing-table ip-address1 { mask-length1 | mask1 } ip-address2 { mask-length2 | mask2 } [ verbose ]
View
Any view
Parameter
ip-address1, ip-address2: Destination IP address, in dotted decimal notation. ip-address1/mask1 and ip-address2/mask2 combine to determine an address range. The system ANDs ip-address1 with mask1 for the starting address of the address range and ANDs ip-address2 with mask2 for the ending address of the address range.
mask1, mask2: IP address mask, address length in dotted decimal notation or expressed as an integer.
mask-length1 mask-length2: IP address mask length.
verbose: Displays detailed routing table information, including that for both active and inactive routes. With this argument absent, the command displays summary information about active routes only.
Description
Use the display ip routing-table ip-address1 ip-address2 command to display information about the routes to the specified range of destination addresses.
Example
# Display information about the routes to the destination addresses ranging from 10.1.4.0 to 200.0.0.0.
<Sysname> display ip routing-table 10.1.4.0 28 200.0.0.0 24
Routing Table : Public
Destination/Mask Proto Pre Cost NextHop Interface
10.1.4.0/24 Static 60 0 0.0.0.0 NULL0
127.0.0.0/8 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
127.0.0.1/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
192.168.0.0/24 Direct 0 0 192.168.0.52 Vlan1
192.168.0.52/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
192.168.100.1/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
192.168.200.0/24 Static 60 0 192.168.0.36 Vlan1
For detailed description of the above output, see Table 1-2.
1.1.5 display ip routing-table ip-prefix
Syntax
display ip routing-table ip-prefix ip-prefix-name [ verbose ]
View
Any view
Parameter
ip-prefix-name: IP Prefix list name, a string of 1 to 19 characters.
verbose: Displays detailed routing table information, including that for inactive routes. With this argument absent, the command displays only brief information about active routes.
Description
Use the display ip routing-table ip-prefix command to display information about routes permitted by a specified prefix list.
This command is intended for the follow-up display of routing policies. If the specified prefix list is not configured, detailed information about all routes (with the verbose keyword) or brief information about all active routes (without the verbose keyword) is displayed.
Example
# Configure a prefix list named abc, permitting routes with a prefix of 192.168.0.0 and a mask length between 16 and 32.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] ip ip-prefix abc permit 192.168.0.0 16 less-equal 32
# Display brief information about active routes permitted by the prefix list abc.
<Sysname> display ip routing-table ip-prefix abc
Routes Matched by Prefix list : abc
Summary Count : 3
Destination/Mask Proto Pre Cost NextHop Interface
192.168.0.0/16 Direct 0 0 192.168.0.52 Vlan1
192.168.0.52/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
192.168.100.1/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
For detailed description of the above output, see Table 1-2.
# Display detailed information about both active and inactive routes permitted by IP prefix list abc.
<Sysname> display ip routing-table ip-prefix abc verbose
Routes Matched by Prefix list abc :
Summary Count : 3
Destination: 192.168.0.0/16
Protocol: Direct Process ID: 0
Preference: 0 Cost: 0
NextHop: 192.168.0.52 Interface: Vlan-interface1
RelyNextHop: 0.0.0.0 Neighbour: 0.0.0.0
Tunnel ID: 0x0 Label: NULL
State: Active Adv Age: 02h24m34s
Tag: 0
Destination: 192.168.0.52/32
Protocol: Direct Process ID: 0
Preference: 0 Cost: 0
NextHop: 127.0.0.1 Interface: InLoopBack0
RelyNextHop: 0.0.0.0 Neighbour: 0.0.0.0
Tunnel ID: 0x0 Label: NULL
State: Active NoAdv Age: 02h24m34s
Tag: 0
Destination: 192.168.100.1/32
Protocol: Direct Process ID: 0
Preference: 0 Cost: 0
NextHop: 127.0.0.1 Interface: InLoopBack0
RelyNextHop: 0.0.0.0 Neighbour: 0.0.0.0
Tunnel ID: 0x0 Label: NULL
State: Active Adv Age: 00h14m26s
Tag: 0
For detailed description of the above output, see Table 1-3.
1.1.6 display ip routing-table protocol
Syntax
display ip routing-table protocol protocol [ inactive | verbose ]
View
Any view
Parameter
protocol: Routing protocol. It can be BGP, DIRECT, ISIS, OSPF, RIP, or STATIC.
inactive: Displays information about only inactive routes. With this argument absent, the command displays information about both active and inactive routes.
verbose: Displays detailed routing table information. With this argument absent, the command displays brief routing table information.
Description
Use the display ip routing-table protocol command to display routing information of a specified routing protocol.
Example
# Display brief information about direct routes.
<Sysname> display ip routing-table protocol direct
Public Routing Table : Direct
Summary Count : 5
Direct Routing table Status : < Active>
Summary Count : 5
Destination/Mask Proto Pre Cost NextHop Interface
127.0.0.0/8 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
127.0.0.1/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
192.168.0.0/24 Direct 0 0 192.168.0.52 Vlan1
192.168.0.52/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
192.168.100.1/32 Direct 0 0 127.0.0.1 InLoop0
Direct Routing table Status : < Inactive>
Summary Count : 0
# Display summary information about static routes.
<Sysname> display ip routing-table protocol static
Public Routing Table : Static
Summary Count : 2
Static Routing table Status : < Active>
Summary Count : 1
Destination/Mask Proto Pre Cost NextHop Interface
192.168.200.0/24 Static 60 0 192.168.0.36 Vlan1
Static Routing table Status : < Inactive>
Summary Count : 1
Destination/Mask Proto Pre Cost NextHop Interface
192.168.120.0/24 Static 60 0 192.168.2.1
For detailed description of the above output, see Table 1-2.
1.1.7 display ip routing-table statistics
Syntax
display ip routing-table statistics
View
Any view
Parameter
None
Description
Use the display ip routing-table statistics command to display statistics about the public network routing table.
Example
# Display statistics about the routes in the routing table.
<Sysname> display ip routing-table statistics
Proto route active added deleted freed
DIRECT 4 4 4 0 0
STATIC 1 1 1 0 0
RIP 0 0 0 0 0
OSPF 0 0 0 0 0
IS-IS 0 0 0 0 0
BGP 0 0 0 0 0
Total 5 5 5 0 0
Table 1-4 Description on the fields of display ip routing-table statistics
Field |
Description |
Proto |
Origin of the routes. Possible values include O_ASE for OSPF_ASE routes, O_NSSA for OSPF NSSA, and AGGRE for aggregated routes. |
route |
Number of routes from the origin |
active |
Number of active routes from the origin |
added |
Number of routes added into the routing table since the router starts up or the last routing table reset operation |
deleted |
Number of routes marked as deleted, which will be freed after a period. |
freed |
Number of routes that got freed, that is, got removed permanently |
Total |
Sums for the numerical items above |
1.1.8 display ipv6 routing-table
Syntax
display ipv6 routing-table
View
Any view
Parameter
None
Description
Use the display ipv6 routing-table command to display brief routing table information, including destination IP address and prefix, protocol type, priority, metric, next hop and outbound interface.
The command displays only active routes, namely, the brief information about the current optimal routes.
Example
# Display brief routing table information
<Sysname> display ipv6 routing-table
Routing Table :
Destinations : 5 Routes : 5
Destination: ::1/128 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : ::1 Preference: 0
Interface : InLoop0 Cost : 0
Destination: 1::/64 Protocol : Static
NextHop : 10::2 Preference: 60
Interface : Vlan1 Cost : 0
Destination: 10::/64 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : 10::1 Preference: 0
Interface : Vlan1 Cost : 0
Destination: 10::1/128 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : ::1 Preference: 0
Interface : InLoop0 Cost : 0
Destination: FE80::/10 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : :: Preference: 0
Interface : NULL0 Cost : 0
Table 1-5 Description on the fields of the display ipv6 routing-table command
Field |
Description |
Destinations |
Number of destination addresses |
Routes |
Number of routes |
Destination |
Destination IPv6 address |
NextHop |
Next hop |
Preference |
Routing preference |
Interface |
Outbound interface |
Protocol |
Routing protocol of the route |
Cost |
Routing cost |
1.1.9 display ipv6 routing-table acl
Syntax
display ipv6 routing-table acl acl6-number [ verbose ]
View
Any view
Parameter
acl6-number: Basic IPv6 ACL number, in the range 2000 to 2999.
verbose: Displays both active and inactive verbose routing information permitted by the ACL. Without this keyword, only brief active routing information is displayed.
Description
Use the display ipv6 routing-table acl command to display routing information permitted by the IPv6 ACL.
Note that all the routing information will be displayed if the specified IPv6 ACL does not exist or no rule is defined in that ACL.
Example
# Display brief routing information permitted by ACL 2000.
<Sysname> display ipv6 routing-table acl 2000
Routes Matched by Access list 2000 :
Summary Count : 4
Destination: ::1/128 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : ::1 Preference: 0
Interface : InLoop0 Cost : 0
Destination: 3009::/64 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : 3009::1235 Preference: 0
Interface : Vlan1 Cost : 0
Destination: 3009::1235/128 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : ::1 Preference: 0
Interface : InLoop0 Cost : 0
Destination: FE80::/10 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : :: Preference: 0
Interface : NULL0 Cost : 0
Refer to Table 1-5 for description about the above output.
1.1.10 display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-address
Syntax
display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-address prefix-length [ longer-match ] [ verbose ]
View
Any view
Parameter
ipv6-address: Destination IPv6 address.
prefix-length: Prefix length, in the range 0 to 128.
longer-match: Displays routes matching the specified prefix.
verbose: Displays both active and inactive verbose routing information. Without this keyword, only brief active routing information is displayed.
Description
Use the display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-address command to display routing information about the specified destination IPv6 address.
Example
# Display brief information about the route matching the specified destination IPv6 address.
<Sysname> display ipv6 routing-table 10::1 64
Routing Table :
Summary Count : 1
Destination: 10::/64 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : 10::1 Preference: 0
Interface : Vlan1 Cost : 0
# Display brief information about routes with destinations falling into the specified destination.
<Sysname> display ipv6 routing-table 10::1 64 longer-match
Routing Table :
Summary Count : 2
Destination: 10::/64 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : 10::1 Preference: 0
Interface : Vlan1 Cost : 0
Destination: 10::1/128 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : ::1 Preference: 0
Interface : InLoop0 Cost : 0
Refer to Table 1-5 for description about the above output.
1.1.11 display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-address1 ipv6-address2
Syntax
display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-address1 prefix-length1 ipv6-address2 prefix-length2 [ verbose ]
View
Any view
Parameter
ipv6-address1/ipv6-address2: An IPv6 address range from IPv6 address1 to IPv6 address2.
prefix-length1/prefix-length2: Prefix length, in the range 0 to 128.
verbose: Displays both active and inactive verbose routing information. Without this keyword, only brief active routing information is displayed.
Description
Use the display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-address1 ipv6-address2 command to display routes with destinations falling into the specified IPv6 address range.
Example
# Display routes with destinations falling into the IPv6 address range.
<Sysname> display ipv6 routing-table 3:: 32 4:4:: 64
Routing Table :
Summary Count : 3
Destination: 3::/32 Protocol : Static
NextHop : :: Preference: 60
Interface : NULL0 Cost : 0
Destination: 4::/64 Protocol : Static
NextHop : :: Preference: 60
Interface : NULL0 Cost : 0
Destination: 4:4::/64 Protocol : Static
NextHop : :: Preference: 60
Interface : NULL0 Cost : 0
Refer to Table 1-5 for description about the above output.
1.1.12 display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-prefix
Syntax
display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-prefix ipv6-prefix-name [ verbose ]
View
Any view
Parameter
ipv6-prefix-name: Name of the IPv6 prefix list, in the range 1 to 19 characters.
verbose: Displays both active and inactive verbose routing information. Without this keyword, only brief active routing information is displayed.
Description
Use the display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-prefix command to display routes permitted by the IPv6 prefix list.
Example
# Display brief active routing information permitted by the IPv6 prefix list abc.
<Sysname> display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-prefix abc
Routes Matched by Prefix list abc :
Summary Count : 1
Destination: 100::/64 Protocol : Static
NextHop : :: Preference: 60
Interface : NULL0 Cost : 0
Refer to Table 1-5 for description about the above output.
1.1.13 display ipv6 routing-table protocol
Syntax
display ipv6 routing-table protocol protocol [ inactive | verbose ]
View
Any view
Parameter
protocol: Displays routes of a routing protocol, which can be bgp4+, isisv6, ospfv3, direct, ripng and static.
inactive: Displays only inactive routes. Without the keyword, all active and inactive routes are displayed.
verbose: Displays both active and inactive verbose routing information. Without this keyword, only brief active routing information is displayed.
Description
Use the display ipv6 routing-table protocol command to display routes of a specified routing protocol.
Example
# Display brief information about all direct routes.
<Sysname> display ipv6 routing-table protocol direct
Direct Routing Table :
Summary Count : 4
Direct Routing Table's Status : < Active >
Summary Count : 4
Destination: ::1/128 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : ::1 Preference: 0
Interface : InLoop0 Cost : 0
Destination: 3009::/64 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : 3009::1235 Preference: 0
Interface : Vlan1 Cost : 0
Destination: 3009::1235/128 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : ::1 Preference: 0
Interface : InLoop0 Cost : 0
Destination: FE80::/10 Protocol : Direct
NextHop : :: Preference: 0
Interface : NULL0 Cost : 0
Direct Routing Table's Status : < Inactive >
Summary Count : 0
Refer to Table 1-5 for description about the above output.
1.1.14 display ipv6 routing-table statistics
Syntax
display ipv6 routing-table statistics
View
Any view
Parameter
None
Description
Use the display ipv6 routing-table statistics command to display routing statistics, including total route number, added route number and deleted route number.
Example
# Display routing statistics.
<Sysname> display ipv6 routing-table statistics
Protocol route active added deleted freed
DIRECT 6 6 8 2 2
STATIC 3 1 3 0 0
RIPng 0 0 0 0 0
OSPFv3 0 0 0 0 0
IS-ISv6 0 0 0 0 0
BGP4+ 0 0 0 0 0
Total 9 7 11 2 2
Table 1-6 Description on the fields of the display ipv6 routing-table statistics command
Field |
Description |
Protocol |
Routing protocol |
route |
Route number of the protocol |
active |
Active route number |
added |
Routes added after the last startup of the router |
deleted |
Deleted routes, which will be released after a specified time |
freed |
Released (totally removed from the routing table) route number |
Total |
Total route number |
1.1.15 display ipv6 routing-table verbose
Syntax
display ipv6 routing-table verbose
View
Any view
Parameter
None
Description
Use the display ipv6 routing-table verbose command to display detailed information about all active and inactive routes, including the statistics of the entire routing table and information for each route.
Example
# Display detailed information about all active and inactive routes.
<Sysname> display ipv6 routing-table verbose
Routing Table :
Destinations : 1 Routes : 1
Destination : ::1 PrefixLength : 128
NextHop : ::1 Preference : 0
RelayNextHop : :: Tag : 0H
Neighbour : :: ProcessID : 0
Interface : InLoopBack0 Protocol : Direct
State : Active NoAdv Cost : 0
Tunnel ID : 0x0 Label : NULL
Table 1-7 Description on the fields of the display ipv6 routing-table verbose command
Field |
Description |
Destination |
Destination IPv6 address |
PrefixLength |
Prefix length of the address |
Nexthop |
Next hop |
Preference |
Routing preference |
RelayNextHop |
Relay next hop |
Tag |
Tag of the route |
Neighbour |
Neighbor address |
ProcessID |
Process ID |
Interface |
Outbound interface |
Protocol |
Routing protocol |
State |
State of the route, Active, Inactive, Adv (advertised), or NoAdv (not advertised) |
Cost |
Cost of the route |
Tunnel ID |
Tunnel ID |
Label |
Label |
Age |
Time that has elapsed since the route was generated |
1.1.16 reset ip routing-table statistics protocol
Syntax
reset ip routing-table statistics protocol { all | protocol }
View
User view
Parameter
all: All protocols.
protocol: Routing protocol. It can be BGP, ISIS, OSPF, DIRECT, RIP, or STATIC.
Description
Use the reset ip routing-table statistics protocol command to clear routing statistics for the routing table.
Example
# You can use the display ip routing-table statistics command to display the routing statistics before configure the reset ip routing-table statistics protocol command.
<Sysname>display ip routing-table statistics
Proto route active added deleted freed
DIRECT 4 4 4 0 0
STATIC 0 0 0 0 0
RIP 0 0 0 0 0
OSPF 0 0 0 0 0
IS-IS 0 0 0 0 0
BGP 0 0 0 0 0
Total 4 4 4 0 0
# Clear all routing statistics in the routing table.
<Sysname> reset ip routing-table statistics protocol all
# After running the reset ip routing-table statistics protocol command, all the statistics for routing table have been cleared.
<Sysname> display ip routing-table statistics
Proto route active added deleted freed
DIRECT 4 4 0 0 0
STATIC 0 0 0 0 0
RIP 0 0 0 0 0
OSPF 0 0 0 0 0
IS-IS 0 0 0 0 0
BGP 0 0 0 0 0
Total 4 4 0 0 0
1.1.17 reset ipv6 routing-table statistics protocol
Syntax
reset ipv6 routing-table statistics protocol { all | protocol }
View
User view
Parameter
all: Clears all route statistics in the routing table.
protocol: Clears route statistics of a specified protocol, bgp4+,isisv6,ospfv3,direct, ripng, or static.
Description
Use the reset ipv6 routing-table statistics protocol command to clear the routing table statistics.
Example
# You can use the display ipv6 routing-table statistics command to display the routing statistics before configure the reset ipv6 routing-table statistics protocol command.
<Sysname> display ipv6 routing-table statistics
Protocol route active added deleted freed
DIRECT 6 6 8 2 2
STATIC 3 1 3 0 0
RIPng 0 0 0 0 0
OSPFv3 0 0 0 0 0
IS-ISv6 0 0 0 0 0
BGP4+ 0 0 0 0 0
Total 9 7 11 2 2
# Clear all routing statistics in the routing table.
<Sysname> reset ipv6 routing-table statistics protocol all
# After running the reset ipv6 routing-table statistics protocol command, all the statistics for routing table have been cleared.
<Sysname> display ipv6 routing-table statistics
Protocol route active added deleted freed
DIRECT 6 6 0 0 0
STATIC 3 1 0 0 0
RIPng 0 0 0 0 0
OSPFv3 0 0 0 0 0
IS-ISv6 0 0 0 0 0
BGP4+ 0 0 0 0 0
Total 9 7 0 0 0