- Table of Contents
-
- H3C S9500 Operation Manual-Release2132[V2.03]-03 IP Routing Volume
- 00-1Cover
- 01-IP Routing Overview
- 02-BGP Configuration
- 03-IS-IS Configuration
- 04-OSPF Configuration
- 05-RIP Configuration
- 06-Routing Policy Configuration
- 07-Static Routing Configuration
- 08-IPv6 BGP Configuration
- 09-IPv6 IS-IS Configuration
- 10-IPv6 OSPFv3 Configuration
- 11-IPv6 RIPng Configuration
- 12-IPv6 Static Routing Configuration
- Related Documents
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Title | Size | Download |
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01-IP Routing Overview | 79.08 KB |
Table of Contents
1.1 IP Routing and Routing Table
1.2.1 Static Routing and Dynamic Routing
1.2.2 Classification of Dynamic Routing Protocols
1.2.3 Routing Protocols and Routing Priority
1.2.4 Load Balancing and Route Backup
1.2.5 Sharing of Routing Information
1.3 Displaying and Maintaining a Routing Table
Chapter 1 IP Routing Overview
Go to these sections for information you are interested in:
l IP Routing and Routing Table
l Displaying and Maintaining a Routing Table
& Note:
The term “router” or router icon in this document refers to a router in a generic sense or a Layer 3 switch.
1.1 IP Routing and Routing Table
1.1.1 Routing
Routing in the Internet is achieved through routers. Upon receiving a packet, a router finds an optimal route based on the destination address and forwards the packet to the next router in the path until the packet reaches the last router, which forwards the packet to the intended destination host.
1.1.2 Routing Table
I. Routing table
Routing tables play a key role in routing. Each router maintains a routing table, and each entry in the table specifies which physical interface a packet destined for a certain destination should go out to reach the next hop (the next router) or the directly connected destination.
Routes in a routing table can be divided into three categories by origin:
l Direct routes: Routes discovered by data link protocols, also known as interface routes.
l Static routes: Routes that are manually configured.
l Dynamic routes: Routes that are discovered dynamically by routing protocols.
II. Contents of a routing table
A routing table includes the following key items:
l Destination address: Destination IP address or destination network.
l Network mask: Specifies, in company with the destination address, the address of the destination network. A logical AND operation between the destination address and the network mask yields the address of the destination network. For example, if the destination address is 129.102.8.10 and the mask 255.255.0.0, the address of the destination network is 129.102.0.0. A network mask is made of a certain number of consecutive 1s. It can be expressed in dotted decimal format or by the number of the 1s.
l Outbound interface: Specifies the interface through which the IP packets are to be forwarded.
l IP address of the next hop: Specifies the address of the next router on the path. If only the outbound interface is configured, its address will be the IP address of the next hop.
l Priority for the route. Routes to the same destination but having different nexthops may have different priorities and be found by various routing protocols or manually configured. The optimal route is the one with the highest priority (with the smallest metric).
Routes can be divided into two categories by destination:
l Subnet routes: The destination is a subnet.
l Host routes: The destination is a host.
Based on whether the destination is directly connected to a given router, routes can be divided into:
l Direct routes: The destination is directly connected to the router.
l Indirect routes: The destination is not directly connected to the router.
To prevent the routing table from getting too large, you can configure a default route. All packets without matching entry in the routing table will be forwarded through the default route.
In the following figure, the IP address on each cloud represents the address of the network. Router G resides in three networks and therefore has three IP addresses for its three physical interfaces. Its routing table is shown below the network topology.
Destination Network |
Nexthop |
Interface |
11.0.0.0 |
11.0.0.1 |
2 |
12.0.0.0 |
12.0.0.1 |
1 |
13.0.0.0 |
12.0.0.2 |
1 |
14.0.0.0 |
14.0.0.4 |
3 |
15.0.0.0 |
14.0.0.2 |
3 |
16.0.0.0 |
14.0.0.2 |
3 |
17.0.0.0 |
11.0.0.2 |
2 |
Figure 1-1 A sample routing table
1.2 Routing Protocol Overview
1.2.1 Static Routing and Dynamic Routing
Static routing is easy to configure and requires less system resources. It works well in small, stable networks with simple topologies. Its major drawback is that you must perform routing configuration again whenever the network topology changes; it cannot adjust to network changes by itself.
Dynamic routing is based on dynamic routing protocols, which can detect network topology changes and recalculate the routes accordingly. Therefore, dynamic routing is suitable for large networks. Its disadvantages are that it is complicated to configure, and that it not only imposes higher requirements on the system, but also eats away a certain amount of network resources.
1.2.2 Classification of Dynamic Routing Protocols
Dynamic routing protocols can be classified based on the following standards:
I. Operational scope
l Interior Gateway Protocols (IGPs): Work within an autonomous system, typically include RIP, OSPF, and IS-IS.
l Exterior Gateway Protocols (EGPs): Work between autonomous systems. The most popular one is BGP.
& Note:
An autonomous system refers to a group of routers that share the same routing policy and work under the same administration.
II. Routing algorithm
l Distance-vector protocols: Include mainly RIP and BGP. BGP is also considered a path-vector protocol.
l Link-state protocols: Include mainly OSPF and IS-IS.
The main differences between the above two types of routing algorithms lie in the way routes are discovered and calculated.
III. Type of the destination address
l Unicast routing protocols: Includes RIP, OSPF, BGP, and IS-IS.
l Multicast routing protocols: Includes PIM-SM and PIM-DM.
This chapter focuses on unicast routing protocols. For information on multicast routing protocols, refer to IP Multicast Volume.
IV. Version of IP protocol
IPv4 routing protocols: RIP, OSPF, BGP and IS-IS.
IPv6 routing protocols: RIPng, OSPFv3, BGP4+, IPv6 IS-IS.
1.2.3 Routing Protocols and Routing Priority
The following table lists some routing protocols and the default priorities for routes found by them:
Routing approach |
Priority |
DIRECT |
0 |
OSPF |
10 |
IS-IS |
15 |
STATIC |
60 |
RIP |
100 |
OSPF ASE |
150 |
OSPF NSSA |
150 |
IBGP |
255 |
EBGP |
255 |
UNKNOWN |
255 |
l The smaller the priority value, the higher the priority.
l The priority for a direct route is always 0, which you cannot change. Any other type of routes can have their priorities manually configured.
l Each static route can be configured with a different priority.
l IPv4 and IPv6 routes have their own respective routing tables.
1.2.4 Load Balancing and Route Backup
I. Load Balancing
In multi-route mode, a routing protocol can be configured with multiple equal-cost routes to the same destination. These routes have the same priority and will all be used to accomplish load balancing if there is no route with a higher priority available.
A given routing protocol may find several routes with the same metric to the same destination, and if this protocol has the highest priority among all the active protocols, these routes will be considered valid routes for load balancing.
II. Route backup
Route backup can help improve network reliability. With route backup, you can configure multiple routes to the same destination, expecting the one with the highest priority to be the main route and all the rest backup routes.
Under normal circumstances, packets are forwarded through the main route. When the main route goes down, the route with the highest priority among the backup routes is selected to forward packets. When the main route recovers, the route selection process is performed again and the main route is selected again to forward packets.
1.2.5 Sharing of Routing Information
As different routing protocols use different algorithms to calculate routes, they may find different routes. In a large network with multiple routing protocols, it is required for routing protocols to share their routing information. Each routing protocol has its own route redistribution mechanism. For detailed information, refer to IP Routing Volume.
1.3 Displaying and Maintaining a Routing Table
To do… |
Use the command… |
Remarks |
Display brief information about the active routes in the routing table |
display ip routing-table [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] [ verbose | | { begin | exclude | include } regular-expression ] |
Available in any view |
Display information about routes to the specified destination |
display ip routing-table ip-address [ mask-length | mask ] [ longer-match ] [ verbose ] |
Available in any view |
Display information about routes with destination addresses in the specified range |
display ip routing-table ip-address1 { mask-length | mask } ip-address2 { mask-length | mask } [ verbose ] |
Available in any view |
Display information about routes permitted by an IPv4 basic ACL |
display ip routing-table acl acl-number [ verbose ] |
Available in any view |
Display routing information permitted by an IPv4 prefix list |
display ip routing-table ip-prefix ip-prefix-name [ verbose ] |
Available in any view |
Display routes of a routing protocol |
display ip routing-table protocol protocol [ inactive | verbose ] |
Available in any view |
Display statistics about the IP routing table or a VPN routing table |
display ip routing-table [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] statistics |
Available in any view |
Clear statistics for the public routing table or a VPN routing table |
reset ip routing-table statistics protocol [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] { all | protocol } |
Available in user view |
Display brief IPv6 routing table information |
display ipv6 routing-table |
Available in any view |
Display verbose IPv6 routing table information |
display ipv6 routing-table verbose |
Available in any view |
Display routing information for a specified destination IPv6 address |
display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-address prefix-length [ longer-match ] [ verbose ] |
Available in any view |
Display routing information permitted by an IPv6 ACL |
display ipv6 routing-table acl acl6-number [ verbose ] |
Available in any view |
Display routing information permitted by an IPv6 prefix list |
display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-prefix ipv6-prefix-name [ verbose ] |
Available in any view |
Display IPv6 routing information of a routing protocol |
display ipv6 routing-table protocol protocol [ inactive | verbose ] |
Available in any view |
Display IPv6 routing statistics |
display ipv6 routing-table statistics |
Available in any view |
Display IPv6 routing information for an IPv6 address range |
display ipv6 routing-table ipv6-address1 prefix-length1 ipv6-address2 prefix-length2 [ verbose ] |
Available in any view |
Clear specified IPv6 routing table statistics |
reset ipv6 routing-table statistics protocol { all | protocol } |
Available in user view |