- Table of Contents
-
- 05-Network Connectivity
- 00-Preface
- 01-MAC address table commands
- 02-Ethernet link aggregation commands
- 03-VLAN commands
- 04-Loop detection commands
- 05-LLDP commands
- 06-Layer 2 forwarding commands
- 07-PPP commands
- 08-L2TP commands
- 09-ARP commands
- 10-IP addressing commands
- 11-DHCP commands
- 12-DHCPv6 commands
- 13-DNS commands
- 14-NAT commands
- 15-IP performance optimization commands
- 16-IPv6 basics commands
- 17-Policy-based routing commands
- 18-IPv6 policy-based routing commands
- 19-GRE commands
- 20-Basic IP routing commands
- 21-IP forwarding basics commands
- 22-Static routing commands
- 23-IPv6 static routing commands
- 24-IGMP snooping commands
- 25-MLD snooping commands
- Related Documents
-
Title | Size | Download |
---|---|---|
22-Static routing commands | 84.09 KB |
Contents
display route-static routing-table
ip route-static default-preference
ip route-static fast-reroute auto
Static routing commands
delete static-routes all
Use delete static-routes all to delete all static routes.
Syntax
delete static-routes all
Views
System view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Usage guidelines
CAUTION: This command might interrupt network communication and cause packet forwarding failure. Before executing the command, make sure you fully understand the potential impact on the network. |
When you use this command, the system will prompt you to confirm the operation before deleting all the static routes.
To delete one static route, use the undo ip route-static command. To delete all static routes, including the default route, use the delete static-routes all command.
Examples
# Delete all static routes.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] delete static-routes all
This will erase all IPv4 static routes and their configurations, you must reconfigure all static routes.
Are you sure?[Y/N]:y
Related commands
ip route-static
display route-static nib
Use display route-static nib to display static route next hop information.
Syntax
display route-static nib [ nib-id ] [ verbose ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
nib-id: Specifies a NIB by its ID, a hexadecimal string of 1 to ffffffff. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays all static route next hop information.
verbose: Displays detailed static route next hop information. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays brief static route next hop information.
Examples
# Displays brief static route next hop information.
<Sysname> display route-static nib
Total number of nexthop(s): 44
NibID: 0x11000000 Sequence: 0
Type: 0x21 Flushed: Yes
UserKey0: 0x111 VrfNthp: 0
UserKey1: 0x0 Nexthop: 0.0.0.0
IFIndex: 0x111 LocalAddr: 0.0.0.0
TopoNthp: 0
NibID: 0x11000001 Sequence: 1
Type: 0x41 Flushed: Yes
UserKey0: 0x0 VrfNthp: 5
UserKey1: 0x0 Nexthop: 2.2.2.2
IFIndex: 0x0 LocalAddr: 0.0.0.0
TopoNthp: 0
Table 1 Command output
Field |
Description |
NibID |
ID of the NIB. |
Sequence |
Sequence number of the NIB. |
Type |
Type of the NIB. |
Flushed |
Indicates whether the route with the NIB has been flushed to the FIB. |
UserKey0 |
Reserved data 1. |
UserKey1 |
Reserved data 2. |
VrfNthp |
This field is not supported in the current software version. Index of the VPN instance that the next hop belongs to. This field displays 0 if the next hop is on the public network. |
Nexthop |
Next hop address. |
IFIndex |
Interface index |
LocalAddr |
Local interface address. |
TopoNthp |
This field is not supported in the current software version. Index of the topology that contains the next hop. This field displays 0 if the next hop is on the public network. |
# Displays detailed static route next hop information.
<Sysname> display route-static nib verbose
Total number of nexthop(s): 44
NibID: 0x11000000 Sequence: 0
Type: 0x21 Flushed: Yes
UserKey0: 0x111 VrfNthp: 0
UserKey1: 0x0 Nexthop: 0.0.0.0
IFIndex: 0x111 LocalAddr: 0.0.0.0
TopoNthp: 0
RefCnt: 2 FlushRefCnt: 0
Flag: 0x2 Version: 1
1 nexthop(s):
PrefixIndex: 0 OrigNexthop: 0.0.0.0
RelyDepth: 0 RealNexthop: 0.0.0.0
Interface: NULL0 LocalAddr: 0.0.0.0
TunnelCnt: 0 Vrf: default-vrf
TunnelID: N/A Topology: base
Weight: 1000000
NibID: 0x11000001 Sequence: 1
Type: 0x41 Flushed: Yes
UserKey0: 0x0 VrfNthp: 5
UserKey1: 0x0 Nexthop: 2.2.2.2
IFIndex: 0x0 LocalAddr: 0.0.0.0
TopoNthp: 0
RefCnt: 1 FlushRefCnt: 0
Flag: 0x12 Version: 1
2 nexthop(s):
PrefixIndex: 0 OrigNexthop: 2.2.2.2
RelyDepth: 7 RealNexthop: 8.8.8.8
Interface: Vlan11 LocalAddr: 12.12.12.12
TunnelCnt: 0 Vrf: default-vrf
TunnelID: N/A Topology: base
Weight: 1000000
PrefixIndex: 0 OrigNexthop: 2.2.2.2
RelyDepth: 9 RealNexthop: 0.0.0.0
Interface: NULL0 LocalAddr: 0.0.0.0
TunnelCnt: 0 Vrf: default-vrf
TunnelID: N/A Topology: base
Weight: 1000000
...
Table 2 Command output
Field |
Description |
NibID |
ID of the NIB. |
Sequence |
Sequence number of the NIB. |
Type |
Type of the NIB. |
Flushed |
Indicates whether the route with the NIB has been flushed to the FIB. |
UserKey0 |
Reserved data 1. |
VrfNthp |
This field is not supported in the current software version. Index of the VPN instance that the next hop belongs to. This field displays 0 if the next hop is on the public network. |
UserKey1 |
Reserved data 2. |
Nexthop |
Next hop address. |
IFIndex |
Interface index. |
LocalAddr |
Local interface address. |
TopoNthp |
This field is not supported in the current software version. Index of the topology that contains the next hop. This field displays 0 if the next hop is on the public network. |
RefCnt |
Reference count of the next hop. |
FlushRefCnt |
Reference count of the next hop that is flushed to the FIB. |
Flag |
Flag of the next hop. |
Version |
Version of the next hop. |
x nexthop(s) |
Number of next hops. |
PrefixIndex |
Prefix index of the next hop for an ECMP route. |
OrigNexthop |
Original next hop. |
RelyDepth |
Recursion depth. |
RealNexthop |
Real next hop. |
Interface |
Output interface. |
localAddr |
Local interface address. |
TunnelCnt |
This field is not supported in the current software version. Number of tunnels after route recursion. |
Vrf |
This field is not supported in the current software version. VPN instance name. For the public network, this field displays default-vrf. |
TunnelID |
This field is not supported in the current software version. ID of the tunnel after route recursion. |
Topology |
This field is not supported in the current software version. Topology name. The topology name for the public network is base. |
Weight |
ECMP route weight. This field displays 0 for non-ECMP routes. |
display route-static routing-table
Use display route-static routing-table to display static routing table information.
Syntax
display route-static routing-table [ ip-address { mask-length | mask } ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
ip-address: Specifies the destination IP address in dotted decimal notation. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays all static routing table information.
mask-length: Specifies the mask length, an integer in the range of 0 to 32.
mask: Specifies the subnet mask in dotted decimal notation.
Examples
# Display static routing table information.
<Sysname> display route-static routing-table
Total number of routes: 24
Status: * - valid
*Destination: 0.0.0.0/0
NibID: 0x1100000a NextHop: 2.2.2.10
MainNibID: N/A BkNextHop: N/A
BkNibID: N/A Interface: Vlan-interface11
TableID: 0x2 BkInterface: Vlan-interface12
Flag: 0x82d01 BfdSrcIp: N/A
DbIndex: 0xd BfdIfIndex: 0x0
Type: Normal BfdVrfIndex: 0
TrackIndex: 0xffffffff Label: NULL
Preference: 60 vrfIndexDst: 0
BfdMode: N/A vrfIndexNH: 0
Permanent: 0 Tag: 0
Destination: 0.0.0.0/0
NibID: 0x1100000b NextHop: 2.2.2.11
MainNibID: N/A BkNextHop: N/A
BkNibID: N/A Interface: Vlan-interface13
TableID: 0x2 BkInterface: Vlan-interface14
Flag: 0x82d01 BfdSrcIp: N/A
DbIndex: 0xd BfdIfIndex: 0x0
Type: Normal BfdVrfIndex: 0
TrackIndex: 0xffffffff Label: NULL
Preference: 60 vrfIndexDst: 0
BfdMode: N/A vrfIndexNH: 0
Permanent: 0 Tag: 0
...
Table 3 Command output
Field |
Description |
destination |
Destination address/prefix. |
NibID |
ID of the NIB. |
MainNibID |
ID of the primary next hop for static route FRR. |
BkNibID |
ID of the backup next hop for static route FRR. |
NextHop |
Next hop address. |
BkNextHop |
Backup next hop address. |
Interface |
Output interface of the route. |
BkInterface |
Backup output interface. |
TableID |
ID of the table to which the route belongs. |
Flag |
Flag of the route. |
DbIndex |
Index of the database to which the route belongs. |
Type |
Route type: · Normal. · DHCP. · NAT. · IPsec. |
BfdSrcIp |
This field is not supported in the current software version. Source IP address of the indirect BFD session. |
BfdIfIndex |
This field is not supported in the current software version. Index of the interface where BFD is enabled. |
BfdVrfIndex |
This field is not supported in the current software version. Index of the VPN instance where BFD is enabled. This field displays 0 if BFD is enabled for the public network. |
BfdMode |
This field is not supported in the current software version. BFD session mode: · N/A—No BFD session is configured. · Ctrl—Control packet mode · Echo—Echo packet mode. |
TrackIndex |
NQA Track index. |
Label |
Label. |
vrfIndexDst |
This field is not supported in the current software version. Index of VPN instance that the destination belongs to. For the public network, this field displays 0. |
vrfIndexNH |
This field is not supported in the current software version. Index of the VPN instance that the next hop belongs to. For the public network, this field displays 0. |
Permanent |
Permanent static route flag. 1 indicates a permanent static route. |
ip route-static
Use ip route-static to configure a static route.
Use undo ip route-static to delete a static route.
Syntax
ip route-static { dest-address { mask-length | mask } | group group-name } interface-type interface-number [ next-hop-address ] [ permanent | track track-entry-number ] [ preference preference ] [ tag tag-value ] [ description text ]
ip route-static { dest-address { mask-length | mask } | group group-name } next-hop-address [ permanent | track track-entry-number ] [ preference preference ] [ tag tag-value ] [ description text ]
undo ip route-static { dest-address { mask-length | mask } | group group-name } [ interface-type interface-number [ next-hop-address ] | next-hop-address ] [ preference preference ]
Default
No static route is configured.
Views
System view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
dest-address: Specifies the destination IP address of the static route, in dotted decimal notation.
mask-length: Specifies the mask length, an integer in the range of 0 to 32.
mask: Specifies the subnet mask in dotted decimal notation.
group group-name: Specifies a static route group by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters.
interface-type interface-number: Specifies an output interface by its type and number. For more information, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.
next-hop-address: Specifies the IP address of the next hop, in dotted decimal notation. For more information, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.
permanent: Specifies the route as a permanent static route. If the output interface is down, the permanent static route is still active.
track track-entry-number: Associates the static route with a track entry specified by its number in the range of 1 to 1024. For more information about Track, see High Availability Configuration Guide.
preference preference: Specifies a preference for the static route, in the range of 1 to 255. The default is 60.
tag tag-value: Sets a tag value for marking the static route, in the range of 1 to 4294967295. The default is 0. Tags of routes are used for route control in routing policies.
description text: Configures a description of 1 to 60 characters for the static route. The description can include special characters, such as the space, except the question mark (?).
Usage guidelines
If the destination IP address and the mask are both 0.0.0.0 (or 0), the configured route is a default route. The default route is used for forwarding a packet matching no entry in the routing table.
Implement different routing policies to configure different route preferences. For example, to enable load sharing for multiple routes to the same destination, assign the same preference to the routes. To enable the routes to back up one another, assign different preferences to them.
Follow these guidelines when you specify the output interface or the next hop address of the static route:
· If the output interface is a Null 0 interface, no next hop address is required.
· If the output interface is a point-to-point interface, you can specify only the output interface. You do not need to change the configuration of the route even if the peer address is changed.
· Multiple next hops might exist if the output interface is a broadcast interface (for example, an Ethernet interface or VLAN interface). You must specify both the output interface and next hop IP address for the static route.
If you specify a static route group, all prefixes in the static route group will be assigned the next hop and output interface specified by using this command.
Examples
# Configure a static route, whose destination address is 1.1.1.1/24, next hop address is 2.2.2.2, tag value is 45, and description information is for internet.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] ip route-static 1.1.1.1 24 2.2.2.2 tag 45 description for internet
Related commands
display ip routing-table protocol
ip route-static-group
prefix
ip route-static default-preference
Use ip route-static default-preference to configure a default preference for static routes.
Use undo ip route-static default-preference to restore the default.
Syntax
ip route-static default-preference default-preference
undo ip route-static default-preference
Default
The default preference of static routes is 60.
Views
System view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
default-preference: Specifies a default preference for static routes, in the range of 1 to 255.
Usage guidelines
If no preference is specified for a static route, the default preference applies.
When the default preference is reconfigured, it applies only to newly added static routes.
Examples
# Set a default preference of 120 for static routes.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] ip route-static default-preference 120
Related commands
display ip routing-table protocol
ip route-static fast-reroute auto
Use ip route-static fast-reroute auto to configure static route FRR to automatically select a backup next hop.
Use undo ip route-static fast-reroute auto to disable static route FRR from automatically selecting a backup next hop.
Syntax
ip route-static fast-reroute auto
undo ip route-static fast-reroute auto
Default
Static route FRR is disabled from automatically selecting a backup next hop.
Views
System view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Examples
# Configure static route FRR to automatically select a backup next hop.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] ip route-static fast-reroute auto
ip route-static-group
Use ip route-static-group to create a static route group and enter its view, or enter the view of an existing static route group.
Use undo ip route-static-group to delete a static route group.
Syntax
ip route-static-group group-name
undo ip route-static-group group-name
Default
No static route groups exist.
Views
System view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
group-name: Specifies the static route group name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters.
Examples
# Create static route group test and enter its view.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] ip route-static-group test
[Sysname-route-static-group-test]
Related commands
ip route-static
prefix
prefix
Use prefix to add a static route prefix to a static route group.
Use undo prefix to delete a static route prefix from a static route group.
Syntax
prefix dest-address { mask-length | mask }
undo prefix dest-address { mask-length | mask }
Default
No static route prefix is added to a static route group.
Views
Static route group view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
dest-address: Specifies the destination IP address of the static route, in dotted decimal notation.
mask-length: Specifies the mask length, an integer in the range of 0 to 32.
mask: Specifies the subnet mask in dotted decimal notation.
Usage guidelines
Execute this command repeatedly to add multiple static route prefixes to a static route group.
After you add static route prefixes to a static route group, you can specify that group in the ip route-static group command to configure static routes with the prefixes. To configure more static routes, you only need to add new static route prefixes to the group.
Examples
# Add static route prefix 1.1.1.1/32 to static route group test.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] ip route-static-group test
[Sysname-route-static-group-test] prefix 1.1.1.1 32
Related commands
ip route-static
ip route-static-group