- Table of Contents
-
- 06-Network
- 01-Scanner
- 02-VRF
- 03-Interface
- 04-Interface pairs
- 05-Interface collaboration
- 06-Security zones
- 07-VLAN
- 08-MAC
- 09-DNS
- 10-ARP
- 11-ND
- 12-Forwarding advanced settings
- 13-ALG
- 14-GRE
- 15-IPsec
- 16-ADVPN
- 17-L2TP
- 18-SSL VPN
- 19-Routing table
- 20-Static routing
- 21-Policy-based routing
- 22-OSPF
- 23-BGP
- 24-RIP
- 25-IPv4 multicast routing
- 26-IPv6 multicast routing
- 27-PIM
- 28-IGMP
- 29-MLD
- 30-DHCP
- 31-HTTP
- 32-SSH
- 33-NTP
- 34-FTP
- 35-Telnet
- 36-MAC authentication
- 37-MAC address whitelist
- 38-MAC access silent MAC info
- 39-MAC access advanced settings
- 40-IP authenticationdocx
- 41-IPv4 whitelist
- 42-IPv6 whitelist
- 43-4G
- 44-Wireless
- Related Documents
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Title | Size | Download |
---|---|---|
20-Static routing | 12.81 KB |
Static routing
Introduction
Static routes are manually configured. If a network's topology is simple, you only need to configure static routes for the network to work correctly.
Static routes cannot adapt to network topology changes. If a fault or a topological change occurs in the network, the network administrator must modify the static routes manually.
A default route is used to forward packets that do not match any specific routing entry in the routing table. You can configure a default IPv4 route with destination address 0.0.0.0/0 and configure a default IPv6 route with destination address ::/0.