06-Layer 3—IP Routing Command Reference

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05-IS-IS commands
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Contents

IS-IS commands· 1

address-family ipv4· 1

address-family ipv6· 1

advertise link-attributes· 2

area-authentication send-only· 3

area-authentication-mode· 3

auto-cost enable· 5

bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost 6

bfd all-interfaces enable· 8

bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj 9

bandwidth-reference· 10

circuit-cost 11

cost-style· 12

default-route-advertise· 12

display isis· 13

display isis event-log graceful-restart 20

display isis event-log lsp· 21

display isis event-log spf 23

display isis global-statistics· 40

display isis graceful-restart status· 42

display isis interface· 43

display isis led· 50

display isis lsdb statistics· 54

display isis mesh-group· 56

display isis name-table· 57

display isis packet 57

display isis peer 66

display isis redistribute· 69

display isis route· 72

display isis spf-tree· 79

display isis statistics· 93

display osi 95

display osi statistics· 96

distribute· 98

domain-authentication send-only· 99

domain-authentication-mode· 99

fast-reroute· 101

fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd· 102

fast-reroute tiebreaker 103

filter-policy export 104

filter-policy import 106

flash-flood· 107

graceful-restart 108

graceful-restart suppress-sa· 108

graceful-restart t1· 109

graceful-restart t2· 110

graceful-restart t3· 111

ignore-att 112

import-route· 112

import-route isis level-1 into level-2· 114

import-route isis level-2 into level-1· 116

import-route isisv6 level-1 into level-2· 117

import-route isisv6 level-2 into level-1· 118

import-route limit 119

isis· 119

isis authentication send-only· 120

isis authentication-mode· 121

isis bfd adjust-cost 123

isis bfd adjust-cost exclude· 124

isis bfd enable· 125

isis bfd exclude· 126

isis bfd session-restrict-adj 126

isis bfd session-restrict-adj exclude· 128

isis circuit-level 128

isis circuit-type p2p· 129

isis cost 130

isis dis-name· 131

isis dis-priority· 131

isis enable· 132

isis fast-reroute lfa-backup exclude· 133

isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost 134

isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost exclude· 135

isis ipv6 bfd enable· 136

isis ipv6 bfd exclude· 137

isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj 137

isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj exclude· 139

isis ipv6 cost 139

isis ipv6 enable· 140

isis ipv6 fast-reroute lfa-backup exclude· 141

isis ipv6 prefix-suppression· 142

isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd· 142

isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd exclude· 143

isis ipv6 tag· 144

isis link-delay· 145

isis link-quality adjust-cost 146

isis mesh-group· 147

isis mib-binding· 148

isis peer hold-max-cost duration· 148

isis peer-ip-check· 149

isis prefix-suppression· 150

isis primary-path-detect bfd· 150

isis primary-path-detect bfd exclude· 152

isis silent 152

isis small-hello· 153

isis tag· 153

isis timer csnp· 154

isis timer hello· 155

isis timer holding-multiplier 156

isis timer lsp· 157

isis timer retransmit 157

is-level 158

is-name· 159

is-name map· 160

isolate enable· 160

ispf enable· 161

log-peer-change· 162

lsp-fragments-extend· 162

lsp-length originate· 163

lsp-length receive· 163

maximum load-balancing· 164

metric-bandwidth advertisement enable· 165

metric-bandwidth suppression· 166

metric-delay advertisement enable· 167

metric-delay suppression· 167

metric-type· 169

multi-instance enable· 169

multi-topology· 170

network-entity· 171

overload adjust-cost 172

pic· 173

preference· 174

prefix-priority· 175

priority· 175

reset isis all 176

reset isis event-log graceful-restart 177

reset isis event-log lsp· 177

reset isis event-log spf 178

reset isis packet 178

reset isis peer 179

reset osi statistics· 179

set-att 180

set-overload· 181

shutdown process· 182

snmp context-name· 183

snmp-agent trap enable isis· 183

summary· 185

timer lsp-arrival 186

timer lsp-flood suppress-flapping· 187

timer lsp-generation· 187

timer lsp-generation suppress-flapping· 188

timer lsp-max-age· 189

timer lsp-refresh· 190

timer purge-zero-lsp route-calculate-delay· 190

timer route-calculate suppress-flapping· 191

timer spf 192

virtual-system·· 193

 


IS-IS commands

address-family ipv4

Use address-family ipv4 to create the IS-IS IPv4 address family and enter its view.

Use undo address-family ipv4 to delete the IS-IS IPv4 address family and all configurations in the view.

Syntax

address-family ipv4 [ unicast ]

undo address-family ipv4 [ unicast ]

Default

No IS-IS IPv4 address family exists.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

unicast: Specifies the unicast address family (the default).

Examples

# Create the IS-IS IPv4 address family and enter its view.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 100

[Sysname-isis-100] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-100-ipv4]

address-family ipv6

Use address-family ipv6 to create the IS-IS IPv6 address family and enter its view.

Use undo address-family ipv6 to remove the IS-IS IPv6 address family and all configurations in the view.

Syntax

address-family ipv6 [ unicast ]

undo address-family ipv6 [ unicast ]

Default

No IS-IS IPv6 address family exists.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

unicast: Specifies the unicast address family (the default).

Usage guidelines

This command enables IPv6 for an IS-IS process.

Examples

# Create the IS-IS IPv6 address family and enter its view.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 100

[Sysname-isis-100] address-family ipv6

[Sysname-isis-100-ipv6]

advertise link-attributes

Use advertise link-attributes to enable IS-IS to advertise link attributes in LSPs.

Use undo advertise link-attributes to restore the default.

Syntax

advertise link-attributes

undo advertise link-attributes

Default

IS-IS does not advertise link attributes in LSPs.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 address family view

IS-IS IPv6 address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

Link attributes advertised in LSPs include the following:

·     IP address.

·     Link delay information. (The attribute is included after you execute the isis link-delay command.)

·     Link bandwidth information. (The attribute is included after you execute the metric-bandwidth advertisement enable command.)

Multiple P2P neighbors might exist between two devices. To ensure correct route calculation, configure each device to advertise IP address of the local interface to its neighbors by using the advertise link-attributes or router-id command.

You can execute this command only after the link cost style is wide, compatible or wide-compatible.

Examples

# Enable IS-IS process 1 to advertise link attributes in LSPs.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] advertise link-attributes

Related commands

cost-style

metric-bandwidth advertisement enable

metric-delay advertisement enable

router-id (Segment Routing Command Reference)

area-authentication send-only

Use area-authentication send-only to configure IS-IS not to check the authentication information in the received Level-1 packets, including LSPs, CSNPs, and PSNPs.

Use undo area-authentication send-only to restore the default.

Syntax

area-authentication send-only

undo area-authentication send-only

Default

When area authentication mode and key are configured, a Level-1 or Level-1-2 router checks the authentication information in the received packets.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

When area authentication mode and key are configured, a Level-1 or Level-1-2 router adds the key in the specified mode into transmitted Level-1 packets (including LSPs, CSNPs, and PSNPs). It also checks the key in the received Level-1 packets.

To prevent packet exchange failure in case of an authentication key change, configure IS-IS not to check the authentication information in the received packets.

Examples

# Configure IS-IS not to check the authentication information in the received packets.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] area-authentication send-only

Related commands

area-authentication-mode

domain-authentication send-only

isis authentication send-only

area-authentication-mode

Use area-authentication-mode to specify an area authentication mode and a key.

Use undo area-authentication-mode to restore the default.

Syntax

area-authentication-mode { { gca key-id { hmac-sha-1 | hmac-sha-224 | hmac-sha-256 | hmac-sha-384 | hmac-sha-512 } [ nonstandard ] | md5 | simple } { cipher | plain } string | keychain keychain-name } [ ip | osi ]

undo area-authentication-mode

Default

No area authentication mode or key is configured.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

gca: Specifies the Generic Cryptographic Authentication (GCA) mode.

key-id: Uniquely identifies an SA in the range of 1 to 65535. The sender inserts the Key ID into the authentication TLV, and the receiver authenticates the packet by using the SA that is selected based on the Key ID.

hmac-sha-1: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-1 algorithm.

hmac-sha-224: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-224 algorithm.

hmac-sha-256: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-256 algorithm.

hmac-sha-384: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-384 algorithm.

hmac-sha-512: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-512 algorithm.

nonstandard: Specifies the nonstandard GCA mode.

md5: Specifies the MD5 authentication mode.

simple: Specifies the simple authentication mode.

cipher: Specifies a key in encrypted form.

plain: Specifies a key in plaintext form. For security purposes, the key specified in plaintext form will be stored in encrypted form.

string: Specifies the key. In simple authentication mode and GCA authentication mode, the plaintext form of the key is a case-sensitive string of 1 to 16 characters, and the encrypted form is a case-sensitive string of 33 to 53 characters. In MD5 authentication mode, the plaintext form of the key is a case-sensitive string of 1 to 255 characters, and the encrypted form is a case-sensitive string of 33 to 373 characters.

keychain: Specifies the keychain authentication mode.

keychain-name: Specifies a keychain by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters.

ip: Checks IP-related fields in LSPs.

osi: Checks OSI-related fields in LSPs.

Usage guidelines

Area authentication enables IS-IS to discard routes from untrusted routers.

The key in the specified mode is inserted into all outbound Level-1 packets (LSP, CSNP, and PSNP) and is used to authenticate inbound Level-1 packets.

IS-IS keychain authentication can operate correctly only when the keys in the keychain use the HMAC-MD5 authentication algorithm.

·     Before IS-IS sends a Level-1 packet, it uses the valid send key obtained from the keychain to authenticate the packet. If no valid send key exists or the valid send key does not use the HMAC-MD5 algorithm, the authentication fails and the packet does not contain authentication information.

·     After IS-IS receives a Level-1 packet, it uses a valid accept key obtained from the keychain to authenticate the packet. If no valid accept key exists or all valid accept keys fail to authenticate the packet, the authentication fails and the packet is discarded.

Routers in an area must have the same authentication mode and key.

If neither ip nor osi is specified, OSI-related fields are checked.

When you specify the GCA mode, follow these guidelines:

·     If you do not specify the nonstandard keyword, the device can communicate only with devices that use the GCA mode.

·     If you specify the nonstandard keyword, the device can communicate only with devices that use the nonstandard GCA mode.

In MD5 authentication mode, execute the undo area-authentication-mode command before version switch if the key lengths supported by the two versions are different.

Examples

# Set the area authentication mode to simple, and set the plaintext key to 123456.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] area-authentication-mode simple plain 123456

Related commands

area-authentication send-only

domain-authentication-mode

isis authentication-mode

auto-cost enable

Use auto-cost enable to enable automatic link cost calculation.

Use undo auto-cost enable to disable automatic link cost calculation.

Syntax

auto-cost enable

undo auto-cost enable

Default

Automatic link cost calculation is disabled.

Views

IS-IS view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

After automatic link cost calculation is enabled, the link cost is automatically calculated based on the bandwidth reference value of an interface. When the cost-style is wide or wide-compatible, the cost value of an interface is calculated by using the following formula: Cost = (Reference bandwidth value / Expected bandwidth value) × 10. For other cost styles, Table 1 applies.

Table 1 Automatic cost calculation scheme for cost styles other than wide and wide-compatible

Interface bandwidth

Cost

≤10 Mbps

60

≤100 Mbps

50

≤155 Mbps

40

≤622 Mbps

30

≤2500 Mbps

20

>2500 Mbps

10

Examples

# Enable automatic link cost calculation for IS-IS process 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] auto-cost enable

Related commands

bandwidth-reference

cost-style

isis cost

isis ipv6 cost

bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost

Use bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost to enable BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment for an IS-IS process.

Use undo bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost to disable BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment for an IS-IS process.

Syntax

bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost { cost-offset | max }

undo bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost

Default

BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment is disabled.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 address family view

IS-IS IPv6 address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

cost-offset: Specifies the interface cost adjustment value. The value range for this argument is 1 to 16777213. When the BFD session goes down, the interface cost is cost-offset plus the original interface cost, and cannot exceed 16777214.

max: Sets the interface cost to the maximum value (16777214) when the BFD session goes down.

Usage guidelines

IMPORTANT

IMPORTANT:

For the bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost command to take effect on an IS-IS process, enable BFD for that IS-IS process first.

After you enable BFD for IS-IS link failure detection, the IS-IS neighbor relationship goes down when the BFD session is down and comes up when the BFD session is up. When the BFD session state changes frequently, IS-IS neighbor relationship flapping will occur. The running of services (such as BGP) that rely on IS-IS might be interrupted. To resolve this issue, use one of the following commands to enable BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment for IS-IS:

·     bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost

·     isis bfd adjust-cost

·     isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost

These commands are different as follows:

·     The bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost command takes effect on all interfaces in an IPv4 or IPv6 IS-IS process. After you execute this command, IS-IS adjusts the interface cost value as follows:

¡     When the BFD session on an interface in the IS-IS process goes down, IS-IS increases the cost value for the interface.

¡     When the BFD session on an interface in the IS-IS process comes up again, IS-IS restores the cost value for the interface to the original value.

·     The isis bfd adjust-cost and isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost commands take effect only on one IS-IS interface. To enable BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment on a single interface, perform the following tasks:

a.     Make sure the IS-IS process to which the interface belongs is not enabled with BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment.

You can use the undo bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost command to disable this feature for an IS-IS process.

b.     Use the isis bfd adjust-cost or isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost command to enable this feature on the interface.

·     For an IS-IS interface, the configuration of the isis bfd adjust-cost or isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost command takes precedence over that of the bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost command.

Examples

# Enable BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment for IS-IS process 1, and set the interface cost adjustment value to 100.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost 100

Related commands

isis bfd adjust-cost

isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost

bfd all-interfaces enable

Use bfd all-interfaces enable to enable BFD for an IS-IS process.

Use undo bfd all-interfaces enable to disable BFD for an IS-IS process.

Syntax

bfd all-interfaces enable

undo bfd all-interfaces enable

Default

BFD is disabled for an IS-IS process.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 address family view

IS-IS IPv6 address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

IS-IS exchanges hello packets at specific intervals with its neighbors to detect neighbor state changes. If IS-IS does not receive any hello packets from a neighbor within the advertised neighbor relationship hold time, it considers the neighbor down and recalculates the routes. The hold time is the hello multiplier multiplied by the hello interval and the default hold time is 30 seconds. This mechanism is not efficient at neighbor state change detection. Serious packet loss might occur when a neighbor goes down.

To resolve this issue, use this command to enable BFD for the IS-IS process. BFD provides a single mechanism to quickly detect and monitor the connectivity of links between IS-IS neighbors, reducing route convergence time.

You can use the bfd all-interfaces enable, isis bfd enable, or isis ipv6 bfd enable command to enable IS-IS BFD. These commands are different as follows:

·     The bfd all-interfaces enable command enables BFD on all interfaces in an IPv4 or IPv6 IS-IS process.

·     The isis bfd enable and isis ipv6 bfd enable commands take effect only on one IS-IS interface. To enable BFD on a single IS-IS interface, perform the following tasks:

a.     Make sure the IS-IS process to which the interface belongs is not enabled with BFD.

You can use the undo bfd all-interfaces enable command to disable BFD for an IS-IS process.

b.     Use the isis bfd enable or isis ipv6 bfd enable command to enable BFD on the IS-IS interface.

Examples

# Enable BFD for IS-IS process 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] bfd all-interfaces enable

Related commands

isis bfd enable

isis ipv6 bfd enable

bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj

Use bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj to enable BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance for an IS-IS process.

Use undo bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj to disable BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance for an IS-IS process.

Syntax

bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj

undo bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj

Default

BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance is disabled for an IS-IS process.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 address family view

IS-IS IPv6 address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

IMPORTANT

IMPORTANT:

For the bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj command to take effect on an IS-IS process, enable BFD for that IS-IS process first.

When BFD detects a Layer 3 forwarding failure between two devices, the BFD session goes down, causing the IPv4 IS-IS adjacency to go down. If Layer 2 forwarding is still available, the devices still can exchange IS-IS packets and re-establish the adjacency. This might cause traffic loss.

To avoid the issue, execute this command on both the local and remote devices. This command enables the interfaces in these IS-IS processes to carry BFD-enabled TLVs in hello packets. After the BFD session between the two devices goes down, the devices do not establish an adjacency if the exchanged BFD-enabled TLVs are identical.

If you configure this command for an existing adjacency, the BFD session state does not affect the adjacency relationship within the hold time. This mechanism avoids adjacency flappings during BFD session establishment.

You can use one of the following commands to enable BFD session state-based control of IS-IS adjacency establishment and maintenance:

·     bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj

·     isis bfd session-restrict-adj

·     isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj

These commands are different as follows:

·     The bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj command takes effect on all interfaces in an IPv4 or IPv6 IS-IS process.

·     The isis bfd session-restrict-adj and isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj commands take effect only on one IS-IS interface. To enable BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance on a single IS-IS interface, perform the following tasks:

a.     Make sure the IS-IS process to which the IS-IS interface belongs is not enabled with BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance.

You can use the undo bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj command to disable this feature for an IS-IS process.

b.     Use the isis bfd session-restrict-adj or isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj command to enable this feature on the IS-IS interface.

Examples

# Enable BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance for IS-IS process 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj

Related commands

bfd all-interfaces enable

isis bfd session-restrict-adj

isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj

bandwidth-reference

Use bandwidth-reference to set the bandwidth reference value for automatic link cost calculation.

Use undo bandwidth-reference to restore the default.

Syntax

bandwidth-reference value

undo bandwidth-reference

Default

The bandwidth reference value is 100 Mbps.

Views

IS-IS view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

value: Specifies the bandwidth reference value in the range of 1 to 2147483648 Mbps.

Examples

# Set the bandwidth reference of IS-IS process 1 to 200 Mbps.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] bandwidth-reference 200

Related commands

auto-cost enable

isis cost

circuit-cost

Use circuit-cost to set a global IS-IS link cost.

Use undo circuit-cost to remove the configuration.

Syntax

circuit-cost cost-value [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo circuit-cost [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

No global link cost is configured.

Views

IS-IS view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

cost-value: Specifies the link cost value. The value range varies by cost style.

·     For styles narrow, narrow-compatible, and compatible, the cost value is in the range of 1 to 63.

·     For styles wide and wide-compatible, the cost value is in the range of 1 to 16777215.

level-1: Applies the link cost to Level-1.

level-2: Applies the link cost to Level-2.

Usage guidelines

If no level is specified, the specified cost applies to both Level-1 and Level-2.

Examples

# Set the global Level-1 link cost to 11 for IS-IS process 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] circuit-cost 11 level-1

Related commands

cost-style

isis cost

cost-style

Use cost-style to set a cost style.

Use undo cost-style to restore the default.

Syntax

cost-style { narrow | wide | wide-compatible | { compatible | narrow-compatible } [ relax-spf-limit ] }

undo cost-style

Default

The IS-IS cost style is narrow.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

narrow: Receives and sends only narrow cost style packets. The narrow cost is in the range of 1 to 63.

wide: Receives and sends only wide cost style packets. The wide cost is in the range of 1 to 16777215.

compatible: Receives and sends both wide and narrow cost style packets.

narrow-compatible: Receives both narrow and wide cost style packets, but sends only narrow cost style packets.

wide-compatible: Receives both narrow and wide cost style packets, but sends only wide cost style packets.

relax-spf-limit: Allows receiving routes with a cost greater than 1023. If you do not specify this keyword, routes with a cost bigger than 1023 will be discarded. This keyword is available only when the compatible or narrow-compatible keyword is specified.

Examples

# Configure the router to send only narrow cost style packets, but receive both narrow and wide cost style packets.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] cost-style narrow-compatible

Related commands

circuit-cost

isis cost

default-route-advertise

Use default-route-advertise to advertise a default route of 0.0.0.0/0.

Use undo default-route-advertise to restore the default.

Syntax

default-route-advertise [ avoid-learning | [ level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2 ] | route-policy route-policy-name | tag tag ] *

undo default-route-advertise

Default

Default route advertisement is disabled.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

avoid-learning: Avoids learning the default route received in LSPs or generated by using the ATT bit to avoid routing loops.

level-1: Advertises a Level-1 default route.

level-1-2: Advertises both Level-1 and Level-2 default routes.

level-2: Advertises a Level-2 default route.

route-policy route-policy-name: Specifies a routing policy by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters.

tag tag: Specifies the tag value for the default route, in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

Usage guidelines

If no level is specified, a Level-2 default route is advertised.

The Level-1 default route is advertised to other routers in the same area, and the Level-2 default route is advertised to all the Level-2 and Level-1-2 routers.

You can use a routing policy to specify a level for the default route. The apply isis level-1 command in routing policy view can generate a Level-1 default route. The apply isis level-2 command in routing policy view can generate a Level-2 default route. The apply isis level-1-2 command in routing policy view can generate both a Level-1 default route and Level-2 default route.

The tag value specified in the routing policy takes precedence over the tag value specified in this command.

Examples

# Configure IS-IS process 1 to advertise a Level-2 default route.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] default-route-advertise

display isis

Use display isis to display configuration information for an IS-IS process.

Syntax

display isis [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

process-id: Specifies a process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays configuration information for all IS-IS processes.

Examples

# Display IS-IS configuration information.

<Sysname> display isis

 

          IS-IS(1) Protocol Information

 

Instance identifier             : 10

Network entity                  : 10.0000.0000.0001.00

IS level                        : level-1-2

Cost style                      : Wide

Isolation                       : Disabled

IPv6 router ID                  : 1000::1

Fast reroute                    : Disabled

Microloop-avoidance

    level-1                     : Disabled

    level-2                     : Disabled

IPv6 microloop-avoidance

    level-1                     : Disabled

    level-2                     : Disabled

Microloop-avoidance RIB-update-delay

    level-1                     : 5000

    level-2                     : 5000

IPv6 microloop-avoidance RIB-update-delay

    level-1                     : 5000

    level-2                     : 5000

Fast-reroute remote-LFA

    level-1                     : Disabled

    level-2                     : Disabled

Node-protecting preference

    level-1                     : 40

    level-2                     : 40

Lowest-cost preference

    level-1                     : 20

    level-2                     : 20

SRLG preference

    level-1                     : 10

    level-2                     : 10

Link-state                      : Link-state

    Instance ID                 : 10

    Level-1                     : Enabled

    Level-2                     : Enabled

Link attribute advertisement    : Disabled

Metric-delay advertisement

    level-1                     : Disabled

    level-2                     : Disabled

Metric-delay advertisement suppression

    Timer                       : 120

    Percent Threshold           : 10

    Absolute Threshold          : 1000

Metric-bandwidth advertisement

    level-1                     : Disabled

    level-2                     : Disabled

Metric-delay advertisement suppression

    Timer                       : 120

Preference                      : 15

LSP length receive              : 1497

LSP length originate

    level-1                     : 1497

    level-2                     : 1497

Maximum imported routes         : 1000

BFD                             : Enabled

BFD session-restrict-adj        : Enabled

BFD adjust cost                 : Maximum

Primary path detection mode     : Ctrl

Timers

    LSP-max-age                 : 1200

    LSP-refresh                 : 900

    SPF mode                    : Normal

    SPF intervals               : 5 50 200

Advertise application specific link attributes

    TE                          : Disabled

    SRLG                        : Disabled

IPv6 enabled

    Fast reroute                : Disabled

    Preference                  : 15

    Maximum imported routes     : 1000

    BFD                         : Enabled

    BFD session-restrict-adj    : Enabled

    BFD adjust cost             : Maximum

    Primary path detection mode : Ctrl

    Link attribute advertisement: Disabled

    Metric-delay advertisement

        level-1                 : Disabled

        level-2                 : Disabled

    Metric-delay advertisement suppression

        Timer                   : 120

        Percent Threshold       : 10

        Absolute Threshold      : 1000

    Metric-bandwidth advertisement

        level-1                 : Disabled

        level-2                 : Disabled

    Metric-delay advertisement suppression

        Timer                   : 120

    Link tag inheritance        : Disabled

    Advertise application specific link attributes

        TE                      : Disabled

        SRLG                    : Disabled

Segment routing IPv4

    MPLS                        : Disabled

    Adjacency                   : Disabled

    Member-port adjacency       : Disabled

    Effective SRGB              : 16000 24000

    Level-1 tunnel count        : 0

    Level-2 tunnel count        : 0

    Local block                 : 4294967295 4294967295

Fast-reroute TI-LFA

    level-1                     : Disabled

    level-2                     : Disabled

Node-protecting preference

    level-1                     : 40

    level-2                     : 40

Lowest-cost preference

    level-1                     : 20

    level-2                     : 20

SRLG preference

    level-1                     : 10

    level-2                     : 10

    SR microloop avoidance

        level-1                 : Disabled

        level-2                 : Disabled

    SR microloop avoidance RIB-update-delay

        level-1                 : 5000

        level-2                 : 5000

Segment routing IPv6

    SRv6                        : Disabled

    Segment routing IPv6 advertisement

        L3 service SID          : Disabled

    SRv6 SRH compression

        level-1                 : Disable

        level-2                 : Disable

Fast-reroute TI-LFA

    level-1                     : Disabled

    level-2                     : Disabled

Node-protecting preference

    level-1                     : 40

    level-2                     : 40

Lowest-cost preference

    level-1                     : 20

    level-2                     : 20

SRLG preference

    level-1                     : 10

    level-2                     : 10

    SR microloop avoidance

        level-1                 : Disabled

        level-2                 : Disabled

    SR microloop avoidance RIB-update-delay

        level-1                 : 5000

        level-2                 : 5000

    End.X SID deletion delay

        State                   : Enabled

        Delay time              : 1800 sec

Table 2 Command output

Field

Description

Instance identifier

Multi-instance process ID.

Network entity

Network entity name.

IS level

IS-IS routing level.

Cost style

Cost style.

IPv6 router ID

IPv6 router ID.

Isolation

Whether IS-IS isolation is enabled.

Process state

IS-IS process state. If you shut down the process by using the shutdown process command, this field displays Admin-down. If the process is not shut down, this field is not displayed.

Fast reroute

IS-IS FRR status:

·     Disabled—IS-IS FRR is disabled.

·     LFA—IS-IS FRR automatically calculates a backup next hop.

·     Route-policy—IS-IS FRR specifies a backup next hop by using a routing policy.

Microloop-avoidance

This field is not supported in the current software version.

Microloop avoidance status: Disabled or Enabled.

Microloop-avoidance RIB-update-delay

This field is not supported in the current software version.

Microloop avoidance RIB-update-delay timer.

Fast-reroute TI-LFA

This field is not supported in the current software version.

TI-LFA FRR status: Disabled or Enabled.

Link-state

IS-IS link state information advertisement.

BGP-LS—The device advertises IS-IS link state information to only BGP.

Instance ID

IS-IS instance ID.

Link attribute advertisement

Link attribute advertisement status: Disabled or Enabled.

Metric-delay advertisement

Link delay advertisement status: Disabled or Enabled.

Metric-delay advertisement suppression

Information about link delay advertisement suppression:

·     Timer—Link delay advertisement suppression timer in seconds.

·     Percent threshold—Suppression threshold for the delay variation ratio in percentage.

·     Absolute threshold—Suppression threshold for the absolute value of the delay variation in microseconds.

This field is not displayed if IS-IS link delay advertisement is disabled.

Metric-bandwidth advertisement

Link bandwidth advertisement status: Disabled or Enabled.

Metric-delay advertisement suppression

Link bandwidth advertisement suppression timer in seconds. This field is not displayed if link bandwidth advertisement is disabled.

Preference

IS-IS route preference.

LSP length receive

Maximum LSP that can be received.

LSP length originate

Maximum LSP that can be generated.

Maximum imported routes

Maximum number of redistributed Level-1/Level-2 IPv4/IPv6 routes.

BFD

BFD is enabled for the IS-IS process.

This field is available only when BFD is enabled for the IS-IS process.

BFD session-restrict-adj

BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance is enabled for the IS-IS process.

This field is available only when this feature is enabled for the IS-IS process.

BFD adjust cost

Interface cost adjustment parameters:

·     cost-offsetInterface cost adjustment value. The value range for cost-offset is 1 to 16777213. When the BFD session goes down, the interface cost is cost-offset plus the original interface cost.

·     Maximum—Maximum interface cost value (16777214). When the BFD session goes down, IS-IS will adjust the interface cost to the maximum.

This field is available only when BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment is enabled for the IS-IS process.

Primary path detection mode

BFD is used for primary link failure detection in the IS-IS process. Primary link failure detection modes include:

·     Ctrl—BFD control packet mode.

·     Echo—BFD echo packet mode.

This field is available only when BFD is used for primary link failure detection in the IS-IS process.

Timers

Timers:

·     LSP-max-age—Maximum life period of LSPs.

·     LSP-refresh—Refresh interval of LSPs.

·     SPF mode—SPF interval calculation mode.

·     SPF intervals—Interval between SPF calculations.

IPv6 enabled

IPv6 is enabled.

Segment routing IPv4

This field is not supported in the current software version.

Segment routing is supported:

·     MPLS—SR-MPLS status: Disabled or Enabled.

·     Adjacency—Adjacency label allocation status: Disabled or Enabled.

·     Member-port adjacency—Whether adjacency label allocation is enabled on member interfaces.

·     Configured SRGB—Configured SRGB range. This field is displayed when SRGB is configured.

·     Effective SRGB—SRGB range that takes effect.

·     Level-1 tunnel count—Number of Level-1 SR tunnels.

·     Level-2 tunnel count—Number of Level-2 SR tunnels.

·     Local block—Minimum and maximum label values of the SRLB.

Segment routing IPv6

This field is not supported in the current software version.

Segment routing is supported:

SRv6—SRV6 status: Disabled or Enabled.

Segment routing IPv6 advertisement

This field is not supported in the current software version.

SRv6 advertisement information.‌

L3 service SID

This field is not supported in the current software version.

Whether L3 service SID advertisement is enabled.

SRv6 SRH compression

This field is not supported in the current software version.

Whether SRv6 SRH compression is enabled.

Fast-reroute TI-LFA

This field is not supported in the current software version.

Topology independent LFA (TI-LFA) FRR status: Disabled or Enabled.

Node-protecting preference

Priority of the node-protection backup path selection policy.

Lowest-cost preference

Priority of the lowest-cost backup path selection policy.

SRLG preference

SRLGs are not supported in the current software version.

Priority of the shared risk link group (SRLG)-disjoint backup path selection policy.

SR microloop avoidance

This field is not supported in the current software version.

SR microloop avoidance status: Disabled or Enabled.

SR microloop avoidance RIB-update-delay

This field is not supported in the current software version.

SR microloop avoidance RIB-update-delay timer.

End.X SID deletion delay

This field is not supported in the current software version.

Information about dynamic End.X SID deletion delay:

·     State—Status of dynamic End.X SID deletion delay: Disabled or Enabled.

·     Delay time—End.X SID deletion delay timer in seconds.

display isis event-log graceful-restart

Use display isis event-log graceful-restart to display IS-IS GR log information.

Syntax

 

display isis event-log graceful-restart

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Examples

# Display IS-IS GR log information.

<Sysname>display isis event-log graceful-restart

IS-IS loginfo :

Aug 24 14:45:37 2015  Process 1 enter GR restarting phase(Initialization).

Aug 24 14:45:37 2015  Process 1 enter GR phase (LSDB synchronization).

Aug 24 14:45:37 2015  Process 1 enter GR phase (TE tunnel prepare).

Aug 24 14:45:37 2015  Process 1 enter GR phase (First SPF computation).

Aug 24 14:45:37 2015  Process 1 enter GR phase (Redistribution).

Aug 24 14:45:37 2015  Process 1 enter GR phase (Second SPF computation).

Aug 24 14:45:37 2015  Process 1 enter GR phase (LSP stability).

Aug 24 14:45:37 2015  Process 1 enter GR phase (LSP generation).

Aug 24 14:45:37 2015  Process 1 enter GR phase (Finish).

Aug 24 14:45:37 2015  Process 1 GR complete.

Table 3 Command output

Field

Description

GR phase

GR phase:

·     Initialization.

·     LSDB synchronization.

·     TE tunnel prepare—Preparing for TE tunnel computation. TE tunnels are not supported in the current software version.

·     First SPF computation.

·     Redistribution.

·     Second SPF computation.

·     LSP stability—Ready to generate LSPs.

·     LSP generation.

·     Finish.

display isis event-log lsp

Use display isis event-log lsp to display IS-IS LSP log information.

Syntax

display isis event-log lsp { purged | refreshed } [ level-1 | level-2 ] [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

purged: Displays log information about purged LSPs.

refreshed: Displays log information about refreshed LSPs, including generated and received LSPs.

level-1: Displays Level-1 LSP log information.

level-2: Displays Level-2 LSP log information.

process-id: Specifies a process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays LSP log information for all IS-IS processes.

Usage guidelines

If you do not specify a level, the command displays both Level-1 and Level-2 LSP log information.

Examples

# Displays log information about purged LSPs.

<Sysname> display isis event-log lsp purged

                              LSP log for IS-IS(1)

                              --------------------

                                Level-1 LSP log

                                ---------------

Date       Time     LSP ID               Seq Num    Event

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2019-09-25 10:19:48 1111.1111.1111.01-00 0x00000001 Generated LSP purge packet

2019-09-25 10:19:48 1111.1111.1111.01-00 0x00000001 Received LSP purge packet

2019-09-25 10:15:29 2222.2222.2222.01-00 0x00000005 Generated LSP purge packet

                                Level-2 LSP log

                                ---------------

Date       Time     LSP ID               Seq Num    Event

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2019-09-25 10:19:48 1111.1111.1111.01-00 0x00000001 Generated LSP purge packet

2019-09-25 10:19:48 1111.1111.1111.01-00 0x00000001 Received LSP purge packet

2019-09-25 10:15:29 2222.2222.2222.01-00 0x00000005 Generated LSP purge packet

# Displays log information about refreshed LSPs.

<Sysname> display isis event-log lsp refreshed

                              LSP log for IS-IS(1)

                              --------------------

                                Level-1 LSP log

                                ---------------

Date       Time     LSP ID                Seq Num    Event

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2019-09-25 17:18:48 0000.0000.0012.00-00 0x00000038 Received LSP

2019-09-25 17:18:48 0000.0000.0011.00-00 0x00000042 Received LSP

2019-09-25 17:18:48 0000.0000.0012.00-00 0x00000039 Generated LSP

2019-09-25 17:18:48 0000.0000.0012.00-00 0x00000038 Received LSP

2019-09-25 17:18:48 0000.0000.0011.00-00 0x00000042 Received LSP

2019-09-25 17:18:48 0000.0000.0012.00-00 0x00000002 Generated LSP

2019-09-25 17:18:48 0000.0000.0011.01-00 0x00000032 Received LSP

2019-09-25 17:18:48 0000.0000.0011.02-00 0x00000035 Received LSP

2019-09-25 17:18:48 0000.0000.0011.01-00 0x00000032 Received LSP

2019-09-25 17:18:48 0000.0000.0011.02-00 0x00000035 Received LSP

2019-09-25 17:18:47 0000.0000.0012.00-00 0x00000001 Generated LSP

                                Level-2 LSP log

                                ---------------

Date       Time     LSPID                Seq Num    Event

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2019-09-25 17:18:48 0000.0000.0012.00-00 0x00000002 Generated LSP

2019-09-25 17:18:47 0000.0000.0012.00-00 0x00000001 Generated LSP

Table 4 Command output

Field

Description

Date

Date of the LSP change.

Time

Time of the LSP change.

LSPID

LSP ID.

Seq Num

LSP sequence number.

Event

LSP change event:

·     Received LSP.

·     Received LSP purge packet.

·     Generated LSP.

·     Generated LSP purge packet.

Related commands

reset isis event-log lsp

display isis event-log spf

Use display isis event-log spf to display IS-IS route calculation log information.

Syntax

display isis event-log spf [ ipv4 | ipv6 ] [ [ level-1 | level-2 ] | verbose ] * [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

ipv4: Displays IS-IS IPv4 route calculation log information.

ipv6: Displays IS-IS IPv6 route calculation log information.

level-1: Displays Level-1 route calculation log information.

level-2: Displays Level-2 route calculation log information.

verbose: Displays detailed route calculation log information. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays brief route calculation log information.

process-id: Specifies a process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays route calculation log information for all IS-IS processes.

Usage guidelines

If you do not specify the ipv4 or ipv6 keyword, the command displays IS-IS IPv4 route calculation log information for the public network.

If you do not specify a level, the command displays both Level-1 and Level-2 route calculation log information.

Examples

# Display brief IS-IS route calculation log information.

<Sysname> display isis event-log spf

 

                              SPF Log for IS-IS(1)

                              --------------------

 

                                Level-1 SPF Log

                                ---------------

 

Date       Time     Duration   Count      Trigger event

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2015-09-07 11:10:45 0          4          Interface metric changed

2015-09-07 09:26:40 0          4          LSP updated

2015-09-07 09:26:28 0          2          DIS changed

2015-09-07 09:26:21 0.001      2          LSP updated

2015-09-07 09:26:07 0.001      3          Direct route changed

 

                                Level-2 SPF Log

                                ---------------

 

Date       Time     Duration   Count      Trigger event

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2015-09-07 11:10:45 0          4          Interface metric changed

2015-09-07 09:26:40 0          4          LSP updated

2015-09-07 09:26:28 0          2          DIS changed

2015-09-07 09:26:21 0          2          LSP updated

2015-09-07 09:26:07 0          3          Direct route changed

# Display detailed IS-IS route calculation log information.

<Sysname> display isis event-log spf verbose

 

                              SPF Log for IS-IS(1)

                              --------------------

 

                                Level-1 SPF Log

                                ---------------

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 11:10:45

 Log key       : 5

 Trigger count : 4

 Trigger event : Interface metric changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase             Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ     0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology          0            SPF nodes: 3

   BSPF              0            Candidate NBRs: 1

   TI/R-LFA prepare  0            TI/R-LFA links: 0, TI/R-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF         0

   Link PQ           0

   Node PSPF         0

   Node PQ           0

   LFA               0            LFA SPF nodes: 1

   Area              0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC               0            Add: 0 modify: 1 delete: 0

                                  Last 10 routes:

                                  1.1.1.0/24

   Route summary     0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total             0

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 09:26:40

 Log key       : 4

 Trigger count : 4

 Trigger event : LSP updated

 SPF details   :

   Phase             Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ     0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology          0            SPF nodes: 3

   BSPF              0            Candidate NBRs: 1

   TI/R-LFA prepare  0            TI/R-LFA links: 0, TI/R-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF         0

   Link PQ           0

   Node PSPF         0

   Node PQ           0

   LFA               0            LFA SPF nodes: 1

   Area              0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC               0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary     0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total             0

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 09:26:28

 Log key       : 3

 Trigger count : 2

 Trigger event : DIS changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase             Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ     0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology          0            SPF links changed: 1

   BSPF              0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI/R-LFA prepare  0            TI/R-LFA links: 0, TI/R-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF         0

   Link PQ           0

   Node PSPF         0

   Node PQ           0

   LFA               0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area              0            Area addresses: 0

   PRC               0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary     0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total             0

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 09:26:21

 Log key       : 2

 Trigger count : 2

 Trigger event : LSP updated

 SPF details   :

   Phase             Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ     0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology          0            SPF nodes: 0

   BSPF              0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI/R-LFA prepare  0            TI/R-LFA links: 0, TI/R-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF         0

   Link PQ           0

   Node PSPF         0

   Node PQ           0

   LFA               0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area              0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC               0.001        Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary     0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total             0.001

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 09:26:07

 Log key       : 1

 Trigger count : 3

 Trigger event : Direct route changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase             Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ     0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology          0            SPF nodes: 0

   BSPF              0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI/R-LFA prepare  0            TI/R-LFA links: 0, TI/R-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF         0

   Link PQ           0

   Node PSPF         0

   Node PQ           0

   LFA               0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area              0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC               0.001        Add: 1 modify: 0 delete: 0

                                  Last 10 routes:

                                  1.1.1.0/24

   Route summary     0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total             0.001

                                Level-2 SPF Log

                                ---------------

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 11:10:45

 Log key       : 5

 Trigger count : 4

 Trigger event : Interface metric changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase             Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ     0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology          0            SPF nodes: 3

   BSPF              0            Candidate NBRs: 1

   TI/R-LFA prepare  0            TI/R-LFA links: 0, TI/R-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF         0

   Link PQ           0

   Node PSPF         0

   Node PQ           0

   LFA               0            LFA SPF nodes: 1

   Area              0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC               0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary     0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total             0

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 09:26:40

 Log key       : 4

 Trigger count : 4

 Trigger event : LSP updated

 SPF details   :

   Phase             Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ     0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology          0            SPF nodes: 3

   BSPF              0            Candidate NBRs: 1

   TI/R-LFA prepare  0            TI/R-LFA links: 0, TI/R-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF         0

   Link PQ           0

   Node PSPF         0

   Node PQ           0

   LFA               0            LFA SPF nodes: 1

   Area              0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC               0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary     0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total             0

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 09:26:28

 Log key       : 3

 Trigger count : 2

 Trigger event : DIS changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase             Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ     0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology          0            SPF links changed: 1

   BSPF              0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI/R-LFA prepare  0            TI/R-LFA links: 0, TI/R-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF         0

   Link PQ           0

   Node PSPF         0

   Node PQ           0

   LFA               0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area              0            Area addresses: 0

   PRC               0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary     0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total             0

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 09:26:21

 Log key       : 2

 Trigger count : 2

 Trigger event : LSP updated

 SPF details   :

   Phase             Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ     0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology          0            SPF nodes: 0

   BSPF              0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI/R-LFA prepare  0            TI/R-LFA links: 0, TI/R-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF         0

   Link PQ           0

   Node PSPF         0

   Node PQ           0

   LFA               0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area              0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC               0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary     0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total             0

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 09:26:07

 Log key       : 1

 Trigger count : 3

 Trigger event : Direct route changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase             Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ     0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology          0            SPF nodes: 0

   BSPF              0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI/R-LFA prepare  0            TI/R-LFA links: 0, TI/R-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF         0

   Link PQ           0

   Node PSPF         0

   Node PQ           0

   LFA               0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area              0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC               0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary     0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total             0

Table 5 Command output

Field

Description

Date

Start date of route calculation.

Time

Start time of route calculation.

Duration

Route calculation duration in seconds. The value is accurate to six decimal places.

Count

Number of events that trigger the current route calculation.

Trigger event

Type of the most recent event that triggers route calculation:

·     NextHop changed.

·     DIS changed.

·     Interface metric changed.

·     SPF link changed.

·     Default route changed.

·     Summary route changed.

·     FRR configuration changed.

·     Prefix priority configuration changed.

·     Route preference changed.

·     ISPF configuration changed.

·     Import filter policy changed.

·     ECMP configuration changed.

·     PIC configuration changed.

·     Interface LFA exclude changed.

·     ATT configuration changed.

·     GR/NSR first SPF. NSR is not supported in the current software version.

·     GR over.

·     T3 timeout.

·     Direct route changed.

·     Logic interface changed.

·     Route leakage configuration changed.

·     Entered overload state.

·     Exited overload state.

·     Area address changed.

·     Route policy changed.

·     Redistributed route updated.

·     LSP updated.

·     RIB smooth.

Log date

Generation time of the route calculation logs.

Log key

Route calculation log key.

Trigger count

Number of events that trigger the current route calculation.

SPF details

Detailed information about the route calculation phases.

Phase

Route calculation phase:

·     TE tunnel ADJ—TE tunnel adjacency calculation. TE tunnels are not supported in the current software version.

·     Topology—Topology calculation.

·     BSPF—Backup SPF calculation.

·     TI/R-LFA prepare—TI-LFA/Remote LFA calculation preparation. TI-LFA and remote LFA are not supported in the current software version.

·     LFA—LFA calculation.

·     Area—Area calculation.

·     PRC—Prefix calculation.

·     Route summary—Route summarization calculation.

Description

Route calculation phase description:

·     TE SPF nodes—Number of SPF nodes for TE tunnel adjacency calculation. TE tunnels are not supported in the current software version.

·     SPF nodes—Number of SPF nodes for topology calculation.

·     Candidate NBRs—Number of candidate neighbors.

·     LFA SPF nodes—Number of SPF nodes for LFA calculation.

·     Area addresses—Number of area addresses.

·     Add, modify, and delete—Prefix calculation summary.

·     Last 10 routes—10 routes that are most recently calculated.

·     Summary route nodes—Number of summarized routes.

Total

Total duration time of all route calculation phases.

# Display brief IPv6 IS-IS route calculation log information.

<Sysname> display isis event-log spf ipv6

 

                              SPF Log for IS-IS(1)

                              --------------------

 

                                Level-1 SPF Log

                                ---------------

 

Date       Time     Duration   Count      Trigger event

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2015-09-07 11:10:45 0          4          Interface metric changed

2015-09-07 09:26:40 0          4          LSP updated

2015-09-07 09:26:28 0          2          DIS changed

2015-09-07 09:26:21 0.001     2          LSP updated

2015-09-07 09:26:07 0.001     3          Direct route changed

 

                                Level-2 SPF Log

                                ---------------

 

Date       Time     Duration   Count      Trigger event

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2015-09-07 11:10:45 0          4          Interface metric changed

2015-09-07 09:26:40 0          4          LSP updated

2015-09-07 09:26:28 0          2          DIS changed

2015-09-07 09:26:21 0          2          LSP updated

2015-09-07 09:26:07 0          3          Direct route changed

# Display detailed IPv6 IS-IS route calculation log information.

<Sysname> display isis event-log spf ipv6 verbose

 

                              SPF Log for IS-IS(1)

                              --------------------

 

                                Level-1 SPF Log

                                ---------------

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 02:18:09

 Log key       : 10

 Trigger count : 2

 Trigger event : LSP updated

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF nodes: 0

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 0

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 02:18:09

 Log key       : 9

 Trigger count : 2

 Trigger event : NextHop changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0.003        SPF nodes: 3

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0.003

 

 Log date      : 2011-01-01 02:17:40

 Log key       : 8

 Trigger count : 2

 Trigger event : Logic interface changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF nodes: 0

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 0

   PRC            0.005        Add: 1 modify: 0 delete: 0

                               Last 10 routes:

                               10::/64

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0.005

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 02:17:38

 Log key       : 7

 Trigger count : 1

 Trigger event : Logic interface changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF nodes: 0

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 0

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 02:17:33

 Log key       : 6

 Trigger count : 5

 Trigger event : NextHop changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF links changed: 1

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 0

   PRC            0.003        Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 1

                               Last 10 routes:

                               3::/24

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0.003

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 02:17:21

 Log key       : 5

 Trigger count : 1

 Trigger event : Direct route changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF nodes: 0

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 0

   PRC            0.006        Add: 1 modify: 0 delete: 0

                               Last 10 routes:

                               3::/24

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0.006

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 02:17:11

 Log key       : 4

 Trigger count : 1

 Trigger event : IPv6 mode changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF nodes: 3

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 01:09:33

 Log key       : 3

 Trigger count : 2

 Trigger event : DIS changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0.001        SPF nodes: 3

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0.001

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 01:09:25

 Log key       : 2

 Trigger count : 2

 Trigger event : LSP updated

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF links changed: 1

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 01:08:49

 Log key       : 1

 Trigger count : 1

 Trigger event : Area address changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF nodes: 0

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0

 

                                Level-2 SPF Log

                                ---------------

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 02:18:09

 Log key       : 10

 Trigger count : 2

 Trigger event : LSP updated

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF nodes: 0

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 0

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 02:18:09

 Log key       : 9

 Trigger count : 2

 Trigger event : NextHop changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0.002        SPF nodes: 3

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0.001        Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0.003

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 02:17:40

 Log key       : 8

 Trigger count : 2

 Trigger event : Logic interface changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF nodes: 0

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 0

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 02:17:38

 Log key       : 7

 Trigger count : 1

 Trigger event : Logic interface changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF nodes: 0

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 0

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 02:17:33

 Log key       : 6

 Trigger count : 5

 Trigger event : NextHop changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF links changed: 1

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 0

   PRC            0.001        Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0.001

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 02:17:21

 Log key       : 5

 Trigger count : 1

 Trigger event : Direct route changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF nodes: 0

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 0

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 02:17:11

 Log key       : 4

 Trigger count : 1

 Trigger event : IPv6 mode changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0.001        SPF nodes: 3

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0.001

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 01:09:33

 Log key       : 3

 Trigger count : 2

 Trigger event : DIS changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF nodes: 3

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 01:09:25

 Log key       : 2

 Trigger count : 2

 Trigger event : LSP updated

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF links changed: 1

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0

 

 Log date      : 2015-09-07 01:08:49

 Log key       : 1

 Trigger count : 1

 Trigger event : Area address changed

 SPF details   :

   Phase          Duration     Description

   TE tunnel ADJ  0            TE SPF nodes: 0

   Topology       0            SPF nodes: 0

   BSPF           0            Candidate NBRs: 0

   TI-LFA prepare 0            TI-LFA links: 0, TI-LFA nodes: 0

   Link PSPF      0

   Link PQ        0

   Node PSPF      0

   Node PQ        0

   LFA            0            LFA SPF nodes: 0

   Area           0            Area addresses: 1

   PRC            0            Add: 0 modify: 0 delete: 0

   Route summary  0            Summary route nodes: 0

   Total          0

Table 6 Command output

Field

Description

Date

Start date of route calculation.

Time

Start time of route calculation.

Duration

Route calculation duration in seconds. The value is accurate to six decimal places.

Count

Number of events that trigger the current route calculation.

Trigger event

Type of the most recent event that triggers route calculation:

·     NextHop changed.

·     DIS changed.

·     Interface metric changed.

·     Interface MTR information changed.

·     SPF link changed.

·     Default route changed.

·     Summary route changed.

·     IPv6 mode changed.

·     FRR configuration changed.

·     Prefix priority configuration changed.

·     Route preference changed.

·     ISPF configuration changed.

·     Import filter policy changed.

·     ECMP configuration changed.

·     PIC configuration changed.

·     Interface LFA exclude changed.

·     ATT configuration changed.

·     GR/NSR first SPF. NSR is not supported in the current software version.

·     GR over.

·     T3 timeout.

·     Direct route changed.

·     Logic interface changed.

·     Route leakage configuration changed.

·     Entered overload state.

·     Exited overload state.

·     Area address changed.

·     Route policy changed.

·     Redistributed route updated.

·     LSP updated.

·     MT disabled.

·     MT enabled.

·     RIB smooth.

Log date

Generation time of the route calculation logs.

Log key

Route calculation log key.

Trigger count

Number of events that trigger the current route calculation.

SPF details

Detailed information about the route calculation phases.

Phase

Route calculation phase:

·     TE tunnel ADJ—TE tunnel adjacency calculation. TE tunnels are not supported in the current software version.

·     Topology—Topology calculation.

·     BSPF—Backup SPF calculation.

·     TI-LFA prepare—TI-LFA calculation preparation. TI-LFA is not supported in the current software version.

·     LFA—LFA calculation.

·     Area—Area calculation.

·     PRC—Prefix calculation.

·     Route summary—Route summarization calculation.

Description

Route calculation phase description:

·     TE SPF nodes—Number of SPF nodes for TE tunnel adjacency calculation. TE tunnels are not supported in the current software version.

·     SPF nodes—Number of SPF nodes for topology calculation.

·     Candidate NBRs—Number of candidate neighbors.

·     LFA SPF nodes—Number of SPF nodes for LFA calculation.

·     Area addresses—Number of area addresses.

·     Add, modify, and delete—Prefix calculation summary.

·     Last 10 routes—10 routes that are most recently calculated.

·     Summary route nodes—Number of summarized routes.

Total

Total duration time of all route calculation phases.

Related commands

reset isis event-log spf

display isis global-statistics

Use display isis global-statistics to display global IS-IS statistics.

Syntax

display isis global-statistics [ public | vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

public: Specifies the public network.

vpn-instance vpn-instance-name: Specifies an MPLS L3VPN instance by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters.

Usage guidelines

If you do not specify any keywords, the command displays global IS-IS statistics for the public network and all VPN instances.

Examples

# Display global IS-IS statistics.

<Sysname> display isis global-statistics

 

  IS-IS global statistics

  Instance count:     2  Process count:     2

  Interface information:

    Type            IPv4 up/down           IPv6 up/down

    LAN                   0/0                    0/0

    P2P                   1/0                    0/0

  Peer information:

    Type              IPv4 Up/Init              IPv6 Up/Init

    LAN Level-1             0/0                       0/0

    LAN Level-2             0/0                       0/0

    P2P                     1/0                       0/0

  Packet information:

    Total output packets: 1022

    Total input packets:  1023

  LSP information:

    Total level-1 LSPs: 2

    Total level-2 LSPs: 2

  Route information:

    Type         IPv4         IPv6

    Level-1      1            0

    Level-2      2            0

Table 7 Command output

Field

Description

Interface information

Interface status statistics.

Type

Interface link adjacency type.

IPv4 up/down

Number of IPv4 interfaces in up or down state.

IPv6 up/down

Number of IPv6 interfaces in up or down state.

Type

Neighbor type:

·     LAN Level-1—Number of Level-1 neighbors with the broadcast network type.

·     LAN Level-2—Number of Level-2 neighbors with the broadcast network type.

·     P2P—Number of neighbors with the point-to-point (P2P) network type.

IPv4 Up

Number of IPv4 neighbors in up state.

IPv4 Init

Number of IPv4 neighbors in init state.

IPv6 Up

Number of IPv6 neighbors in up state.

IPv6 Init

Number of IPv6 neighbors in init state.

Packet information

Statistics of received and sent protocol packets.

Total output packets

Number of sent protocol packets.

Total input packets

Number of received protocol packets.

LSP information

Number of LSPs in the LSDB.

Total level-1 LSPs

Number of Level-1 LSPs.

Total level-2 LSPs

Number of Level-2 LSPs.

Route Information

Route statistics:

·     Level-1—Level-1 IS-IS route statistics.

·     Level-2—Level-2 IS-IS route statistics.

·     IPv4—IPv4 IS-IS route statistics.

·     IPv6—IPv6 IS-IS route statistics.

display isis graceful-restart status

Use display isis graceful-restart status to display IS-IS GR state.

Syntax

display isis graceful-restart status [ level-1 | level-2 ] [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

level-1: Displays the IS-IS Level-1 GR state.

level-2: Displays the IS-IS Level-2 GR state.

process-id: Specifies a process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays GR state of all IS-IS processes.

Examples

# Display IS-IS GR state.

<Sysname> display isis graceful-restart status

 

                        Restart information for IS-IS(1)

                        --------------------------------

Restart status: COMPLETE

Restart phase: Finish

Restart t1: 3, count 10; Restart t2: 60; Restart t3: 300

SA Bit: supported

 

                          Level-1 restart information

                          ---------------------------

Total number of interfaces: 1

Number of waiting LSPs: 0

 

                          Level-2 restart information

                          ---------------------------

Total number of interfaces: 1

Number of waiting LSPs: 0

Table 8 Command output

Field

Description

Restart status

Current GR state:

·     RESTARTING—In this state, forwarding can be ensured.

·     STARTING—In this state, forwarding cannot be ensured.

·     COMPLETE—GR is completed.

Restart phase

Current Restart phase:

·     Initialization.

·     LSDB synchronization.

·     TE tunnel prepare.

·     First SPF computation.

·     Redistribution.

·     Second SPF computation.

·     LSP stability—Ready to generate LSPs.

·     LSP generation.

·     Finish.

Restart t1

T1 timer, in seconds.

count

Number of T1 timer expirations.

Restart t2

T2 timer, in seconds.

Restart t3

T3 timer, in seconds.

SA Bit

Whether SA is supported.

Total number of interfaces

Total number of IS-IS interfaces.

Number of waiting LSPs

Number of LSPs not obtained by the GR restarter from GR helpers during LSDB synchronization.

display isis interface

Use display isis interface to display IS-IS interface information.

Syntax

display isis interface [ [ interface-type interface-number ] [ verbose ] | statistics ] [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

interface-type interface-number: Displays information for a specified IS-IS interface. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays information about all interfaces.

verbose: Displays detailed information about an interface. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays brief information about an interface.

statistics: Displays IS-IS interface statistics.

process-id: Displays IS-IS interface information for an IS-IS process specified by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays interface information for all IS-IS processes.

Examples

# Display brief IS-IS interface information.

<Sysname> display isis interface

 

                       Interface information for IS-IS(1)

                       ----------------------------------

 

  Interface:  Vlan-interface100

  Index     IPv4 state      IPv6 state     Circuit ID   MTU   Type   DIS

  00001     Up              Down           1            1497  L1/L2  No/No

# Display detailed IS-IS interface information.

<Sysname> display isis interface verbose

 

                       Interface information for IS-IS(1)

                       ----------------------------------

 

  Interface:  Vlan-interface100

  Index     IPv4 state      IPv6 state     Circuit ID   MTU   Type   DIS

  00001     Up              Down           1            1497  L1/L2  No/No

  SNPA address                     : 000c-29e8-1bd5

  IP address                       : 192.168.220.10

  Secondary IP address(es)         :

  IPv6 link-local address          :

  Extended circuit ID              : 1

  CSNP timer value                 : L1        10   L2        10

  Hello timer value                :           10

  Hello multiplier value           :            3

  LSP timer value                  : L12       33

  LSP transmit-throttle count      : L12        5

  Cost                             : L1       100   L2        100

  IPv6 cost                        : L1        10   L2        10

  Priority                         : L1        64   L2        64

  Retransmit timer value           : L12        5

  MPLS TE status                   : L1  Disabled   L2    Disabled

  Link quality                     : GOOD

  Cost adjusted at low quality     : 50

  IPv4 BFD                         : Disabled

  IPv6 BFD                         : Disabled

  IPv4 BFD session-restrict-adj    : Enabled

  IPv6 BFD session-restrict-adj    : Disabled

  IPv4 FRR LFA backup              : Enabled

  IPv6 FRR LFA backup              : Enabled

  IPv4 FRR TI-LFA                  : L1   Enabled  L2   Enabled

  IPv6 FRR TI-LFA                  : L1   Enabled  L2   Enabled

  IPv4 FRR remote-LFA              : L1   Enabled  L2   Enabled

  IPv4 prefix suppression          : Disabled

  IPv6 prefix suppression          : Disabled

  IPv4 tag                         : 1

  IPv6 tag                         : 0

  IPv4 BFD adjust cost             : Maximum

  IPv6 BFD adjust cost             : Maximum

  IPv4 primary path detection mode : BFD ctrl

  IPv6 primary path detection mode : BFD ctrl

  Average delay                    : 1000

  Min delay                        : 10

  Max delay                        : 500

  Delay variation                  : 200

Table 9 Command output

Field

Description

Interface

Interface type and number.

Index

Interface index.

IPv4 state

IPv4 state:

·     Up—The interface is up at both the link layer and network layer.

·     Down—The interface is down at the link layer and network layer.

·     Lnk:Up/IP:Dn—The interface is up at the link layer but is down at the network layer.

IPv6 state

IPv6 state:

·     Up—The interface is up at both the link layer and network layer.

·     Down—The interface is down at the link layer and network layer.

·     Lnk:Up/IP:Dn—The interface is up at the link layer but is down at the network layer.

CircuitID

Circuit ID.

·     0(Invalid)IS-IS is not successfully enabled on the broadcast interface.

·     1—IS-IS is successfully enabled on the broadcast interface.

MTU

Interface MTU.

Type

Interface link adjacency type.

DIS

Indicates whether the interface is elected as the Level-1/Level-2 DIS. On a P2P network, this field displays a hyphen (-) because DIS election is not performed.

SNPA address

Subnet access point address.

IP address

Primary IP address.

Secondary IP address(es)

Secondary IP addresses.

IPv6 link-local address

IPv6 link local address.

Extended circuit ID

Extended circuit ID for a P2P link.

CSNP timer value

Interval for sending CSNP packets.

Hello timer value

Interval for sending Hello packets.

Hello multiplier value

Number of invalid Hello packets.

LSP timer value

Minimum interval for sending LSP packets.

LSP transmit-throttle count

Number of LSP packets sent each time.

Cost

Cost of the interface.

IPv6 cost

IPv6 link cost of the interface.

Priority

DIS priority.

Retransmit timer value

Retransmission interval for LSPs on a P2P link.

MPLS TE status

This field is not supported in the current software version.

MPLS TE status: Enabled or Disabled.

Link quality

Link quality:

·     GOOD—The bit error ratio is below the upper threshold or drops below the lower threshold.

·     LOW—The bit error ratio exceeds the upper threshold.

This field is displayed only when the interface is configured with the isis link-quality adjust-cost command.

Cost adjusted at low quality

Interface cost adjustment parameters:

·     xx—Value added to the interface cost. When the link quality is LOW, the interface cost is xx plus the original interface cost.

·     Maximum—Sets the interface cost to the maximum when the link quality is LOW.

This field is displayed only when the interface is configured with the isis link-quality adjust-cost command.

IPv4 BFD

Whether BFD for IS-IS is enabled:

·     Disabled.

·     Enabled.

·     Enabled, inherited—BFD is enabled on the IS-IS interface. The inherited attribute indicates that the interface inherits the global configuration of this feature from the IPv4 IS-IS process to which the interface belongs.

·     ExcludedThe BFD capacity of the IS-IS interface is suppressed by the isis bfd exclude command.

IPv6 BFD

Whether BFD for IPv6 IS-IS is enabled:

·     Disabled.

·     Enabled.

·     Enabled, inheritedBFD is enabled on the IS-IS interface. The inherited attribute indicates that the interface inherits the global configuration of this feature from the IPv6 IS-IS process to which the interface belongs.

·     Excluded—The BFD capacity of the IS-IS interface is suppressed by the isis ipv6 bfd exclude command.

IPv4 BFD session-restrict-adj

Whether IPv4 adjacency establishment and maintenance control based on BFD session state is enabled:

·     Disabled.

·     Enabled.

·     Enabled, inherited—BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance is enabled on the interface. The inherited attribute indicates that the interface inherits the global configuration of this feature from the IPv4 IS-IS process to which the interface belongs.

·     Excluded—BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance is suppressed on the interface by the isis bfd session-restrict-adj exclude command.

IPv6 BFD session-restrict-adj

Whether IPv6 adjacency establishment and maintenance control based on BFD session state is enabled:

·     Disabled.

·     Enabled.

·     Enabled, inherited—BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance is enabled on the interface. The inherited attribute indicates that the interface inherits the global configuration of this feature from the IPv6 IS-IS process to which the interface belongs.

·     ExcludedBFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance is suppressed on the interface by the isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj exclude command.

IPv4 FRR LFA backup

Whether LFA calculation is enabled for IPv4 FRR:

·     Disabled.

·     Enabled.

IPv6 FRR LFA backup

Whether LFA calculation is enabled for IPv6 FRR:

·     Disabled.

·     Enabled.

IPv4 FRR TI-LFA

This field is not supported in the current software version.

IPv4 TI-LFA calculation status:

·     Disabled.

·     Enabled.

IPv6 FRR TI-LFA

This field is not supported in the current software version.

IPv6 TI-LFA calculation status:

·     Disabled.

·     Enabled.

IPv4 FRR remote-LFA

This field is not supported in the current software version.

IPv4 remote LFA calculation status:

·     Disabled.

·     Enabled.

IPv4 prefix-suppression

Whether IPv4 IS-IS prefix suppression is enabled:

·     Disabled.

·     Enabled.

IPv6 prefix-suppression

Whether IPv6 IS-IS prefix suppression is enabled:

·     Disabled.

·     Enabled.

IPv4 tag

IPv4 tag value of the interface.

IPv6 tag

IPv6 tag value of the interface.

IPv4 BFD adjust cost

Whether BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment is enabled on the IPv4 IS-IS interface:

·     Disabled.

·     cost-offsetInterface cost adjustment value. The value range for cost-offset is 1 to 16777213. When the BFD session goes down, the interface cost is cost-offset plus the original interface cost.

·     cost-offset, inherited—Interface cost adjustment value. The value range for cost-offset is 1 to 16777213. The inherited attribute indicates that the interface inherits the global configuration of cost-offset from the IPv4 IS-IS process to which the interface belongs.

·     MaximumMaximum interface cost value (16777214). When the BFD session goes down, IS-IS will adjust the interface cost to the maximum.

·     Maximum, inherited—Maximum interface cost value (16777214). When the BFD session goes down, IS-IS will adjust the interface cost to the maximum. The inherited attribute indicates that the interface inherits this configuration from the IPv4 IS-IS process to which the interface belongs.

·     Excluded—BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment is suppressed on the interface by the isis bfd adjust-cost exclude command.

IPv6 BFD adjust cost

Whether BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment is enabled on the IPv6 IS-IS interface:

·     Disabled.

·     cost-offset—Interface cost adjustment value. The value range for cost-offset is 1 to 16777213. When the BFD session goes down, the interface cost is cost-offset plus the original interface cost.

·     cost-offset, inherited—Interface cost adjustment value. The value range for cost-offset is 1 to 16777213. The inherited attribute indicates that the interface inherits the global configuration of cost-offset from the IPv6 IS-IS process to which the interface belongs.

·     Maximum—Maximum interface cost value (16777214). When the BFD session goes down, IS-IS will adjust the interface cost to the maximum.

·     Maximum, inheritedMaximum interface cost value (16777214). When the BFD session goes down, IS-IS will adjust the interface cost to the maximum. The inherited attribute indicates that the interface inherits this configuration from the IPv6 IS-IS process to which the interface belongs.

·     Excluded—BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment is suppressed on the interface by the isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost exclude command.

IPv4 primary path detection mode

IPv4 primary path detection mode:

·     BFD ctrl—BFD control packet mode.

·     BFD ctrl, inherited—BFD control packet mode. The inherited attribute indicates that the interface inherits this configuration from the IPv4 IS-IS process to which the interface belongs.

·     BFD echo—BFD echo packet mode.

·     BFD echo, inherited—BFD echo packet mode. The inherited attribute indicates that the interface inherits this configuration from the IPv4 IS-IS process to which the interface belongs.

·     DisabledThe IS-IS interface does not use BFD for primary link failure detection.

·     Excluded—The IS-IS interface is disabled from using BFD for primary link failure detection by the isis primary-path-detect bfd exclude command.

IPv6 primary path detection mode

IPv6 primary path detection mode:

·     BFD ctrl—BFD control packet mode.

·     BFD ctrl, inherited—BFD control packet mode. The inherited attribute indicates that the interface inherits this configuration from the IPv6 IS-IS process to which the interface belongs.

·     BFD echo—BFD echo packet mode.

·     BFD echo, inherited—BFD echo packet mode. The inherited attribute indicates that the interface inherits this configuration from the IPv6 IS-IS process to which the interface belongs.

·     Disabled—The IS-IS interface does not use BFD for primary link failure detection.

·     Excluded—The IS-IS interface is disabled from using BFD for primary link failure detection by the isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd exclude command.

Average delay

Average link delay in microseconds.

Max delay

Maximum link delay in microseconds.

Min delay

Minimum link delay in microseconds.

Delay variation

Acceptable link delay variation in microseconds.

# Display IS-IS interface statistics.

<Sysname> display isis interface statistics

 

                  Interface statistics information for IS-IS(1)

                  --------------------------------------------

  Type            IPv4 up/down           IPv6 up/down

  LAN                   1/0                    0/0

  P2P                   0/0                    0/0

Table 10 Command output

Field

Description

Type

Network type of the interface:

·     LAN—Broadcast network.

·     P2P—Point-to-point network.

IPv4 up

Number of IS-IS interfaces in up state.

IPv4 down

Number of IS-IS interfaces in down state.

IPv6 up

Number of IS-Is interfaces in up state.

IPv6 down

Number of IS-Is interfaces in down state.

display isis led

Use display isis led to display IS-IS LSDB information.

Syntax

display isis led [ [ level-1 | level-2 ] | local | [ lsp-id lipid | lsp-name lspname ] | verbose ] * [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

level-1: Displays the Level-1 LSDB.

level-2: Displays the Level-2 LSDB.

local: Displays LSP information generated locally.

lsp-id lspid: Specifies an LSP ID, in the form of sysID. Pseudo ID-fragment num, where sysID represents the originating node or pseudo node. Pseudo ID is separated by a dot from sysID and by a hyphen from fragment num.

lsp-name lspname: Specifies the LSP name, in the form of Symbolic name.Pseudo ID-fragment num, where Pseudo ID is separated by a dot from Symbolic name and by a hyphen from fragment num. If the Pseudo ID is 0, specify the LSP name in the form Symbolic name-fragment num.

verbose: Displays LSDB detailed information. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays brief information about LSDB.

process-id: Specifies an IS-IS process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays LSDBs for all IS-IS processes.

Usage guidelines

If no level is specified, the command displays both Level-1 and Level-2 LSDB information.

Examples

# Display brief Level-1 LSDB information.

<Sysname> display isis lsdb level-1

 

                        Database information for IS-IS(1)

                        --------------------------------

        ATTENTION: System is overloaded.

        Overload is set manually.

 

                          Level-1 Link State Database

                          ---------------------------

 

LSPID                 Seq Num      Checksum      Holdtime      Length  ATT/P/OL

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

0000.0000.0001.00-00* 0x00000087   0xf846        1152          183     0/0/0

0000.0000.0003.00-00  0x00000005   0x4bee        520           177     0/0/0

0000.0000.0003.00-01  0x00000004   0x7245        520           45      0/0/0

0000.0000.0011.00-00  0x0000000b   0xcdf6        815           183     0/0/0

 

    *-Self LSP, +-Self LSP(Extended), ATT-Attached, P-Partition, OL-Overload

# Display detailed Level-1 LSDB information.

<Sysname> display isis lsdb level-1 verbose

 

                        Database information for IS-IS(1)

                        --------------------------------

        ATTENTION: System is overloaded.

        Overload is set manually.

 

                          Level-1 Link State Database

                          ---------------------------

 

LSPID                 Seq Num      Checksum      Holdtime      Length  ATT/P/OL

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

0000.0000.0001.00-00* 0x00000080   0x73f         1185          183     0/0/0

 Source       0000.0000.0001.00

 IID          10

 ITID         0

 NLPID        IPv4 IPv6

 Area address 10

 IPv4 address 192.168.220.10

 IPv6 address 10::1

 MT ID        0002   (-/-)

 MT ID        0006   (-/-)

 +NBR  ID

     0000.0000.0011.00                Cost: 100

 IPv6 unicast NBR ID

     6464.6464.6464.01                Cost: 10         MT ID: 2

     Interface IPv6 address: 100::1

     NBR Interface IPv6 address: 100::2

 +IP-Extended

     192.168.220.0   255.255.255.0    Cost: 100

IPv6

     10::/64                          Cost: 10

 IPv6 unicast

     10::/64                          Cost: 10         MT ID: 2

 

0000.0000.0003.00-00  0x00000005   0x4bee        887           177     0/0/0

 Source       0000.0000.0003.00

 NLPID        IPv4

 Area address 10

 IPv4 address 10.10.10.10

 IPv4 address 192.168.220.20

 +NBR  ID

     0000.0000.0001.00                Cost: 10

     Flag: 0, Average delay: 1000 us

     Remaining bandwidth: 15624999796736 bytes/sec

     Available bandwidth: 15624999796736 bytes/sec

     Utilized bandwidth: 0 bytes/sec

     SR/SRv6 Link Maximum SID Depths

         MPLS MSD         : 13

 +IP-Extended

     1.1.1.1         255.255.255.255  Cost: 0

     Prefix-SID: 10              Algorithm: 128

     Prefix-SID flags (R/N/P/E/V/L): 0/1/0/0/0/0

 +IP-Extended

     192.168.100.0   255.255.255.0    Cost: 10

 Router ID    1.1.1.1

 Router capability

     Router ID: 1.1.1.1         Flags (D/S): 0/0

     Segment routing (I/V/H): 1/0/0

     SRGB base: 16000           SRGB range : 8001

     SR/SRv6 Node Maximum SID Depths

         MPLS MSD         : 13

 

0000.0000.0003.00-01  0x00000004   0x7245        887           45      0/0/0

 Source       0000.0000.0003.00

 +IP-Extended

         10.10.10.0      255.255.255.0    Cost: 10

 +IP-Extended

         192.168.220.0   255.255.255.0    Cost: 10

 

 

    *-Self LSP, +-Self LSP(Extended), ATT-Attached, P-Partition, OL-Overload

# Display detailed Level-2 LSDB information.

<Sysname> display isis lsdb level-2 verbose

 

                       Database information for IS-IS(1)

                       ---------------------------------

 

                          Level-2 Link State Database

                          ---------------------------

 

LSPID                 Seq Num      Checksum      Holdtime      Length  ATT/P/OL

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

0000.0000.0099.00-00* 0x00000006   0x49a5        1126          97      0/0/1

 Source       0000.0000.0099.00

 NLPID        IPv4 IPv6

 Area address 10

 IPv4 address 192.168.2.199

 IPv6 address 2001::1

 MT ID        0000   (-/-)

 MT ID        0002   (-/-)

 +IP-Extended

     192.168.2.0     255.255.255.0    Cost: 10

 IPv6 unicast

     2001::/64                        Cost: 10         MT ID: 2

 

 

    *-Self LSP, +-Self LSP(Extended), ATT-Attached, P-Partition, OL-Overload

Table 11 Command output

Field

Description

LSPID

LSP ID.

Seq Num

LSP sequence number.

Checksum

LSP checksum.

Holdtime

LSP lifetime, which decreases as time elapses.

Length

LSP length.

ATT/P/OL

·     ATT—Attach bit.

·     P—Partition bit.

·     OL—Overload bit.

1 means the LSP bit is set and 0 means the LSP bit is not set.

Source

System ID of the originating router.

HOST NAME

Dynamic host name of the originating router.

ORG ID

Original system ID of the virtual system of the originating router.

IID

Multi-instance process ID.

ITID

Multi-instance topology ID. The value of this field is fixed at 0 in the current software version.

NLPID

Network layer protocol the originating router runs.

Area address

Area address of the originating router.

IPv4 address

IP address of the originating router's IS-IS interface.

IPv6 address

IPv6 address of the originating router's IS-ISv6 interface.

MT ID        0000     (-/-)

MT ID        0002     (-/-)

MT ID        0006     (-/-)

Topology supported by the originating router (0/0/0 indicates ATT/P/OL):

·     0000—Base topology.

·     0002—IPv6 unicast topology.

·     0006—IPv4 unicast topology.

·     (-/-)—Attach bit/overload bit.

NBR ID

Neighbor ID of the originating router.

IPv6 unicast NBR ID

IPv6 unicast neighbor information about the originating router.

Interface IP address

IP address of the local interface.

Neighbor IP address

IP address of the remote interface.

Interface IPv6 address

IPv6 address of the local interface.

NBR Interface IPv6 address

IPv6 address of the remote interface.

Router ID

IPv4 router ID.

IPv6 router ID

IPv6 router ID.

IP-Internal

Internal IP address and mask of the originating router.

IP-External

External IP address and mask of the originating router.

IP-Extended

Extended information about the originating router, including the IP address, subnet mask, and prefix SID information.

Cost

Cost.

Auth

Authentication information of the originating router.

IPv6

Internal IPv6 address and prefix of the originating router.

IPv6-Ext

External IPv6 address and prefix of the originating router.

IPv4 unicast

IPv4 unicast reachability information about the originating router.

IPv6 unicast

Internal IPv6 unicast reachability information about the originating router.

IPv6 unicast-ext

External IPv6 unicast reachability information about the originating router.

Flag

Average link delay flag indicating whether the average link delay exceeds 16777215 microseconds:

·     0—Stable link state whose average delay is shorter than or equivalent to 16777215 microseconds.

·     1—Unstable link state whose average delay is longer than 16777215 microseconds.

Average delay

Average delay in microseconds.

Flag

Min/Max link delay flag indicating whether the Min/Max link delay exceeds 16777215 microseconds.

·     0—Stable link state whose Min/Max delay is shorter than or equivalent to 16777215 microseconds.

·     1—Unstable link state whose Min/Max delay is longer than 16777215 microseconds.

Min delay

Minimum link delay in microseconds.

Max delay

Maximum link delay in microseconds.

Delay variation

Acceptable link delay variation in microseconds.

Remaining bandwidth

Remaining bandwidth in byte/s.

Available bandwidth

Available bandwidth in byte/s.

Utilized bandwidth

Used bandwidth in byte/s.

display isis lsdb statistics

Use display isis lsdb statistics to display IS-IS LSDB statistics.

Syntax

display isis lsdb statistics [ level-1 | level-2 ] [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

level-1: Displays IS-IS Level-1 LSDB statistics.

level-2: Displays IS-IS Level-2 LSDB statistics.

process-id: Specifies an IS-IS process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays LSDB statistics for all IS-IS processes.

Usage guidelines

If no level is specified, the command displays both Level-1 and Level-2 LSDB statistics.

Examples

# Display IS-IS LSDB statistics.

<Sysname> display isis lsdb statistics

 

                   Database Statistics information for IS-IS(1)

                   -----------------------------------------

 

                              Level-1 LSDB Statistics

                              -----------------------

 

LSP source ID                                                      LSP count

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Total                                                              333

1111.1111.1111.00                                                  1

2222.2222.2222.00                                                  256

2222.2222.2222.01                                                  1

bbbb.bbbb.0001.00                                                  75

 

                              Level-2 LSDB Statistics

                              -----------------------

 

LSP source ID                                                      LSP count

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Total                                                              663

1111.1111.1111.00                                                  256

2222.2222.2222.00                                                  256

2222.2222.2222.01                                                  1

aaaa.aaaa.0001.00                                                  75

bbbb.bbbb.0001.00                                                  75

Table 12 Command output

Field

Description

LSP source ID

ID of the source system.

LSP count

Number of LSPs with the same source ID.

Total

Total number of LSPs.

Related commands

display isis lsdb

display isis mesh-group

Use display isis mesh-group to display IS-IS mesh group configuration information.

Syntax

display isis mesh-group [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

process-id: Displays IS-IS mesh-group configuration for an IS-IS process specified by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays IS-IS mesh group configuration information for all IS-IS processes.

Examples

# Add Twenty-FiveGigE 1/0/1 and Twenty-FiveGigE 1/0/2 to mesh group 100.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface twenty-fivegige 1/0/1

[Sysname-Twenty-FiveGigE1/0/1] isis mesh-group 100

[Sysname-Twenty-FiveGigE1/0/1] quit

[Sysname] interface twenty-fivegige 1/0/2

[Sysname-Twenty-FiveGigE1/0/2] isis mesh-group 100

# Display IS-IS mesh-group configuration information.

[Sysname-Twenty-FiveGigE1/0/2] display isis mesh-group

               Mesh Group information for IS-IS(1)

----------------------------------------------------------------------

 Interface          Status

 WGE1/0/1            100

 WGE1/0/2            100

Table 13 Command output

Field

Description

Interface

Interface name.

Status

Mesh group the interface belongs to/whether a blocked interface is configured.

display isis name-table

Use display isis name-table to display the host name-to-system ID mapping table.

Syntax

display isis name-table [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

process-id: Displays the host name to system ID mapping table for an IS-IS process specified by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays the host name to system ID mapping table for all IS-IS processes.

Examples

# Display the IS-IS host name to system ID mapping table.

<Sysname> display isis name-table

                      Name table information for IS-IS(1)

                      -----------------------------------

 System ID           Hostname                            Type       Level

 6789.0000.0001      RUTA                                DYNAMIC    Level-1

 6789.0000.0001      RUTA                                DYNAMIC    Level-2

 0000.0000.0041      RUTB                                STATIC     Level-1

 0000.0000.0041      RUTB                                STATIC     Level-2

 6789.0000.0001.01   DIS-A                               DYNAMIC    Level-1

 0000.0000.0041.01   DIS-B                               DYNAMIC    Level-2

Table 14 Command output

Field

Description

System ID

System ID.

Hostname

Host name.

Type

Mapping type:

·     STATIC.

·     DYNAMIC.

Level

Level on which the system ID-to-host name mapping takes effect: Level-1 or Level-2.

display isis packet

Use display isis packet to display IS-IS packet statistics.

Syntax

display isis packet { csnp | hello | lsp | psnp } by-interface [ verbose ] [ interface-type interface-number ] [ process-id ]

display isis packet { csnp | hello | lsp | psnp } [ verbose ] [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

csnp: Displays CSNP packet statistics.

hello: Displays hello packet statistics.

lsp: Displays LSP packet statistics.

psnp: Displays PSNP packet statistics.

by-interface: Displays packet statistics on a per-interface basis.

verbose: Displays detailed packet statistics.

interface-type interface-number: Specifies an interface by its type and number. If you do not specify this option, the command displays IS-IS packet statistics for all interfaces.

process-id: Specifies an IS-IS process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays packet statistics for all IS-IS processes.

Examples

# Display detailed hello packet statistics on a per-interface basis.

<Sysname> display isis packet hello by-interface verbose

 

                     Hello packet information for IS-IS(1)

                     -------------------------------------

 

  Interface:  Vlan-interface10

  Total output packets : 0          Total output error packets : 0

  Total input packets  : 0          Total input error packets  : 0

 

  Input packets with errors

    Bad packet length      : 0          Bad header length          : 0

    Jumbo packet           : 0          Bad protocol description   : 0

    Bad protocol ID        : 0          Bad protocol version       : 0

    Unknown packet type    : 0          Bad max area count         : 0

    Bad system ID length   : 0          Bad circuit type           : 0

    Bad auth TLV           : 0          Bad area address TLV       : 0

    Auth failure           : 0          Excessive area addresses   : 0

    Bad NBR TLV            : 0          Excessive auth TLVs        : 0

    Excessive IF Addr TLVs : 0          Excessive IF addresses     : 0

    Bad IF address TLV     : 0          Duplicate system ID        : 0

    Bad TLV length         : 0          Bad IP address             : 0

    Duplicate IP address   : 0          Mismatched area address    : 0

    Mismatched protocol    : 0          Mismatched network type    : 0

    Bad IPv6 address TLV   : 0          Bad IPv6 address           : 0

    Duplicate IPv6 address : 0          Bad MT ID TLV              : 0

    SNPA conflict (LAN)    : 0          Excessive NBR SNPAs (LAN)  : 0

    Mismatched level (LAN) : 0          Bad 3-Way option TLV (P2P) : 0

    No common MT ID (P2P)  : 0          Bad circuit ID (P2P)       : 0

    Bad IID TLV            : 0

# Display detailed hello packet statistics.

<Sysname> display isis packet hello verbose

 

                     Hello packet information for IS-IS(1)

                     -------------------------------------

 

  Total output packets : 0          Total output error packets : 0

  Total input packets  : 0          Total input error packets  : 0

 

  Input packets with errors

    Bad packet length      : 0          Bad header length          : 0

    Jumbo packet           : 0          Bad protocol description   : 0

    Bad protocol ID        : 0          Bad protocol version       : 0

    Unknown packet type    : 0          Bad max area count         : 0

    Bad system ID length   : 0          Bad circuit type           : 0

    Bad auth TLV           : 0          Bad area address TLV       : 0

    Auth failure           : 0          Excessive area addresses   : 0

    Bad NBR TLV            : 0          Excessive auth TLVs        : 0

    Excessive IF Addr TLVs : 0          Excessive IF addresses     : 0

    Bad IF address TLV     : 0          Duplicate system ID        : 0

    Bad TLV length         : 0          Bad IP address             : 0

    Duplicate IP address   : 0          Mismatched area address    : 0

    Mismatched protocol    : 0          Mismatched network type    : 0

    Bad IPv6 address TLV   : 0          Bad IPv6 address           : 0

    Duplicate IPv6 address : 0          Bad MT ID TLV              : 0

    SNPA conflict (LAN)    : 0          Excessive NBR SNPAs (LAN)  : 0

    Mismatched level (LAN) : 0          Bad 3-Way option TLV (P2P) : 0

    No common MT ID (P2P)  : 0          Bad circuit ID (P2P)       : 0

    Bad IID TLV            : 0

Table 15 Command output

Field

Description

Input packets with errors

Statistics for packets with the following errors:

·     Bad packet length—Invalid packet length.

·     Bad header length—Invalid header length.

·     Jumbo packet—The packet length exceeds the buffer size or the interface MTU.

·     Bad protocol description—Invalid protocol description.

·     Bad protocol ID—Invalid protocol identifier.

·     Bad protocol version—Invalid protocol version.

·     Unknown packet type—Unknown packet type.

·     Bad max area count—Invalid maximum number of area addresses.

·     Bad system ID length—Invalid system ID length.

·     Bad circuit type—Invalid interface type.

·     Bad auth TLV—Invalid authentication TLV.

·     Bad area address TLV—Invalid area address TLV.

·     Auth failure—Authentication failure.

·     Excessive area addresses—Excessive area addresses.

·     Bad NBR TLV—Invalid neighbor TLV.

·     Excessive auth TLVs—Excessive authentication TLVs.

·     Excessive IF Addr TLVs—Excessive interface address TLVs.

·     Excessive IF addresses—Excessive interface addresses.

·     Bad IF address TLV—Invalid interface address TLV.

·     Duplicate system ID—Duplicate system IDs.

·     Bad TLV length—Invalid TLV length.

·     Bad IP address—The IP address does not belong to the same network as the local interface address.

·     Duplicate IP address—Duplicate IP addresses.

·     Mismatched area address—Mismatched area addresses.

·     Mismatched protocol—Mismatched protocols.

·     Mismatched network type—Mismatched network types.

·     Bad IPv6 address TLV—Invalid IPv6 address TLV.

·     Bad IPv6 address—Invalid IPv6 address.

·     Duplicate IPv6 address—Duplicate IPv6 addresses.

·     Bad MT ID TLV—Invalid topology ID TLV.

·     SNPA conflict (LAN)—SNPA conflict.

·     Excessive NBR SNPAs (LAN)—Excessive neighbor SNPAs.

·     Mismatched level (LAN)—Mismatched levels.

·     Bad 3-Way option TLV (P2P)—Invalid three-way handshake information.

·     No common MT ID (P2P)—No common topology ID.

·     Bad circuit ID (P2P)—Invalid circuit ID.

·     Bad IID TLV—The multi-instance TLV length is smaller than the minimum length specified in the protocol.

# Display detailed LSP packet statistics on a per-interface basis.

<Sysname> display isis packet lsp by-interface verbose

 

                      LSP packet information for IS-IS(1)

                      -----------------------------------

 

  Interface:  Vlan-interface10

  Total output packets : 0          Total output error packets : 0

  Total input packets  : 0          Total input error packets  : 0

 

  Input packets with errors

    Bad packet length    : 0          Bad header length        : 0

    Jumbo packet         : 0          SNPA conflict (LAN)      : 0

    Smaller than header  : 0          Bad protocol description : 0

    Bad protocol ID      : 0          Bad protocol version     : 0

    Unknown packet type  : 0          Bad max area count       : 0

    No active NBR        : 0          Bad system ID length     : 0

    Mismatched level     : 0          Illegal IS type          : 0

    Sequence number is 0 : 0          Checksum is 0            : 0

    Incorrect checksum   : 0          Bad TLV length           : 0

    Mismatched protocol  : 0          Bad auth TLV             : 0

    Auth failure         : 0          Excessive auth TLVs      : 0

    Bad NBR TLV          : 0          Bad extended IS TLV      : 0

    Bad IF address TLV   : 0          Bad IPv6 IF address TLV  : 0

    Bad alias TLV        : 0          Bad IP reachability TLV  : 0

    Bad MT IS TLV        : 0          Bad area address TLV     : 0

    Bad MT ID TLV        : 0          Bad MT IP TLV            : 0

    Bad MT IPv6 TLV      : 0          Bad IPv6 reachability TLV: 0

    Bad router ID TLV    : 0          Bad SRLG TLV              : 0

    Bad IID TLV          : 0

# Display detailed LSP packet statistics.

<Sysname> display isis packet lsp verbose

 

                      LSP packet information for IS-IS(1)

                      -----------------------------------

 

  Total output packets : 0          Total output error packets : 0

  Total input packets  : 0          Total input error packets  : 0

 

  Input packets with errors

    Bad packet length    : 0          Bad header length         : 0

    Jumbo packet         : 0          SNPA conflict (LAN)       : 0

    Smaller than header  : 0          Bad protocol description  : 0

    Bad protocol ID      : 0          Bad protocol version      : 0

    Unknown packet type  : 0          Bad max area count        : 0

    No active NBR        : 0          Bad system ID length      : 0

    Mismatched level     : 0          Illegal IS type           : 0

    Sequence number is 0 : 0          Checksum is 0             : 0

    Incorrect checksum   : 0          Bad TLV length            : 0

    Mismatched protocol  : 0          Bad auth TLV              : 0

    Auth failure         : 0          Excessive auth TLVs       : 0

    Bad NBR TLV          : 0          Bad extended IS TLV       : 0

    Bad IF address TLV   : 0          Bad IPv6 IF address TLV   : 0

    Bad alias TLV        : 0          Bad IP reachability TLV   : 0

    Bad MT IS TLV        : 0          Bad area address TLV      : 0

    Bad MT ID TLV        : 0          Bad MT IP TLV             : 0

    Bad MT IPv6 TLV      : 0          Bad IPv6 reachability TLV : 0

    Bad router ID TLV    : 0          Bad SRLG TLV              : 0

    Bad IID TLV          : 0

Table 16 Command output

Field

Description

Input packets with errors

Statistics for packets with the following errors:

·     Bad packet length—Invalid packet length.

·     Bad header length—Invalid header length.

·     Jumbo packet—The packet length exceeds the maximum length of packets that can be received.

·     SNPA conflict (LAN)—SNPA conflict.

·     Smaller than header—The packet length is smaller than the fixed header length.

·     Bad protocol description—Invalid protocol description.

·     Bad protocol ID—Invalid protocol identifier.

·     Bad protocol version—Invalid protocol version.

·     Unknown packet type—Unknown packet type.

·     Bad max area count—Invalid maximum number of area addresses.

·     No active NBR—The packet is from an unknown neighbor.

·     Bad system ID length—Invalid system ID length.

·     Mismatched level—Mismatched levels.

·     Illegal IS type—Invalid IS type.

·     Sequence number is 0—The sequence number is 0.

·     Checksum is 0—The checksum is 0.

·     Incorrect checksum—Incorrect checksum.

·     Bad TLV length—Invalid TLV length.

·     Mismatched protocol—Mismatched protocols.

·     Bad auth TLV—Invalid authentication TLV.

·     Auth failure—Authentication failure.

·     Excessive auth TLVs—Excessive authentication TLVs.

·     Bad NBR TLV—Invalid neighbor TLV.

·     Bad extended IS TLV—Invalid extended IS TLV.

·     Bad IF address TLV—Invalid interface address TLV.

·     Bad IPv6 IF address TLV—Invalid IPv6 interface address TLV.

·     Bad alias TLV—Invalid alias TLV.

·     Bad IP reachability TLV—Invalid IP reachability TLV.

·     Bad MT IS TLV—Invalid topology IS TLV.

·     Bad area address TLV—Invalid area address TLV.

·     Bad MT ID TLV—Invalid topology ID TLV.

·     Bad MT IP TLV—Invalid IPv4 topology TLV.

·     Bad MT IPv6 TLV—Invalid IPv6 topology TLV.

·     Bad IPv6 reachability TLV—Invalid IPv6 reachability TLV.

·     Bad router ID TLV—Invalid router ID TLV.

·     Bad IID TLV—The multi-instance TLV length is smaller than the minimum length specified in the protocol.

# Display detailed CSNP packet statistics on a per-interface basis.

<Sysname> display isis packet csnp by-interface verbose

 

                      CSNP packet information for IS-IS(1)

                      ------------------------------------

 

  Interface:  Vlan-interface10

  Total output packets : 0          Total output error packets : 0

  Total input packets  : 0          Total input error packets  : 0

 

  Input packets with errors

    Bad packet length   : 0          Bad header length       : 0

    Jumbo packet        : 0          SNPA conflict (LAN)     : 0

    Smaller than header : 0          Bad protocol description: 0

    Bad protocol ID     : 0          Bad protocol version    : 0

    Unknown packet type : 0          Bad max area count      : 0

    No active NBR       : 0          Bad system ID length    : 0

    Mismatched level    : 0          Bad TLV length          : 0

    Auth failure        : 0          Bad auth TLV            : 0

    Bad LSP TLV length  : 0          Excessive auth TLVs     : 0

    Excessive LSPs      : 0          Bad LSP ID              : 0

    Bad IID TLV         : 0

# Display detailed CSNP packet statistics.

<Sysname> display isis packet csnp verbose

 

                      CSNP packet information for IS-IS(1)

                      ------------------------------------

 

  Total output packets : 0          Total output error packets : 0

  Total input packets  : 0          Total input error packets  : 0

 

  Input packets with errors

    Bad packet length   : 0          Bad header length        : 0

    Jumbo packet        : 0          SNPA conflict (LAN)      : 0

    Smaller than header : 0          Bad protocol description : 0

    Bad protocol ID     : 0          Bad protocol version     : 0

    Unknown packet type : 0          Bad max area count       : 0

    No active NBR       : 0          Bad system ID length     : 0

    Mismatched level    : 0          Bad TLV length           : 0

    Auth failure        : 0          Bad auth TLV             : 0

    Bad LSP TLV length  : 0          Excessive auth TLVs      : 0

    Excessive LSPs      : 0          Bad LSP ID               : 0

    Bad IID TLV         : 0

Table 17 Command output

Field

Description

Input packets with errors

Statistics for packets with the following errors:

·     Bad packet length—Invalid packet length.

·     Bad header length—Invalid header length.

·     Jumbo packet—The packet length exceeds the maximum length of packets that can be received.

·     SNPA conflict (LAN)—SNPA conflict.

·     Smaller than header—The packet length is smaller than the fixed header length.

·     Bad protocol description—Invalid protocol description.

·     Bad protocol ID—Invalid protocol identifier.

·     Bad protocol version—Invalid protocol version.

·     Unknown packet type—Unknown packet type.

·     Bad max area count—Invalid maximum number of area addresses.

·     No active NBR—The packet is from an unknown neighbor.

·     Bad system ID length—Invalid system ID length.

·     Mismatched level—Mismatched levels.

·     Bad TLV length—Invalid TLV length.

·     Auth failure—Authentication failure.

·     Bad auth TLV—Invalid authentication TLV.

·     Bad LSP TLV length—Invalid LSP TLV length.

·     Excessive auth TLVs—Excessive authentication TLVs.

·     Excessive LSPs—Excessive LSPs.

·     Bad LSP ID—Invalid LSP ID.

·     Bad IID TLV—The multi-instance TLV length is smaller than the minimum length specified in the protocol.

# Display detailed PSNP packet statistics on a per-interface basis.

<Sysname> display isis packet psnp by-interface verbose

 

                      PSNP packet information for IS-IS(1)

                      ------------------------------------

 

  Interface:  Vlan-interface10

  Total output packets : 0          Total output error packets : 0

  Total input packets  : 0          Total input error packets  : 0

 

  Input packets with errors

    Bad packet length   : 0          Bad header length       : 0

    Jumbo packet        : 0          SNPA conflict (LAN)     : 0

    Smaller than header : 0          Bad protocol description: 0

    Bad protocol ID     : 0          Bad protocol version    : 0

    Unknown packet type : 0          Bad max area count      : 0

    No active NBR       : 0          Bad system ID length    : 0

    Mismatched level    : 0          Bad TLV length          : 0

    Auth failure        : 0          Bad auth TLV            : 0

    Bad LSP TLV length  : 0          Excessive auth TLVs     : 0

    Excessive LSPs      : 0          Bad LSP ID              : 0

    Bad IID TLV         : 0

# Display detailed PSNP packet statistics.

<Sysname> display isis packet psnp verbose

 

                      PSNP packet information for IS-IS(1)

                      ------------------------------------

 

  Total output packets : 0          Total output error packets : 0

  Total input packets  : 0          Total input error packets  : 0

 

  Input packets with errors

    Bad packet length   : 0          Bad header length        : 0

    Jumbo packet        : 0          SNPA conflict (LAN)      : 0

    Smaller than header : 0          Bad protocol description : 0

    Bad protocol ID     : 0          Bad protocol version     : 0

    Unknown packet type : 0          Bad max area count       : 0

    No active NBR       : 0          Bad system ID length     : 0

    Mismatched level    : 0          Bad TLV length           : 0

    Auth failure        : 0          Bad auth TLV             : 0

    Bad LSP TLV length  : 0          Excessive auth TLVs      : 0

    Excessive LSPs      : 0          Bad LSP ID               : 0

    Bad IID TLV         : 0

Table 18 Command output

Field

Description

Input packets with errors

Statistics for packets with the following errors:

·     Bad packet length—Invalid packet length.

·     Bad header length—Invalid header length.

·     Jumbo packet—The packet length exceeds the maximum length of packets that can be received.

·     SNPA conflict (LAN)—SNPA conflict.

·     Smaller than header—The packet length is smaller than the fixed header length.

·     Bad protocol description—Invalid protocol description.

·     Bad protocol ID—Invalid protocol identifier.

·     Bad protocol version—Invalid protocol version.

·     Unknown packet type—Unknown packet type.

·     Bad max area count—Invalid maximum number of area addresses.

·     No active NBR—The packet is from an unknown neighbor.

·     Bad system ID length—Invalid system ID length.

·     Mismatched level—Mismatched levels.

·     Bad TLV length—Invalid TLV length.

·     Auth failure—Authentication failure.

·     Bad auth TLV—Invalid authentication TLV.

·     Bad LSP TLV length—Invalid LSP TLV length.

·     Excessive auth TLVs—Excessive authentication TLVs.

·     Excessive LSPs—Excessive LSPs.

·     Bad LSP ID—Invalid LSP ID.

·     Bad IID TLV—The multi-instance TLV length is smaller than the minimum length specified in the protocol.

Related commands

reset isis packet

display isis peer

Use display isis peer to display IS-IS neighbor information.

Syntax

display isis peer [ statistics | verbose ] [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

statistics: Displays IS-IS neighbor statistics.

verbose: Displays detailed IS-IS neighbor information. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays brief IS-IS neighbor information.

process-id: Displays IS-IS neighbor information for an IS-IS process specified by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays neighbor information for all IS-IS processes.

Examples

# Display brief IS-IS neighbor information.

<Sysname> display isis peer

 

                         Peer information for IS-IS(1)

                         -----------------------------

 

 System ID: 0000.0000.0001

 Interface: Vlan100                 Circuit Id:  0000.0000.0001.01

 State: Up     HoldTime:  27s       Type: L1(L1L2)     PRI: 64

 

 System ID: 0000.0000.0001

 Interface: Vlan100                  Circuit Id:  0000.0000.0001.01

 State: Up     HoldTime:  27s       Type: L2(L1L2)     PRI: 64

# Display detailed IS-IS neighbor information.

<Sysname> display isis peer verbose

 

                         Peer information for IS-IS(1)

                         ----------------------------

 

 System ID: 0000.1111.2222

 Interface: Vlan100                 Circuit Id:  0000.1111.2222.01

 State: Up     Holdtime:   6s       Type: L1(L1L2)     PRI: 64

 Area address(es): 49

 Peer IP address(es): 12.0.0.2

 Peer IPv6 address(es): FE80::541F:98FF:FE5E:205

 Peer IPv6 global address(es): 100::2

 Peer local circuit ID: 1

 Peer circuit SNPA address: 000c-293b-c4be

 Uptime: 00:05:07

 Adj protocol:  IPv4

 IPv4 adjacency state: Up

 Adj P2P three-way handshake: No

 Graceful Restart capable

   Restarting signal: No

   Suppress adjacency advertisement: No

 Local topology:

   0    2

 Remote topology:

   0    2

 Local BFD support:

   (MTID:0, IPv4)

 Remote BFD support:

   (MTID:0, IPv4)

 

 System ID: 0000.0000.0002

 Interface: Vlan101                 Circuit Id:  001

 State: Up     HoldTime: 27s        Type: L1L2         PRI: --

 Area address(es): 49

 Peer IP address(es): 192.168.220.30

 Peer local circuit ID: 1

 Peer circuit SNPA address: 000c-29fd-ed69

 Uptime: 00:05:07

 Adj protocol:  IPv4

 Adj P2P three-way handshake: Yes

   Peer extended circuit ID: 2

 Graceful Restart capable

   Restarting signal: No

   Suppress adjacency advertisement: No

 Local topology:

   0

 Remote topology:

   0

 Local BFD support:

   (MTID:0, IPv4)

 Remote BFD support:

   (MTID:0, IPv4)

Table 19 Command output

Field

Description

System ID

System ID of the neighbor.

Interface

Interface connecting to the neighbor.

Circuit Id

Circuit ID.

State

Circuit state.

HoldTime

Within the holdtime, if no hellos are received from the neighbor, the neighbor is considered down. If a hello is received, the holdtime is reset to the initial value.

Type

Circuit type:

·     L1—Means the circuit type is Level-1 and the neighbor is a Level-1 router.

·     L2—Means the circuit type is Level-2 and the neighbor is a Level-2 router.

·     L1(L1L2)—Means the circuit type is Level-1 and the neighbor is a Level-1-2 router.

·     L2(L1L2)—Means the circuit type is Level-2 and the neighbor is a Level-1-2 router.

PRI

DIS priority of the neighbor.

Area address(es)

Area address of the neighbor.

Peer IP address(es)

IP address of the neighbor.

Peer IPv6 address(es)

IPv6 address of the neighbor.

Peer IPv6 global address(es)

Global unicast IPv6 address of the remote interface.

Uptime

Time elapsed since the neighbor relationship was formed.

Adj Protocol

Adjacency protocol: IPv4 or IPv6.

IPv4 adjacency state

IPv4 adjacency state: Up or Down.

This field is not displayed if IPv4 is not supported.

IPv6 adjacency state

IPv6 adjacency state: Up or Down.

This field is not displayed if IPv6 is not supported.

Adjacency not up

Reason why the adjacency relationship is down: Waiting for BFD session to come up.

This field is no longer displayed after the adjacency relationship comes up.

Peer local circuit ID

Circuit ID of the neighbor.

Peer circuit SNPA address

SNPA address of the neighbor.

Adj P2P three-way handshake

Indicates whether the neighbor supports P2P three-way handshake.

Peer extended circuit ID

Extended circuit ID of the neighbor interface. This field is available when the neighbor supports three-way handshake.

Graceful Restart capable

The neighbor has the GR helper capability.

Restarting signal

RR flag.

Suppress adjacency advertisement

Whether or not to suppress the SA bit upon restart.

Local topology

List of topologies supported by the local interface.

Remote topology

List of topologies supported by the neighbor interface.

Local BFD support

Support of the local end for adjacency establishment and maintenance control based on BFD session state:

·     (MTID:0, IPv4)—Adjacency establishment and maintenance control based on BFD session state is supported in IPv4 unicast topology 0.

·     (MTID:0, IPv6)—Adjacency establishment and maintenance control based on BFD session state is supported in IPv6 unicast topology 0.

·     (MTID:2, IPv6)—Adjacency establishment and maintenance control based on BFD session state is supported in IPv6 unicast topology 2.

This field is not displayed if the local end does not support adjacency establishment and maintenance control based on BFD session state.

Remote BFD support

Support of the remote end for adjacency establishment and maintenance control based on BFD session state:

·     (MTID:0, IPv4)—Adjacency establishment and maintenance control based on BFD session state is supported in IPv4 unicast topology 0.

·     (MTID:0, IPv6)—Adjacency establishment and maintenance control based on BFD session state is supported in IPv6 unicast topology 0.

·     (MTID:2, IPv6)—Adjacency establishment and maintenance control based on BFD session state is supported in IPv6 unicast topology 2.

This field is not displayed if the remote end does not support adjacency establishment and maintenance control based on BFD session state.

# Display IS-IS neighbor statistics.

<Sysname> display isis peer statistics

 

                    Peer Statistics information for IS-IS(1)

                    ---------------------------------------

  Type              IPv4 Up/Init              IPv6 Up/Init

  LAN Level-1             1/0                       0/0

  LAN Level-2             1/0                       0/0

  P2P                     0/0                       0/0

Table 20 Command output

Field

Description

Type

Neighbor type:

·     LAN Level-1—Number of Level-1 neighbors whose network type is broadcast.

·     LAN Level-2—Number of Level-2 neighbors whose network type is broadcast.

·     P2P—Number of neighbors whose network type is P2P.

IPv4 Up

Number of IPv4 neighbors in up state.

IPv4 Init

Number of IPv4 neighbors in init state.

IPv6 Up

Number of IPv6 neighbors in up state.

IPv6 Init

 

Number of IPv6 neighbors in init state.

display isis redistribute

Use display isis redistribute to display the redistributed IS-IS routing information.

Syntax

display isis redistribute [ ipv4 [ ip-address mask-length ] | ipv6 [ ipv6-address prefix-length ] ] [ level-1 | level-2 ] [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

ipv4: Displays the redistributed IPv4 routing information.

ip-address mask-length: Specifies the destination IP address and mask length.

ipv6: Displays the redistributed IPv6 routing information.

ipv6-address prefix-length: Specifies the destination IPv6 address and prefix length. The value range for the prefix-length argument is 1 to 128.

process-id: Specifies the IS-IS process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535.

level-1: Displays the IS-IS Level-1 routing information.

level-2: Displays the IS-IS Level-2 routing information.

Usage guidelines

If you do not specify the ipv4 or ipv6 keyword, the command displays the redistributed IPv4 routing information.

If you do not specify an IS-IS level, this command displays both Level-1 and Level-2 routing information.

Examples

# Display redistributed IPv4 routing information.

<Sysname> display isis redistribute 1

 

                         Route information for IS-IS(1)

                         ------------------------------

 

                        Level-1 IPv4 Redistribute Table

                        --------------------------------

 Type IPv4 Destination     IntCost    ExtCost    Tag        State

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 D    192.168.30.0/24      0          0                     Active

 D    11.11.11.11/32       0          0

 D    10.10.10.0/24        0          0

 

          Type: D -Direct, I -ISIS, S -Static, O -OSPF, B -BGP, R -RIP

Table 21 Command output

Field

Description

Route information for IS-IS(1)

IS-IS process of the redistributed routing information.

Level-1 IPv4 Redistribute Table

Redistributed IPv4 routing information of IS-IS Level-1.

Level-2 IPv4 Redistribute Table

Redistributed IPv4 routing information of IS-IS Level-2.

Type

Redistributed route type.

IPv4 Destination

IPv4 destination address.

IntCost

Internal cost of the route.

ExtCost

External cost of the route.

Tag

Tag value.

State

Indicates whether the route is valid.

# Display redistributed IPv6 routing information.

<Sysname> display isis redistribute ipv6 1

 

                         Route information for IS-IS(1)

                         ------------------------------

 

                        Level-1 IPv6 Redistribute Table

                        --------------------------------

Type       : direct     Destination: 12:1::/64

IntCost    : 0          Tag        :

State      : Active

 

 

                        Level-2 IPv6 Redistribute Table

                        --------------------------------

Type       : direct     Destination: 12:1::/64

IntCost    : 0          Tag        :

State      : Active

Table 22 Command output

Field

Description

Route information for IS-IS(1)

Redistributed route information for IS-IS process 1.

Level-1 IPv6 Redistribute Table

Redistributed route information of IS-IS Level-1.

Level-2 IPv6 Redistribute Table

Redistributed route information of IS-IS Level-2.

Type

Redistributed route types:

·     Direct.

·     IS-ISv6.

·     Static.

·     OSPFv3.

·     BGP4+.

·     RIPng.

Destination

IPv6 destination address.

IntCost

Internal route cost.

Tag

Tag value.

State

Indicates whether the redistributed route is valid.

display isis route

Use display isis route to display IS-IS routing information.

Syntax

display isis route [ ipv4 [ ip-address mask-length ] | ipv6 [ ipv6-address prefix-length ] ] [ [ level-1 | level-2 ] | verbose ] * [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

ipv4: Displays IS-IS IPv4 routing information.

ip-address mask-length: Displays IS-IS IPv4 routing information for the specified IP address. The mask-length argument is in the range of 0 to 32.

ipv6: Displays IS-IS IPv6 routing information.

ipv6-address prefix-length: Displays IS-IS IPv6 routing information for the specified IPv6 address. The prefix-length argument is in the range of 0 to 128.

level-1: Displays Level-1 IS-IS routing information.

level-2: Displays Level-2 IS-IS routing information.

verbose: Displays detailed IS-IS IPv4 routing information. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays brief IS-IS routing information

process-id: Displays IS-IS IPv4 routing information for an IS-IS process specified by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify an IS-IS process, this command displays routing information for all IS-IS processes.

Usage guidelines

If you do not specify the ipv4 or ipv6 keyword, the command displays IS-IS IPv4 routing information.

If you do not specify a level, this command displays both Level-1 and Level-2 routing information.

Examples

# Display brief IS-IS IPv4 routing information.

<Sysname> display isis route

 

                         Route information for IS-IS(1)

                         -----------------------------

 

                         Level-1 IPv4 Forwarding Table

                         -----------------------------

 

 IPv4 Destination     IntCost    ExtCost ExitInterface   NextHop         Flags

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 8.8.8.0/24           10         NULL    Vlan100         Direct          D/L/-

 9.9.9.0/24           20         NULL    Vlan100         8.8.8.5         R/L/-

 

      Flags: D-Direct, R-Added to Rib, L-Advertised in LSPs, U-Up/Down Bit Set

 

                         Level-2 IPv4 Forwarding Table

                         -----------------------------

 

 IPv4 Destination     IntCost    ExtCost ExitInterface   NextHop         Flags

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 8.8.8.0/24           10         NULL                                    D/L/-

 

      Flags: D-Direct, R-Added to Rib, L-Advertised in LSPs, U-Up/Down Bit Set

Table 23 Command output

Field

Description

Route information for IS-IS(1)

Route information for IS-IS process 1.

Level-1 IPv4 Forwarding Table

IS-IS IPv4 routing information for Level-1.

Level-2 IPv4 Forwarding Table

IS-IS IPv4 routing information for Level-2.

IPv4 Destination

IPv4 destination address.

IntCost

Internal cost.

ExtCost

External cost.

ExitInterface

Output interface.

NextHop

Next hop.

Flags

Routing state flag:

·     D—Direct route.

·     R—The route has been added into the routing table.

·     L—The route has been advertised in an LSP.

·     U—Penetration flag. Setting it to UP can prevent an LSP sent from L2 to L1 from being sent back to L2.

# Display detailed IS-IS IPv4 routing information.

<Sysname> display isis route verbose

 

                         Route information for IS-IS(1)

                         -----------------------------

 

                         Level-1 IPv4 Forwarding Table

                         -----------------------------

 

 IPv4 Dest : 8.8.8.0/24          Int. Cost  : 10               Ext. Cost  : NULL

 Admin Tag : -                   Src Count  : 2                Flag       : D/L/-

 InLabel   : 4294967295          InLabel Flag: -/-/-/-/-/-

 NextHop   :                     Interface :                  ExitIndex :

    Direct                             Vlan100                    0x00000000

 Nib ID    : 0x0                 OutLabel   : 4294967295       OutLabelFlag: -

 LabelSrc  : N/A                 Delay Flag : N/A

 

 IPv4 Dest : 9.9.9.0/24          Int. Cost  : 20               Ext. Cost : NULL

 Admin Tag : -                   Src Count  : 1                Flag      : R/L/-

 InLabel   : 4294967295          InLabel Flag: -/-/-/-/-/-

 NextHop   :                     Interface :                  ExitIndex :

    8.8.8.5                            Vlan100                    0x00000003

 Nib ID    : 0x0                 OutLabel   : 4294967295       OutLabelFlag: -

 LabelSrc  : N/A                 Delay Flag : N/A

 

      Flags: D-Direct, R-Added to Rib, L-Advertised in LSPs, U-Up/Down Bit Set

 

      InLabel flags: R-Readvertisement, N-Node SID, P-no PHP

                     E-Explicit null, V-Value, L-Local

 

      OutLabelFlags: E-Explicit null, I-Implicit null, N-Nomal, P-SR label prefer

 

                         Level-2 IPv4 Forwarding Table

                         -----------------------------

 

 IPv4 Dest : 8.8.8.0/24          Int. Cost  : 10               Ext. Cost  : NULL

 Admin Tag : -                   Src Count  : 2                Flag       : D/L/-

 InLabel   : 4294967295          InLabel Flag: -/-/-/-/-/-

 NextHop   :                     Interface  :                  ExitIndex  :

    Direct                             Vlan100                    0x00000001

 Nib ID    : 0x14000003                 OutLabel   : 4294967295       OutLabelFlag: -

 LabelSrc  : N/A                 Delay Flag : N/A

 

      Flags: D-Direct, R-Added to Rib, L-Advertised in LSPs, U-Up/Down Bit Set

      InLabel flags: R-Readvertisement, N-Node SID, P-no PHP

                     E-Explicit null, V-Value, L-Local

 

      OutLabelFlags: E-Explicit null, I-Implicit null, N-Nomal, P-SR label prefer

Table 24 Command output

Field

Description

Route information for IS-IS(1)

Route information for IS-IS process 1.

Level-1 IPv4 Forwarding Table

IS-IS IPv4 routing information for Level-1.

Level-2 IPv4 Forwarding Table

IS-IS IPv4 routing information for Level-2.

IPv4 Dest

IPv4 destination.

Int. Cost

Internal cost.

Ext. Cost

External cost.

Admin Tag

Tag.

Src Count

Count of advertising sources.

Flag

Route state flag:

·     R—The route has been installed into the routing table.

·     L—The route has been flooded in an LSP.

·     U—Route leaking flag. Setting it to UP can prevent an LSP sent from L2 to L1 from being sent back to L2.

InLabel

This field is not supported in the current software version.

Incoming label.

InLabel flag

This field is not supported in the current software version.

Incoming label flag:

·     R—Re-advertisement flag. If set, inter-level propagation or route redistribution exists.

·     N—Node-SID flag. If set, the prefix SID is the SID to an SR node.

·     P—No-PHP flag. If set, the penultimate node cannot pop the prefix SID.

·     E—Explicit null flag. If set, the upstream neighbor must replace the prefix SID with an explicit null flag before forwarding the packets.

·     V—Value/Index flag. If set, the prefix SID carries an absolute value.

·     L—Local flag. If set, the prefix SID has local significance.

NextHop

Next hop.

Interface

Output interface.

ExitIndex

Index of the output interface.

Nib ID

ID assigned by the routing management module (next hop index).

OutLabel

This field is not supported in the current software version.

Outgoing label.

OutLabelFlag

This field is not supported in the current software version.

Outgoing label flag:

·     E—Explicit null flag. The upstream neighbor must replace the SID with an explicit null flag before forwarding the packets.

·     I—Implicit null flag. The upstream neighbor must replace the SID with an implicit null flag before forwarding the packets. This flag is not supported in the current software version.

·     N—Normal flag.

·     P—SR label preferred flag.

LabelSrc

This field is not supported in the current software version.

Label source:

·     SR—The label is allocated by the SR node.

·     SRMS—The label is allocated by the segment routing mapping server (SRMS).

·     N/A—No label exists.

Delay Flag

This field is not supported in the current software version.

Microloop avoidance delay flag:

·     D—Microloop avoidance is configured. Route convergence is delayed.

·     N/A—Microloop avoidance is not configured or the microloop avoidance RIB-update-delay timer has expired. Route convergence is in progress.

# Display IPv6 IS-IS routing information.

<Sysname> display isis route ipv6

 

                         Route information for IS-IS(1)

                         ------------------------------

 

                         Level-1 IPv6 forwarding table

                         -----------------------------

 Destination: 2001:1::                                PrefixLen: 64

 Flag       : R/L/-                                   Cost     : 20

 Next hop   : FE80::200:5EFF:FE64:8905                Interface: Vlan100

 

 Destination: 2001:2::                                PrefixLen: 64

 Flag       : D/L/-                                   Cost     : 10

 Next hop   : Direct                                  Interface: Vlan100

 

       Flags: D-Direct, R-Added to Rib, L-Advertised in LSPs, U-Up/Down Bit Set

 

                         Level-2 IPv6 forwarding table

                         -----------------------------

 

 Destination: 2001:1::                                PrefixLen: 64

 Flag       : -/-/-                                   Cost     : 20

 

 

 Destination: 2001:2::                                PrefixLen: 64

 Flag       : D/L/-                                   Cost     : 10

 

       Flags: D-Direct, R-Added to Rib, L-Advertised in LSPs, U-Up/Down Bit Set

Table 25 Command output

Field

Description

Destination

IPv6 destination prefix.

PrefixLen

Prefix length.

Flag/Flags

Route flag:

·     D—This is a direct route.

·     R—The route has been added into the routing table.

·     L—The route has been advertised in an LSP.

·     U—Route leaking flag, indicating that the Level-1 route is from Level-2. U means the route will not be returned to Level-2.

Cost

Route cost.

Next hop

Next hop.

Interface

Output interface type and number.

# Display detailed IPv6 IS-IS routing information.

<Sysname> display isis route ipv6 verbose

 

                         Route information for IS-IS(1)

                         ------------------------------

 

                         Level-1 IPv6 forwarding table

                         -----------------------------

 

 IPv6 dest   : 2::2/128

 Flag        : R/L/-                       Cost        : 10

 Admin tag   : -                           Src count   : 1

 Algorithm   : 0

 Priority    : Medium

 Nexthop     : FE80::86FB:DDFF:FE3F:1007

 Interface   : Vlan12                      Delay Flag : N/A

 BkNexthop   : FE80::86FB:D4FF:FE1B:E05

 BkInterface : Vlan10

 Nib ID      : 0x24000008

 

 IPv6 dest   : 2012::/64

 Flag        : D/L/-                       Cost        : 10

 Admin tag   : -                           Src count   : 2

 Algorithm   : 0

 Priority    : Low

 Nexthop     : Direct

 Interface   : Vlan12                      Delay Flag : N/A

 Nib ID      : 0x0

 

 IPv6 dest   : 2023::/64

 Flag        : R/L/-                       Cost        : 20

 Admin tag   : -                           Src count   : 2

 Algorithm   : 0

 Priority    : Low

 Nexthop     : FE80::86FB:D4FF:FE1B:E05

 Interface   : Vlan10                      Delay Flag : N/A

 Nib ID      : 0x24000007

 

 Priority    : Low

 Nexthop     : FE80::86FB:DDFF:FE3F:1007

 Interface   : Vlan12                      Delay Flag : N/A

 Nib ID      : 0x24000004

 

 IPv6 dest   : 2013::/64

 Flag        : D/L/-                       Cost        : 10

 Admin tag   : -                           Src count   : 2

 Algorithm   : 0

 Priority    : Low

 Nexthop     : Direct

 Interface   : Vlan10                      Delay Flag : N/A

 Nib ID      : 0x0

 

      Flags: D-Direct, R-Added to Rib, L-Advertised in LSPs, U-Up/Down Bit Set

 

                         Level-2 IPv6 forwarding table

                         -----------------------------

 

 IPv6 dest : 2::2/128

 Flag      : -/-/-                       Cost      : 10

 Admin tag : -                           Src count : 2

 Nexthop   : -

 Interface : -

 Nib ID    : -

 

 IPv6 dest   : 2012::/64

 Flag        : D/L/-                       Cost        : 10

 Admin tag   : -                           Src count   : 3

 Algorithm   : 0

 Priority    : Low

 Nexthop     : Direct

 Interface   : Vlan12                      Delay Flag : N/A

 Nib ID      : 0x0

 

 IPv6 dest : 2023::/64

 Flag      : -/-/-                       Cost      : 20

 Admin tag : -                           Src count : 2

 Nexthop   : -

 Interface : -

 Nib ID    : -

 

 IPv6 dest   : 2013::/64

 Flag        : D/L/-                       Cost        : 10

 Admin tag   : -                           Src count   : 3

 Algorithm   : 0

 Priority    : Low

 Nexthop     : Direct

 Interface   : Vlan12                      Delay Flag : N/A

 Nib ID      : 0x0

 

      Flags: D-Direct, R-Added to Rib, L-Advertised in LSPs, U-Up/Down Bit Set

Table 26 Command output

Field

Description

IPv6 dest

IPv6 destination address and prefix.

Flag/Flags

Route flag:

·     D—The route is a direct route.

·     R—The route has been added into the routing table.

·     L—The route has been advertised in an LSP.

·     U—Route leaking flag, indicating the Level-1 route is from Level-2. U means the route will not be returned to Level-2.

Cost

Route cost.

Admin tag

Administrative tag.

Src count

Number of advertisement sources.

Algorithm

Algorithm ID.

0 represents the SPF algorithm.

Priority

Route convergence priority. Options include critical, high, medium, and low.

Nexthop

Next hop.

Interface

Output interface type and number.

BkNexthop

Backup next hop.

BkInterface

Backup output interface.

Nib ID

Next hop index assigned by the routing management module.

display isis spf-tree

Use display isis spf-tree to display IS-IS SPF tree information.

Syntax

display isis spf-tree [ ipv4 | ipv6 ] [ [ level-1 | level-2 ] | [ source-id source-id | verbose ] ] * [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

ipv4: Displays IS-IS IPv4 SPF tree information.

ipv6: Displays IS-IS IPv6 SPF tree information.

level-1: Displays Level-1 IS-IS SPF tree information. If you do not specify a level, the command displays both Level-1 and Level-2 SPF tree information.

level-2: Displays Level-2 SPF tree information. If you do not specify a level, the command displays both Level-1 and Level-2 SPF tree information.

source-id source-id: Displays detailed information about an SPF node. The source-id argument represents the system ID of the SPF node, in XXXX.XXXX.XXXX.XX format.

verbose: Displays detailed IS-IS SPF tree information. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays brief IS-IS SPF tree information.

process-id: Specifies an IS-IS process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command displays SPF tree information for all IS-IS processes.

Usage guidelines

If you do not specify the ipv4 or ipv6 keyword, the command displays IS-IS IPv4 SPF tree information.

Examples

# Display brief IS-IS IPv4 SPF tree information.

<Sysname> display isis spf-tree

 

                        Shortest Path Tree for IS-IS(1)

                        -------------------------------

 

      Flags: S-Node is on SPF tree       T-Node is on tent list

             O-Node is overload          R-Node is directly reachable

             I-Node or Link is isolated  D-Node or Link is to be deleted

             C-Neighbor is child         P-Neighbor is parent

             V-Link is involved          N-Link is a new path

             L-Link is on change list    U-Protocol usage is changed

             H-Nexthop is changed

 

                           Level-1 Shortest Path Tree

                           --------------------------

 

SpfNode            NodeFlag       SpfLink            LinkCost LinkFlag

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

0000.0000.0032.00  S/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.01  10       -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0064.00  10       -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

0000.0000.0032.01  S/-/-/R/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0064.00  0        -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.00  0        -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

0000.0000.0064.00  S/-/-/R/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.00  10       -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.01  10       -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

 

                           Level-2 Shortest Path Tree

                           --------------------------

 

SpfNode            NodeFlag       SpfLink            LinkCost LinkFlag

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

0000.0000.0032.00  S/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.01  10       -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0064.00  10       -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

0000.0000.0032.01  S/-/-/R/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0064.00  0        -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.00  0        -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

0000.0000.0064.00  S/-/-/R/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.00  10       -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.01  10       -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

# Display detailed IS-IS IPv4 SPF tree information.

<Sysname> display isis spf-tree verbose

 

                        Shortest Path Tree for IS-IS(1)

                        -------------------------------

 

      Flags: S-Node is on SPF tree       T-Node is on tent list

             O-Node is overload          R-Node is directly reachable

             I-Node or Link is isolated  D-Node or Link is to be deleted

             C-Neighbor is child         P-Neighbor is parent

             V-Link is involved          N-Link is a new path

             L-Link is on change list    U-Protocol usage is changed

             H-Nexthop is changed

 

                           Level-1 Shortest Path Tree

                           --------------------------

 

 SpfNode        : 0000.0000.0001.00

 Distance       : 0

 TE distance    : 0

 SRP distance   : 0

 NodeFlag       : S/-/-/-/-/-

 RelayNibID     : 0x0

 TE tunnel count: 0

 SRP count      : 0

 Nexthop count  : 0

 SpfLink count  : 1

 -->0000.0000.0004.04

    LinkCost    : 10

    LinkNewCost : 10

    MplsTeCost  : 16777215

    DelayCost   : 16777215

    LinkFlag    : -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Adjacent     Interface : N/A

     Cost       : 10           Nexthop   : N/A

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

     MplsTeCost : 16777215     DelayCost : 16777215

 

 SpfNode        : 0000.0000.0004.00

 Distance       : 10

 TE Distance    : 10

 SRP distance   : 0

 NodeFlag       : S/-/-/-/-/-

 RelayNibID     : 0x14000000

 Nexthop count  : 2

     Neighbor   : 0000.0000.0004.00        Interface  : Tun0

     Nexthop    : 4.4.4.4

     BkNeighbor : N/A                      BkInterface: N/A

     BkNexthop  : N/A

     Neighbor   : 0000.0000.0004.00        Interface  : Vlan50

     Nexthop    : 1.1.1.3

     BkNeighbor : N/A                      BkInterface: N/A

     BkNexthop  : N/A

 SpfLink count  : 1

 -->0000.0000.0004.04

    LinkCost    : 10

    LinkNewCost : 10

    MplsTeCost  : 16777215

    DelayCost   : 16777215

    LinkFlag    : -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Remote       Interface : N/A

     Cost       : 10           Nexthop   : N/A

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

     AdvMtID    : 0

     MplsTeCost : 16777215     DelayCost : 16777215

 

 SpfNode        : 0000.0000.0004.04

 Distance       : 10

 TE distance    : 10

 SRP distance   : 0

 NodeFlag       : S/-/-/R/-/-

 RelayNibID     : 0x14000001

 TE tunnel count: 0

 SRP count      : 0

 Nexthop count  : 0

 SpfLink count  : 2

 -->0000.0000.0001.00

    LinkCost    : 0

    LinkNewCost : 0

    MplsTeCost  : 0

    DelayCost   : 0

    LinkFlag    : -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Remote       Interface : N/A

     Cost       : 0            Nexthop   : N/A

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

     MplsTeCost : 0            DelayCost : 0

 -->0000.0000.0004.00

    LinkCost    : 0

    LinkNewCost : 0

    MplsTeCost  : 0

    DelayCost   : 0

    LinkFlag    : -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Remote       Interface : Vlan50

     Cost       : 0            Nexthop   : 1.1.1.3

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

     MplsTeCost : 0            DelayCost : 0

 

                           Level-2 Shortest Path Tree

                           --------------------------

 

 SpfNode        : 0000.0000.0001.00

 Distance       : 0

 TE distance    : 0

 SRP distance   : 0

 NodeFlag       : S/-/-/-/-/-

 RelayNibID     : 0x0

 TE tunnel count: 0

 SRP count      : 0

 Nexthop count  : 0

 SpfLink count  : 1

 -->0000.0000.0004.04

    LinkCost    : 10

    LinkNewCost : 10

    MplsTeCost  : 16777215

    DelayCost   : 16777215

    LinkFlag    : -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Adjacent     Interface : N/A

     Cost       : 10           Nexthop   : N/A

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

     MplsTeCost : 16777215     DelayCost : 16777215

 

 SpfNode        : 0000.0000.0004.00

 Distance       : 10

 TE distance    : 10

 SRP distance   : 0

 NodeFlag       : S/-/-/-/-/-

 RelayNibID     : 0x0

 Nexthop count  : 2

     Neighbor   : 0000.0000.0004.00        Interface  : Tun0

     Nexthop    : 4.4.4.4

     BkNeighbor : N/A                      BkInterface: N/A

     BkNexthop  : N/A

     Neighbor   : 0000.0000.0004.00        Interface  : Vlan50

     Nexthop    : 1.1.1.3

     BkNeighbor : N/A                      BkInterface: N/A

     BkNexthop  : N/A

 SpfLink count  : 1

 -->0000.0000.0004.04

    LinkCost    : 10

    LinkNewCost : 10

    MplsTeCost  : 16777215

    DelayCost   : 16777215

    LinkFlag    : -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Remote       Interface : N/A

     Cost       : 10           Nexthop   : N/A

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

     AdvMtID    : 0

     MplsTeCost : 16777215     DelayCost : 16777215

 

 SpfNode        : 0000.0000.0004.04

 Distance       : 10

 TE distance    : 10

 SRP distance   : 0

 NodeFlag       : S/-/-/R/-/-

 RelayNibID     : 0x0

 TE tunnel count: 0

 SRP count      : 0

 Nexthop count  : 0

 SpfLink count  : 2

 -->0000.0000.0001.00

    LinkCost    : 0

    LinkNewCost : 0

    MplsTeCost  : 0

    DelayCost   : 0

    LinkFlag    : -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Remote       Interface : N/A

     Cost       : 0            Nexthop   : N/A

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

     MplsTeCost : 0            DelayCost : 0

 -->0000.0000.0004.00

    LinkCost    : 0

    LinkNewCost : 0

    MplsTeCost  : 0

    DelayCost   : 0

    LinkFlag    : -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Remote       Interface : Vlan50

     Cost       : 0            Nexthop   : 1.1.1.3

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

     MplsTeCost : 0            DelayCost : 0

# Display detailed information about the SPF node with system ID 0000.0000.0002.00

<Sysname> display isis spf-tree source-id 0000.0000.0002.00

                        Shortest Path Tree for IS-IS(1)

                        -------------------------------

      Flags: S-Node is on SPF tree       T-Node is on tent list

             O-Node is overload          R-Node is directly reachable

             I-Node or Link is isolated  D-Node or Link is to be deleted

             C-Neighbor is child         P-Neighbor is parent

             V-Link is involved          N-Link is a new path

             L-Link is on change list    U-Protocol usage is changed

             H-Nexthop is changed

                           Level-1 Shortest Path Tree

                           --------------------------

 SpfNode        : 0000.0000.0002.00

 Distance       : 10

 TE distance    : 10

 SRP distance   : 0

 NodeFlag       : S/-/-/-/-/-

 RelayNibID     : 0x0

 TE tunnel count: 0

 SRP count      : 0

 Nexthop count  : 1

     Neighbor   : 0000.0000.0002.00        Interface  : Vlan100

     Nexthop    : 101.1.1.2

     BkNeighbor : N/A                      BkInterface: N/A

     BkNexthop  : N/A

 SpfLink count  : 2

 -->0000.0000.0002.01

    LinkCost    : 60

    LinkNewCost : 60

    MplsTeCost  : 16777215

    DelayCost   : 16777215

    LinkFlag    : -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Remote       Interface : N/A

     Cost       : 60           Nexthop   : N/A

     InterfaceIP: 101.1.1.101   NeighborIP: N/A

        AdvMtID : 0

     MplsTeCost : 16777215     DelayCost : 16777215

 -->0000.0000.0003.01

    LinkCost    : 10

    LinkNewCost : 10

    MplsTeCost  : 16777215

    DelayCost   : 16777215

    LinkFlag    : -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Remote       Interface : N/A

     Cost       : 10           Nexthop   : N/A

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

        AdvMtID : 0

     MplsTeCost : 16777215     DelayCost : 16777215

 

                           Level-2 Shortest Path Tree

                           --------------------------

 SpfNode        : 0000.0000.0002.00

 Distance       : 10

 TE distance    : 10

 SRP distance   : 0

 NodeFlag       : S/-/-/-/-/-

 RelayNibID     : 0x0

 TE tunnel count: 0

 SRP count      : 0

 Nexthop count  : 1

     Neighbor   : 0000.0000.0002.00        Interface  : Vlan100

     Nexthop    : 101.1.1.2

     BkNeighbor : N/A                      BkInterface: N/A

     BkNexthop  : N/A

 SpfLink count  : 2

 -->0000.0000.0002.01

    LinkCost    : 60

    LinkNewCost : 60

    MplsTeCost  : 16777215

    DelayCost   : 16777215

    LinkFlag    : -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Remote       Interface : N/A

     Cost       : 60           Nexthop   : N/A

     InterfaceIP: 101.1.1.101   NeighborIP: N/A

        AdvMtID : 0

     MplsTeCost : 16777215     DelayCost : 16777215

 -->0000.0000.0003.01

    LinkCost    : 10

    LinkNewCost : 10

    MplsTeCost  : 16777215

    DelayCost   : 16777215

    LinkFlag    : -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Remote       Interface : N/A

     Cost       : 10           Nexthop   : N/A

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

        AdvMtID : 0

     MplsTeCost : 16777215     DelayCost : 16777215

Table 27 Command output

Field

Description

SpfNode

ID of the topology node.

Distance

Shortest distance from the root node to the local node.

TE distance

TE tunnels are not supported in the current software version.

Shortest distance from the root node to the local node (including tunnel links). If no TE tunnels are configured, TE distance equals to Distance.

SRP distance

SRv6-TE policies are not supported in the current software version.

Shortest distance from the root node to the local node (including SRv6 TE policy links). If no SRv6 TE policy is configured, SRP distance equals to Distance.

NodeFlag

Node flag:

·     S—The node is on the SPF tree.

·     T—The node is on the tent list.

·     O—The node is overloaded.

·     R—The node is directly connected.

·     I—The node is isolated.

·     D—The node is to be deleted.

RelayNibID

Next hop ID of the node after route recursion.

TE tunnel count

TE tunnel is not supported in the current software version.

Number of TE tunnels destined to this node.

SRP count

SRv6-TE policies are not supported in the current software version.

Number of SRv6 TE policies destined to this node.

Nexthop count

Next hop count.

Nexthop

Primary next hop of the node or the link advertising source.

AdvMtID

Topology from which the routing information is learned:

·     0—Base topology.

·     6-4094—Other topologies.

Interface

Primary output interface of the node or the link advertising source.

BkNexthop

Backup next hop.

BkInterface

Backup output interface.

Neighbor

ID of the primary next hop neighbor.

BkNeighbor

ID of the backup next hop neighbor.

SpfLink

Topology link.

SpfLink count

Number of topology links.

LinkCost

Link cost.

LinkNewCost

New link cost.

MplsTeCost

TE metric value for the IS-IS interface link. The maximum value is 16777215.

DelayCost

Latency for the IS-IS interface link. The maximum value is 16777215.

LinkFlag

Link flag:

·     I—The link is isolated.

·     D—The link is to be deleted.

·     C—The neighbor is a child node.

·     P—The neighbor is the parent node.

·     V—The link is involved.

·     N—The link is a new path.

·     L—The link is on the change list.

·     U—The protocol usage of the link is changed.

·     H—The next hop of the link is changed.

LinkSrcCnt

Number of link advertising sources.

Type

Type of the link advertising source:

·     Adjacent—The link advertising source is a local neighbor.

·     Remote—The link advertising source is advertised by a remote node in an LSP.

Cost

Cost of the link advertising source.

InterfaceIP

Interface IP address.

NeighborIP

Neighbor IP address.

# Display brief IPv6 IS-IS SPF tree information.

<Sysname> display isis spf-tree ipv6

 

                        Shortest Path Tree for IS-IS(1)

                        -------------------------------

 

      Flags: S-Node is on SPF tree       T-Node is on tent list

             O-Node is overload          R-Node is directly reachable

             I-Node or Link is isolated  D-Node or Link is to be deleted

             C-Neighbor is child         P-Neighbor is parent

             V-Link is involved          N-Link is a new path

             L-Link is on change list    U-Protocol usage is changed

             H-Nexthop is changed

 

                       Level-1 Shortest Path Tree

                       ----------------------------------

 

SpfNode            NodeFlag       SpfLink            LinkCost LinkFlag

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

0000.0000.0032.00  S/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.01  10       -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0064.00  10       -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

0000.0000.0032.01  S/-/-/R/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0064.00  0        -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.00  0        -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

0000.0000.0064.00  S/-/-/R/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.00  10       -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.01  10       -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

 

                       Level-2 Shortest Path Tree

                       ----------------------------------

 

SpfNode            NodeFlag       SpfLink            LinkCost LinkFlag

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

0000.0000.0032.00  S/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.01  10       -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0064.00  10       -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

0000.0000.0032.01  S/-/-/R/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0064.00  0        -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.00  0        -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

0000.0000.0064.00  S/-/-/R/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.00  10       -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

                               -->0000.0000.0032.01  10       -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

# Display detailed Level-1 IPv6 IS-IS SPF tree information.

<Sysname> display isis spf-tree ipv6 level-1 verbose

                        Shortest Path Tree for IS-IS(1)

                        -------------------------------

 

      Flags: S-Node is on SPF tree       T-Node is on tent list

             O-Node is overload          R-Node is directly reachable

             I-Node or Link is isolated  D-Node or Link is to be deleted

             C-Neighbor is child         P-Neighbor is parent

             V-Link is involved          N-Link is a new path

             L-Link is on change list    U-Protocol usage is changed

             H-Nexthop is changed

 

                           Level-1 Shortest Path Tree

                           --------------------------

 

 SpfNode        : 0000.0000.0032.00

 Distance       : 0

 TE distance    : 0

 NodeFlag       : S/-/-/-/-/-

 RelayNibID     : 0x0

 TE tunnel count: 0

 Nexthop count  : 0

 SpfLink count  : 2

 -->0000.0000.0032.01

    LinkCost    : 10

    LinkNewCost : 10

    MplsTeCost  : 16777215

    DelayCost   : 16777215

    LinkFlag    : -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Adjacent     Interface : N/A

     Cost       : 10            Nexthop  : N/A

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

     MplsTeCost : 16777215     DelayCost : 16777215

-->0000.0000.0064.00

    LinkCost    : 10

    LinkNewCost : 10

    MplsTeCost  : 16777215

    DelayCost   : 16777215

    LinkFlag    : -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Adjacent     Interface : Tun1

     Cost       : 10           Nexthop  : FE80::A0A:A40

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

     MplsTeCost : 16777215     DelayCost : 16777215

 

SpfNode        : 0000.0000.0032.01

 Distance       : 10

 TE distance    : 10

 NodeFlag       : S/-/-/R/-/-

 RelayNibID     : 0x0

 TE tunnel count: 0

 Nexthop count  : 0

 SpfLink count  : 2

 -->0000.0000.0064.00

    LinkCost    : 0

    LinkNewCost : 0

    MplsTeCost  : 0

    DelayCost   : 0

    LinkFlag    : -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Adjacent     Interface : Vlan2

     Cost       : 10           Nexthop   : FE80::200:12FF:FE34:1

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

     MplsTeCost : 0            DelayCost : 0

-->0000.0000.0032.00

    LinkCost    : 0

    LinkNewCost : 0

    MplsTeCost  : 0

    DelayCost   : 0

    LinkFlag    : -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Adjacent     Interface : N/A

     Cost       : 0             Nexthop  : N/A

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

     MplsTeCost : 0            DelayCost : 0

 

SpfNode        : 0000.0000.0064.00

 Distance       : 10

 TE distance    : 10

 NodeFlag       : S/-/-/R/-/-

 RelayNibID     : 0x0

 TE tunnel count: 0

 Nexthop count  : 2

     Neighbor  : 0000.0000.0064.00        Interface  : Vlan2

     NextHop   : FE80::200:12FF:FE34:1

     BkNeighbor: N/A                      BkInterface: N/A

     BkNextHop : N/A

     Neighbor  : 0000.0000.0064.00        Interface  : Tun1

     NextHop   : FE80::A0A:A40

     BkNeighbor: N/A                      BkInterface: N/A

     BkNextHop : N/A

 SpfLink count  : 2

 -->0000.0000.0032.00

    LinkCost    : 10

    LinkNewCost : 10

    MplsTeCost  : 16777215

    DelayCost   : 16777215

    LinkFlag    : -/-/-/P/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Remote       Interface : N/A

     Cost       : 10           Nexthop   : N/A

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

        AdvMtID : 0

     MplsTeCost : 16777215     DelayCost : 16777215

-->0000.0000.0064.00

    LinkCost    : 10

    LinkNewCost : 10

    MplsTeCost  : 16777215

    DelayCost   : 16777215

    LinkFlag    : -/-/C/-/-/-/-/-/-

    LinkSrcCnt  : 1

     Type       : Remote       Interface : Tun1

     Cost       : 10           Nexthop   : FE80::A0A:A40

     InterfaceIP: N/A          NeighborIP: N/A

        AdvMtID : 0

     MplsTeCost : 16777215     DelayCost : 16777215

Table 28 Command output

Field

Description

SpfNode

ID of the topology node.

Distance

Shortest distance from the root node to the current node.

TE distance

TE tunnels are not supported in the current software version.

Shortest distance from the root node to the current node (including tunnel links). If no TE tunnels are configured, TE distance equals Distance.

NodeFlag

Node flag:

·     S—The node is on the SPF tree.

·     T—The node is on the tent list.

·     O—The node is overloaded.

·     R—The node is directly connected.

·     I—The node is isolated.

·     D—The node is to be deleted.

TE tunnel count

TE tunnels are not supported in the current software version.

Number of TE tunnels destined for this node.

Nexthop count

Number of next hops.

NextHop

Primary next hop of the node or the link advertising source.

AdvMtID

Topology from which the routing information is learned:

·     0—Base topology.

·     6-4094—Other topologies.

Interface

Primary output interface of the node or the link advertising source.

BkNextHop

Backup next hop.

BkInterface

Backup output interface.

Neighbor

ID of the primary next hop neighbor.

BkNeighbor

ID of the backup next hop neighbor.

SpfLink

Topology link.

SpfLink count

Number of topology links.

LinkCost

Link cost.

LinkNewCost

New link cost.

MplsTeCost

TE metric value for the IS-IS interface link. The maximum value is 16777215.

DelayCost

Latency for the IS-IS interface link. The maximum value is 16777215.

LinkFlag

Link flag:

·     I—The link is isolated.

·     D—The link is to be deleted.

·     C—The neighbor is a child node.

·     P—The neighbor is the parent node.

·     V—The link is involved.

·     N—The link is a new path.

·     L—The link is on the change list.

·     U—The protocol of the link is changed.

·     H—The next hop of the link is changed.

LinkSrcCnt

Number of link advertising sources.

Type

Type of the link advertising source:

·     Adjacent—The link advertising source is a local neighbor.

·     Remote—The link advertising source is advertised by a remote node in an LSP.

Cost

Cost of the link advertising source.

InterfaceIP

IP address of the interface,

NeighborIP

IP address of the neighbor.

display isis statistics

Use display isis statistics to display IS-IS statistics.

Syntax

display isis statistics [ ipv4 | ipv6 ] [ level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2 ] [ process-id ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

ipv4: Displays IS-IS IPv4 statistics. If you do not specify this option, the command displays IS-IS IPv4 and IPv6 statistics.

ipv6: Displays IS-IS IPv6 statistics.

level-1: Displays IS-IS Level-1 statistics.

level-1-2: Displays IS-IS Level-1-2 statistics.

level-2: Displays IS-IS Level-2 statistics.

process-id: Displays statistics for an IS-IS process specified by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify an IS-IS process, this command displays the statistics for all IS-IS processes.

Usage guidelines

If you do not specify a level, this command displays both Level-1 and Level-2 routing information.

Examples

# Display IS-IS statistics.

<Sysname> display isis statistics

 

                       Statistics information for IS-IS(1)

                       ----------------------------------

 

                               Level-1 Statistics

                               ------------------

 

MTR(base)

 

Learnt routes information:

         Total IPv4 Learnt Routes in IPv4 Routing Table: 1

 

Imported routes information:

        IPv4 Imported Routes:

                        Static: 0       Direct: 0

                        ISIS:   0       BGP:    0

                        RIP:    0       OSPF:   0

                        Total Number:   0

 

MTR(base)

 

Learnt routes information:

         Total IPv6 Learnt Routes in IPv6 Routing Table: 0

 

Imported routes information:

         IPv6 Imported Routes:

                         Static: 0       Direct: 0

                         ISISv6: 0       BGP4+:  0

                         RIPng:  0       OSPFv3: 0

                         Total Number:   0

 

Lsp information:

                  LSP Source ID:          No. of used LSPs

                  7777.8888.1111                  001

 

                               Level-2 Statistics

                               ------------------

 

MTR(base)

 

Learnt routes information:

         Total IPv4 Learnt Routes in IPv4 Routing Table: 0

 

Imported routes information:

        IPv4 Imported Routes:

                        Static: 0       Direct: 0

                        ISIS:   0       BGP:    0

                        RIP:    0       OSPF:   0

                        Total Number:   0

 

MTR(base)

 

Learnt routes information:

         Total IPv6 Learnt Routes in IPv6 Routing Table: 0

 

Imported routes information:

         IPv6 Imported Routes:

                         Static: 0       Direct: 0

                         ISISv6: 0       BGP4+:  0

                         RIPng:  0       OSPFv3: 0

                         Total Number:   0

 

Lsp information:

                  LSP Source ID:          No. of used LSPs

                  7777.8888.1111                  001

Table 29 Command output

Field

Description

Statistics information for IS-IS(processid)

Statistics for the IS-IS process.

Level-1 Statistics

Level-1 statistics.

Level-2 Statistics

Level-2 statistics.

MTR(topo-name)

MTR topology. base represents the base topology.

Learnt routes information

Total IPv4 Learnt Routes in IPv4 Routing Table means number of learned IPv4 routes.

Total IPv6 Learnt Routes in IPv6 Routing Table means number of learned IPv6 routes.

IPv4 Imported Routes

Numbers of different types of redistributed IPv4 routes, including static, direct, IS-IS, BGP, RIP, and OSPF routes.

IPv6 Imported Routes

 

Numbers of different types of redistributed IPv6 routes, including static, direct, IS-ISv6, BGP4+, RIPng, and OSPFv3 routes.

Lsp information

LSP information:

·     LSP Source ID—ID of the source system.

·     No. of used LSPs—Number of used LSPs.

display osi

Use display osi to display OSI connection information.

Syntax

display osi [ slot slot-number ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

slot slot-number: Specifies the slot number of the device, which is fixed at 1.

Examples

# Display OSI connection information.

<Sysname> display osi

Total OSI socket number: 2

 

 Location:

 Creator: isisd[1539]

 State: N/A

 Options: SO_FILTER

 Error: 0

 Receiving buffer(cc/hiwat/lowat/drop/state): 0 / 1048576 / 1 / 0 / N/A

 Sending buffer(cc/hiwat/lowat/state): 0 / 262144 / 512 / N/A

 Type: 2

 Enabled interfaces:

  Vlan-interface100

   MAC address: 0180-c200-0014

 

 Location:

 Creator: isisd[1539]

 State: N/A

 Options: SO_FILTER

 Error: 0

 Receiving buffer(cc/hiwat/lowat/drop/state): 0 / 1048576 / 1 / 0 / N/A

 Sending buffer(cc/hiwat/lowat/state): 0 / 262144 / 512 / N/A

 Type: 2

 Enabled interfaces:

  Vlan-interface100

   MAC address: 0180-c200-0014

Table 30 Command output

Field

Description

Total OSI socket number

Total number of OSI sockets.

Creator

Name of the socket creator. The process ID of the creator is displayed in the square brackets.

State

This field always displays N/A.

Options

Socket options:

·     SO_FILTER—Filter option is configured.

·     N/A—No option is configured.

Error

Number of errors that affect the socket session.

Receiving buffer(cc/hiwat/lowat/drop/state)

Receiving buffer information, including the current used space, maximum space, minimum space, number of dropped packets, and status.

Sending buffer(cc/hiwat/lowat/state)

Sending buffer information, including the current used space, maximum space, minimum space, and status.

Type

Type 2 socket, corresponding to unreliable connectionless-oriented transport layer protocols.

Enabled interfaces

Input interfaces and matched multicast MAC addresses. Only packets received from Ethernet link-layer interfaces need to match the multicast MAC addresses.

display osi statistics

Use display osi statistics to display OSI packet statistics.

Syntax

display osi statistics [ slot slot-number ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

slot slot-number: Specifies the slot number of the device, which is fixed at 1.

Examples

# Display OSI packet statistics.

<Sysname> display osi statistics

Received packets:

     Total: 35

     Relay received: 35

     Relay forwarded: 35

     Invalid service slot: 0

     No matched socket: 0

     Not delivered, input socket full: 0

Sent packets:

     Total: 19

     Relay forwarded: 19

     Relay received: 19

     Failed: 0

Table 31 Command output

Field

Description

Received packets

Statistics of received packets:

·     Total—Total number of received link layer packets.

·     Relay received—Number of inbound packets relayed from other cards to the card on which the input interface resides. This count is not included in the total count of received packets.

·     Relay forwarded—Number of inbound packets relayed to the card on which the input interface resides.

·     Invalid service slot—Number of discarded packets due to unavailability of the card on which the input interface resides.

·     No matched socket—Number of discarded packets due to mismatches in input interfaces, MAC addresses, or connection filter criteria.

·     Not delivered, input socket full—Number of undelivered packets due to a socket receiving buffer overflow.

Sent packets

Statistics of sent packets:

·     Total—Total number of packets that IS-IS sent over OSI connections.

·     Relay forwarded—Number of outbound packets relayed to the cards that hosts the output interfaces. This count is not included in the total count of sent packets.

·     Relay received—Number of outbound packets on the cards that hosts the output interfaces. These packets are relayed from other cards.

·     Failed—Number of packets failed to be sent.

Related commands

reset osi statistics

distribute

Use distribute to advertise IS-IS link state information to other protocols.

Use undo distribute to restore the default.

Syntax

distribute { bgp-ls | link-state } [ instance-id id ] [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo distribute { bgp-ls | link-state } [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

The device does not advertise IS-IS link state information any other protocol.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

bgp-ls: Advertises IS-IS link state information only to BGP.

link-state: Advertises IS-IS link state information to all protocols, such as BGP.

instance-id id: Specifies an instance by its ID in the range of 0 to 65535. If you do not specify this option, the command advertises IS-IS link state information of instance 0 to BGP.

level-1: Advertises the Level-1 IS-IS link state information to BGP.

level-2: Advertises the Level-2 IS-IS link state information to BGP.

Usage guidelines

After the device advertises IS-IS link state information to other protocols, these protocols can then advertise the information for intended applications.

If multiple IS-IS processes have the same instance ID and link state information, only the link state information of the IS-IS process with the smallest process ID is advertised.

To advertise the same link state information of different IS-IS processes to other protocols, specify a different instance ID for each IS-IS process.

If you do not specify a level for this command, both Level-1 and Level-2 IS-IS link state information will be advertised to other protocols.

If you do not specify a keyword for the undo distribute command, IS-IS does not advertise link state information.

If you execute this command multiple times, the most recent configuration takes effect.

Examples

# Advertise link state information of IS-IS process 1 to BGP.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] distribute bgp-ls

domain-authentication send-only

Use domain-authentication send-only to configure IS-IS not to check the authentication information in the received Level-2 packets, including LSPs, CSNPs, and PSNPs.

Use undo domain-authentication send-only to restore the default.

Syntax

domain-authentication send-only

undo domain-authentication send-only

Default

When domain authentication mode and key are configured, a Level-2 or Level-1-2 router checks the authentication information in the received packets.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

When domain authentication mode and key are configured, a Level-2 or Level-1-2 router adds the key in the specified mode into transmitted Level-2 packets (including LSPs, CSNPs, and PSNPs). It also checks the key in the received Level-2 packets.

To prevent packet exchange failure in case of an authentication key change, configure IS-IS not to check the authentication information in the received packets.

Examples

# Configure IS-IS not to check the authentication information in the received packets.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] domain-authentication send-only

Related commands

area-authentication send-only

domain-authentication-mode

isis authentication send-only

domain-authentication-mode

Use domain-authentication-mode to specify the routing domain authentication mode and a key.

Use undo domain-authentication-mode to restore the default.

Syntax

domain-authentication-mode { { gca key-id { hmac-sha-1 | hmac-sha-224 | hmac-sha-256 | hmac-sha-384 | hmac-sha-512 } [ nonstandard ] | md5 | simple } { cipher | plain } string | keychain keychain-name } [ ip | osi ]

undo domain-authentication-mode

Default

No routing domain authentication mode or key is configured.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

gca: Specifies the GCA mode.

key-id: Uniquely identifies an SA in the range of 1 to 65535. The sender inserts the Key ID into the authentication TLV, and the receiver authenticates the packet by using the SA that is selected based on the Key ID.

hmac-sha-1: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-1 algorithm.

hmac-sha-224: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-224 algorithm.

hmac-sha-256: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-256 algorithm.

hmac-sha-384: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-384 algorithm.

hmac-sha-512: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-512 algorithm.

nonstandard: Specifies the nonstandard GCA authentication mode.

md5: Specifies the MD5 authentication mode.

simple: Specifies the simple authentication mode.

cipher: Specifies a key in encrypted form.

plain: Specifies a key in plaintext form. For security purposes, the key specified in plaintext form will be stored in encrypted form.

string: Specifies the key. In simple authentication mode and GCA authentication mode, the plaintext form of the key is a case-sensitive string of 1 to 16 characters, and the encrypted form is a case-sensitive string of 33 to 53 characters. In MD5 authentication mode, the plaintext form of the key is a case-sensitive string of 1 to 255 characters, and the encrypted form is a case-sensitive string of 33 to 373 characters.

keychain: Specifies the keychain authentication mode.

keychain-name: Specifies a keychain by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters.

ip: Checks IP-related fields in LSPs.

osi: Checks OSI-related fields in LSPs.

Usage guidelines

The configured key in the specified mode is inserted into all outgoing Level-2 packets (LSP, CSNP, and PSNP) and is used for authenticating the incoming Level-2 packets.

IS-IS keychain authentication can operate correctly only when the keys in the keychain use the HMAC-MD5 authentication algorithm.

·     Before IS-IS sends a Level-2 packet, it uses the valid send key obtained from the keychain to authenticate the packet. If no valid send key exists or the valid send key does not use the HMAC-MD5 algorithm, the authentication fails and the packet does not contain the authentication information.

·     After IS-IS receives a Level-2 packet, it uses a valid accept key obtained from the keychain to authenticate the packet. If no valid accept key exists or all valid accept keys fail to authenticate the packet, the authentication fails and the packet is discarded.

All the backbone routers must have the same authentication mode and key.

If neither ip nor osi is specified, the OSI-related fields in LSPs are checked.

When you specify the GCA mode, follow these guidelines:

·     If you do not specify the nonstandard keyword, the device can communicate only with devices that use the GCA mode.

·     If you specify the nonstandard keyword, the device can communicate only with devices that use the nonstandard GCA mode.

In MD5 authentication mode, execute the undo domain-authentication-mode command before version switch if the key lengths supported by the two versions are different.

Examples

# Set the routing domain authentication mode to simple, and set the plaintext key to 123456.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] domain-authentication-mode plain 123456

Related commands

area-authentication-mode

domain-authentication send-only

isis authentication-mode

fast-reroute

Use fast-reroute to configure IS-IS FRR.

Use undo fast-reroute to disable IS-IS FRR.

Syntax

fast-reroute { lfa [ level-1 | level-2 ] | route-policy route-policy-name }

undo fast-reroute { lfa [ level-1 | level-2 ] | route-policy }

Default

IS-IS FRR is disabled.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

lfa: Calculates a backup next hop through Loop Free Alternate (LFA) calculation.

level-1: Specifies Level-1 routes.

level-2: Specifies Level-2 routes.

route-policy route-policy-name: Uses the specified routing policy to designate a backup next hop. The route-policy-name argument is a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters.

Usage guidelines

ECMP routes do not support IS-IS FRR.

Example

# Enable FRR for IS-IS process 1 and configure IS-IS FRR to calculate a backup next hop through LFA calculation for all routes.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] fast-reroute lfa

fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd

Use fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd to enable BFD-powered primary link failure detection for an IS-IS process.

Use undo fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd to disable BFD-powered primary link failure detection in an IS-IS process.

Syntax

fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd { ctrl | echo }

undo fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd

Default

An IS-IS process does not use BFD to detect primary link failures for IS-IS FRR and PIC.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 address family view

IS-IS IPv6 address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

ctrl: Enables BFD control packet mode.

echo: Enables BFD echo packet mode.

Usage guidelines

This command enables IS-IS FRR and IS-IS PIC to use BFD to detect primary link failures. BFD can detect and report a primary link failure to IS-IS for a primary-backup path switchover. This can shorten the duration of service interruption.

To enable BFD-powered primary link failure detection, you can use the fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd, isis primary-path-detect bfd, or isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd command.

These commands are different as follows:

·     The fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd command enables BFD-powered primary link failure detection on all interfaces in an IPv4 or IPv6 IS-IS process.

·     The isis primary-path-detect bfd and isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd commands take effect only on one IS-IS interface. To enable BFD-powered primary link failure detection on a single IS-IS interface, perform the following tasks:

a.     Make sure the IS-IS process to which the IS-IS interface belongs is not enabled with BFD-powered primary link failure detection.

You can use the undo fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd command to disable this feature for an IS-IS process.

b.     Use the isis primary-path-detect bfd or isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd command to enable this feature on the IS-IS interface.

Examples

# Enable BFD control packet mode for IS-IS FRR and PIC in IS-IS process 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd ctrl

Related commands

fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd

isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd

isis primary-path-detect bfd

Related commands

ip prefix-list

fast-reroute tiebreaker

Use fast-reroute tiebreaker to set the priority for an FRR backup path selection policy.

Use undo fast-reroute tiebreaker to restore the default.

Syntax

fast-reroute tiebreaker { lowest-cost | node-protecting } preference preference [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo fast-reroute tiebreaker { lowest-cost | node-protecting } [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

The priority values of the node-protection, lowest-cost, and SRLG-disjoint backup path selection policies are 40, 20, and 10, respectively.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

lowest-cost: Sets a priority value for the lowest-cost backup path selection policy.

node-protecting: Sets a priority value for the node-protection backup path selection policy.

preference preference: Specifies a priority value in the range of 1 to 255. A higher value indicates a higher priority.

level-1: Applies the configuration to Level-1 areas.

level-2: Applies the configuration to the Level-2 area.

Usage guidelines

If you execute this command multiple times for a backup path selection policy, the most recent configuration takes effect.

If you configure multiple backup path selection policies in an address family view, IS-IS calculates a backup path by using the policies in descending order of their priorities until a backup path is calculated.

If IS-IS fails to calculate a backup path by using the lowest-cost policy, it does not perform further backup path calculation.

If you do not specify a level, the command takes effect on both Level-1 and Level-2 areas.

Examples

# Set the priority value of the node-protection backup path selection policy to 100.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] fast-reroute tiebreaker node-protecting preference 100

Related commands

fast-reroute

filter-policy export

Use filter-policy export to configure IS-IS to filter redistributed routes.

Use undo filter-policy export to remove the configuration.

Syntax

In IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view:

filter-policy { ipv4-acl-number | prefix-list prefix-list-name | route-policy route-policy-name } export [ bgp | direct | { isis | ospf | rip } [ process-id ] | static ]

undo filter-policy export [ bgp | direct | { isis | ospf | rip } [ process-id ] | static ]

In IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view:

filter-policy { ipv6-acl-number | prefix-list prefix-list-name | route-policy route-policy-name } export [ bgp4+ | direct | { isisv6 | ospfv3 | ripng } [ process-id ] | static ]

undo filter-policy export [ bgp4+ | direct | { isisv6 | ospfv3 | ripng } [ process-id ] | static ]

Default

IS-IS does not filter redistributed routes.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

acl-number: Specifies an ACL by its number in the range of 2000 to 3999 to filter redistributed routes.

prefix-list prefix-list-name: Specifies a prefix list by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters, to filter redistributed routes by destination address.

route-policy route-policy-name: Specifies a routing policy by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters, to filter redistributed routes.

bgp: Filters redistributed BGP routes.

bgp4+: Filters redistributed IPv6 BGP routes.

direct: Filters redistributed direct routes.

isis: Filters redistributed IS-IS routes.

isisv6: Filters redistributed IPv6 IS-IS routes.

ospf: Filters redistributed OSPF routes.

ospfv3: Filters redistributed OSPFv3 routes.

rip: Filters redistributed RIP routes.

ripng: Filters redistributed RIPng routes.

process-id: Specifies a process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. The default process ID is 1.

static: Filters redistributed static routes.

Usage guidelines

If you do not specify any parameters, this command filters all redistributed routes.

This command filters routes redistributed by the import-route command. Only routes that have not been filtered can be advertised.

When you specify an ACL, follow these guidelines:

·     If the ACL does not exist or has no rules, IS-IS does not filter any redistributed routes.

·     If a rule in the ACL is applied to a VPN instance, the rule will deny all redistributed routes.

To use an advanced ACL (with a number from 3000 to 3999) in the command, configure the ACL using one of the following methods:

·     To deny/permit a route with the specified destination, use the rule [ rule-id ] { deny | permit } ip source sour-addr sour-wildcard command.

·     To deny/permit a route with the specified destination and mask, use the rule [ rule-id ] { deny | permit } ip source sour-addr sour-wildcard destination dest-addr dest-wildcard command.

The source keyword specifies the destination address of a route and the destination keyword specifies the subnet mask of the route. For the configuration to take effect, specify a contiguous subnet mask.

Examples

# Use basic ACL 2000 to filter redistributed routes.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] acl basic 2000

[Sysname-acl-ipv4-basic-2000] rule deny source 192.168.10.0 0.0.0.255

[Sysname-acl-ipv4-basic-2000] quit

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] filter-policy 2000 export

# Configure advanced ACL 3000 to permit only route 113.0.0.0/16 to pass. Use advanced ACL 3000 to filter redistributed routes.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] acl advanced 3000

[Sysname-acl-ipv4-adv-3000] rule 10 permit ip source 113.0.0.0 0 destination 255.255.0.0 0

[Sysname-acl-ipv4-adv-3000] rule 100 deny ip

[Sysname-acl-ipv4-adv-3000] quit

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis 1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] filter-policy 3000 export

Related commands

display isis route

filter-policy import

Use filter-policy import to configure IS-IS to filter routes calculated using received LSPs.

Use undo filter-policy import to restore the default.

Syntax

filter-policy { acl-number | prefix-list prefix-list-name | route-policy route-policy-name } import

undo filter-policy import

Default

IS-IS does not filter routes calculated using received LSPs.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

acl-number: Specifies an ACL by its number in the range of 2000 to 3999 to filter routes calculated using received LSPs.

prefix-list prefix-list-name: Specifies a prefix list by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters, to filter routes calculated using received LSPs by destination address.

route-policy route-policy-name: Specifies a routing policy by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters, to filter received routes.

Usage guidelines

This command filters received routes. Only routes that pass the filter can be added into the routing table.

When you specify an ACL, follow these guidelines:

·     If the ACL does not exist or has no rules, IS-IS does not filter any received routes.

·     If a rule in the ACL is applied to a VPN instance, the rule will deny all received routes.

To use an advanced ACL (with a number from 3000 to 3999) in the command, configure the ACL using one of the following methods:

·     To deny/permit a route with the specified destination, use the rule [ rule-id ] { deny | permit } ip source sour-addr sour-wildcard command.

·     To deny/permit a route with the specified destination and mask, use the rule [ rule-id ] { deny | permit } ip source sour-addr sour-wildcard destination dest-addr dest-wildcard command.

The source keyword specifies the destination address of a route and the destination keyword specifies the subnet mask of the route. For the configuration to take effect, specify a contiguous subnet mask.

Examples

# Use basic ACL 2000 to filter routes calculated using received LSPs.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] acl basic 2000

[Sysname-acl-ipv4-basic-2000] rule deny source 192.168.10.0 0.0.0.255

[Sysname-acl-ipv4-basic-2000] quit

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] filter-policy 2000 import

# Use advanced ACL 3000 to filter routes calculated using received LSPs and install only route 113.0.0.0/16 to the IP routing table.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] acl advanced 3000

[Sysname-acl-ipv4-adv-3000] rule 10 permit ip source 113.0.0.0 0 destination 255.255.0.0 0

[Sysname-acl-ipv4-adv-3000] rule 100 deny ip

[Sysname-acl-ipv4-adv-3000] quit

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis 1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] filter-policy 3000 import

Related commands

display ip routing-table

flash-flood

Use flash-flood to enable IS-IS LSP flash flooding.

Use undo flash-flood to disable IS-IS LSP flash flooding.

Syntax

flash-flood [ flood-count flooding-count | max-timer-interval flooding-interval | [ level-1 | level-2 ] ] *

undo flash-flood [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

IS-IS LSP flash flooding is disabled.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

flood-count flooding-count: Specifies the maximum number of LSPs to be flooded before the next SPF calculation, in the range of 1 to 15. The default is 5.

max-timer-interval flooding-interval: Specifies the delay of the flash flooding, in the range of 10 to 50000 milliseconds. The default is 10.

level-1: Enables flash flooding for level-1.

level-2: Enables flash flooding for level-2.

Usage guidelines

If no level is specified, the command enables IS-IS LSP flash flooding for both Level-1 and Level-2.

Examples

# Enable fast flooding, and set the maximum LSPs to be sent to 10 and the delay time to 100 milliseconds.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] flash-flood flood-count 10 max-timer-interval 100

graceful-restart

Use graceful-restart to enable IS-IS GR.

Use undo graceful-restart to disable IS-IS GR.

Syntax

graceful-restart

undo graceful-restart

Default

IS-IS GR is disabled.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Examples

# Enable GR for IS-IS process 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] graceful-restart

Related commands

graceful-restart suppress-sa

graceful-restart suppress-sa

Use graceful-restart suppress-sa to suppress the Suppress-Advertisement (SA) bit during restart.

Use undo graceful-restart suppress-sa to restore the default.

Syntax

graceful-restart suppress-sa

undo graceful-restart suppress-sa

Default

The SA bit is set during restart.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

Suppressing the SA bit is mainly for avoiding black hole route. If a router starts or reboots without keeping the local forwarding table, sending packets to the router might result in severe packet loss. To avoid this, you can set the SA bit of the hello packet sent by the GR restarter to 1. Upon receiving such hello packets, the GR helpers will not advertise the GR restarter through LSP.

Examples

# Suppress the SA bit during graceful restart.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] graceful-restart suppress-sa

Related commands

graceful-restart

graceful-restart t1

Use graceful-restart t1 to set the T1 timer.

Use undo graceful-restart t1 to restore the default.

Syntax

graceful-restart t1 seconds count count

undo graceful-restart t1

Default

The T1 timer is 3 seconds and can expire 10 times.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

seconds: Specifies the T1 timer in the range of 3 to 10 seconds.

count: Specifies the number of times that the T1 timer can expire, in the range of 1 to 20.

Usage guidelines

The T1 timer specifies the number of times that GR restarter can send a Restart TLV with the RR bit set. After restart, the GR restarter sends a Restart TLV with the RR bit set to its neighbor. If the restarting router receives a Restart TLV with the RA set from its neighbor before the T1 timer expires, the GR process starts. Otherwise, the GR process fails.

To ensure successful GR timer configuration, follow these restrictions and guidelines when you configure the GR timers:

·     The product of the T1 timer and the number of times that the T1 timer can expire must be smaller than the T2 timer.

·     The T2 timer must be smaller than the T3 timer.

Examples

# Set the T1 timer of IS-IS process 1 to 5 seconds, and the expiration times to 5.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] graceful-restart t1 5 count 5

Related commands

graceful-restart

graceful-restart t2

graceful-restart t3

graceful-restart t2

Use graceful-restart t2 to set the T2 timer.

Use undo graceful-restart t2 to restore the default.

Syntax

graceful-restart t2 seconds

undo graceful-restart t2

Default

The T2 timer is 60 seconds.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

seconds: Specifies the T2 timer in the range of 30 to 65535 seconds.

Usage guidelines

The T2 timer specifies the LSDB synchronization interval. Each LSDB has a T2 timer. The Level-1-2 router has two T2 timers: a Level-1 timer and a Level-2 timer. If the LSDBs have not achieved synchronization before the two timers expire, the GR process fails.

To ensure successful GR timer configuration, follow these restrictions and guidelines when you configure the GR timers:

·     The product of the T1 timer and the number of times that the T1 timer can expire must be smaller than the T2 timer.

·     The T2 timer must be smaller than the T3 timer.

Examples

# Set the T2 timer of IS-IS process 1 to 50 seconds.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] graceful-restart t2 50

Related commands

graceful-restart

graceful-restart t1

graceful-restart t3

graceful-restart t3

Use graceful-restart t3 to set the T3 timer.

Use undo graceful-restart t3 to restore the default.

Syntax

graceful-restart t3 seconds

undo graceful-restart t3

Default

The T3 timer is 300 seconds.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

seconds: Specifies the T3 timer in the range of 300 to 65535 seconds.

Usage guidelines

The T3 timer specifies the GR interval. The GR interval is set as the holdtime in hello PDUs. Within the interval, the neighbors maintain their adjacency with the GR restarter. If the GR process has not completed within the holdtime, the neighbors tear down the neighbor relationship and the GR process fails.

To ensure successful GR timer configuration, follow these restrictions and guidelines when you configure the GR timers:

·     The product of the T1 timer and the number of times that the T1 timer can expire must be smaller than the T2 timer.

·     The T2 timer must be smaller than the T3 timer.

Examples

# Set the T3 timer of IS-IS process 1 to 500 seconds.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] graceful-restart t3 500

Related commands

graceful-restart

graceful-restart t1

graceful-restart t2

ignore-att

Use ignore-att to configure IS-IS not to calculate the default route through the ATT bit.

Use undo ignore-att to restore the default.

Syntax

ignore-att

undo ignore-att

Default

IS-IS calculates the default route through the ATT bit.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Examples

# Configure IS-IS not to calculate the default route through the ATT bit.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] ignore-att

import-route

Use import-route to enable route redistribution.

Use undo import-route to disable route redistribution.

Syntax

In IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view:

import-route bgp [ as-number ] [ allow-ibgp ] [ cost cost-value | cost-type { external | internal } | [ level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2 ] | route-policy route-policy-name | tag tag ] *

import-route { direct | static } [ cost cost-value | cost-type { external | internal } | [ level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2 ] | route-policy route-policy-name | tag tag ] *

import-route { isis | ospf | rip } [ process-id | all-processes ] [ allow-direct | cost cost-value | cost-type { external | internal } | [ level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2 ] | route-policy route-policy-name | tag tag ] *

undo import-route { bgp | direct | { isis | ospf | rip } [ process-id | all-processes ] | static }

In IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view:

import-route bgp4+ [ as-number ] [ allow-ibgp ] [ cost cost-value ] | [ level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2 ] | route-policy route-policy-name | tag tag ] *

import-route { isisv6 | ospfv3 | ripng } [ process-id ] [ allow-direct | cost cost-value | [ level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2 ] | route-policy route-policy-name | tag tag ] *

undo import-route { bgp4+ | direct | { isisv6 | ospfv3 | ripng } [ process-id ] | static }

Default

IS-IS does not redistribute routes from other routing protocols or processes.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

bgp: Redistributes BGP routes.

bgp4+: Redistributes IPv6 BGP routes.

as-number: Specifies an AS by its number in the range of 1 to 4294967295. If you do not specify this argument, the command redistributes all IPv4 or IPv6 EBGP routes. As a best practice, specify an AS to prevent the system from redistributing excessive routes.

direct: Redistributes direct routes.

isis: Redistributes IS-IS routes.

isisv6: Redistributes IPv6 IS-IS routes.

ospf: Redistributes OSPF routes.

ospfv3: Redistributes OSPFv3 routes.

rip: Redistributes RIP routes.

ripng: Redistributes RIPng routes.

process-id: Specifies a process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. The default value is 1.

static: Redistributes static routes.

all-processes: Redistributes routes from all the processes of the IS-IS, OSPF, or RIP routing protocol.

allow-ibgp: Allows redistribution of IBGP routes. The import-route bgp or import-route bgp4+ command redistributes only EBGP routes if you do not specify the allow-ibgp keyword. To redistribute IBGP routes in addition to EBGP routes, specify the allow-ibgp keyword. Improper redistribution of IBGP routes might cause routing loops. When you use the allow-ibgp keyword, make sure you understand its impact on the network.

allow-direct: Redistributes the networks of the local interfaces enabled with the specified routing protocol. By default, the networks of the local interfaces are not redistributed. If you specify both the allow-direct keyword and the route-policy route-policy-name option, make sure the if-match rule defined in the routing policy does not conflict with the allow-direct keyword. For example, if you specify the allow-direct keyword, do not configure the if-match route-type rule for the routing policy. Otherwise, the allow-direct keyword does not take effect.

cost cost-value: Specifies a cost for redistributed routes, which is in the range of 0 to 4261412864.

·     For the styles of narrow, narrow-compatible, and compatible, the cost is in the range of 0 to 63.

·     For the styles of wide and wide-compatible, the cost is in the range of 0 to 4261412864.

cost-type { external | internal }: Specifies the cost type. The internal type indicates internal routes, and the external type indicates external routes. If external is specified, the cost of a redistributed route is added by 64 to make internal routes take priority over external routes. The type is external by default. The keywords are available only when the cost type is narrow, narrow-compatible, or compatible.

level-1: Redistributes routes into the Level-1 routing table.

level-1-2: Redistributes routes into both Level-1 and Level-2 routing tables.

level-2: Redistributes routes into the Level-2 routing table. If no level is specified, the routes are redistributed into the Level-2 routing table by default.

route-policy route-policy-name: Redistributes only routes matching the specified routing policy. The route-policy-name argument is a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters.

tag tag: Specifies a tag value for marking redistributed routes, in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

Usage guidelines

IS-IS takes all the redistributed routes as external routes to destinations outside the IS-IS routing domain.

After you specify the cost keyword, the effective cost varies by cost style. For the styles of narrow, narrow-compatible, and compatible, the cost is in the range of 0 to 63. If the cost is more than 63, 63 is used. For the style of wide or wide-compatible, the configured value is the effective value.

This import-route command cannot redistribute default routes. The command redistributes only active routes. To display route state information, use the display ip routing-table protocol command.

If you do not specify the cost keyword, the cost of a redistributed route is 0.

When you execute the undo form of the command, per-process setting has higher priority than the all-processes setting. The undo import-route { isis | ospf | rip } all-processes command cannot remove the setting configured for a process by using the import-route { isis | ospf | rip } process-id command. To remove the setting for that process, you must specify the process ID in the undo form of the command.

Examples

# Redistribute static routes into IS-IS, and set the cost of redistributed routes to 15.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] import-route static cost 15

Related commands

display ip routing-table protocol

import-route limit

import-route isis level-1 into level-2

Use import-route isis level-1 into level-2 to enable route advertisement from Level-1 to Level-2.

Use undo import-route isis level-1 into level-2 to disable route advertisement from Level-1 to Level-2.

Syntax

import-route isis level-1 into level-2 [ filter-policy { ipv4-acl-number | prefix-list prefix-list-name | route-policy route-policy-name } | tag tag ] *

undo import-route isis level-1 into level-2

Default

Route advertisement from Level-1 to Level-2 is enabled.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

filter-policy: Specifies a filtering policy.

ipv4-acl-number: Specifies an ACL by its number in the range of 2000 to 3999 to filter routes from Level-1 to Level-2.

prefix-list prefix-list-name: Specifies an IPv4 prefix list by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters, to filter routes from Level-1 to Level-2 by destination address.

route-policy route-policy-name: Specifies a routing policy by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters, to filter routes from Level-1 to Level-2.

tag tag: Specifies a tag for marking redistributed routes, in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

Usage guidelines

If a routing policy is used, the routing policy must be specified in the import-route isis level-1 into level-2 command to filter routes from Level-1 to Level-2. Other routing policies specified for route reception and redistribution do not affect the route leaking.

If a filtering policy is configured, only Level-1 routes not filtered out can be advertised into the Level-2 area.

When you specify an IPv4 ACL, follow these guidelines:

·     If the ACL does not exist or has no rules, IS-IS does not filter any routes advertised from Level-1 to Level-2.

·     If a rule in the ACL is applied to a VPN instance, the rule will deny all routes advertised from Level-1 to Level-2.

Examples

# Enable route advertisement from Level-1 to Level-2.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] import-route isis level-1 into level-2

Related commands

import-route

import-route isis level-1 into level-2

import-route isis level-2 into level-1

Use import-route isis level-2 into level-1 to enable route advertisement from Level-2 to Level-1.

Use undo import-route isis level-2 into level-1 to restore the default.

Syntax

import-route isis level-2 into level-1 [ filter-policy { ipv4-acl-number | prefix-list prefix-list-name | route-policy route-policy-name } | tag tag ] *

undo import-route isis level-2 into level-1

Default

Route advertisement from Level-2 to Level-1 is disabled.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

filter-policy: Specifies a filtering policy.

ipv4-acl-number: Specifies an ACL by its number in the range of 2000 to 3999 to filter routes from Level-2 to Level-1.

prefix-list prefix-list-name: Specifies an IPv4 prefix list by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters, to filter routes from Level-2 to Level-1 by destination address.

route-policy route-policy-name: Uses the specified routing policy to filter routes from Level-2 to Level-1. The route-policy-name argument is a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters.

tag tag: Specifies a tag for marking redistributed routes, in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

Usage guidelines

If a routing policy is used, the routing policy must be specified in the import-route isis level-2 into level-1 command to filter routes from Level-2 to Level-1. Other routing policies specified for route reception and redistribution does not affect the route leaking.

If a filtering policy is configured, only Level-2 routes not filtered out can be advertised into the Level-1 area.

When you specify an IPv4 ACL, follow these guidelines:

·     If the ACL does not exist or has no rules, IS-IS does not filter any routes advertised from Level-2 to Level-1.

·     If a rule in the ACL is applied to a VPN instance, the rule will deny all routes advertised from Level-2 to Level-1.

Examples

# Enable route advertisement from Level-2 to Level-1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] import-route isis level-2 into level-1

Related commands

import-route

import-route isis level-1 into level-2

import-route isisv6 level-1 into level-2

Use import-route isisv6 level-1 into level-2 to enable route advertisement from Level-1 to Level-2.

Use undo import-route isisv6 level-1 into level-2 to disable route advertisement from Level-1 to Level-2.

Syntax

import-route isisv6 level-1 into level-2 [ filter-policy { ipv6-acl-number | prefix-list prefix-list-name | route-policy route-policy-name } | tag tag ] *

undo import-route isisv6 level-1 into level-2

Default

Route advertisement from Level-1 to Level-2 is enabled.

Views

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

filter-policy: Specifies a filtering policy.

ipv6-acl-number: Specifies an IPv6 ACL by its number in the range of 2000 to 3999.

prefix-list prefix-list-name: Specifies an IPv6 prefix list by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters.

route-policy route-policy-name: Specifies a routing policy by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters.

tag tag: Specifies an administrative tag for marking redistributed routes, in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

Usage guidelines

This command enables a Level-1-2 router to redistribute Level-1 routes to Level-2 routers and Level-1-2 routers in the local area.

When you specify an IPv6 ACL, follow these guidelines:

·     If the ACL does not exist or has no rules, IS-IS does not filter any routes advertised from Level-1 to Level-2.

·     If a rule in the ACL is applied to a VPN instance, the rule will deny all routes advertised from Level-1 to Level-2.

Examples

# Enable route advertisement from Level-1 to Level-2.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv6

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv6] import-route isisv6 level-1 into level-2

import-route isisv6 level-2 into level-1

Use import-route isisv6 level-2 into level-1 to enable IPv6 IS-IS route advertisement from Level-2 to Level-1.

Use undo import-route isisv6 level-2 into level-1 to restore the default.

Syntax

import-route isisv6 level-2 into level-1 [ filter-policy { ipv6-acl-number | prefix-list prefix-list-name | route-policy route-policy-name } | tag tag ] *

undo import-route isisv6 level-2 into level-1

Default

IPv6 IS-IS route advertisement from Level-2 to Level-1 is disabled.

Views

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

filter-policy: Specifies a filtering policy.

ipv6-acl-number: Specifies an IPv6 ACL by its number in the range of 2000 to 3999.

prefix-list prefix-list-name: Specifies an IPv6 prefix list by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters.

route-policy route-policy-name: Specifies a routing policy by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters.

tag tag: Specifies an administrative tag for marking redistributed routes, in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

Usage guidelines

This command enables a Level-1-2 router to redistribute Level-2 routes to the Level-1 and Level-1-2 routers in the local area.

When you specify an IPv6 ACL, follow these guidelines:

·     If the ACL does not exist or has no rules, IS-IS does not filter any routes advertised from Level-2 to Level-1.

·     If a rule in the ACL is applied to a VPN instance, the rule will deny all routes advertised from Level-2 to Level-1.

Examples

# Enable IPv6 IS-IS route advertisement from Level-2 to Level-1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv6

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv6] import-route isisv6 level-2 into level-1

import-route limit

Use import-route limit to configure the maximum number of redistributed Level 1/Level 2 routes.

Use undo import-route limit to restore the default.

Syntax

import-route limit number

undo import-route limit

Default

The maximum number of redistributed Level 1/Level 2 IPv4 routes is 221184, and the maximum number of redistributed Level 1/Level 2 IPv6 routes is 110592.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

number: Specifies the maximum number of redistributed Level 1/Level 2 routes. The value range for this argument is 1 to 221184 for IPv4 IS-IS and is 1 to 110592 for IPv6 IS-IS.

Examples

# Configure IS-IS process 1 to redistribute up to 1000 Level 1/Level 2 IPv4 routes.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] import-route limit 1000

Related commands

import-route

isis

Use isis to enable IS-IS and enter IS-IS view.

Use undo isis to disable IS-IS.

Syntax

isis [ process-id ] [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ]

undo isis [ process-id ]

Default

IS-IS is disabled.

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

process-id: Specifies an IS-IS process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. The default is 1.

vpn-instance vpn-instance-name: Specifies an MPLS L3VPN instance by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters. If no VPN instance is specified, the IS-IS process runs on the public network.

Examples

# Enable IS-IS process 1 and set the system ID to 0000.0000.0002 and area ID to 01.0001.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] network-entity 01.0001.0000.0000.0002.00

Related commands

isis enable

network-entity

isis authentication send-only

Use isis authentication send-only to configure an IS-IS interface not to check the authentication information in the received hello packets.

Use undo isis authentication send-only to remove the configuration.

Syntax

isis authentication send-only [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo isis authentication send-only [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

When interface authentication mode and key are configured, an IS-IS interface checks the authentication information in the received packets.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

level-1: Configures IS-IS not to check the authentication information in the received Level-1 hello packets.

level-2: Configures IS-IS not to check the authentication information in the received Level-2 hello packets.

Usage guidelines

When peer authentication mode and key are configured, an IS-IS interface adds the key in the specified mode into transmitted hello packets. It also checks the key in the received hello packets.

To prevent packet exchange failure in case of an authentication key change, configure the IS-IS interface not to check the authentication information in the received packets.

Examples

# Configure VLAN-interface 10 not to check the authentication information in the received Level-1 hello packets.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis authentication send-only level-1

Related commands

area-authentication send-only

domain-authentication send-only

isis authentication-mode

isis authentication-mode

Use isis authentication-mode to specify the neighbor relationship authentication mode and a key.

Use undo isis authentication-mode to remove the configuration.

Syntax

isis [ process-id process-id ] authentication-mode { { gca key-id { hmac-sha-1 | hmac-sha-224 | hmac-sha-256 | hmac-sha-384 | hmac-sha-512 } [ nonstandard ] | md5 | simple } { cipher | plain } string | keychain keychain-name } [ level-1 | level-2 ] [ ip | osi ]

undo isis [ process-id process-id ] authentication-mode [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

No neighbor relationship authentication mode or key is configured.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

process-id process-id: Specifies an IS-IS multi-instance process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this option, the traditional IS-IS process is specified.

gca: Specifies the GCA mode.

key-id: Uniquely identifies an SA in the range of 1 to 65535. The sender inserts the Key ID into the authentication TLV, and the receiver authenticates the packet by using the SA that is selected based on the Key ID.

hmac-sha-1: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-1 algorithm.

hmac-sha-224: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-224 algorithm.

hmac-sha-256: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-256 algorithm.

hmac-sha-384: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-384 algorithm.

hmac-sha-512: Specifies the HMAC-SHA-512 algorithm.

nonstandard: Specifies the nonstandard GCA mode.

md5: Specifies the MD5 authentication mode.

simple: Specifies the simple authentication mode.

cipher: Specifies a key in encrypted form.

plain: Specifies a key in plaintext form. For security purposes, the key specified in plaintext form will be stored in encrypted form.

string: Specifies the key. In simple authentication mode and GCA authentication mode, the plaintext form of the key is a case-sensitive string of 1 to 16 characters, and the encrypted form is a case-sensitive string of 33 to 53 characters. In MD5 authentication mode, the plaintext form of the key is a case-sensitive string of 1 to 255 characters, and the encrypted form is a case-sensitive string of 33 to 373 characters.

keychain: Specifies the keychain authentication mode.

keychain-name: Specifies a keychain by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters.

level-1: Configures the key for Level-1.

level-2: Configures the key for Level-2.

ip: Checks IP-related fields in LSPs and SNPs.

osi: Checks OSI-related fields in LSPs and SNPs.

Usage guidelines

The key in the specified mode is inserted into all outbound hello packets and is used for authenticating inbound hello packets. Only if the authentication succeeds can the neighbor relationship be formed.

IS-IS keychain authentication can operate correctly only when the keys in the keychain use the HMAC-MD5 authentication algorithm.

·     Before IS-IS sends a Hello packet, it uses the valid send key obtained from the keychain to authenticate the packet. If no valid send key exists or the valid send key does not use the HMAC-MD5 algorithm, the authentication fails and the packet does not contain the authentication information.

·     After IS-IS receives a Hello packet, it uses a valid accept key obtained from the keychain to authenticate the packet. If no valid accept key exists or all valid accept keys fail to authenticate the packet, the authentication fails and the packet is discarded.

The level-1 and level-2 keywords are configurable on an interface that has had IS-IS enabled with the isis enable command.

If you configure a key without specifying a level, the key applies to both Level-1 and Level-2.

For two routers to become neighbors, the authentication mode and key at both ends must be identical.

If neither ip nor osi is specified, the OSI-related fields in LSPs are checked.

When you specify the GCA mode, follow these guidelines:

·     If you do not specify the nonstandard keyword, the device can communicate only with devices that use the GCA mode.

·     If you specify the nonstandard keyword, the device can communicate only with devices that use the nonstandard GCA mode.

In MD5 authentication mode, execute the undo isis authentication-mode command before version switch if the key lengths supported by the two versions are different.

Examples

# On VLAN-interface 10, set the authentication mode to simple, and set the plaintext key to 123456.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis authentication-mode simple plain 123456

Related commands

area-authentication-mode

domain authentication-mode

isis authentication send-only

isis bfd adjust-cost

Use isis bfd adjust-cost to enable BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment on an IPv4 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis bfd adjust-cost to restore the default.

Syntax

isis bfd adjust-cost { cost-offset | max }

undo isis bfd adjust-cost

Default

An IPv4 IS-IS interface inherits the configuration of the bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost command in IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

cost-offset: Specifies the interface cost adjustment value. The value range for this argument is 1 to 16777213. When the BFD session goes down, the interface cost is cost-offset plus the original interface cost, and cannot exceed 16777214.

max: Sets the interface cost to the maximum value (16777214) when the BFD session goes down.

Usage guidelines

·     IMPORTANT

IMPORTANT:

For the isis bfd adjust-cost command to take effect on an IPv4 IS-IS interface, enable BFD on that interface first.

After you enable BFD for IPv4 IS-IS link failure detection, IPv4 IS-IS neighbor relationship flapping will occur upon frequent BFD session state changes. The running of services (such as BGP) that rely on IPv4 IS-IS might be interrupted. To resolve this issue, enable IPv4 IS-IS to adjust the interface cost according to the BFD session state. IPv4 IS-IS will adjust the cost value for an interface as follows to ensure fast route convergence against link state changes:

·     When the BFD session on the interface goes down, IPv4 IS-IS increases the cost value for the interface.

·     When the BFD session on the interface comes up again, IPv4 IS-IS restores the cost value for the interface to the original value.

You can perform one of the following tasks to enable BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment for IPv4 IS-IS:

·     Use the bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost command in IPv4 IS-IS unicast address family view. This task takes effect on all interfaces in the current IPv4 IS-IS process.

·     Use the isis bfd adjust-cost command in interface view. This task takes effect only on the current IPv4 IS-IS interface.

For an IPv4 IS-IS interface, the isis bfd adjust-cost command takes precedence over the bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost command. The interface uses the configuration of the bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost command only when you do not execute the isis bfd adjust-cost command on that interface.

Examples

# Enable BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment on IPv4 IS-IS interface VLAN-interface 10, and set the interface cost adjustment value to 100.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis enable 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis bfd enable

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis bfd adjust-cost 100

Related commands

bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost

display isis interface

isis bfd enable

isis bfd adjust-cost exclude

Use isis bfd adjust-cost exclude to suppress BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment on an IPv4 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis bfd adjust-cost exclude to restore the default.

Syntax

isis bfd adjust-cost exclude

undo isis bfd adjust-cost exclude

Default

IPv4 IS-IS can adjust the cost value for an interface according to the BFD session state.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

The bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost command enables BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment on all interfaces in an IS-IS process. To disable this feature on an interface in that IS-IS process, use the isis bfd adjust-cost exclude command on the interface.

When you use the following commands together on the same IPv4 IS-IS interface, the command that is used at last takes effect:

·     isis bfd adjust-cost exclude

·     isis bfd adjust-cost

Examples

# Suppress BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment on IPv4 IS-IS interface VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis enable 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis bfd adjust-cost exclude

Related commands

bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost

isis bfd adjust-cost

isis bfd enable

Use isis bfd enable to enable BFD on an IPv4 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis bfd enable to restore the default.

Syntax

isis bfd enable

undo isis bfd enable

Default

An IPv4 IS-IS interface inherits the configuration of the bfd all-interfaces enable command in IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

IPv4 IS-IS exchanges hello packets at specific intervals with its neighbors to detect neighbor state changes. If IPv4 IS-IS does not receive any hello packets from a neighbor within the advertised neighbor relationship hold time, it considers the neighbor down and recalculates the routes. The hold time is the hello multiplier multiplied by the hello interval and the default hold time is 30 seconds. This mechanism is not efficient at neighbor state change detection. Serious packet loss might occur when a neighbor goes down.

To resolve this issue, use this command to enable BFD. BFD provides a single mechanism to quickly detect and monitor the connectivity of links between IPv4 IS-IS neighbors, reducing route convergence time.

You can perform one of the following tasks to enable BFD for IPv4 IS-IS:

·     Use the bfd all-interfaces enable command in IPv4 IS-IS unicast address family view. This task takes effect on all interfaces in the current IPv4 IS-IS process.

·     Use the isis bfd enable command in interface view. This task takes effect only on the current IPv4 IS-IS interface.

For an IPv4 IS-IS interface, the isis bfd enable command takes precedence over the bfd all-interfaces enable command. The interface uses the configuration of the bfd all-interfaces enable command only when you do not execute the isis bfd enable command on that interface.

Examples

# Enable BFD on IPv4 IS-IS interface VLAN-interface 11.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 11

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis enable

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis bfd enable

isis bfd exclude

Use isis bfd exclude to suppress the BFD capacity of an IPv4 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis bfd exclude to restore the default.

Syntax

isis bfd exclude

undo isis bfd exclude

Default

The BFD capacity of an IPv4 IS-IS interface is not suppressed.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

The bfd all-interfaces enable command enables BFD on all interfaces in an IPv4 IS-IS process. To disable BFD on an interface in that IS-IS process, use the isis bfd exclude command on the interface.

When you use the following commands together on the same IPv4 IS-IS interface, the command that is used at last takes effect:

·     isis bfd exclude

·     isis bfd enable

Examples

# Suppress the BFD capacity of IPv4 IS-IS interface VLAN-interface 11.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 11

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis enable

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis bfd exclude

Related commands

bfd all-interfaces enable

isis bfd enable

isis bfd session-restrict-adj

Use isis bfd session-restrict-adj to enable BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance on an IPv4 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis bfd session-restrict-adj to restore the default.

Syntax

isis bfd session-restrict-adj

undo isis bfd session-restrict-adj

Default

An IPv4 IS-IS interface inherits the configuration of the bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj command in IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

IMPORTANT

IMPORTANT:

For the isis bfd session-restrict-adj command to take effect on an IPv4 IS-IS interface, enable BFD on that interface first.

When BFD detects a Layer 3 forwarding failure between two devices, the BFD session goes down, which causes the IPv4 IS-IS adjacency to go down. If Layer 2 forwarding is still available, the devices can exchange IS-IS packets and re-establish the adjacency, which might cause traffic loss.

To avoid the issue, execute this command on the BFD-enabled interfaces of the local and remote devices, enabling the interfaces to carry BFD-enabled TLVs in hello packets. After the BFD session goes down, the devices do not establish an adjacency if the exchanged BFD-enabled TLVs are identical.

If you configure this command for an existing adjacency, the BFD session state does not affect the adjacency relationship within the hold time. This mechanism avoids adjacency flaps during the BFD session establishment.

You can perform one of the following tasks to enable BFD session state-based control of IPv4 IS-IS adjacency establishment and maintenance:

·     Use the bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj command in IPv4 IS-IS unicast address family view. This task takes effect on all interfaces in the current IPv4 IS-IS process.

·     Use the isis bfd session-restrict-adj command in interface view. This task takes effect only on the current IPv4 IS-IS interface.

For an IPv4 IS-IS interface, the isis bfd session-restrict-adj command takes precedence over the bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj command. The interface uses the configuration of the bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj command only when you do not execute the isis bfd session-restrict-adj command on that interface.

Examples

# Enable BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance on IPv4 IS-IS interface VLAN-interface 11.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 11

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis enable

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis bfd enable

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis bfd session-restrict-adj

Related commands

bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj

isis bfd enable

isis bfd session-restrict-adj exclude

Use isis bfd session-restrict-adj exclude to suppress BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance on an IPv4 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis bfd session-restrict-adj exclude to restore the default.

Syntax

isis bfd session-restrict-adj exclude

undo isis bfd session-restrict-adj exclude

Default

BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance is not suppressed on an IPv4 IS-IS interface.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

The bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj command enables BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance on all interfaces in an IPv4 IS-IS process. To disable this feature on an interface in that IS-IS process, use the isis bfd session-restrict-adj exclude command on the interface.

When you use the following commands together on the same IPv4 IS-IS interface, the command that is used at last takes effect:

·     isis bfd session-restrict-adj exclude

·     isis bfd session-restrict-adj

Examples

# Suppress BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance on IPv4 IS-IS interface VLAN-interface 11.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 11

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis enable 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis bfd enable

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis bfd session-restrict-adj exclude

Related commands

bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj

isis bfd session-restrict-adj

isis circuit-level

Use isis circuit-level to set the circuit level for the interface.

Use undo isis circuit-level to restore the default.

Syntax

isis circuit-level [ level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2 ]

undo isis circuit-level

Default

An interface can establish either the Level-1 or Level-2 adjacency.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

level-1: Sets the circuit level to Level-1.

level-1-2: Sets the circuit level to Level-1-2.

level-2: Sets the circuit level to Level-2.

Usage guidelines

For a Level-1 (Level-2) router, the circuit level can only be Level-1 (Level-2). For a Level-1-2 router, you must specify a circuit level for a specific interface to form only the specified level neighbor relationship.

Examples

# VLAN-interface 10 is connected to a non-backbone router in the same area. Set the circuit level of VLAN-interface 10 to Level-1 to prevent sending and receiving Level-2 Hello packets.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis enable

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis circuit-level level-1

Related commands

is-level

isis circuit-type p2p

Use isis circuit-type p2p to set the network type of an interface to P2P.

Use undo isis circuit-type to restore the default.

Syntax

isis [ process-id process-id ] circuit-type p2p

undo isis [ process-id process-id ] circuit-type

Default

The network type of an interface varies by physical media. (The network type of a VLAN interface is broadcast.)

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

process-id process-id: Specifies an IS-IS multi-instance process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this option, the traditional IS-IS process is specified.

Usage guidelines

Use this command only on a broadcast network with two attached routers.

Interfaces with different network types operate differently. For example, broadcast interfaces must elect a DIS and flood CSNP packets to synchronize the LSDBs. P2P interfaces do not need to elect a DIS, and use a different LSDB synchronization mechanism.

If only two routers exist on a broadcast network, set the network type of attached interfaces to P2P to avoid DIS election and CSNP flooding. This saves network bandwidth and speeds up network convergence.

Examples

# Set the network type of VLAN-interface 10 to P2P.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis enable

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis circuit-type p2p

isis cost

Use isis cost to set the IS-IS cost for an interface.

Use undo isis cost to remove the configuration.

Syntax

isis [ process-id process-id ] cost cost-value [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo isis [ process-id process-id ] cost [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

No IS-IS cost is configured for an interface.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

process-id process-id: Specifies an IS-IS multi-instance process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this option, the traditional IS-IS process is specified.

cost-value: Specifies an IS-IS cost in the range of 1 to 16777215.

level-1: Applies the cost to Level-1.

level-2: Applies the cost to Level-2.

Usage guidelines

If neither level-1 nor level-2 is included, the cost applies to both level-1 and level-2.

Examples

# Set the Level-2 IS-IS cost to 5 for VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis cost 5 level-2

Related commands

auto-cost enable

bandwidth-reference

isis dis-name

Use isis dis-name to configure a name for a DIS to represent the pseudo node on a broadcast network.

Use undo isis dis-name to restore the default.

Syntax

isis dis-name symbolic-name

undo isis dis-name

Default

No name is configured for the DIS.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

symbolic-name: Specifies a DIS name, a case-insensitive string of 1 to 64 characters.

Usage guidelines

This command takes effect only on routers that have dynamic system ID to host name mapping enabled. This command does not take effect on Point-to-Point interfaces.

Examples

# Set the DIS name to LOCALAREA.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis dis-name LOCALAREA

Related commands

display isis name-table

is-name

isis dis-priority

Use isis dis-priority to specify a DIS priority at a specified level for an interface.

Use undo isis dis-priority to remove the configuration.

Syntax

isis dis-priority priority [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo isis dis-priority [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

The priority of Level-1 and Level-2 is 64.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

priority: Specifies a DIS priority in the range of 0 to 127.

level-1: Applies the DIS priority to Level-1.

level-2: Applies the DIS priority to Level-2.

Usage guidelines

On an IS-IS broadcast network, a router must be elected as the DIS at each routing level. Specify a DIS priority at a level for an interface. The greater the interface's priority is, the more likelihood it becomes the DIS. If multiple routers in the broadcast network have the same highest DIS priority, the router with the highest Subnetwork Point of Attachment (SNPA) address becomes the DIS. SNPA addresses are MAC addresses on a broadcast network.

IS-IS has no backup DIS. The router with a priority of 0 can also participate in DIS election.

If neither level-1 nor level-2 is specified, the DIS priority applies to both Level-1 and Level-2.

Examples

# Set the Level-2 DIS priority to 127 for VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis dis-priority 127 level-2

isis enable

Use isis enable to enable an IS-IS process on an interface.

Use undo isis enable to disable IS-IS.

Syntax

isis enable [ process-id ]

undo isis enable

Default

No IS-IS process is enabled on an interface.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

process-id: Specifies an IS-IS process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. The default is 1.

Examples

# Enable IS-IS process 1 globally and enable it on VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] network-entity 10.0001.1010.1020.1030.00

[Sysname-isis-1] quit

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis enable 1

Related commands

isis

network-entity

isis fast-reroute lfa-backup exclude

Use isis fast-reroute lfa-backup exclude to disable LFA calculation on an interface.

Use undo isis fast-reroute lfa-backup exclude to restore the default.

Syntax

isis fast-reroute lfa-backup exclude [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo isis fast-reroute lfa-backup exclude [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

LFA calculation is enabled on an interface, and the interface can be elected as a backup interface.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

level-1: Disables LFA calculation on the interface whose circuit level is Level-1.

level-2: Disables LFA calculation on the interface whose circuit level is Level-2.

Usage guidelines

When this command is configured, the interface does not participate in the LFA calculation, and cannot be elected as a backup interface.

If you do not specify the level-1 or level-2 keyword, LFA calculation is disabled on the interface regardless of its circuit level.

Examples

# Disable LFA calculation on VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] network-entity 10.0001.1010.1020.1030.00

[Sysname-isis-1] quit

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis enable 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis fast-reroute lfa-backup exclude

Related commands

fast-reroute

isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost

Use isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost to enable BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment on an IPv6 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost to restore the default.

Syntax

isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost { cost-offset | max }

undo isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost

Default

An IPv6 IS-IS interface inherits the configuration of the bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost command in IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

cost-offset: Specifies the value to be added to the interface cost when the BFD session goes down. The value range for this argument is 1 to 16777213. When the BFD session goes down, the interface cost is cost-offset plus the original interface cost, and cannot exceed 16777214.

max: Sets the interface cost to the maximum value (16777214) when the BFD session goes down.

Usage guidelines

IMPORTANT

IMPORTANT:

For the isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost command to take effect on an IPv6 IS-IS interface, enable BFD on that interface first.

After you enable BFD for IPv6 IS-IS link failure detection, IPv6 IS-IS neighbor relationship flapping will occur upon frequent BFD session state changes. The running of services (such as BGP) that rely on IPv6 IS-IS might be interrupted. To resolve this issue, enable IPv6 IS-IS to adjust the interface cost according to the BFD session state. IPv6 IS-IS will adjust the cost value for an interface as follows to ensure fast route convergence against link state changes:

·     When the BFD session on the interface goes down, IPv6 IS-IS increases the cost value for the interface.

·     When the BFD session on the interface comes up again, IPv6 IS-IS restores the cost value for the interface to the original value.

You can perform one of the following tasks to enable IPv6 IS-IS to adjust the interface cost according to the BFD session state:

·     Use the bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost command in IPv6 IS-IS unicast address family view. This task takes effect on all interfaces in the current IPv6 IS-IS process.

·     Use the isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost command in interface view. This task takes effect only on the current IPv6 IS-IS interface.

For an IPv6 IS-IS interface, the isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost command takes precedence over the bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost command. The interface uses the configuration of the bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost command only when you do not execute the isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost command on that interface.

Examples

# Enable BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment on IPv6 IS-IS interface VLAN-interface 10, and set the interface cost adjustment value to 200.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis ipv6 enable 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis ipv6 bfd enable

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost 200

Related commands

display isis interface

isis ipv6 bfd enable

isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost exclude

Use isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost exclude to suppress BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment on an IPv6 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost exclude to restore the default.

Syntax

isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost exclude

undo isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost exclude

Default

IPv6 IS-IS can adjust the cost value for an interface according to the BFD session state.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

The bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost command enables BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment on all interfaces in an IPv6 IS-IS process. To disable this feature on an interface in that IS-IS process, use the isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost exclude command on the interface.

When you use the following commands together on the same IPv6 IS-IS interface, the command that is used at last takes effect:

·     isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost exclude

·     isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost

Examples

# Suppress BFD session state-based interface cost adjustment on IPv6 IS-IS interface VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis ipv6 enable 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost exclude

Related commands

bfd all-interfaces adjust-cost

isis ipv6 bfd adjust-cost

isis ipv6 bfd enable

Use isis ipv6 bfd enable to enable BFD on IPv6 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis ipv6 bfd enable to restore the default.

Syntax

isis ipv6 bfd enable

undo isis ipv6 bfd enable

Default

An IPv4 IS-IS interface inherits the configuration of the bfd all-interfaces enable command in IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

IPv6 IS-IS exchanges hello packets at specific intervals with its neighbors to detect neighbor state changes. If IPv6 IS-IS does not receive any hello packets from a neighbor within the advertised neighbor relationship hold time, it considers the neighbor down and recalculates the routes. The hold time is the hello multiplier multiplied by the hello interval and the default hold time is 30 seconds. This mechanism is not efficient at neighbor state change detection. Serious packet loss might occur when a neighbor goes down.

To resolve this issue, use this command to enable BFD on the IPv6 IS-IS interface. BFD provides a single mechanism to quickly detect and monitor the connectivity of links between IPv6 IS-IS neighbors, reducing route convergence time.

You can perform one of the following tasks to enable BFD for IPv6 IS-IS:

·     Use the bfd all-interfaces enable command in IPv6 IS-IS unicast address family view. This task takes effect on all interfaces in the current IPv6 IS-IS process.

·     Use the isis ipv6 bfd enable command in interface view. This task takes effect only on the current IPv6 IS-IS interface.

For an IPv6 IS-IS interface, the isis ipv6 bfd enable command takes precedence over the bfd all-interfaces enable command. The interface uses the configuration of the bfd all-interfaces enable command only when you do not execute the isis ipv6 bfd enable command on that interface.

Examples

# Enable BFD on IPv6 IS-IS interface VLAN-interface 11.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 11

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis ipv6 bfd enable

Related commands

bfd all-interfaces enable

isis ipv6 bfd exclude

Use isis ipv6 bfd exclude to suppress the BFD capacity of an IPv6 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis ipv6 bfd exclude to restore the default.

Syntax

isis ipv6 bfd exclude

undo isis ipv6 bfd exclude

Default

The BFD capacity of an IPv6 IS-IS interface is not suppressed.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

The bfd all-interfaces enable command enables BFD on all interfaces in an IPv6 IS-IS process. To disable BFD on an interface in that IS-IS process, use the isis ipv6 bfd exclude command on the interface.

When you use the following commands together on the same IPv6 IS-IS interface, the command that is used at last takes effect:

·     isis ipv6 bfd exclude

·     isis ipv6 bfd enable

Examples

# Suppress the BFD capacity of IPv6 IS-IS interface VLAN-interface 11.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 11

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis ipv6 enable

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis ipv6 bfd exclude

Related commands

bfd all-interfaces enable

isis ipv6 bfd enable

isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj

Use isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj to enable BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance on an IPv6 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj to restore the default.

Syntax

isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj

undo isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj

Default

An IPv6 IS-IS interface inherits the configuration of the bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj command in IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

IMPORTANT

IMPORTANT:

For the isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj command to take effect on an IPv6 IS-IS interface, enable BFD on that interface first.

When BFD detects a Layer 3 forwarding failure between two routers, the BFD session goes down, which causes the IPv6 IS-IS adjacency to go down. If Layer 2 forwarding is still available, the routers can exchange IS-IS packets and re-establish the adjacency, which might cause traffic loss.

To avoid the issue, execute this command on the BFD-enabled interfaces of the local and remote routers, enabling the interfaces to carry BFD-enabled TLVs in hello packets. After the BFD session goes down, the routers do not establish an adjacency if the exchanged BFD-enabled TLVs are identical.

If you configure this command for an existing adjacency, the BFD session state does not affect the adjacency relationship within the hold time. This mechanism avoids adjacency flaps during the BFD session establishment.

You can perform one of the following tasks to enable BFD session state-based control of IPv6 IS-IS adjacency establishment and maintenance:

·     Use the bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj command in IPv6 IS-IS unicast address family view. This task takes effect on all interfaces in the current IPv6 IS-IS process.

·     Use the isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj command in interface view. This task takes effect only on the current IPv6 IS-IS interface.

For an IPv6 IS-IS interface, the isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj command takes precedence over the bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj command. The interface uses the configuration of the bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj command only when you do not execute the isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj command on that interface.

Examples

# Enable BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance on IPv6 IS-IS interface VLAN-interface 11.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 11

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis ipv6 enable

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis ipv6 bfd enable

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj

Related commands

bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj

isis ipv6 bfd enable

isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj exclude

Use isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj exclude to suppress BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance on an IPv6 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj exclude to restore the default.

Syntax

isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj exclude

undo isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj exclude

Default

BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance is not suppressed on an IPv6 IS-IS interface.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

The bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj command enables BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance on all interfaces in an IPv6 IS-IS process. To disable this feature on an interface in that IS-IS process, use the isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj exclude command on the interface.

When you use the following commands together on the same IPv6 IS-IS interface, the command that is used at last takes effect:

·     isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj exclude

·     isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj

Examples

# Suppress BFD session state-based control of adjacency establishment and maintenance on IPv6 IS-IS interface VLAN-interface 11.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 11

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis ipv6 enable 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj exclude

Related commands

bfd all-interfaces session-restrict-adj

isis ipv6 bfd session-restrict-adj

isis ipv6 cost

Use isis ipv6 cost to set the IPv6 IS-IS cost for an interface.

Use undo isis ipv6 cost to remove the configuration.

Syntax

isis [ process-id process-id ] ipv6 cost cost-value [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo isis [ process-id process-id ] ipv6 cost [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

No IPv6 IS-IS cost is configured for an interface.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

process-id process-id: Specifies an IS-IS multi-instance process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this option, the traditional IS-IS process is specified.

cost-value: Specifies an IPv6 IS-IS cost in the range of 1 to 16777215.

level-1: Applies the cost to Level-1 routes.

level-2: Applies the cost to Level-2 routes.

Usage guidelines

This command applies to interfaces that are enabled with IPv6 IS-IS.

This command takes effect only when the standard MTR mode is enabled.

Examples

# Set the IPv6 IS-IS cost to 10 for VLAN-interface 11.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 100

[Sysname-isis-100] address-family ipv6 unicast

[Sysname-isis-100-ipv6] quit

[Sysname-isis-100] quit

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 11

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis ipv6 enable 100

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis ipv6 cost 10

isis ipv6 enable

Use isis ipv6 enable to enable IPv6 for IS-IS on an interface.

Use undo isis ipv6 enable to disable IPv6 for IS-IS on an interface.

Syntax

isis ipv6 enable [ process-id ]

undo isis ipv6 enable

Default

IPv6 is disabled for IS-IS on an interface.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

process-id: Specifies an IS-IS process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. The default is 1.

Examples

# Enable IPv6 for IS-IS on VLAN-interface 100.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] network-entity 10.0001.1010.1020.1030.00

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv6 unicast

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv6] quit

[Sysname-isis-1] quit

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 100

[Sysname-Vlan-interface100] ipv6 address 2002::1/64

[Sysname-Vlan-interface100] isis ipv6 enable 1

isis ipv6 fast-reroute lfa-backup exclude

Use isis ipv6 fast-reroute lfa-backup exclude to disable LFA calculation on an interface.

Use undo isis ipv6 fast-reroute lfa-backup exclude to restore the default.

Syntax

isis ipv6 fast-reroute lfa-backup exclude [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo isis ipv6 fast-reroute lfa-backup exclude [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

LFA calculation is enabled on an interface.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

level-1: Disables LFA calculation on the interface whose circuit level is Level-1.

level-2: Disables LFA calculation on the interface whose circuit level is Level-2.

Usage guidelines

If you do not specify the level-1 or level-2 keyword, LFA calculation is disabled on the interface regardless of its circuit level.

Examples

# Disable LFA calculation on VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] network-entity 10.0001.1010.1020.1030.00

[Sysname-isis-1] quit

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis ipv6 enable 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis ipv6 fast-reroute lfa-backup exclude

Related commands

fast-reroute

isis ipv6 prefix-suppression

Use isis ipv6 prefix-suppression to enable prefix suppression on an interface.

Use undo isis ipv6 prefix-suppression to disable prefix suppression on an interface.

Syntax

isis ipv6 prefix-suppression

undo isis ipv6 prefix-suppression

Default

Prefix suppression is disabled on an interface.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

By default, IS-IS interfaces advertise their IPv6 prefixes in LSPs. Use this command to disable an interface from advertising its IPv6 prefix in LSPs. This enhances network security by preventing IP routing to the internal nodes and speeds up network convergence.

Examples

# Enable prefix suppression on VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis ipv6 prefix-suppression

isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd

Use isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd to enable BFD-powered primary link failure detection on an IPv6 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd to restore the default.

Syntax

isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd { ctrl | echo }

undo isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd

Default

An IPv6 IS-IS interface inherits the configuration of the fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd command in IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

ctrl: Enables BFD control packet mode.

echo: Enables BFD echo packet mode.

Usage guidelines

This command enables IPv6 IS-IS FRR and PIC to use BFD to detect primary link failures. BFD can detect and report a primary link failure to IPv6 IS-IS for a primary-backup path switchover. This can shorten the duration of service interruption.

For an interface to run the BFD session in echo packet mode correctly, make sure the interface has an IPv6 global unicast address. For more information about IPv6 global unicast addresses, see IPv6 basics configuration in Layer 3—IP Services Configuration Guide.

You can perform one of the following tasks to enable BFD-powered primary link failure detection for IPv6 IS-IS FRR and PIC:

·     Use the fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd command in IPv6 IS-IS unicast address family view. This task takes effect on all interfaces in the current IPv6 IS-IS process.

·     Use the isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd command in interface view. This task takes effect only on the current IPv6 IS-IS interface.

For an IPv6 IS-IS interface, the isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd command takes precedence over the fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd command. The interface uses the configuration of the fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd command only when you do not execute the isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd command on that interface.

Examples

# Enable BFD control packet mode for IPv6 IS-IS FRR on VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv6

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv6] fast-reroute lfa

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv6] quit

[Sysname-isis-1] quit

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd ctrl

# Enable BFD echo packet mode for IPv6 IS-IS PIC on VLAN-interface 11.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] pic additional-path-always

[Sysname-isis-1] quit

[Sysname] bfd echo-source-ipv6 1::1

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 11

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd echo

Related commands

fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd

isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd exclude

Use isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd exclude to suppress BFD-powered primary link failure detection on an IPv6 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd exclude to restore the default.

Syntax

isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd exclude

undo isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd exclude

Default

BFD-powered primary link failure detection is not suppressed on an IPv6 IS-IS interface.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

The fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd command enables BFD-powered primary link failure detection on all interfaces in an IPv6 IS-IS process. To disable this feature on an interface in that IS-IS process, use the isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd exclude command on the interface.

When you use the following commands together on the same IPv6 IS-IS interface, the command that is used at last takes effect:

·     isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd exclude

·     isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd

Examples

# Suppress BFD-powered primary link failure detection on IPv6 IS-IS interface VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis ipv6 enable 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd exclude

Related commands

fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd

isis ipv6 primary-path-detect bfd

isis ipv6 tag

Use isis ipv6 tag to configure the tag value on an interface.

Use undo isis ipv6 tag to restore the default.

Syntax

isis ipv6 tag tag

undo isis ipv6 tag

Default

No tag value is configured on an interface.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

tag: Specifies a tag value in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

Usage guidelines

When IS-IS advertises an IPv6 prefix with a tag value, it adds the tag to the IPv6 reachability information TLV, regardless of the link cost style.

Examples

# Set the tag value on VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis ipv6 tag 4294967295

isis link-delay

Use isis link-delay to configure link delay settings on an IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis link-delay to remove link delay settings on an IS-IS interface.

Syntax

isis link-delay { average average-delay-value | min min-delay-value max max-delay-value | variation variation-value } *

undo isis link-delay { average | min | variation } *

Default

No link delay settings are configured on an IS-IS interface.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

average average-delay-value: Specifies the average link delay on an interface in the range of 1 to 16777215 microseconds. The average-delay-value parameter represents the average link delay for the interface to send a packet to its directly-connected peer. If you do not specify this option, the delay value is the average link delay reported by the interface.

min min-delay-value: Specifies the minimum link delay on an interface in the range of 1 to 16777215 microseconds. The min-delay-value parameter represents the minimum link delay for the interface to send a packet to its directly-connected peer. If you do not specify this option, the delay value is the minimum link delay reported by the interface.

max max-delay-value: Specifies the maximum link delay on an interface in the range of 1 to 16777215 microseconds. The max-delay-value parameter represents the maximum link delay for the interface to send a packet to its directly-connected peer. If you do not specify this option, the delay value is the maximum link delay reported by the interface.

variation variation-value: Sets the acceptable delay variation on an interface in the range of 1 to 16777215 microseconds. The variation-value parameter represents the difference between two consecutive average link delays. If you do not specify this option, the delay variation value is the variation reported by the interface.

Usage guidelines

Perform either of the following tasks to obtain link delay information of an interface:

·     Static configuration—Execute the isis link-delay command to manually configure link delay parameters on the interface.

·     Dynamic acquisition—Execute the test-session bind interface command to bind the interface as the out interface of a TWAMP Light test session. Then, TWAMP Light will send the detected link delay information to the interface, and the interface will report the link delay information to IS-IS at periodic intervals. For more information about TWAMP, see NQA TWAMP-light configuration in Network Management and Monitoring Configuration Guide.

For an instance, the isis link-delay command takes precedence over the test-session bind interface command.

The specified minimum link delay must be lower than the maximum one.

Examples

# Set the average link delay, minimum link delay, maximum link delay and acceptable link delay variation to 100, 10, 1000, 20 microseconds respectively for Interface Twenty-FiveGigE1/0/1. (Applicable to routers.)

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface twenty-fivegige 1/0/1

[Sysname-Twenty-FiveGigE1/0/1] isis link-delay average 100 min 10 max 1000 variation 20

# Set the average link delay, minimum link delay, maximum link delay and acceptable link delay variation to 100, 10, 1000, 20 microseconds respectively for Interface Vlan-interface10. (Applicable to switches.)

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis link-delay average 100 min 10 max 1000 variation 20

Related commands

test-session bind interface (Network Management and Monitoring Command Reference)

isis link-quality adjust-cost

Use isis link-quality adjust-cost to enable IS-IS to adjust the interface cost according to the link quality.

Use undo isis link-quality adjust-cost to disable IS-IS from adjusting the interface cost according to the link quality.

Syntax

isis link-quality adjust-cost { cost | max }

undo isis link-quality adjust-cost

Default

IS-IS does not adjust the interface cost according to the link quality.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

cost: Specifies the value to be added to the interface cost when the link quality changes to LOW. The value range for this argument is 1 to 16777213. When the link quality changes to LOW, the interface cost is cost plus the original interface cost. The interface cost cannot exceed the maximum interface cost.

max: Sets the interface cost to the maximum when the link quality changes to LOW. The maximum interface cost varies by cost type:

·     When the cost type is narrow, narrow-compatible, or compatible, the maximum interface cost is 63.

·     When the cost type is wide or wide-compatible, the maximum interface cost is 16777215.

Usage guidelines

Error codes, which refer to bit differences between the received and source signals, cannot be avoided because of inevitable link aging and optical path jitter problems. A high error code ratio might cause service degradation or interruption.

To reduce the impact of error codes on an IS-IS network, you can enable IS-IS to adjust the interface cost according to the link quality.

After you configure this command on an interface, IS-IS adjusts the interface cost as follows:

·     When the link quality of the interface becomes LOW, IS-IS increases the cost value for the interface.

·     When the link quality of the interface restores to GOOD, IS-IS restores the cost value for the interface.

Examples

# Enable IS-IS to adjust the cost of interface VLAN-interface 10 according to the link quality, and set the value to be added to the interface cost to 200.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis link-quality adjust-cost 200

Related commands

cost-style

isis mesh-group

Use isis mesh-group to add an interface into a mesh group or block the interface.

Use undo isis mesh-group to restore the default.

Syntax

isis mesh-group { mesh-group-number | mesh-blocked }

undo isis mesh-group

Default

An interface does not belong to any mesh group and is not blocked.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

mesh-group-number: Specifies a mesh group by its number in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

mesh-blocked: Configures the interface to send LSPs only after receiving LSP requests.

Usage guidelines

An interface not in a mesh group floods received LSPs to other interfaces. For an NBMA network with multiple point-to-point links, this mechanism causes repeated LSP flooding and bandwidth waste.

To solve this problem, use this command to add relevant interfaces to a mesh group. An interface in a mesh group only floods a received LSP to interfaces not in the same mesh group.

You can also use this command to block an interface. A blocked interface sends LSPs only after receiving LSP requests.

The mesh-group feature takes effect only on point-to-point links.

Examples

# Add Twenty-FiveGigE 1/0/1 to mesh group 3.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface twenty-fivegige 1/0/1

[Sysname-Twenty-FiveGigE1/0/1] isis mesh-group 3

isis mib-binding

Use isis mib-binding to bind an IS-IS process to MIB.

Use undo  isis mib-binding to restore the default.

Syntax

isis mib-binding process-id

undo isis mib-binding

Default

MIB operation is bound to the IS-IS process with the smallest process ID.

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

process-id: Specifies an IS-IS process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535.

Usage guidelines

If the specified the process ID does not exist, the MIB binding configuration fails.

Deleting an IS-IS process bound to MIB operation deletes the MIB binding configuration. MIB operation is bound to the IS-IS process with the smallest process ID.

Examples

# Bind IS-IS process 100 to MIB.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis mib-binding 100

isis peer hold-max-cost duration

Use isis peer hold-max-cost duration to enable IS-IS to advertise the maximum link cost to neighbors within the specified period of time.

Use undo isis peer hold-max-cost duration to restore the default.

Syntax

isis peer hold-max-cost duration time

undo isis peer hold-max-cost duration

Default

IS-IS advertises the original link cost to neighbors during a route convergence.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

time: Specifies the time period during which IS-IS advertises the maximum link cost to neighbors, in the range of 100 to 1000000 milliseconds.

Usage guidelines

On an IS-IS network, when a link recovers from failures or the state of an interface changes, IS-IS will re-establish neighbor relationships and perform route convergence. During the route convergence process, routing loops and traffic loss might occur because the convergence speeds of the nodes are different. To address this issue, enable IS-IS to advertise the maximum link cost to neighbors within the specified period of time, so the traffic forwarding path remains unchanged. After the specified period of time, IS-IS advertises the original link cost to neighbors and performs optimal route selection again.

For a P2P neighbor, the timer specified by the time argument starts after the neighbor becomes up. For a broadcast neighbor, the timer specified by the time argument starts after the neighbor becomes up and the DIS is elected.

When the cost type is wide, the maximum link cost is 16777214. When the cost type is Narrow, the maximum link cost is 63.

This command applies to both IPv4 IS-IS and IPv6 IS-IS.

Examples

# On interface VLAN-interface10, enable IS-IS to advertise the maximum link cost to neighbors within 1000 milliseconds.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis peer hold-max-cost duration 1000

isis peer-ip-check

Use isis peer-ip-check to enable source address check for hello packets on an IS-IS P2P interface. An IS-IS P2P interface can establish a neighbor relationship only with a peer on the same network.

Use undo isis peer-ip-check to restore the default.

Syntax

isis peer-ip-check

undo isis peer-ip-check

Default

An IS-IS P2P interface can have a peer on a different network.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Examples

# Enable source address check for hello packets on Interface VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis peer-ip-check

Related commands

isis circuit-type p2p

isis prefix-suppression

Use isis prefix-suppression to enable prefix suppression on an interface.

Use undo isis prefix-suppression to disable prefix suppression on an interface.

Syntax

isis prefix-suppression

undo isis prefix-suppression

Default

Prefix suppression is disabled on an interface.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

Use this command to disable an interface from advertising its prefix in LSPs. This enhances network security by preventing IP routing to the interval nodes and speeds up network convergence.

This command is also applicable to the secondary IP address of the interface.

Examples

# Enable prefix suppression on VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis prefix-suppression

isis primary-path-detect bfd

Use isis primary-path-detect bfd to enable BFD-powered primary link failure detection on an IPv4 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis primary-path-detect bfd to restore the default.

Syntax

isis primary-path-detect bfd { ctrl | echo }

undo isis primary-path-detect bfd

Default

An IPv4 IS-IS interface inherits the configuration of the fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd command in IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

ctrl: Specifies the BFD control packet mode.

echo: Specifies the BFD echo packet mode.

Usage guidelines

This command enables IPv4 IS-IS FRR and PIC to use BFD to detect primary link failures. BFD can detect and report a primary link failure to IPv4 IS-IS for a primary-backup path switchover. This can shorten the duration of service interruption.

You can perform one of the following tasks to enable BFD-powered primary link failure detection for IPv4 IS-IS FRR and PIC:

·     Use the fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd command in IPv4 IS-IS unicast address family view. This task takes effect on all interfaces in the current IPv4 IS-IS process.

·     Use the isis primary-path-detect bfd command in interface view. This task takes effect only on the current IPv4 IS-IS interface.

For an IPv4 IS-IS interface, the isis primary-path-detect bfd command takes precedence over the fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd command. The interface uses the configuration of the fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd command only when you do not execute the isis primary-path-detect bfd command on that interface.

Examples

# Enable BFD control packet mode for IPv4 IS-IS FRR on VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] fast-reroute lfa

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] quit

[Sysname-isis-1] quit

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis primary-path-detect bfd ctrl

# Enable BFD echo packet mode for IPv4 IS-IS PIC on VLAN-interface 11.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] pic additional-path-always

[Sysname-isis-1] quit

[Sysname] bfd echo-source-ip 1.1.1.1

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 11

[Sysname-Vlan-interface11] isis primary-path-detect bfd echo

Related commands

fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd

isis primary-path-detect bfd exclude

Use isis primary-path-detect bfd exclude to suppress BFD-powered primary link failure detection on an IPv4 IS-IS interface.

Use undo isis primary-path-detect bfd exclude to restore the default.

Syntax

isis primary-path-detect bfd exclude

undo isis primary-path-detect bfd exclude

Default

BFD-powered primary link failure detection is not suppressed on an IPv4 IS-IS interface.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

The fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd command enables BFD-powered primary link failure detection on all interfaces in an IPv4 IS-IS process. To disable this feature on an interface in that IS-IS process, use the isis primary-path-detect bfd exclude command on the interface.

When you use the following commands together on the same IPv4 IS-IS interface, the command that is used at last takes effect:

·     isis primary-path-detect bfd exclude

·     isis primary-path-detect bfd

Examples

# Suppress BFD-powered primary link failure detection on IPv4 IS-IS interface VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis enable 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis primary-path-detect bfd exclude

Related commands

fast-reroute primary-path-detect bfd

isis primary-path-detect bfd

isis silent

Use isis silent to disable the interface from sending and receiving IS-IS packets.

Use undo isis silent to restore the default.

Syntax

isis silent

undo isis silent

Default

An interface can send and receive IS-IS packets.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

This command is not available in loopback interface view.

Examples

# Disable VLAN-interface 10 from sending and receiving IS-IS packets.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis silent

isis small-hello

Use isis small-hello to configure the interface to send small hello packets without CLVs.

Use undo isis small-hello to restore the default.

Syntax

isis small-hello

undo isis small-hello

Default

An interface sends standard hello packets.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

This command is not available in loopback interface view.

Examples

# Configure VLAN-interface 10 to send small Hello packets.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis small-hello

isis tag

Use isis tag to configure the tag value for an interface.

Use undo isis tag to restore the default.

Syntax

isis tag tag

undo isis tag

Default

The interface is not configured with a tag value.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

tag: Specifies the tag value in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

Usage guidelines

When IS-IS advertises an IP prefix with a tag value, it adds the tag to the IP reachability information TLV if the link cost style is wide, wide-compatible, or compatible.

Examples

# Configure the tag value for VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis tag 4294967295

isis timer csnp

Use isis timer csnp to set on the DIS of a broadcast network the interval for sending CSNP packets.

Use undo isis timer csnp to remove the configuration.

Syntax

isis timer csnp seconds [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo isis timer csnp [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

The default CSNP interval is 10 seconds.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

seconds: Specifies on the DIS of a broadcast network the interval for sending CSNP packets. The value range is 1 to 600 seconds.

level-1: Applies the interval to Level-1.

level-2: Applies the interval to Level-2.

Usage guidelines

On a broadcast network, this command only applies to the DIS, because the DIS sends CSNP packets periodically for LSDB synchronization.

If no level is specified, the CSNP interval applies to both Level-1 and Level-2.

Examples

# Configure Level-2 CSNP packets to be sent every 15 seconds over VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis timer csnp 15 level-2

isis timer hello

Use isis timer hello to set the interval for sending hello packets.

Use undo isis timer hello to remove the configuration.

Syntax

isis timer hello seconds [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo isis timer hello [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

The hello interval is 10 seconds.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

seconds: Specifies the interval for sending hello packets, in the range of 1 to 255 seconds.

level-1: Specifies the interval for sending Level-1 hello packets.

level-2: Specifies the interval for sending Level-2 hello packets.

Usage guidelines

If a neighbor does not receive any hello packets from the router within the advertised hold time, it considers the router down and recalculates the routes. The hold time is the hello multiplier multiplied by the hello interval.

Level-1 and Level-2 hello packets are sent independently on a broadcast network, so you need to specify an interval for each level. On a P2P link, Level-1 and Level-2 packets are both sent in P2P hello packets, and you need not specify an interval for each level.

You can configure the level-1 and level-2 keywords only on broadcast interfaces. Before you configure the level-1 or level-2 keyword, enable IS-IS on the interface.

The shorter the interval, the more system resources will be occupied.

If no level is specified, the hello interval applies to both Level-1 and Level-2.

Examples

# Configure Level-2 hello packets to be sent every 20 seconds over VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis timer hello 20 level-2

Related commands

isis timer holding-multiplier

isis timer holding-multiplier

Use isis timer holding-multiplier to set the IS-IS hello multiplier.

Use undo isis timer holding-multiplier to remove the configuration.

Syntax

isis timer holding-multiplier value [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo isis timer holding-multiplier [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

The default IS-IS hello multiplier is 3.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

value: Specifies the number of hello intervals, in the range of 3 to 1000.

level-1: Applies the number to the Level-1 IS-IS neighbor.

level-2: Applies the number to the Level-2 IS-IS neighbor.

Usage guidelines

The hello multiplier is the number of hello packets a neighbor must miss before declaring the router is down.

If a neighbor does not receive any hello packets from the router within the advertised hold time, it considers the router down and recalculates the routes. The hold time is the hello multiplier multiplied by the hello interval.

Level-1 and Level-2 hello packets are sent independently on a broadcast network, so you need to specify a hello multiplier for each level. On a P2P link, Level-1 and Level-2 packets are both sent in P2P hello packets, and you need not specify Level-1 or Level-2.

You can configure the level-1 and level-2 keywords only on broadcast interfaces. Before you configure the level-1 or level-2 keyword, enable IS-IS on the interface.

If no level is specified, the hello multiplier applies to both Level-1 and Level-2.

The value of hello multiplier multiplied by hello interval cannot be more than 65535.

Examples

# Set the hello multiplier to 6 for VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis timer holding-multiplier 6 level-2

Related commands

isis timer hello

isis timer lsp

Use isis timer lsp to set the minimum interval for sending LSPs on the interface and specify the maximum number of LSPs that can be sent per time.

Use undo isis timer lsp to restore the default.

Syntax

isis timer lsp time [ count count ]

undo isis timer lsp

Default

The minimum interval for sending LSPs on the interface is 33 milliseconds, and the maximum number of LSPs that can be sent at a time is 5.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

time: Specifies the minimum interval for sending link-state packets, in the range of 1 to 1000 milliseconds.

count: Specifies the maximum number of link-state packets to be sent at one time, in the range of 1 to 1000.

Usage guidelines

If a change occurs in the LSDB, IS-IS advertises the changed LSP to neighbors. You can specify the minimum interval for sending these LSPs to control the amount of LSPs on the network.

Examples

# Set the interval to 500 milliseconds for sending LSPs on Twenty-FiveGigE 1/0/1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface twenty-fivegige 1/0/1

[Sysname-Twenty-FiveGigE1/0/1] isis timer lsp 500

# Set the interval to 500 milliseconds for sending LSPs on VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis timer lsp 500

Related commands

isis timer retransmit

isis timer retransmit

Use isis timer retransmit to configure the interval for retransmitting LSP packets over a point-to-point link.

Use undo isis timer retransmit to restore the default.

Syntax

isis timer retransmit seconds

undo isis timer retransmit

Default

The retransmission interval on a P2P link is 5 seconds.

Views

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

seconds: Specifies the interval for retransmitting LSP packets, in the range of 1 to 300 seconds.

Usage guidelines

On a P2P link, IS-IS requires an advertised LSP be acknowledged. If no acknowledgment is received within a configurable interval, IS-IS will retransmit the LSP.

You do not need to use this command over a broadcast link where CSNPs are periodically broadcast to implement LSDB synchronization.

Examples

# Set the LSP retransmission interval on a P2P link to 50 seconds for VLAN-interface 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis circuit-type p2p

[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] isis timer retransmit 50

Related commands

isis circuit-type p2p

isis timer lsp

is-level

Use is-level to specify the IS level.

Use undo is-level to restore the default.

Syntax

is-level { level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2 }

undo is-level

Default

The IS level is level-1-2.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

level-1: Specifies Level-1, which means IS-IS only calculates intra-area routes and maintains the Level-1 LSDB.

level-1-2: Specifies Level-1-2, which means IS-IS calculates routes and maintains the LSDBs for both Level-1 and Level-2.

level-2: Specifies Level-2, which means IS-IS calculates routes and maintains the LSDB for Level-2 only.

Usage guidelines

If only one area exists, configure all the routers as either Level-1 or Level-2, because the routers do not need to maintain two identical LSDBs at the same time.

If the only area is an IP network, configure all the routers as Level-2 for scalability.

Examples

# Set the IS level to Level-1 for IS-IS process 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] is-level level-1

is-name

Use is-name to specify a host name for the IS and enable dynamic system ID to hostname mapping.

Use undo is-name to disable dynamic system ID to hostname mapping.

Syntax

is-name sys-name

undo is-name

Default

Dynamic system ID to hostname mapping is disabled, and no host name is configured for the IS.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

sys-name: Specifies a host name for the local IS, a case-insensitive string of 1 to 64 characters.

Usage guidelines

To display the host name rather than the system ID of an IS by using the display isis lsdb command, first enable dynamic system ID to hostname mapping.

Examples

# Configure a host name for the local IS.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] is-name RUTA

Related commands

display isis name-table

is-name map

Use is-name map to configure a system ID to host name mapping for a remote IS.

Use undo is-name map to remove the mapping.

Syntax

is-name map sys-id map-sys-name

undo is-name map sys-id

Default

No system ID to host name mapping is configured for a remote IS.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

sys-id: Specifies the system ID or pseudonode ID of a remote IS.

map-sys-name: Specifies a host name for the remote IS, a case-insensitive string of 1 to 64 characters.

Usage guidelines

Each remote IS system ID corresponds to only one name.

Examples

# Map the host name RUTB to the system ID 0000.0000.0041 of the remote IS.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] is-name map 0000.0000.0041 RUTB

Related commands

display isis name-table

isolate enable

Use isolate enable to enable IS-IS isolation.

Use undo isolate enable to disable IS-IS isolation.

Syntax

isolate enable

undo isolate enable

Default

IS-IS isolation is disabled.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

Isolation is a method used for network device maintenance. It gracefully removes a device from the packet forwarding path for maintenance and gracefully adds the device to the network after maintenance.

To reduce impact on traffic forwarding, you can isolate a device before upgrading it. IS-IS isolation works as follows:

1.     After IS-IS isolation is enabled for a device, IS-IS sets the overload bit in the LSPs advertised by the device and sets the link cost to the maximum value.

2.     Each neighbor of the device reselects an optimal route based on the LSPs and stops forwarding traffic to the device. The device is fully isolated from the network and you can upgrade the device.

3.     After the maintenance, disable IS-IS isolation on the device to gracefully add it back to the network by clearing its overload bit and restoring its link cost.

The isolated device does not advertise redistributed routes and routes received from other levels. To enable advertising these routes, execute the set-overload command.

Examples

# Isolate the device from the network in IS-IS process 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] isolate enable

Related commands

set-overload

ispf enable

Use ispf enable to enable incremental SPF (ISPF).

Use undo ispf enable to disable ISPF.

Syntax

ispf enable

undo ispf enable

Default

ISPF is enabled.

Views

IS-IS view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

When a network topology is changed, ISPF recomputes only the affected part of the SPT, instead of the entire SPT.

Examples

# Enable IS-IS ISPF.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] ispf enable

log-peer-change

Use log-peer-change to enable the logging of IS-IS neighbor state changes.

Use undo log-peer-change to disable the logging.

Syntax

log-peer-change

undo log-peer-change

Default

The logging of IS-IS neighbor state changes is enabled.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

This command enables sending logs about IS-IS neighbor state changes to the information center. For IS-IS neighbor state change logs to be sent correctly, you must also configure the information center parameters on the device. For more information about information center, see information center configuration in System Management Configuration Guide.

Examples

# Disable the logging of IS-IS neighbor state changes.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] undo log-peer-change

lsp-fragments-extend

Use lsp-fragments–extend to enable LSP fragment extension for a level.

Use undo lsp-fragments–extend to restore the default.

Syntax

lsp-fragments-extend [ level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2 ]

undo lsp-fragments-extend

Default

LSP fragment extension is disabled.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

level-1: Applies the fragment extension to Level-1 LSPs.

level-1-2: Applies the fragment extension to both Level-1 and Level-2 LSPs.

level-2: Applies the fragment extension to Level-2 LSPs.

Usage guidelines

If no level is specified, the command enables LSP fragment extension for both Level-1 and Level-2.

Examples

# Enable LSP fragment extension for Level-2.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] lsp-fragments-extend level-2

lsp-length originate

Use lsp-length originate to configure the maximum size of generated Level-1 or Level-2 LSPs.

Use undo lsp-length originate to remove the configuration.

Syntax

lsp-length originate size [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo lsp-length originate [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

The maximum size of generated Level-1 and Level-2 LSPs is 1497 bytes.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

size: Specifies the maximum size of LSP packets, in the range of 512 to 16384 bytes.

level-1: Applies the size to Level-1 LSP packets.

level-2: Applies the size to Level-2 LSP packets.

Usage guidelines

If neither Level-1 nor Level-2 is specified in the command, the configured maximum size applies to the current IS-IS level.

Examples

# Set the maximum size of the generated Level-2 LSPs to 1024 bytes.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] lsp-length originate 1024 level-2

lsp-length receive

Use lsp-length receive to configure the maximum size of received LSPs.

Use undo lsp-length receive to restore the default.

Syntax

lsp-length receive size

undo lsp-length receive

Default

The maximum size of received LSPs is 1497 bytes.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

size: Specifies the maximum size of received LSPs, in the range of 512 to 16384 bytes.

Examples

# Configure the maximum size of received LSPs to 1024 bytes.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] lsp-length receive 1024

maximum load-balancing

Use maximum load-balancing to configure the maximum number of ECMP routes for load balancing.

Use undo maximum load-balancing to restore the default.

Syntax

maximum load-balancing number

undo maximum load-balancing

Default

The maximum number of IS-IS ECMP routes equals the maximum number of ECMP routes, which is configurable by using the max-ecmp-num command.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

number: Specifies the maximum number of ECMP routes. The value of 1 indicates that IS-IS does not perform load balancing.

Usage guidelines

You can use the max-ecmp-num command to configure the maximum number of ECMP routes supported by the system as m. After a reboot, the value range for the number argument of the maximum load-balancing command is 1 to m.

Examples

# Set the maximum number of ECMP routes to 2.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 100

[Sysname-isis-100] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-100-ipv4] maximum load-balancing 2

Related commands

max-ecmp-num

metric-bandwidth advertisement enable

Use metric-bandwidth advertisement enable to enable IS-IS to advertise link bandwidth information.

Use undo metric-bandwidth advertisement enable to disable IS-IS from advertising link bandwidth information.

Syntax

metric-bandwidth advertisement enable [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo metric-bandwidth advertisement enable [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

IS-IS does not advertise link bandwidth information.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 address family view

IS-IS IPv6 address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

level-1: Specifies Level-1 routers.

level-2: Specifies Level-2 routers.

Usage guidelines

Perform this task to enable IS-IS to advertise link bandwidth information and report the information to the controller through BGP-LS. Then, the controller performs optimal route calculation based on the link bandwidth information.

This command takes effect only after you enable link attribute advertisement by executing the advertise link-attributes command.

Examples

# Enable IS-IS process 1 to advertise link bandwidth information.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] metric-bandwidth advertisement enable

Related commands

advertise link-attributes

distribute bgp-ls

metric-bandwidth suppression

Use metric-bandwidth suppression to enable IS-IS to suppress link bandwidth information advertisement and configure the suppression timer.

Use undo metric-bandwidth suppression to disable IS-IS from suppressing link bandwidth information advertisement.

Syntax

metric-bandwidth suppression timer time-value

undo metric-bandwidth suppression

Default

Link bandwidth information advertisement is suppressed.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

timer time-value: Specifies the suppression timer in the range of 0 to 600 seconds. The default timer is 120 seconds. To disable IS-IS from suppressing link bandwidth information advertisement, set the timer to 0.

Usage guidelines

By suppressing link bandwidth information advertisement, you can prevent device resources from being over consumed due to frequent bandwidth changes.

Link bandwidth advertisement suppression works as follows:

·     The interface reports link bandwidth information to IS-IS at negotiated intervals.

·     IS-IS advertises link bandwidth information through BGP-LS at intervals specified by the time-value argument. IS-IS does not advertise link bandwidth information until the suppression timer expires.

This command takes effect only after you enable link bandwidth information advertisement by executing the metric-bandwidth advertisement enable command.

As a best practice, the suppression timer you specified should not be less than the Ethernet interface measurement interval. For more information about Ethernet interfaces, see Ethernet interface configuration in Interface Management and Configuration Guide.

Examples

# Enable IS-IS process 1 to suppress link bandwidth information advertisement and set the suppression timer to 100 seconds.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] metric-bandwidth suppression timer 100

Related commands

metric-bandwidth advertisement enable

metric-delay advertisement enable

Use metric-delay advertisement enable to enable IS-IS to advertise link delay information.

Use undo metric-delay advertisement enable to disable IS-IS from advertising link delay information.

Syntax

metric-delay advertisement enable [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo metric-delay advertisement enable [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

Link delay information advertisement is disabled.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 address family view

IS-IS IPv6 address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

level-1: Specifies Level-1 routers.

level-2: Specifies Level-2 routers.

Usage guidelines

Perform this task to enable IS-IS to advertise link delay information and report the information to the controller through BGP-LS. Then, the controller performs optimal route calculation based on the link delay information.

This command takes effect only after you enable link attribute advertisement by using the advertise link-attributes command.

Examples

# Enable IS-IS process 1 to advertise link delay information.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] metric-delay advertisement enable

Related commands

advertise link-attributes

distribute bgp-ls

metric-delay suppression

Use metric-delay suppression to enable IS-IS to suppress link delay information advertisement and configure the suppression settings.

Use undo metric-delay suppression to disable IS-IS from suppressing link delay information advertisement.

Syntax

metric-delay suppression timer time-value percent-threshold percent-value absolute-threshold absolute-value

undo metric-delay suppression

Default

Link delay information advertisement is suppressed.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

timer time-value: Specifies the suppression timer in the range of 0 to 600 seconds. The default timer is 120 seconds. To disable IS-IS from suppressing link delay information advertisement, set the timer to 0.

percent-value: Specifies the suppression threshold for link delay variation ratio in the range of 0 to 100%. The default threshold is 10%. If this argument is unnecessary, you can set it to 0.

absolute-value: Specifies the suppression threshold for the absolute value of link delay variation in the range of 0 to 10000 microseconds. The default threshold is 1000 microseconds. If this argument is unnecessary, you can set it to 0.

Usage guidelines

By suppressing link delay information advertisement, you can prevent device resources from being over consumed due to frequent link delay changes.

Link delay advertisement suppression works as follows:

·     The interface reports link delay information to IS-IS at negotiated intervals.

·     IS-IS advertises link delay information through BGP-LS at intervals specified by the time-value argument. IS-IS does not advertise link delay information within the suppression timer except for the following conditions:

¡     The variation ratio between two consecutive minimum delays is larger than or equivalent to the suppression threshold for the delay variation ratio.

¡     The absolute value of the difference between two consecutive minimum delays is larger than or equivalent to the suppression threshold for the absolute value of the delay variation.

This command takes effect only after you execute the metric-delay advertisement enable command.

As a best practice, the  suppression timer you specified should not be less than the NQA measurement interval. For more information about NQA, see NQA configuration in Network Management and Monitoring Configuration Guide.

Examples

# Enable IS-IS process 1 to suppress link delay information advertisement and configure the suppression settings.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] metric-delay suppression timer 100 percent-threshold 50 absolute-threshold 200

Related commands

metric-delay advertisement enable

metric-type

Use metric-type to configure the metric type of a flexible algorithm.

Use undo metric-type to restore the default.

Syntax

metric-type { delay | te-cost }

undo metric-type

Default

The flexible algorithm uses IS-IS link cost for path calculation.

Views

Flexible algorithm view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

delay: Configures the metric type as link delay.

te-cost: Configures the metric type as TE cost.

Usage guidelines

By default, the flexible algorithm uses IS-IS link cost for optimal path calculation. In some scenarios, the paths calculated by the flexible algorithm might not be optimal. To resolve this issue, configure the flexible algorithm to use another metric type for optimal path calculation.

Flexible algorithm supports the following metric types:

·     IS-IS link cost.

·     Link delay. The minimum link delay is used for optimal path calculation.

·     TE cost.

You can use this feature only when the link cost style is wide, compatible, or wide-compatible.

Examples

# Configure the metric type of flexible algorithm 128 as TE cost.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] flex-algo 128

[Sysname-isis-1-flex-algo-128] metric-type te-cost

Related commands

cost-style

isis link-delay

metric-delay advertisement enable

multi-instance enable

Use multi-instance enable to enable the IS-IS multi-instance process and specify an instance ID for the process.

Use undo multi-instance enable to disable the IS-IS multi-instance process.

Syntax

multi-instance enable iid iid-value

undo multi-instance enable

Default

IS-IS multi-instance process is disabled.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

iid iid-value: Specifies an instance ID for the IS-IS process, in the range of 1 to 65535.

Usage guidelines

IS-IS processes not enabled with the multi-instance process feature are called traditional IS-IS processes. IS-IS processes enabled with the multi-instance process feature are called IS-IS multi-instance processes.

By default, an interface supports only one IS-IS process. To configure multiple IS-IS processes on a device, you must add more interfaces to the device and configure the interfaces manually. To simplify configuration, use the IS-IS multi-instance process feature to configure multiple IS-IS multi-instance processes as well as a traditional IS-IS process on an interface.

After you enable the IS-IS multi-instance process feature, two devices can establish a neighbor relationship only when you configure the same instance ID for the multi-instance processes on the devices.

When you configure IS-IS multi-instance processes or disable the IS-IS multi-instance process feature, follow these restrictions and guidelines:

·     You cannot specify the same instance ID for different IS-IS processes.

·     Before enabling or disabling the IS-IS multi-instance process feature on an interface that has been configured with an IS-IS process, disable IS-IS on the interface.

Examples

# Enable IS-IS multi-instance process on IS-IS process 1 and set the instance ID to 3.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] multi-instance enable iid 3

Related commands

isis enable

multi-topology

Use multi-topology to enable IPv6 IS-IS MTR.

Use undo multiple-topology to disable IPv6 IS-IS MTR.

Syntax

multi-topology [ compatible ]

undo multi-topology

Default

IPv6 IS-IS MTR is disabled.

Views

IS-IS IPv6 address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

compatible: Specifies the compatible mode to advertise IPv6 prefixes to both IPv4 and IPv6 topologies. If you do not specify this keyword, the command advertises IPv6 prefixes only to the IPv6 topology.

Usage guidelines

This command enables separate route calculation in IPv4 and IPv6 topologies.

This command is available when the link cost style is wide, compatible, or wide-compatible.

Examples

# Enable IPv6 IS-IS MTR.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv6

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv6] multi-topology

Related commands

cost-style

network-entity

Use network-entity to configure the Network Entity Title (NET) for an IS-IS process.

Use undo network-entity to delete a NET.

Syntax

network-entity net

undo network-entity net

Default

No NET is configured.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

net: Specifies a NET as a dotted hexadecimal string in the X…X.XXXX....XXXX.00 format. The X…X segment represents the area address, the XXXX....XXXX segment represents the system ID, and the 00 segment is the SEL.

Usage guidelines

CAUTION

CAUTION:

When you execute the network-entity command together with the cost-style and is-level commands for the same IS-IS process, execute the network-entity command at last. Incorrect configuration order might cause data loss because the IS-IS process will restart.

A NET is a special NSAP address with the SEL being 0. The length of the NET is in the range of 8 to 20 bytes.

A NET comprises the following parts:

·     Area ID—With a length of 1 to 13 bytes.

·     System ID—A system ID uniquely identifies a host or router in the area and has a fixed 6-byte length.

·     SEL—It has a value of 0 and a fixed 1-byte length.

For example, a NET of ab.cdef.1234.5678.9abc.00 specifies the area ID ab.cdef, the system ID 1234.5678.9abc, and the SEL 00.

Examples

# Set the NET to 10.0001.1010.1020.1030.00, of which 10.0001 is the area ID and 1010.1020.1030 is the system ID.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] network-entity 10.0001.1010.1020.1030.00

Related commands

cost-style

isis

isis enable

is-level

overload adjust-cost

Use overload adjust-cost to set the cost for all IS-IS interfaces when the device enters the overload state.

Use undo overload adjust-cost to restore the default.

Syntax

overload adjust-cost { cost-offset | max }

undo overload adjust-cost

Default

The device does not change the cost for any IS-IS interfaces when it enters the overload state.

Views

IS-IS view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

cost-offset: Sets the cost offset in the range of 1 to 16777213. When the device enters the overload state, the cost of each IS-IS interface changes to the original interface cost plus the specified cost offset value. The new cost does not exceed the maximum cost value of the interface.

max: Sets the maximum cost value. The value range varies by cost style.

·     For styles narrow, narrow-compatible, and compatible, the maximum cost value is 63.

·     For styles wide and wide-compatible, the maximum cost value is 16777214.

Usage guidelines

Upon entering the overload state, the device sends an LSP with the OL bit set to its neighbors. The neighbor that receives the LSP performs path calculation and forwards packets as follows:

·     For packets destined to a network not directly connected to the overloaded device, the neighbor device does not forward the packets to the overloaded device.

·     For packets destined to the network directly connected to the overloaded device, the neighbor device forwards the packets to the overloaded device.

These processing methods might cause problems in an anycast scenario where the destination address of packets is an anycast address. The neighbor device will send such packets to the anycast node with the smallest cost, and that node might have already entered the overload state. To avoid such problems, use this command to enable an overloaded device to increase its cost. Neighbors will not select the device during path calculation.

The command takes effect when the device enters the overload state as follows:

·     When the device is in overload state, the system increases the cost of all IS-IS interfaces on the device. Neighbors will not select the device during path calculation.

·     When the device exits the overload state or you execute the undo overload adjust-cost command, the IS-IS interfaces resume their original costs.

Examples

# Increase the cost for all IS-IS interfaces by 50 when IS-IS process 1 enters the overload state.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] overload adjust-cost 50

pic

Use pic to enable IS-IS PIC.

Use undo pic to disable IS-IS PIC.

Syntax

pic [ additional-path-always ]

undo pic

Default

IS-IS PIC is enabled.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

additional-path-always: Allows the indirect suboptimal route as the backup route.

Usage guidelines

Prefix Independent Convergence (PIC) enables the device to speed up network convergence by ignoring the number of prefixes. PIC applies only to indirect routes.

When both IS-IS PIC and IS-IS FRR are configured, only IS-IS FRR takes effect.

Examples

# Configure IS-IS PIC to support the indirect suboptimal route as the backup route.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] pic additional-path-always

preference

Use preference to configure the preference for IS-IS.

Use undo preference to restore the default.

Syntax

preference { preference | route-policy route-policy-name } *

undo preference

Default

IS-IS preference is 15.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

preference: Specifies an IS-IS protocol preference in the range of 1 to 255.

route-policy route-policy-name: Specifies a routing policy by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters, to assign a priority to the matching routes.

Usage guidelines

If multiple routing protocols find routes to the same destination, the route found by the routing protocol with the highest preference is selected as the optimal route.

If a routing policy is specified in this command, the preference set by the routing policy applies to the matching routes. Other routes use the preference set by the preference command.

Examples

# Set the preference for IS-IS to 25.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] preference 25

prefix-priority

Use prefix-priority to assign convergence priorities to specific IS-IS routes.

Use undo prefix-priority to remove the configuration.

Syntax

prefix-priority { critical | high | medium } { prefix-list prefix-list-name | tag tag-value }

prefix-priority route-policy route-policy-name

undo prefix-priority { critical | high | medium } [ prefix-list | tag ]

undo prefix-priority route-policy

Default

IS-IS routes have the lowest convergence priority.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

critical: Specifies the highest convergence priority.

high: Specifies the high convergence priority.

medium: Specifies the medium convergence priority.

prefix-list prefix-list-name: Specifies a prefix list by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters.

tag tag-value: Specifies a tag value in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

route-policy route-policy-name: Specifies a routing policy by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters.

Usage guidelines

The higher the convergence priority, the faster the convergence speed.

IS-IS host routes have a medium convergence priority.

Examples

# Assign the high convergence priority to IS-IS routes permitted by IP prefix list standtest.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] prefix-priority high prefix-list standtest

priority

Use priority to set the priority of a flexible algorithm.

Use undo priority to restore the default.

Syntax

priority priority-value

undo priority

Default

The priority of a flexible algorithm is 128.

Views

Flexible algorithm view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

priority-value: Specifies a priority value in the range of 0 to 255. A higher value indicates a higher priority.

Usage guidelines

All nodes that participate in the path calculation for a flexible algorithm can have a different FAD. To avoid routing loops in an FAD advertisement scope (IS-IS area), these nodes must use the same FAD. By convention, a node selects an FAD as follows:

·     The FAD with the highest priority will be selected from the FADs advertised within the IS-IS routing domain. If the node does not advertise FADs, it selects the FAD with the highest priority from the received FADs.

·     The FAD with the greatest system ID will be selected from the FADs that have the highest priority.

This feature is available when the link cost style is wide, compatible, or wide-compatible.

Examples

# Set the priority to 200 for flexible algorithm 128.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] flex-algo 128

[Sysname-isis-1-flex-algo-128] priority 200

Related commands

advertise-definition

cost-style

reset isis all

Use reset isis all to clear all IS-IS data structure information.

Syntax

reset isis all [ process-id ] [ graceful-restart ]

Views

User view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

process-id: Specifies an IS-IS process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535 to clear the data structure information for an IS-IS process.

graceful-restart: Recovers the data through graceful restart after the data is cleared.

Usage guidelines

If no IS-IS process is specified, the command clears data structure information for all IS-IS processes.

Use this command when LSPs must be updated immediately.

Examples

# Clear all IS-IS data structure information.

<Sysname> reset isis all

reset isis event-log graceful-restart

Use reset isis event-log graceful-restart to clear IS-IS GR log information.

Syntax

 

reset isis event-log graceful-restart

Views

User view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

# Clear IS-IS GR log information.

<Sysname> reset isis event-log graceful-restart

reset isis event-log lsp

Use reset isis event-log lsp to clear IS-IS LSP log information.

Syntax

reset isis event-log lsp  { purged | refreshed } [ process-id ]

Views

User view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

purged: Clears log information about purged LSPs.

refreshed: Clears log information about refreshed LSPs.

process-id: Specifies an IS-IS process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command clears LSP log information for all IS-IS processes.

Examples

# Clear log information about LSPs for IS-IS process 1.

<Sysname> reset isis event-log lsp 1

Related commands

display isis event-log lsp

reset isis event-log spf

Use reset isis event-log spf to clear IS-IS route calculation log information.

Syntax

reset isis event-log spf [ process-id ]

Views

User view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

process-id: Specifies an IS-IS process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command clears route calculation log information for all IS-IS processes.

Examples

# Clear route calculation log information for IS-IS process 1.

<Sysname> reset isis event-log spf 1

Related commands

display isis event-log spf

reset isis packet

Use reset isis packet to clear IS-IS packet statistics.

Syntax

reset isis packet [ csnp | hello | lsp | psnp ] [ interface-type interface-number ] [ process-id ]

Views

User view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

csnp: Clears CSNP packet statistics.

hello: Clears hello packet statistics.

lsp: Clears LSP packet statistics.

psnp: Clears PSNP packet statistics.

interface-type interface-number: Specifies an interface by its type and number. If you do not specify this option, the command clears IS-IS packet statistics for all interfaces.

process-id: Specifies an IS-IS process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify this argument, the command clears IS-IS packet statistics for all IS-IS processes.

Examples

# Clear IS-IS packet statistics for all IS-IS processes.

<Sysname> reset isis packet

Related commands

display isis packet

reset isis peer

Use reset isis peer to clear data structure information for a specified IS-IS neighbor.

Syntax

reset isis peer system-id [ process-id ]

Views

User view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

system-id: Specifies an IS-IS neighbor by its system ID.

process-id: Specifies an IS-IS process by its ID in the range of 1 to 65535 to clear data structure information for the neighbor in the specified IS-IS process.

Usage guidelines

Use this command when you re-establish an IS-IS neighbor relationship.

Examples

# Clear the data structure information of the neighbor with the system ID 0000.0c11.1111.

<Sysname> reset isis peer 0000.0c11.1111

reset osi statistics

Use reset osi statistics to clear OSI packet statistics.

Syntax

reset osi statistics

Views

User view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

To obtain OSI packet statistics from the specified time point, first clear the existing statistics.

Examples

# Clear OSI packet statistics.

<Sysname> reset osi statistics

Related commands

display osi statistics

set-att

Use set-att to set the ATT bit of Level-1 LSPs.

Use undo set-att to restore the default.

Syntax

set-att { always | never }

undo set-att

Default

The Level-1-2 router sets the ATT bit for Level-1 LSPs in accordance with the default ATT bit setting rule.

Views

IS-IS view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

always: Sets the ATT bit of Level-1 LSPs.

never: Keeps the ATT bit of Level-1 LSPs not set.

Usage guidelines

The ATT bit is used to identify the connection status between a Level-1 area and other areas. By default, a Level-1-2 router sets the ATT bit for Level-1 LSPs as follows:

·     The Level-1-2 router sets the ATT bit in Level-1 LSPs to inform the Level-1 routers that it can reach other areas. After a Level-1 router receives a Level-1 LSP with the ATT bit set, it generates a default route destined for the Level-1-2 router.

·     The Level-1-2 router does not set the ATT bit in Level-1 LSPs if it can reach only one area.

To edit the default ATT bit setting rule for a Level-1-2 router, perform the following tasks as needed:

·     To enable ATT bit setting for all Level-1 LSPs, execute the set-att always command on the Level-1-2 router.

·     To disable a Level-1 router from generating a default route upon receiving an ATT-bit-set Level-1 LSP from the Level-1-2 router, you can perform one of the following tasks:

¡     Execute the ignore-att command on the Level-1 router.

¡     Execute the set-att never command on the Level-1-2 router.

The set-att command is applicable to only Level-1-2 routers.

Examples

# Set the ATT bit of Level-1 LSPs.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] set-att always

set-overload

Use set-overload to set the overload bit.

Use undo set-overload to restore the default.

Syntax

In IS-IS view:

set-overload [ on-startup [ [ start-from-nbr system-id [ timeout1 [ nbr-timeout ] ] ] | timeout2 | wait-for-bgp [ timeout3 ] ] ] [ allow { external | interlevel } * ]

undo set-overload

In IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view:

set-overload [ on-startup [ [ start-from-nbr system-id [ timeout1 [ nbr-timeout ] ] ] | timeout2 | wait-for-bgp4+ [ timeout3 ] ] ] [ allow { external | interlevel } * ]

undo set-overload

Default

The overload bit is not set.

Views

IS-IS view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

on-startup: Sets the overload bit upon system startup.

start-from-nbr system-id [ timeout1 [ nbr-timeout ] ]: Starts the nbr-timeout timer when the router begins to establish the neighbor relationship with the neighbor after system startup. If the neighbor relationship is formed within the nbr-timeout interval, IS-IS keeps the overload bit set. If not, the bit is cleared. IS-IS keeps the overload bit set within the timeout1 interval after the neighbor relationship is formed within the nbr-timeout interval.

·     system-id—Specifies the neighbor.

·     timeout1—The timeout1 interval is in the range of 5 to 86400 seconds, and the default is 600 seconds.

·     nbr-timeout—The timer has an interval from 5 to 86400 seconds. The default is 1200 seconds.

timeout2: Sets the overload bit within the timeout2 interval after system startup. The interval is in the range of 5 to 86400 seconds, and the default is 600 seconds.

wait-for-bgp [ timeout3 ]: Starts the timeout3 timer for BGP convergence after system startup. If BGP is not converged within the timeout3 interval, IS-IS clears the overload bit. The value range for the timeout3 argument is 5 to 86400 seconds, and the default is 600 seconds.

wait-for-bgp4+ [ timeout3 ]: Starts the timeout3 timer for IPv6 BGP convergence after system startup. If IPv6 BGP is not converged within the timeout3 interval, IPv6 IS-IS clears the overload bit. The value range for the timeout3 argument is 5 to 86400 seconds, and the default is 600 seconds.

allow: Allows advertising address prefixes. By default, no address prefixes are allowed to be advertised when the overload bit is set.

external: Allows advertising IP address prefixes redistributed from other routing protocols with the allow keyword specified.

interlevel: Allows advertising IP address prefixes learned from different IS-IS levels with the allow keyword specified.

Usage guidelines

If the on-startup keyword is not specified, the command sets the overload bit immediately until the undo set-overload command is executed.

If the on-startup keyword is specified, IS-IS sets the overload bit upon system startup and keeps it set within the timeout2 interval.

Examples

# Set overload flag on the current router.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] set-overload

shutdown process

Use shutdown process to shut down an IS-IS process.

Use undo shutdown process to restart an IS-IS process.

Syntax

shutdown process

undo shutdown process

Default

IS-IS process is not shut down.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

Both this feature and IS-IS isolation can be used for IS-IS maintenance.

After you execute the shutdown process command for an IS-IS process, the process performs the following operations:

·     Changes the state of all neighbors to down.

·     Stops receiving and sending IS-IS packets.

·     Clears its neighbor, LSDB, and IS-IS route information.

If the neighbors do not receive any hello packets from the IS-IS process within the hold time, they consider the process down and recalculate the routes.

After maintenance, you can use the undo shutdown process command to restart the IS-IS process for neighbor relationship re-establishment.

Examples

# Shut down IS-IS process 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] shutdown process

Related commands

isolate enable

snmp context-name

Use snmp context-name to set the context name for the SNMP object for managing IS-IS.

Use undo snmp context-name to restore the default.

Syntax

snmp context-name context-name

undo snmp context-name

Default

No context name is set for the SNMP object for managing IS-IS.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

context-name: Specifies a context name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 32 characters.

Examples

# Configure the context name as isis for the SNMP object for managing IS-IS process 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] snmp context-name isis

snmp-agent trap enable isis

Use snmp-agent trap enable isis to enable IS-IS SNMP notifications.

Use undo snmp-agent trap enable isis to disable IS-IS SNMP notifications.

Syntax

snmp-agent trap enable isis [ adjacency-state-change | area-mismatch | authentication | authentication-type | buffsize-mismatch | id-length-mismatch | lsdboverload-state-change | lsp-corrupt | lsp-parse-error | lsp-size-exceeded | manual-address-drop | max-seq-exceeded | maxarea-mismatch | own-lsp-purge | protocol-support  | rejected-adjacency | skip-sequence-number | version-skew ] *

undo snmp-agent trap enable isis [ adjacency-state-change | area-mismatch | authentication | authentication-type | buffsize-mismatch | id-length-mismatch | lsdboverload-state-change | lsp-corrupt | lsp-parse-error | lsp-size-exceeded | manual-address-drop | max-seq-exceeded | maxarea-mismatch | own-lsp-purge | protocol-support  | rejected-adjacency | skip-sequence-number | version-skew ] *

Default

IS-IS SNMP notifications are enabled.

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

adjacency-state-change: Specifies notifications about IS-IS adjacency status changes.

area-mismatch: Specifies notifications about area address mismatches between hello packets.

authentication: Specifies notifications about authentication failures of IS-IS packets.

authentication-type: Specifies notifications about authentication type errors of IS-IS packets.

buffsize-mismatch: Specifies notifications about buffer size mismatches for LSPs.

id-length-mismatch: Specifies notifications about system ID length mismatches of IS-IS packets.

lsdboverload-state-change: Specifies notifications about LSDB overload state changes.

lsp-corrupt: Specifies notifications about LSP checksum errors in the LSDB.

lsp-parse-error: Specifies notifications about LSP packet parse failures.

lsp-size-exceeded: Specifies notifications about propagation failures caused by oversized LSPs.

manual-address-drop: Specifies notifications about manually configured area addresses that have been dropped.

max-seq-exceeded: Specifies notifications about attempts to exceed the maximum LSP sequence number.

maxarea-mismatch: Specifies notifications about maximum area address mismatches of hello packets.

own-lsp-purge: Specifies notifications about attempts to remove the local LSP.

protocol-support: Specifies notifications about supported-protocol mismatches.

rejected-adjacency: Specifies notifications about adjacency creation failures.

skip-sequence-number: Specifies notifications about LSP sequence number duplications.

version-skew: Specifies notifications about hello packet version mismatches.

Usage guidelines

If you do not specify a notification, this command enables all IS-IS SNMP notifications.

If no IS-IS process exists, the configuration is not allowed.

This function does not take effect if all configured IS-IS processes are deleted.

Examples

# Disable IS-IS SNMP notifications.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] undo snmp-agent trap enable isis

summary

Use summary to configure a summary route.

Use undo summary to remove a summary route.

Syntax

In IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view:

summary ip-address { mask-length | mask } [ avoid-feedback | generate_null0_route | [ level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2 ] | tag tag ] *

undo summary ip-address { mask-length | mask } [ level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2 ]

In IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view:

summary ipv6-prefix prefix-length [ avoid-feedback | generate_null0_route | [ level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2 ] | tag tag ] *

undo summary ipv6-prefix prefix-length [ level-1 | level-1-2 | level-2 ]

Default

No summary route is configured.

Views

IS-IS IPv4 unicast address family view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

ip-address: Specifies the destination IP address of the summary route.

mask-length: Specifies the mask length of the summary route, in the range of 0 to 32.

mask: Specifies the mask of the destination IP address, in dotted decimal notation.

ipv6-prefix: Specifies an IPv6 prefix for the summary route.

prefix-length: Specifies the length of the IPv6 prefix, in the range of 0 to 128.

avoid-feedback: Avoids learning summary routes by route calculation.

generate_null0_route: Generates the Null 0 route to avoid routing loops.

level-1: Summarizes only the routes redistributed to Level-1.

level-1-2: Summarizes the routes redistributed to both Level-1 and Level-2.

level-2: Summarizes only the routes redistributed to Level-2.

tag tag: Specifies a management tag in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

Usage guidelines

To reduce the size of the routing table, as well as the size of LSP and LSDB generated by the router, summarize multiple contiguous networks into a single network. You can summarize native IS-IS routes and redistributed routes. After summarization, the cost of the summary route is the smallest cost of the summarized routes.

If no level is specified, only level-2 routes are summarized.

The router summarizes only routes generated from local LSPs.

Examples

# Configure a summary route of 202.0.0.0/8.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] address-family ipv4

[Sysname-isis-1-ipv4] summary 202.0.0.0 255.0.0.0

timer lsp-arrival

Use timer lsp-arrival to set the LSP receiving interval.

Use undo timer lsp-arrival to remove the configuration.

Syntax

timer lsp-arrival maximum-interval [ minimum-interval [ incremental-interval ] ] [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo timer lsp-arrival [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

The LSP receiving interval is not set.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

maximum-interval: Specifies the maximum LSP receiving interval in the range of 1 to 120 seconds.

minimum-interval: Specifies the minimum LSP receiving interval in the range of 10 to 60000 milliseconds.

incremental-interval: Specifies the incremental interval in the range of 10 to 60000 milliseconds.

level-1: Applies the intervals to Level-1.

level-2: Applies the intervals to Level-2.

Usage guidelines

When the network is stable, IS-IS uses the minimum receiving interval. When network changes become frequent, the receiving interval increases by the incremental interval each time the same LSP is received until the maximum receiving interval is reached.

The minimum LSP receiving interval and the incremental interval cannot be greater than the maximum LSP receiving interval.

If no level is specified, the specified intervals apply to both Level-1 and Level-2.

Examples

# Set the maximum receiving interval, minimum receiving interval, and incremental interval for Level-1 LSPs to 10 seconds, 100 milliseconds, and 200 milliseconds, respectively.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] timer lsp-arrival 10 100 200 level-1

timer lsp-flood suppress-flapping

Use timer lsp-flood suppress-flapping to suppress LSP flooding when route flapping occurs.

Use undo timer lsp-flood suppress-flapping to remove the configuration.

Syntax

timer lsp-flood suppress-flapping delay-interval [ threshold threshold-value ] [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo timer lsp-flood suppress-flapping [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

IS-IS does not suppress LSP flooding.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

delay-interval: Specifies the delay time in the range of 0 to 65535 seconds.

threshold threshold-value: Specifies the number of route flaps that trigger the delay timer, in the range of 3 to 100. The default number is 5.

level-1: Applies the configuration to Level-1.

level-2: Applies the configuration to Level-2.

Usage guidelines

If no level is specified, the configuration applies to both Level-1 and Level-2.

Examples

# Suppress Level-1 LSP flooding for 5 seconds after the number of route flaps reaches 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] timer lsp-flood suppress-flapping 5 threshold 10 level-1

timer lsp-generation

Use timer lsp-generation to set the LSP generation interval.

Use undo timer lsp-generation to remove the configuration.

Syntax

timer lsp-generation maximum-interval [ minimum-interval [ incremental-interval ] ] [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo timer lsp-generation [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

The maximum interval is 5 seconds, the minimum interval is 50 milliseconds, and the incremental interval is 200 milliseconds.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

maximum-interval: Specifies the maximum interval in the range of 1 to 120 seconds.

minimum-interval: Specifies the minimum interval in the range of 10 to 60000 milliseconds.

incremental-interval: Specifies the incremental interval in the range of 10 to 60000 milliseconds.

level-1: Applies the intervals to Level-1.

level-2: Applies the intervals to Level-2. If no level is specified, the specified intervals apply to both Level-1 and Level-2.

Usage guidelines

By adjusting the LSP generation interval, you can prevent bandwidth and router resources from being over consumed due to frequent topology changes.

If you specify only the maximum-interval argument, the LSP generation interval is maximum-interval.

If you do not specify the incremental-interval argument, the LSP generation interval is in the range of minimum-interval to maximum-interval.

If you specify the incremental-interval argument, the LSP generation interval is as follows:

·     When network changes are not frequent, the minimum-interval is adopted.

·     When network changes are frequent, the LSP generation interval increases by incremental-interval × 2n-2 (n is the number of calculation times) each time a generation occurs until the maximum-interval is reached.

The minimum interval and the incremental interval cannot be greater than the maximum interval.

Examples

# Set the maximum interval, minimum interval, and incremental interval to 10 seconds, 100 milliseconds, and 200 milliseconds, respectively.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1]timer lsp-generation 10 100 200

timer lsp-generation suppress-flapping

Use timer lsp-generation suppress-flapping to suppress LSP generation when route flapping occurs.

Use undo timer lsp-generation suppress-flapping to remove the configuration.

Syntax

timer lsp-generation suppress-flapping delay-interval [ threshold threshold-value] [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo timer lsp-generation suppress-flapping [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

IS-IS does not suppress LSP generation.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

delay-interval: Specifies the delay time in the range of 0 to 65535 seconds.

threshold threshold-value: Specifies the number of route flaps that trigger the delay timer, in the range of 3 to 100. The default number is 5.

level-1: Applies the configuration to Level-1.

level-2: Applies the configuration to Level-2.

Usage guidelines

If no level is specified, the configuration applies to both Level-1 and Level-2.

Examples

# Suppress Level-1 LSP generation for 3 seconds after the number of route flaps reaches 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] timer lsp-generation suppress-flapping 3 threshold 10 level-1

timer lsp-max-age

Use timer lsp-max-age to set the LSP maximum age in the LSDB.

Use undo timer lsp-max-age to restore the default.

Syntax

timer lsp-max-age seconds

undo timer lsp-max-age

Default

The LSP maximum age in the LSDB is 1200 seconds.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

seconds: Specifies the LSP maximum aging time in the range of 1 to 65535 seconds.

Usage guidelines

Each LSP has an age that decreases in the LSDB. Any LSP with an age of 0 is deleted from the LSDB. You can adjust the age value based on the scale of a network.

Examples

# Set the maximum LSP age to 1500 seconds.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] timer lsp-max-age 1500

Related commands

timer lsp-refresh

timer lsp-refresh

Use timer lsp-refresh to set the LSP refresh interval.

Use undo timer lsp-refresh to restore the default.

Syntax

timer lsp-refresh seconds

undo timer lsp-refresh

Default

The default LSP refresh interval is 900 seconds.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

seconds: Specifies the LSP refresh interval in the range of 1 to 65534 seconds.

Usage guidelines

Each router refreshes its LSPs at a configurable interval and sends them to other routers to achieve the following purposes:

·     Prevent valid routes from aging out.

·     Synchronize LSPs in the network.

A smaller refresh interval speeds up network convergence but consumes more bandwidth.

To refresh LSPs before they are aged out, the interval configured by the timer lsp-refresh command must be smaller than that configured by the timer lsp-max-age command.

Examples

# Set the LSP refresh interval to 1500 seconds.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] timer lsp-refresh 1500

Related commands

timer lsp-max-age

timer purge-zero-lsp route-calculate-delay

Use timer purge-zero-lsp route-calculate-delay to suppress route calculation after fragment 0 of a purge LSP is received.

Use undo timer purge-zero-lsp route-calculate-delay to remove the configuration.

Syntax

timer purge-zero-lsp route-calculate-delay delay-interval [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo timer purge-zero-lsp route-calculate-delay [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

IS-IS suppresses route calculation for 10 seconds after fragment 0 of a purge LSP is received.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

delay-interval: Specifies the delay time in the range of 0 to 65535 seconds.

level-1: Applies the delay time to Level-1.

level-2: Applies the delay time to Level-2.

Usage guidelines

If no level is specified, the delay time applies to both Level-1 and Level-2.

Examples

# Suppress route calculation for 15 seconds after fragment 0 of a purge LSP is received.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] timer purge-zero-lsp route-calculate-delay 15 level-1

timer route-calculate suppress-flapping

Use timer route-calculate suppress-flapping to suppress route calculation when route flapping occurs.

Use undo timer route-calculate suppress-flapping to remove the configuration.

Syntax

timer route-calculate suppress-flapping delay-interval [ threshold threshold-value ] [ level-1 | level-2 ]

undo timer route-calculate suppress-flapping [ level-1 | level-2 ]

Default

IS-IS does not suppress route calculation.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

delay-interval: Specifies the delay time in the range of 0 to 65535 seconds.

threshold threshold-value: Specifies the number of route flaps that trigger the delay timer, in the range of 3 to 100. The default number is 5.

level-1: Applies the configuration to Level-1.

level-2: Applies the configuration to Level-2.

Usage guidelines

If no level is specified, the configuration applies to both Level-1 and Level-2.

Examples

# Suppress route calculation for 5 seconds after the number of route flaps reaches 10.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] timer route-calculate suppress-flapping 5 threshold 10 level-1

timer spf

Use timer spf to set the SPF calculation interval.

Use undo timer spf to restore the default.

Syntax

timer spf { maximum-interval [ minimum-interval [ incremental-interval [ conservative ] ] ] | millisecond millisecond-interval } [ exclude-prc ]

undo timer spf

Default

The maximum SPF calculation interval is 5 seconds, the minimum interval is 50 milliseconds, and the incremental interval is 200 milliseconds.

Views

IS-IS view

IS-IS IPv6 unicast address family view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

maximum-interval: Specifies the maximum SPF calculation interval in the range of 1 to 120 seconds.

minimum-interval: Specifies the minimum SPF calculation interval in the range of 10 to 60000 milliseconds.

incremental-interval: Specifies the incremental SPF calculation interval in the range of 10 to 60000 milliseconds.

conservative: Keeps the maximum interval when route flapping occurs. If you do not specify this keyword, the minimum interval is used after SPF calculation is performed at the maximum interval for three consecutive times.

millisecond millisecond-interval: Specifies the fixed SPF calculation interval in the range of 0 to 10000 milliseconds.

exclude-prc: Configures IS-IS to perform SPF calculation immediately upon route prefix changes.

Usage guidelines

Based on the LSDB, an IS-IS router uses the SPF algorithm to calculate a shortest path tree with itself being the root, and uses the shortest path tree to determine the next hop to a destination network. By adjusting the SPF calculation interval, you can prevent bandwidth and router resources from being overused due to frequent topology changes.

When network changes are not frequent, the minimum-interval is adopted. If network changes become frequent, the SPF calculation interval increases by the incremental-interval each time a generation happens until the maximum-interval is reached.

The minimum interval and the incremental interval cannot be greater than the maximum interval.

As a best practice to speed up route convergence triggered by route prefix changes, specify the exclude-prc keyword for the timer spf command.

Examples

# Set the maximum interval to 10 seconds, the minimum interval to 100 milliseconds, and the incremental interval to 300 milliseconds, respectively.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] timer spf 10 100 300

virtual-system

Use virtual-system to configure a virtual system ID for the IS-IS process.

Use undo virtual-system to remove a virtual system ID.

Syntax

virtual-system virtual-system-id

undo virtual-system virtual-system-id

Default

No virtual system ID is configured.

Views

IS-IS view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

virtual-system-id: Specifies a virtual system ID for the IS-IS process.

Examples

# Set a virtual system ID of 2222.2222.2222 for IS-IS process 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] isis 1

[Sysname-isis-1] virtual-system 2222.2222.2222

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