346
C
HAPTER
32: I
NTEGRATED
IS-IS C
ONFIGURATION
By default, the interface priority is 64. If the level-1 or level-2 is not specified, it
defaults to setting the priority of Level-1.
Setting Router Type
Based upon the position of the router, the levels can be divided into Level-1
(intra-domain router), Level-2 (inter-domain router) and Level-1-2 (that is,
intra-domain router as well as inter-domain router).
Perform the following configuration in IS-IS view.
By default, the router type is
level-1-2
.
Setting Interface Circuit
Level
Perform the following configuration in Interface view.
n
Only when the router to which the interface belongs is of Level-1-2 type, is the
modification to the interface circuit level meaningful. Otherwise, the type of the
router determines the level of adjacency relation.
You can set the circuit level to limit what adjacency can be established for the
interface. For example, Level-1 interface can only have Level-1 adjacency. Level-2
interface can only have Level-2 adjacency. For the Level-1-2 router, you can
configure some interfaces to Level-2 to prevent transmitting Level-1 Hello packets
to Level-2 backbone so as to save the bandwidth. However, Level-1 and Level-2
use the same kind of Hello packet over the
p2p
link, and therefore such setting is
unnecessary in this case.
By default, the circuit-level on the interface is
level-1-2
.
Configuring IS-IS to
Import Routes of Other
Protocols
For IS-IS, the routes discovered by other routing protocols are processed as the
routes outside the routing domain. When importing the routes of other protocols,
you can specify the default cost for them.
When IS-IS imports routes, you can also specify to import the routes to Level-1,
Level-2 or Level-1-2.
Table 311
Set priority for DIS election
Operation
Command
Set the priorities for DIS election on the
interface
isis dis-priority
value
[
level-1
|
level-2
]
Restore the default priorities for DIS election
on the interface
undo isis dis-priority
[
level-1
|
level-2
]
Table 312
Set the router type
Operation
Command
Set the router type
is-level
{
level-1
|
level-1-2
|
level-2
}
Restore the default router type
undo is-level
Table 313
Set the interface circuit level
Operation
Command
Set the interface circuit level
isis circuit-level
[
level-1
|
level-1-2
|
level-2
]
Restore the default interface circuit level
undo isis circuit-level
Summary of Contents for Switch 8807
Page 14: ......
Page 32: ...32 CHAPTER 2 COMMAND LINE INTERFACE...
Page 50: ...50 CHAPTER 5 MANAGEMENT INTERFACE CONFIGURATION...
Page 54: ...54 CHAPTER 6 CONFIGURATION FILE MANAGEMENT...
Page 64: ...64 CHAPTER 8 SUPER VLAN CONFIGURATION...
Page 70: ...70 CHAPTER 9 ISOLATE USER VLAN CONFIGURATION...
Page 78: ...78 CHAPTER 10 IP ADDRESS CONFIGURATION...
Page 82: ...82 CHAPTER 11 IP PERFORMANCE CONFIGURATION flag ACK window 16079...
Page 100: ...100 CHAPTER 13 ETHERNET PORT CONFIGURATION...
Page 114: ...114 CHAPTER 15 PORT ISOLATION CONFIGURATION...
Page 158: ...158 CHAPTER 18 DIGEST SNOOPING CONFIGURATION...
Page 162: ...162 CHAPTER 19 FAST TRANSITION...
Page 219: ......
Page 220: ...220 CHAPTER 24 VLAN ACL CONFIGURATION...
Page 234: ...234 CHAPTER 25 802 1X CONFIGURATION...
Page 284: ...284 CHAPTER 28 IP ROUTING PROTOCOL OVERVIEW...
Page 290: ...290 CHAPTER 29 STATIC ROUTE CONFIGURATION...
Page 338: ...338 CHAPTER 31 OSPF CONFIGURATION...
Page 392: ...392 CHAPTER 33 BGP CONFIGURATION...
Page 404: ...404 CHAPTER 34 IP ROUTING POLICY CONFIGURATION...
Page 406: ...406 CHAPTER 35 ROUTE CAPACITY CONFIGURATION...
Page 408: ...408 CHAPTER 36 RECURSIVE ROUTING CONFIGURATION...
Page 416: ...416 CHAPTER 37 IP MULTICAST OVERVIEW...
Page 430: ...430 CHAPTER 39 IGMP SNOOPING CONFIGURATION...
Page 454: ...454 CHAPTER 42 IGMP CONFIGURATION...
Page 462: ...462 CHAPTER 43 PIM DM CONFIGURATION...
Page 506: ...506 CHAPTER 46 MBGP MULTICAST EXTENSION CONFIGURATION...
Page 528: ...528 CHAPTER 48 MPLS BASIC CAPABILITY CONFIGURATION...
Page 632: ...632 CHAPTER 51 MPLS VLL...
Page 652: ...652 CHAPTER 52 VPLS CONFIGURATION...
Page 666: ...666 CHAPTER 53 VRRP CONFIGURATION...
Page 680: ...680 CHAPTER 56 ARP TABLE SIZE CONFIGURATION...
Page 718: ...718 CHAPTER 59 NETSTREAM CONFIGURATION...
Page 728: ...728 CHAPTER 61 POE CONFIGURATION...
Page 736: ...736 CHAPTER 63 UDP HELPER CONFIGURATION...
Page 746: ...746 CHAPTER 64 SNMP CONFIGURATION...
Page 792: ...792 CHAPTER 68 FILE SYSTEM MANAGEMENT...
Page 800: ...800 CHAPTER 69 DEVICE MANAGEMENT...
Page 810: ...810 CHAPTER 70 FTP TFTP CONFIGURATION...
Page 840: ...840 CHAPTER 72 SYSTEM MAINTENANCE AND DEBUGGING...
Page 844: ...844 CHAPTER 74 PACKET STATISTICS CONFIGURATION...
Page 846: ...846 CHAPTER 75 ETHERNET PORT LOOPBACK DETECTION...
Page 860: ...860 CHAPTER 76 QINQ CONFIGURATION...
Page 866: ...866 CHAPTER 77 NQA CONFIGURATION...
Page 876: ...876 CHAPTER 78 PASSWORD CONTROL CONFIGURATION...