•
<name>
is an arbitrary name specified to
route add
that can be used to delete the
route using
route delet
e.
•
<dest>
is the IP address of the network being routed to (only those bits of
<dest>
corresponding to bits set in
<mask>
are relevant).
•
<relay>
is the IP address of the next-hop gateway for the route.
•
<mask>
(default
ff:ff:ff:0
0) is the subnet mask of the network being routed to,
specified as four hexadecimal numbers separated by colons. For example:
•
0:0:0:0
is a default route (matches everything without a more specific route)
•
ff:ff:ff:0
would match a Class C network.
•
ff:ff:ff:ff
is a route to a single host.
(Note: the default is not always sensible; in particular, if
<dest>
is
0.0.0.0
then it
would be better for the mask to default to
0:0:0:0.
This may change in future
versions.)
•
<cost>
(default 1) is the number of hops counted as the cost of the route, which
may affect the choice of route when the route is competing with routes acquired
from RIP. (But note that using a mixture of RIP and static routing is not advised.)
•
<timeout>
(default 0, meaning that the route does not time out) is the number of
seconds that the route will remain in the routing table.
Note
– The routing table does not contain routes to the directly connected
networks, without going through a gateway. ATMOS TCP/IP routes packets to
such destinations by using the information in the device and subnet tables
instead.
The
route
command (with no parameters) displays the routing table. It adds a
comment to each route with the following information:
• How the route was obtained; one of:
•
MAN
– configured by the
route
command
•
RIP
– obtained from RIP
•
ICMP
– obtained from an ICMP redirect message
•
SNMP
– configured by SNMP network management;
• The time-out, if the route is not permanent;
• The original time-out, if the route is not permanent;
• The name of the interface (if known) that will be used for the route;
• An asterisk (“*”) if the route was added recently and RIP has not yet processed the
change (the asterisk should disappear within 30 seconds, when RIP next considers
broadcasting routing information).
Configuration saving saves this information. (Only the routes configured by the
route
command are saved or displayed by
confi
g.)
10.44.3Example
Summary of Contents for I-Storm A02-RA
Page 1: ...I Storm ADSL Router Console Commands Reference Manual v1 01 A02 RA Atmos _ME01...
Page 9: ...equipment including safety information...
Page 19: ...console tell command...
Page 26: ...version...
Page 40: ...6 DHCP server Console commands This chapter describes the DHCP server Console commands...
Page 45: ...7 NAT Console commands...
Page 112: ...Warning symbol 3 wb 31 wh 31 ww 31...