Variable
Value
must be at least four times the Hello interval value. The
default is 40.
delete
Deletes an OSPF interface.
hello-interval
<seconds>
Configures the OSPF hello interval for the interface.
seconds
is the number of seconds between hello
packets sent on this interface. The range is 1–
65535. The default is 10.
Important:
When you change the hello interval values, you
must save the configuration file and reboot the
switch for the values to be restored and checked for
consistency.
info
Displays OSPF characteristics for the interface.
metric
<metric>
Configures the OSPF metric for the interface. The
switch advertises the metric in router link
advertisements.
metric
is the range 0–65535.
poll-interval
<seconds>
Configures the polling interval for the OSPF interface
in seconds.
seconds
is 0–2147483647.
priority
<priority>
Configures the OSPF priority for the interface during
the election process for the designated router. The
interface with the highest priority number is the
designated router. The interface with the second-
highest priority becomes the backup designated
router. If the priority is 0, the interface cannot become
either the designated router or a backup. The priority
is used only during election of the designated router
and backup designated router.
priority
is in the range 0–255. The default is 1.
retransmit-interval
<seconds>
Configures the retransmit interval for the OSPF
interface; the number of seconds between link-state
advertisement retransmissions.
seconds
is an integer 1–1800.
transit-delay
<seconds>
Configures the transit delay time for the OSPF
interface, the estimated time in seconds required to
transmit a link-state update packet over the interface.
seconds
is an integer 1–1,800.
tunnel-id
Specifies the ID number of the tunnel in the range of
1–2147477248.
Configuring OSPF on a tunnel
Configuration — IPv6 Routing
November 2010 279
Summary of Contents for ERS 8600 series
Page 14: ...New in this release 14 Configuration IPv6 Routing November 2010...
Page 78: ...IPv6 routing configuration 78 Configuration IPv6 Routing November 2010...
Page 132: ...Basic IPv6 configuration using the ACLI 132 Configuration IPv6 Routing November 2010...
Page 176: ...IPv6 routing configuration using the CLI 176 Configuration IPv6 Routing November 2010...
Page 194: ...IPv6 routing configuration using the ACLI 194 Configuration IPv6 Routing November 2010...
Page 206: ...IPv6 DHCP Relay configuration using the CLI 206 Configuration IPv6 Routing November 2010...
Page 238: ...IPv6 VRRP configuration using the CLI 238 Configuration IPv6 Routing November 2010...
Page 250: ...IPv6 VRRP configuration using the ACLI 250 Configuration IPv6 Routing November 2010...
Page 262: ...IPv6 RSMLT configuration using the CLI 262 Configuration IPv6 Routing November 2010...
Page 268: ...IPv6 RSMLT configuration using the ACLI 268 Configuration IPv6 Routing November 2010...
Page 306: ...Multicast protocol configuration using the ACLI 306 Configuration IPv6 Routing November 2010...
Page 344: ...IPv6 traffic filter configuration using the ACLI 344 Configuration IPv6 Routing November 2010...
Page 398: ...CLI show commands 398 Configuration IPv6 Routing November 2010...