show ipv6 ospf neighbor
SecureStack C3 Configuration Guide
25-43
This
example
displays
the
output
of
this
command
when
a
neighbor
is
specified.
C3(su)->router#show ipv6 ospf neighbor 8.8.8.8
Interface Vlan 45
Area Id 0.0.0.30
Options 0x2
Router Priority 128
Dead timer due in (secs) 33
State Full/DR
Events 6
Retransmission Queue Length 0
Table 25
‐
10
provides
an
explanation
of
the
command
output.
Table 25-9
show ipv6 ospf neighbor Output Details
Output Field
What It Displays...
Router ID
The 4-digit dotted-decimal number of the neighbor router.
Priority
OSPFv3 priority for the specified interface. The priority of an
interface is a priority integer from 0 to 255. A value of '0' indicates
that the router is not eligible to become the designated router on
this network.
Intf ID
Interface ID of the neighbor.
Interface
Interface of the local router.
State
State of the neighboring routers. Possible values are:
•
Down- initial state of the neighbor conversation - no recent
information has been received from the neighbor.
•
Attempt - no recent information has been received from the
neighbor but a more concerted effort should be made to
contact the neighbor.
•
Init - a Hello packet has recently been seen from the neighbor,
but bidirectional communication has not yet been established.
•
2 way - communication between the two routers is bidirectional.
This is the final state between two routers, both of which are
non-designated routers or back-up designated routers.
•
Exchange start - the first step in creating an adjacency between
the two neighboring routers, the goal is to decide which router
is the master and to decide upon the initial DD sequence
number.
•
Exchange - the router is describing its entire link state database
by sending Database Description packets to the neighbor.
•
Loading - Link State Request packets are sent to the neighbor
asking for the more recent LSAs that have been discovered
(but not yet received) in the Exchange state.
•
Full - the neighboring routers are fully adjacent and they will
now appear in router-LSAs and network-LSAs.
Dead Time
Amount of time, in seconds, to wait before the router assumes the
neighbor is unreachable.
Summary of Contents for SECURESTACK C3
Page 2: ......
Page 34: ...xxxii...
Page 40: ...Getting Help xxxviii About This Guide...
Page 126: ...clear license 4 6 Activating Licensed Features...
Page 132: ...set port inlinepower 5 6 Configuring System Power and PoE...
Page 228: ...clear port protected name 7 60 Port Configuration...
Page 270: ...clear snmp interface 8 42 SNMP Configuration...
Page 396: ...clear port txq 12 10 Port Priority Configuration...
Page 414: ...ip igmp robustness 13 18 IGMP Configuration...
Page 542: ...clear arpinspection statistics 17 32 DHCP Snooping and Dynamic ARP Inspection...
Page 546: ...Enabling Router Configuration Modes 18 4 Preparing for Router Mode...
Page 640: ...traceroute ipv6 21 10 IPv6 Management...
Page 698: ...show ipv6 dhcp binding 24 20 DHCPv6 Configuration...
Page 746: ...show ipv6 ospf virtual link 25 48 OSPFv3 Configuration...
Page 834: ...ip access group 26 88 Authentication and Authorization Configuration...
Page 848: ...TACACS Configuration clear tacacs interface 27 14...
Page 866: ...sFlow Configuration show sflow agent 28 18...
Page 872: ...Index 4...