AT-S63 Management Software Features Guide
Section VII: Routing
335
Equal-cost Multi-path (ECMP) Routing
When there are multiple routes in the routing table to the same remote
destinations, ECMP enables the switch to use the different routes to
forward traffic. This can improve network performance by increasing the
available bandwidth for the traffic flows, and also provide for route
redundancy.
The routing table permits up to 32 routes to the same remote destination,
with up to eight of the routes as active at one time. The routes can be all
static routes, RIP routes, or a combination of the two. Routes to the same
destination must have different next hops. The routing table will not permit
two entries to the same remote destination with the same next hop.
When the routing table contains eight or less routes to the same
destination, all the routes can be active and available to route packets.
The distribution of the traffic among the active routes is controlled through
a hash that combines the packet source and destination IP addresses to
select a route for packets from a source node. The traffic from a specific
source and destined for a specific remote destination is assigned a route
and all traffic to that remote destination from that source is forwarded
using that route. The assignment of a route does not change except if the
path is lost (for instance, the status of an interface changes from up to
down), in which case its traffic is redirected to one of the remaining routes.
When there are more than eight routes in the table to the same
destination, the active routes are selected by preference value, metric
value, and age, in that order. The routes with the eight lowest preference
values are selected as the active routes. Where routes have the same
preference value, selection is based on the lowest metric values.
Otherwise, the selections are based on when the routes were added to the
routing table, with older routes given preference over newer routes.
Those routes not selected as active routes are placed in a standby mode.
The selection of the active destination routes by the switch is dynamic and
can change as routes are added and deleted from the routing table, and
when they change status. For instance, if a new static or RIP route is
added to the routing table when there are already eight active routes to the
same destination, the new route will replace an existing active route if it
has a lower preference value, forcing one of the active routes to change to
the standby mode.
Furthermore, an interface must be physically up with at least one active
port in the VLAN for any of its routes to be considered as available for use.
If an interface is down, meaning there are no active ports in the VLAN, the
routes of the interface are considered inactive and are not assigned any
traffic. For example, if there are eight routes to the same destination, but
two of the routes reside in an interface that is down, those routes are not
used, leaving six available routes.
Содержание AT-S63
Страница 14: ...Figures 14 ...
Страница 18: ...Tables 18 ...
Страница 28: ...28 Section I Basic Operations ...
Страница 58: ...Chapter 1 Overview 58 ...
Страница 76: ...Chapter 2 AT 9400Ts Stacks 76 Section I Basic Operations ...
Страница 96: ...Chapter 5 MAC Address Table 96 Section I Basic Operations ...
Страница 114: ...Chapter 8 Port Mirror 114 Section I Basic Operations ...
Страница 116: ...116 Section II Advanced Operations ...
Страница 146: ...Chapter 12 Access Control Lists 146 Section II Advanced Operations ...
Страница 176: ...Chapter 14 Quality of Service 176 Section II Advanced Operations ...
Страница 196: ...196 Section III Snooping Protocols ...
Страница 204: ...Chapter 18 Multicast Listener Discovery Snooping 204 Section III Snooping Protocols ...
Страница 216: ...Chapter 20 Ethernet Protection Switching Ring Snooping 216 Section III Snooping Protocols ...
Страница 218: ...218 Section IV SNMPv3 ...
Страница 234: ...234 Section V Spanning Tree Protocols ...
Страница 268: ...268 Section VI Virtual LANs ...
Страница 306: ...Chapter 27 Protected Ports VLANs 306 Section VI Virtual LANs ...
Страница 320: ...320 Section VII Internet Protocol Routing ...
Страница 360: ...Chapter 30 BOOTP Relay Agent 360 Section VII Routing ...
Страница 370: ...Chapter 31 Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol 370 Section VII Routing ...
Страница 372: ...372 Section VIII Port Security ...
Страница 402: ...Chapter 33 802 1x Port based Network Access Control 402 Section VIII Port Security ...
Страница 404: ...404 Section IX Management Security ...
Страница 436: ...Chapter 36 PKI Certificates and SSL 436 Section IX Management Security ...
Страница 454: ...Chapter 38 TACACS and RADIUS Protocols 454 Section IX Management Security ...
Страница 462: ...Chapter 39 Management Access Control List 462 Section IX Management Security ...
Страница 504: ...Appendix B SNMPv3 Configuration Examples 504 Security Model Security Level Storage Type SNMPv3 Parameters Continued ...
Страница 532: ...Appendix D MIB Objects 532 ...