■
Use to specify that the router generates and accepts both old-style and new-style
TLV tuples.
■
Old style
refers to TLVs having metrics with a narrow (six-bit) field with a value
in the range 0–63.
New style
refers to TLVs having metrics with a wider field, as
provided for in current extensions to IS-IS traffic engineering.
■
Specify whether the command applies to level 1, level 2, or both.
■
Example
host1(config-router)#
metric-style transition level-1
■
Issuing this command results in more resource usage than issuing the
metric-style
narrow
or
metric-style wide
commands.
■
Use the
no
version to restore the default, which is to generate and accept only
old-style TLVs with narrow (six-bit) metric fields.
■
See metric-style transition
metric-style wide
■
Use to specify that the router generates and accepts only new-style TLV tuples.
■
Old style
refers to TLVs having metrics with a narrow (six-bit) field with a value
in the range 0–63.
New style
refers to TLVs having metrics with a wider field, as
provided for in current extensions to IS-IS traffic engineering.
■
Use the
transition
option to
accept
old-style and new-style metrics; only new-style
metrics are
generated
.
■
Specify whether the command applies to level 1, level 2, or both.
■
Before you set a route tag for an IS-IS interface, you must issue the
metric-style
wide
command to configure the router to generate and accept TLV type 135,
which is a new-style tuple that contains the route tag.
■
Example
host1(config-router)#
metric-style wide level-1-2
■
Use the
no
version to restore the default, which is to generate and accept only
old-style TLVs with narrow (six-bit) metric fields.
■
See metric-style wide
Setting the Administrative Distance
You can indicate the dependability of a routing information source by configuring
the administrative distance for learned routes.
distance ip
■
Use to configure the administrative distance for IS-IS learned routes.
■
The distance indicates the dependability of a routing information source. A higher
relative value indicates lower dependability. Preference is always given to the
routes with smaller values.
366
■
Configuring Global IS-IS Parameters
JUNOSe 11.0.x IP, IPv6, and IGP Configuration Guide
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