19.07.2013 Views

CCNP TSHOOT 6.0 - Cisco Learning Home

CCNP TSHOOT 6.0 - Cisco Learning Home

CCNP TSHOOT 6.0 - Cisco Learning Home

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

<strong>CCNP</strong>v6 <strong>TSHOOT</strong><br />

O 10.1.200.0/24 [110/2] via 10.1.2.1, 07:43:00, FastEthernet0/1<br />

O 10.1.211.1/32 [110/2] via 10.1.2.1, 07:43:10, FastEthernet0/1<br />

O 10.1.212.1/32 [110/3] via 10.1.2.1, 07:43:00, FastEthernet0/1<br />

R1#show ip route 10.1.50.0 255.255.255.0<br />

Routing entry for 10.1.50.0/24<br />

Known via "ospf 1", distance 110, metric 2, type inter area<br />

Redistributing via eigrp 1<br />

Advertised by eigrp 1 metric 1544 2000 255 1 1500<br />

Last update from 10.1.2.1 on FastEthernet0/1, 07:42:07 ago<br />

Routing Descriptor Blocks:<br />

* 10.1.2.1, from 10.1.211.1, 07:42:07 ago, via FastEthernet0/1<br />

Route metric is 2, traffic share count is 1<br />

The source of a route in the routing table is marked by the “from” field that follows the next-hop IP address. For<br />

distance vector protocols, the source and next-hop addresses are typically the same. For a link-state protocol,<br />

such as OSPF, this is the router that originated the LSA on which the route is based. By tracking the routing<br />

source from router to router, you can determine the point where the incorrect routing information is injected into<br />

the routing protocol’s data structures, and you can apply filtering to stop it from being propagated.<br />

All contents are Copyright © 1992–2010 <strong>Cisco</strong> Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. This document is <strong>Cisco</strong> Public Information. Page 37 of 39

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!