Configuring ipv6 pim hello options, Configuring hello options globally – H3C Technologies H3C SecPath F1000-E User Manual

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Configuring IPv6 PIM hello options

In both an IPv6 PIM-DM domain and an IPv6 PIM-SM domain, the hello messages sent among routers

contain the following configurable options:

DR_Priority (for IPv6 PIM-SM only)—Priority for DR election. The higher the priority is, the easier it
is for the router to win DR election. You can configure this parameter on all the routers in a

multi-access network directly connected to IPv6 multicast sources or receivers.

Holdtime—The timeout time of IPv6 PIM neighbor reachability state. When this timer times out, if
the router has received no hello message from an IPv6 PIM neighbor, it assumes that this neighbor

has expired or become unreachable.

LAN_Prune_Delay—The delay of prune messages on a multi-access network. This option consists of
Lan-delay (namely, prune message delay), override-interval, and neighbor tracking flag. If the

LAN-delay or override-interval values of different IPv6 PIM routers on a multi-access subnet are

different, the largest value takes effect. If you want to enable neighbor tracking, be sure to enable
the neighbor tracking feature on all IPv6 PIM routers on a multi-access subnet.

The LAN-delay setting will cause the upstream routers to delay forwarding received prune messages. The

override-interval sets the length of time that a downstream router can wait before sending a prune

override message. When a router receives a prune message from a downstream router, it does not
perform the prune action immediately. Instead, it maintains the current forwarding state for a period of

LAN-delay plus override-interval. If the downstream router needs to continue receiving IPv6 multicast

data, it must send a join message within the prune override interval. Otherwise, the upstream route will

perform the prune action when the period of LAN-delay plus override-interval times out.
A hello message sent from an IPv6 PIM router contains a generation ID option. The generation ID is a

random value for the interface on which the hello message is sent. Normally, the generation ID of an IPv6

PIM router does not change unless the status of the router changes (for example, when IPv6 PIM is just

enabled on the interface or the device is restarted). When the router starts or restarts sending hello
messages, it generates a new generation ID. If an IPv6 PIM router finds that the generation ID in a hello

message from the upstream router has changed, it assumes that the status of the upstream neighbor is lost

or the upstream neighbor has changed. In this case, it triggers a join message for state update.
If you disable join suppression (namely, enable neighbor tracking), be sure to disable the join

suppression feature on all IPv6 PIM routers on a multi-access subnet. Otherwise, the upstream router will
fail to explicitly track join messages from downstream routers.

Configuring hello options globally

Step

Command

Remarks

1.

Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.

Enter IPv6 PIM view.

pim ipv6

N/A

3.

Configure the priority for DR
election.

hello-option dr-priority priority

Optional.
1 by default.

4.

Configure IPv6 PIM neighbor
timeout time.

hello-option holdtime interval

Optional.
105 seconds by default.

5.

Configure the prune message

delay time (LAN-delay).

hello-option lan-delay interval

Optional.
500 milliseconds by default.

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