What are ospf routers and lsas, How are routes selected, How are ospf and ospfv3 different – Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 945

Advertising
background image

Configuring OSPF and OSPFv3

945

What Are OSPF Routers and LSAs?

When a PowerConnect switch is configured to use OSPF for dynamic

routing, it is considered to be an OSPF router. OSPF routers keep track of the

state of the various links they send data to. Routers exchange OSPF link state

advertisements (LSAs) with other routers. External LSAs provide information

on static routes or routes learned from other routing protocols.
OSPF defines various router types:

• Backbone routers have an interface in Area 0.
• Area border routers (ABRs) have interfaces in multiple areas.
• Internal routers have all their interfaces in a single OSPF area.
• Autonomous system boundary routers (ASBRs) redistribute routes from

other protocols and originate external LSAs.

How Are Routes Selected?

OSPF determines the best route using the route metric and the type of the

OSPF route. The following order is used for choosing a route if more than one

type of route exists:

1 Intra-area (the destination prefix is in the same area as the router

computing the route)

2 Inter-area (the destination is not in the same area as the router computing

the route

3 External Type 1
4 External Type 2

How Are OSPF and OSPFv3 Different?

OSPFv3 is the Open Shortest Path First routing protocol for IPv6. It is similar

to OSPFv2 in its concept of a link state database, intra/inter area, and AS

external routes and virtual links. It differs from its IPv4 counterpart in a

number of respects. Peering is done through link-local addresses, and the

protocol is link rather than network centric; and addressing semantics have

been moved to leaf LSAs.

Advertising