Not-so-stubby-area (nssa) -52, Not-so-stubby-area (nssa) -53, Not-so-stubby-area (nssa) – HP 3500YL User Manual

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IP Routing Features
Configuring OSPF

Not-So-Stubby-Area (NSSA)

Beginning with software release K.12.xx, this area is available and connects
to the backbone area through one or more ABRs. NSSAs are intended for use
where an ASBR exists in an area where you want to control the following:

advertising the ASBR’s external route paths to the backbone area

advertising the NSSA’s summary routes to the backbone area

allowing LSAs from the backbone area to advertise in the NSSA:

summary routes (type-3 LSAs) from other areas

external routes (type-5 LSAs) from other areas as a default external
route (type-7 LSAs)

In the above operation, the ASBR in the NSSA injects external routes as type
7 LSAs. (Type 5 LSAs are not allowed in an NSSA.) The ABR connecting the
NSSA to the backbone converts the type 7 LSAs to type 5 LSAs and injects
them into the backbone area for propagation to networks in the backbone and
to any normal areas configured in the AS. The ABR also injects type-3 summary
LSAs:

from the NSSA into the backbone area

from the backbone into the NSSA

As mentioned above, if the ABR detects type-5 external LSAs on the backbone,
it injects a corresponding type-7 LSA default route (0.0.0.0/0) into the NSSA

You can also configure the NSSA ABR to do the following:

Suppress advertising some or all of the area’s summarized internal or
external routes into the backbone area. (Refer to “8. Optional: Configure
Ranges on an ABR To Reduce Advertising to the Backbone” on page 5-76.
)

Replace all type-3 summary routes and the type-7 default route with the
type-3 default summary route (0.0.0.0/0).

Virtual links are not allowed for NSSAs.

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