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CH A P T E R 11

Routing Protocols

This chapter describes the level of support that Cisco ANA provides for routing protocols, as follows:
• Technology Description, page 11-1
• Information Model Objects (IMOs), page 11-3
• Vendor-Specific Inventory and IMOs, page 11-7
• Service Alarms, page 11-7
For information on network topology, see Chapter 38, “Cisco ANA VNE Topology.”

Technology Description
This section provides the following IP technology descriptions:
• BGP
• MP-BGP
• OSPF
• IS-IS
Please see Part 1: Cisco VNEs in this guide for information about which devices support the various
technologies.

BGP
The Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) routes traffic between autonomous systems. An autonomous
system is a network or group of networks under common administration and with common routing
policies. BGP exchanges routing information for the Internet and is the protocol used between ISPs.
Customer networks, such as universities and corporations, usually employ an Interior Gateway Protocol
(IGP), such as RIP or OSPF, to exchange routing information within their networks. Customers connect
to ISPs, and ISPs use BGP to exchange customer and ISP routes. When BGP is used between
autonomous systems, the protocol is referred to as external BGP (eBGP). If a service provider is using
BGP to exchange routes within an autonomous system, the protocol is referred to as interior BGP
(iBGP).
BGP is a very robust and scalable routing protocol, as evidenced by the fact that it is the routing protocol
employed on the Internet. To achieve scalability at this level, BGP uses many route parameters, called
attributes, to define routing policies and maintain a stable routing environment. BGP neighbors exchange
full routing information when the TCP connection between neighbors is first established. When changes

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Chapter 11 Routing Protocols
Technology Description

to the routing table are detected, the BGP routers send to their neighbors only those routes that have
changed. BGP routers do not send periodic routing updates, and BGP routing updates advertise only the
optimal path to a destination network.

MP-BGP
Multiprotocol BGP (MP-BGP) adds capabilities to BGP to enable multicast routing policy throughout
the Internet and to connect multicast topologies within and between BGP autonomous systems. That is,
MP-BGP is an enhanced BGP that carries IP multicast routes. BGP carries two sets of routes, one set for
unicast routing and one set for multicast routing. The routes associated with multicast routing are used
by the Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) to build data distribution trees.

eBGP/iBGP
As noted previously, BGP is an inter-autonomous system routing protocol. When BGP is used between
autonomous systems (AS), the protocol is referred to as external BGP (eBGP). If a service provider is
using BGP to exchange routes within an AS, then the protocol is referred to as interior BGP (iBGP).

OSPF
Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) is a routing protocol developed for IP networks by the IGP working
group of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). It was derived from several research efforts,
including a version of OSI’s IS-IS routing protocol.
OSPF has two primary characteristics:
• It is an open protocol. Its specification is in the public domain (RFC 1247).
• It is based on the Shortest Path First (SPF) algorithm, sometimes known as the Dijkstra algorithm.
OSPF is a link-state routing protocol that calls for the sending of link-state advertisements (LSAs) to all
other routers within the same hierarchical area. Information on attached interfaces, metrics used, and
other variables are included in OSPF LSAs. As OSPF routers accumulate link-state information, they
use the SPF algorithm to calculate the shortest path to each node.
In addition to OSPF versions 1 and 2, Cisco ANA 3.7.2 supports OSPF version 3 which includes IPv6
feature implementation support.

IS-IS
Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) is an OSI link-state hierarchical routing protocol
that floods the network with link-state information to build a complete, consistent picture of a network
topology. IS-IS distinguishes between Level 1 and Level 2 ISs. Level 1 ISs communicate with other
Level 1 ISs in the same area. Level 2 ISs route between Level 1 areas and form an intradomain routing
backbone.

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Chapter 11 Routing Protocols
Information Model Objects (IMOs)

Information Model Objects (IMOs)


This section describes the following IMOs:
• BGP Neighbor Entry (IBgpNeighbourEntry)
• OSPF Process (IOspfProcess)
• OSPF Neighbor (IOspfNeighbor)
• OSPF Interface (IOspfInterface)
• SPF Timers (ISpfTimers)
• ISIS Process (IISISProcess)
• ISIS Metric (IISISMetric)
• ISIS Interface (IISISInterface)
• ISIS Neighbor (IISISNeighbor)

BGP Neighbor Entry


The BGP Neighbor Entry IMO represents both the configuration and the outcome of running the Border
Gateway Protocol (BGP) within a group of participating routers in a BGP neighborhood. It contains
information about the connection with a remote BGP peer. It is the entry of the BGP Neighbors Table
attribute of the Multi Protocol BGP Entity object (see VPN and VRF), representing the BGP routing
service concept in the IMO.

Table 11-1 BGP Neighbor Entry (IBgpNeighbourEntry)

Attribute Name Attribute Description Scheme Polling Interval


Remote Identifier Identifier of the remote peer (IP Address) Any Configuration
Neighbor Type Neighbor type (Null, Client, Non Client) Any Configuration
Distributing Interface Distributing IP interface Any Configuration
Remote Address Remote peer IP address Any Configuration
Remote Autonomous System Remote peer autonomous system Any Configuration
Status Status (Null, Idle, Connect, Active, Open Sent, Open Confirm, Any Configuration
Established)
Hold Time Established hold time in seconds Any Configuration
Keep Alive Time Established keepalive time in seconds Any Configuration
Peer Autonomous System The AS to which the peer belongs. Any Configuration
(AS)

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Information Model Objects (IMOs)

OSPF Process
The OSPF Process IMO contains identifying information for the OSPF process and the router on which
it is configured.

Table 11-2 OSPF Process (IOspfProcess)

Attribute Name Attribute Description Scheme Polling Interval


Process ID Unique process identifier. Any Configuration
OSPF Version The OSPF version (v1, v2 or v3) Any Configuration
Router ID The IP address of the OSPF process router. Any Configuration

OSPF Neighbor
The OSPF Neighbor IMO contains information about the OSPF neighboring router.

Table 11-3 OSPF Neighbor (IOspfNeighbor)

Attribute Name Attribute Description Scheme Polling Interval


Neighbor ID IP Address that represents the OSPF Router ID of the neighboring router. Any Configuration
The Neighbor ID is learned when Hello packets are received from the
neighbor, or is configured if this is a virtual adjacency.
Outgoing Interface Identifier of the OSPF Interface through which the neighbor is known. Any Configuration
Neighbor State The state of a conversation being held with a neighboring router (down, Any Configuration
attempt, init, 1-way, 2-way, exstart, exchange, loading, removed and full.)
Neighbor Interface IP Address of the neighbor's OSPF interface. Any Configuration
Address
Area ID The ID of the network segment to which the neighbor belongs. Any Configuration

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Information Model Objects (IMOs)

OSPF Interface
The OSPF Interface IMO represents the connection between the OSPF router and the attached network.

Table 11-4 OSPF Interface (IOspfInterface)

Attribute Name Attribute Description Scheme Polling Interval


Area ID The Area ID of the area to which the attached network belongs. All routing Any Configuration
protocol packets originating from the interface are labelled with this Area
ID.
Network Type The OSPF interface type (point-to-point, broadcast, NBMA, or virtual Any Configuration
link.)
Cost The cost of sending a data packet on the interface, expressed in the link Any Configuration
state metric.
State The functional level of an interface (down, loopback, waiting, Any Configuration
point-to-point, DR other, backup, DR). State determines whether or not
full adjacencies are allowed to form over the interface.
Interface Address The IP address of the interface used by the OSPF process. Any Configuration
Interface Name The name of the interface used by the OSPF process. Any Configuration
Network Type The type of network to which the OSPF interface belongs. Any Configuration
IF Priority An 8-bit unsigned integer representing the priority of the router. When two Any Configuration
routers attached to a network both attempt to become designated router, the
one with the highest router priority takes precedence. A router whose
router priority is set to 0 is ineligible to become the designated router on
the attached network.
DR ID The router ID of the designated router that advertises link state for the Any Configuration
network.
BDR ID The router ID of the backup designated router that becomes the designated Any Configuration
router upon failure of the current designated router.

SPF Timers
The SPF Timers IMO contains parameters that control OSPF shortest path first (SPF) throttling.

Table 11-5 SPF Timers (ISpfTimers)

Attribute Name Attribute Description Scheme Polling Interval


Schedule Delay Initial delay to schedule an SFP calculation after a change, in milliseconds. Product Configuration
Min Hold Time Minimum hold time between two consecutive SPF calculations, in Product Configuration
milliseconds.
Max Wait Time Maximum wait time between two consecutive SPF calculations, in Product Configuration
milliseconds.

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Information Model Objects (IMOs)

IS-IS Process
The IS-IS Process IMO contains identifying information for the IS-IS process and the router on which
it is configured.
The tag (process ID) can be used to identify multiple IS-IS processes by providing a meaningful name
for a routing process. This name must be unique among all IP router processes for a given router. If the
tag is not specified, the process is referenced with a null tag.

Table 11-6 ISIS Process (IISISProcess)

Attribute Name Attribute Description Scheme Polling Interval


ISIS Interface The interfaces running the IS-IS protocol. IpCore Configuration
ISIS Metric Metric used for the redistributed route. IpCore Configuration
ISIS Neighbor The routers with which this router has IS-IS adjacencies. IpCore Configuration
Manual Area Address The ID of the IS-IS area to which the router belongs. IpCore Configuration
IS Type The type of the IS (Level 1, Level 2 or Level 1 and 2). IpCore Configuration
System ID The system ID of the router. IpCore Configuration
Process ID The area tag of the IS-IS instance. When there are multiple IS-IS areas, the IpCore Configuration
area tag is used to identify the IS-IS instance.

ISIS Metric
The ISIS Metric IMO represents the metric used for the redistributed route. This is a number in the range
0-63 if the router is configured with the metric-style narrow command or a number in the range 0 -
16777215 if the router is configured with the metric-style transition or metric-style wide command.
Default value is 10.

Table 11-7 ISIS Metric (IISISMetric)

Attribute Name Attribute Description Scheme Polling Interval


IS Type Level at which the Intermediate System is running (Level 1, Level 2 or IpCore Configuration
Level 1 and 2).
Metric Style The type of metric (Narrow, Transient, Wide). IpCore Configuration
Metric Value The value of the metric. IpCore Configuration
Address Family The IP address type (IPv4, IPv6). IpCore Configuration

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Vendor-Specific Inventory and IMOs

ISIS Interface
The ISIS Interface IMO represents the interfaces on which the IS-IS is configured.

Table 11-8 ISIS Interface (IISISInterface)

Attribute Name Attribute Description Scheme Polling Interval


Interface Name The interface name of the neighbor. IpCore Configuration
Interface OID The interface on which the IS-IS is configured. IpCore Configuration

ISIS Neighbor
The ISIS Neighbor IMO represents the routers with which this router has IS-IS adjacencies.

Table 11-9 ISIS Neighbor (IISISNeighbor)

Attribute Name Attribute Description Scheme Polling Interval


IS Type The IS type of the neighbor (Level 1, Level 2 or Level 1 and 2). IpCore Configuration
System ID The identifier for the neighbor system. IpCore Configuration
Admin State The state of the neighbor (up, down). IpCore Configuration
Hold Time Holding time, in seconds, for this adjacency. The value is based on IpCore Configuration
received IS-to-IS Hello (IIH) PDUs and the elapsed time since receipt.
SNPA Subnetwork point of attachment (SNPA) for the neighbor. IpCore Configuration
Interface Name The interface name of the neighbor. IpCore Configuration
IP Address The IP address of the neighbor. IpCore Configuration
Address Family The IP address type (IPv4, IPv6). IpCore Configuration

Vendor-Specific Inventory and IMOs


There are no vendor-specific inventory or IMOs for this technology.

Service Alarms
The following alarms are supported for this technology:
• BGP Neighbor Loss, page 41-9
• BGP Process Down, page 41-10
• BGP Link Down, page 41-7
• OSPF Neighbor State Change, page 41-54

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