Alcatel-Lucent OmniSwitch 6850-48 Cli Reference Manual page 1972

Alcatel-lucent omniswitch 6850-48: reference guide
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output definitions (continued)
Graft Timeout
Neighbor Interval
Neighbor Timeout
Prune Lifetime
Prune Timeout
Report Interval
Route Holddown
Route Timeout
Subord Default
page 29-26
The graft message retransmission value, in seconds. The graft message
retransmission value defines the duration of time that the routing switch
will wait before retransmitting a graft message if it has not received an
acknowledgement from its neighbor. Values may range from 5–86400.
The default value is 5.
The current neighbor probe interval time, in seconds. The neighbor
probe interval time specifies how often probes are transmitted to inter-
faces with attached DVMRP neighbors. Values may range from 5–30.
The default value is 10.
The current neighbor timeout value, in seconds. This value specifies
how long the routing switch will wait for activity from a neighboring
DVMRP router before assuming the inactive router is down. Values
may range from 5–86400. The default value is 35.
The length of time, in seconds, a prune will be in effect. When the
prune lifetime expires, the interface is joined back onto the multicast
delivery tree. If unwanted multicast datagrams continue to arrive, the
prune mechanism will be re-initiated and the cycle will continue.
Values may range from 180–86400. The default value is 7200.
The current prune packet retransmission value, in seconds. This value
indicates the duration of time that the routing switch will wait if it con-
tinues to receive unwanted multicast traffic before retransmitting a
prune message. Values range from 30–86400. The default value is 30.
The current route report interval, in seconds. The route report interval
defines how often routers will send their complete routing tables to
neighboring routers running DVMRP. Values may range from
10–2000. The default value is 60.
The current holddown time, in seconds. This value indicates the time
during which DVMRP routes are kept in a holddown state. A holddown
state refers to the time that a route to an inactive network continues to
be advertised. Values may range from 1–120. The default value is 120.
The current route expiration timeout value, in seconds. The route expi-
ration timeout value specifies how long the routing switch will wait
before aging out a route. Values may range from 20–4000. The default
value is 140.
Displays the initial default assumption on a neighbor's subordinate or
non-subordinate status. When the status value is true, DVMRP
neighbors are assumed to be subordinate and traffic is automatically
forwarded to the neighbor upon initial discovery. When the value is
false, traffic is not forwarded to the neighbor until route reports have
been exchanged and the neighbor has explicitly expressed dependency.
To change the current subordinate neighbor status, refer to the
ip dvmrp subord-default command on page
true and false. The default value is true.
29-16. Options include
OmniSwitch CLI Reference Guide
DVMRP Commands
June 2012

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