Displaying The Routing Table - Cisco ASA 5505 Configuration Manual

Asa 5500 series
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Chapter 18
Information About Routing
This issue has a high probability in same security traffic configuration, where virtually any traffic may
be either source-translated or destination-translated, depending on direction of initial packet in the flow.
When this issue occurs after a route flap, it can be resolved manually by using the clear xlate command,
or automatically resolved by an XLATE timeout. XLATE timeout may be decreased if necessary. To
ensure that this rarely happens, make sure that there is no route flaps on adaptive security appliance and
around it. That is, ensure that destination translated packets that belong to the same flow are always
forwarded the same way through the adaptive security appliance.
Supported Internet Protocols for Routing
The adaptive security appliance supports several internet protocols for routing. Each protocol is briefly
described in this section.
Information About the Routing Table
This section includes the following topics:

Displaying the Routing Table

To show all routes in ASDM that are in the routing table, choose Monitoring > Routing > Routes.
In this table, each row represents one route.
OL-20339-01
Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (EIGRP)
EIGRP provides compatibility and seamless interoperation with IGRP routers. An
automatic-redistribution mechanism allows IGRP routes to be imported into Enhanced IGRP, and
vice versa, so it is possible to add Enhanced IGRP gradually into an existing IGRP network.
For more information about configuring EIGRP, see the
Open Shortest Path First (OSPF)
Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) is a routing protocol developed for Internet Protocol (IP) networks
by the interior gateway protocol (IGP) working group of the Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF). OSPF uses a link-state algorithm to build and calculate the shortest path to all known
destinations. Each router in an OSPF area includes an identical link-state database, which is a list
of each of the router usable interfaces and reachable neighbors.
For more information about configuring OSPF, see the
Routing Information Protocol
The Routing Information Protocol (RIP) is a distance-vector protocol that uses hop count as its
metric. RIP is widely used for routing traffic in the global Internet and is an interior gateway
protocol (IGP), which means that it performs routing within a single autonomous system.
For more information about configuring RIP, see the
Displaying the Routing Table, page 18-5
How the Routing Table Is Populated, page 18-6
How Forwarding Decisions are Made, page 18-7
Supported Internet Protocols for Routing
"Configuring EIGRP" section on page
"Configuring OSPF" section on page
"Configuring RIP" section on page
Cisco ASA 5500 Series Configuration Guide using ASDM
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