Neighbors And Adjacencies; The Link-State Database - Lenovo CN4093 Application Manual

10gb converged scalable switch
Hide thumbs Also See for CN4093:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Neighbors and Adjacencies

The Link-State Database

450
CN4093 Application Guide for N/OS 8.3
In areas with two or more routing devices, neighbors and adjacencies are formed.
Neighbors are routing devices that maintain information about each others' health.
To establish neighbor relationships, routing devices periodically send hello packets
on each of their interfaces. All routing devices that share a common network
segment, appear in the same area, and have the same health parameters (hello
and dead intervals) and authentication parameters respond to each other's hello
packets and become neighbors. Neighbors continue to send periodic hello packets
to advertise their health to neighbors. In turn, they listen to hello packets to
determine the health of their neighbors and to establish contact with new
neighbors.
The hello process is used for electing one of the neighbors as the area's Designated
Router (DR) and one as the area's Backup Designated Router (BDR). The DR is
adjacent to all other neighbors and acts as the central contact for database
exchanges. Each neighbor sends its database information to the DR, which relays
the information to the other neighbors.
The BDR is adjacent to all other neighbors (including the DR). Each neighbor sends
its database information to the BDR just as with the DR, but the BDR merely stores
this data and does not distribute it. If the DR fails, the BDR will take over the task
of distributing database information to the other neighbors.
OSPF is a link-state routing protocol. A link represents an interface (or routable
path) from the routing device. By establishing an adjacency with the DR, each
routing device in an OSPF area maintains an identical Link-State Database (LSDB)
describing the network topology for its area.
Each routing device transmits a Link-State Advertisement (LSA) on each of its
active interfaces. LSAs are entered into the LSDB of each routing device. OSPF uses
flooding to distribute LSAs between routing devices. Interfaces may also be passive.
Passive interfaces send LSAs to active interfaces, but do not receive LSAs, hello
packets, or any other OSPF protocol information from active interfaces. Passive
interfaces behave as stub networks, allowing OSPF routing devices to be aware of
devices that do otherwise participate in OSPF (either because they do not support
it, or because the administrator chooses to restrict OSPF traffic exchange or transit).
When LSAs result in changes to the routing device's LSDB, the routing device
forwards the changes to the adjacent neighbors (the DR and BDR) for distribution
to the other neighbors.
OSPF routing updates occur only when changes occur, instead of periodically. For
each new route, if an adjacency is interested in that route (for example, if
configured to receive static routes and the new route is indeed static), an update
message containing the new route is sent to the adjacency. For each route removed
from the route table, if the route has already been sent to an adjacency, an update
message containing the route to withdraw is sent.

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents