Show Ip Ospf Database - Dell S6000 Reference Manual

Command line for the system
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Command
This guide is platform-specific. For command information about other platforms,
History
refer to the relevant Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.
The following is a list of the Dell Networking OS version history for this command.
Version 9.4.
(0.0)
Version 9.0.2.0
Version
8.3.19.0
Version 8.3.11.1
Version 8.3.7.0
Version 7.8.1.0
Version 7.8.1.0
Version 7.6.1.0
Version 7.5.1.0
Usage
To isolate problems with external routes, use this command. In OSPF, external
Information
routes are calculated by adding the LSA cost to the cost of reaching the ASBR
router. If an external route does not have the correct cost, use this command to
determine if the path to the originating router is correct. The display output is not
sorted in any order.
You can determine if an ASBR is in a directly connected area (or not) by the flags.
For ASBRs in a directly connected area, E flags are set. In the following example,
router 1.1.1.1 is in a directly connected area since the Flag is E/-/-/. For remote
ASBRs, the E flag is clear (-/-/-/).
Example
Dell#show ip ospf 1asbr
RouterID
3.3.3.3
1.1.1.1
Dell#

show ip ospf database

Display all LSA information. If you do not enable OSPF on the switch, no output is generated.
S6000
Syntax
show ip ospf process-id [vrf vrf-name] database [database-
summary]
1010
Added support for VRF.
Introduced on the S6000.
Introduced on the S4820T.
Introduced on the Z9000.
Introduced on the S4810.
Added support of Multi-Process OSPF.
Added the process-id option, in support of Multi-Process
OSPF.
Introduced on the S-Series.
Introduced on the C-Series and E-Series.
NOTE: ASBRs that are not in directly connected areas are also displayed.
Flags
Cost Nexthop
-/-/-/
2
E/-/-/
0
Interface Area
10.0.0.2
Gi 0/1
0.0.0.0
-
Open Shortest Path First (OSPFv2 and OSPFv3)
1
0

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