Using The Adjacency Table; Overview - HPE FlexNetwork 10500 Series Configuration Manual

Layer 3-ip services
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Using the adjacency table

This feature can be used only to display the adjacency table on tunnel interfaces. For information
about tunnel interfaces, see

Overview

The adjacency table stores information about directly connected neighbors for IP forwarding. The
neighbor information in this chapter refers to non-Ethernet neighbor information.
This table is not user configurable. The neighbor information is generated, updated, and deleted by
link layer protocols through negotiation or through manual configuration. An adjacency entry
includes the following information:
Neighbor network layer address (next hop).
Output interface.
Link layer protocol type.
Link layer address.
When forwarding an IP packet, the device performs the following tasks:
Searches the FIB to find the output interface and next hop.
Uses the output interface and next hop address to search the adjacency table for link layer
forwarding information.
NOTE:
Ethernet and non-Ethernet neighbor information are stored and managed together.
You can use the display adjacent-table command and the display ipv6 adjacent-table command
to display the adjacency table information.
The following table shows the items in an adjacency table output:
Item
IP address
IPv6 address
Routing interface
Physical interface
Logical interface
Service type
Action type
Link media type
"Configuring
tunneling."
Description
IP address of the next hop in the FIB table. This address is used for
adjacency table lookup.
IPv6 address of the next hop in the FIB table. This address is used for
adjacency table lookup.
Output interface in the matching route entry. This interface is used for
adjacency table lookup, and it can be logical or physical.
Output physical interface that sends matching packets.
If the routing interface is physical, the routing interface and physical
interface are the same.
If the routing interface is logical, the routing interface and physical
interface are different.
Logical interface for sending packets.
Link layer protocol type.
Action to be taken on the matching packet: Forwarding or Drop.
Related to the link layer protocol used by the routing interface.
P2P—Point-to-point link.
NBMA—Non-broadcast multi-access link.
133

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents