HP MSR2003 Configuration Manual page 319

Hp msr router series
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Holdtime—IPv6 PIM neighbor lifetime. If a router receives no hello message from a neighbor when
the neighbor lifetime expires, it regards the neighbor failed or unreachable.
LAN_Prune_Delay—Delay of forwarding prune messages on a shared-media LAN. This option
consists of LAN delay (namely, prune message delay), override interval, and neighbor tracking
support (namely, the capability to disable join message suppression).
The prune message delay defines the delay time for a router to forward a received prune message
to the upstream routers. The override interval defines a time period for a downstream router to
override a prune message. If the prune message delay or override interval on different IPv6 PIM
routers on a shared-media LAN are different, the largest value takes effect.
A router does not immediately prune an interface after it receives a prune message from the
interface. Instead, it starts a timer (the prune message delay plus the override interval). If interface
receives a join message before the override interval expires, the router does not prune the
interface. Otherwise, the router prunes the interface when the timer (the prune message delay plus
the override interval) expires.
You can enable the neighbor tracking function on an upstream router to track the states of the
downstream nodes for which the joined state holdtime timer has not expired. If you want to enable
the neighbor tracking function, you must enable it on all IPv6 PIM routers on a shared-media LAN.
Otherwise, the upstream router cannot track join messages from every downstream routers.
Generation ID—A router generates a generation ID for hello messages when an interface is
enabled with IPv6 PIM. The generation ID is a random value, but only changes when the status of
the router changes. If an IPv6 PIM router finds that the generation ID in a hello message from the
upstream router has changed, it assumes that the status of the upstream router has changed. In this
case, it sends a join message to the upstream router for status update. You can configure an
interface to drop hello messages without the generation ID options to promptly know the status of an
upstream router.
You can configure hello message options in IPv6 PIM view or interface view. The configurations made in
IPv6 PIM view are effective on all interfaces and the configurations made in interface view are effective
on only the current interface. If you configure hello message options in both IPv6 PIM view and interface
view, the configuration in interface view always takes precedence.
Configuring hello message options globally
Step
1.
Enter system view.
2.
Enter IPv6 PIM view.
3.
Set the DR priority.
Set the neighbor lifetime.
4.
5.
Set the prune message delay.
6.
Set the override interval.
7.
Enable the neighbor tracking
function.
Command
system-view
ipv6 pim [ vpn-instance
vpn-instance-name ]
hello-option dr-priority priority
hello-option holdtime time
hello-option lan-delay delay
hello-option override-interval
interval
hello-option neighbor-tracking
309
Remarks
N/A
N/A
By default, the DR priority is 1.
By default, the neighbor lifetime is
105 seconds.
By default, the prune message
delay is 500 milliseconds.
By default, the override interval is
2500 milliseconds.
By default, the neighbor tracking
function is disabled.

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