Ipv6 Neighbor - Dell C9000 Series Reference Manual

Networking command-line reference guide
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unplanned-only
Defaults
OSPFv3 graceful restart supports both planned and unplanned failures.
Command Modes
ROUTER OSPFv3
Command History
This guide is platform-specific. For command information about other platforms, 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
9.9(0.0)
9.2(1.0)
9.1.(0.0)
8.4.2.2
8.3.19.0
Usage Information OSPFv3 graceful restart supports planned-only and/or unplanned-only restarts. The
default is support for both planned and unplanned restarts.
By default, both planned and unplanned restarts trigger an OSPFv3 graceful restart.
Selecting one or the other mode restricts OSPFv3 to the single selected mode.

ipv6 neighbor

Configure a static entry in the IPv6 neighbor discovery.
C9000 Series
Syntax
ipv6 neighbor{ipv6-address} {interface interface}
{hardware_address}[vrf vrf-name]
(OPTIONAL) Enter the keywords unplanned-only to indicate
graceful restart is supported in an unplanned restart condition
only.
Description
Introduced on the C9010.
Introduced on the Z9500.
Introduced on the S4810 and Z9000.
Introduced on the E-Series TeraScale.
Introduced on the S4820T.
A planned restart occurs when you enter the redundancy force-failover
rpm command to force the primary RPM to switch to the backup RPM. During a
planned restart, OSPF sends out a Type-11 Grace LSA before the system switches
over to the backup RPM.
An unplanned restart occurs when an unplanned event causes the active RPM to
switch to the backup RPM, such as when an active process crashes, the active
RPM is removed, or a power failure happens. During an unplanned restart, OSPF
sends out a Grace LSA when the backup RPM comes online.
Open Shortest Path First (OSPFv2 and OSPFv3)
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