Description
Use the ospfv3 peer command to specify a neighbor and the DR priority of the neighbor.
Use the undo ospfv3 peer command to remove the configuration.
A router uses the priority set with the ospfv3 peer command to determine whether to send a hello
packet to the neighbor rather than for DR election.
Examples
# Specify the neighbor fe80::1111.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10
[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] ospfv3 peer fe80::1111
ospfv3 timer dead
Syntax
ospfv3 timer dead seconds [ instance instance-id ]
undo ospfv3 timer dead [ instance instance-id ]
View
Interface view
Default Level
2: System level
Parameters
seconds: Dead time in seconds, ranging from 1 to 65535.
instance-id: Instance ID of an interface, in the range of 0 to 255, which defaults to 0.
Description
Use the ospfv3 timer dead command to configure the OSPFv3 neighbor dead time for an interface that
belongs to a specified instance.
Use the undo ospfv3 timer dead command to restore the default.
By default, the OSPFv3 neighbor dead time is 40 seconds for P2P and Broadcast interfaces, and is not
supported on P2MP and NBMA interfaces at present.
OSPFv3 neighbor dead time: if an interface receives no hello packet from a neighbor after dead time
elapses, the interface will consider the neighbor dead.
The dead seconds value is at least four times the Hello seconds value and must be identical on
interfaces attached to the same network segment.
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