Overload - Juniper JUNOS OS 10.3 - SOFTWARE Manual

For ex series ethernet switches
Hide thumbs Also See for JUNOS OS 10.3 - SOFTWARE:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

overload

Syntax
Hierarchy Level
Release Information
Description
Options
Copyright © 2010, Juniper Networks, Inc.
overload {
timeout seconds;
}
[edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (oospf | ospf3)],
[edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast
| name)],
[edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast |
ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)],
[edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols
(ospf | ospf3)],
[edit logical systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols
ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name)],
[edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols
ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)],
[edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)],
[edit protocols ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name)],
[edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)],
[edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)]
[edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf topology (default |
ipv4-multicast | name],
[edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast |
ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)],
Statement introduced before Junos OS Release 7.4.
Statement introduced in Junos OS Release 9.0 for EX Series switches.
Support for Multitopology Routing introduced in Junos OS Release 9.0.
Support for Multitopology Routing introduced in Junos OS Release 9.0 for EX Series
switches.
Support for the
realm
statement introduced in Junos OS Release 9.2.
Support for the
statement introduced in Junos OS Release 9.2. for EX Series
realm
switches.
Configure the local routing device so that it appears to be overloaded. You might do this
when you want the routing device to participate in OSPF routing, but do not want it to
be used for transit traffic.
NOTE: Traffic destined to immediately attached interfaces continues to
reach the routing device.
—(Optional) Number of seconds at which the overloading is reset. If no
timeout seconds
timeout interval is specified, the routing device remains in overload state until the
overload
statement is deleted or a timeout is set.
Range: 60 through 1800 seconds
Default: 0 seconds
Chapter 73: Configuration Statements for Layer 3 Protocols
1903

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents