D-Link D-View 5.1 User Manual page 131

Network management system
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D-View 5.1 User's Guide
The routing table lists information pertaining to the routes presently known to the
device. Each entry corresponds to one route. This table is divided into fourteen
columns as listed below. Except for the Index column, all columns in this table can be
resized by dragging their respective right borders with the mouse left button. The
following describes each column:
The Index column displays the corresponding index number of each entry. Each entry
corresponds to a route.
IpRouteDest is a read-write MIB object of the ip group that displays the destination IP
address for this route. Multiple routes to a single destination can appear in the table.
An entry of 0.0.0.0 means that it is the default route.
IpRouteIfIndex is a read-write MIB object of the ip group that displays the index value
that uniquely identifies the interface on the device through which the next hop for this
route can be reached.
IpRouteMetric1 is a read-write MIB object of the ip group that displays the primary
routing metric for this route. Routing metric is the cost for taking a particular route; it
is used primarily to configure preferred paths. Preferred paths assume relatively low
metrics, while less preferred paths assume higher metric values. If the route does not
use this particular metric, a -1 appears in this column.
IpRouteMetric2 is a read-write MIB object of the ip group that displays the alternate
routing metric for this route.
IpRouteMetric3 is a read-write MIB object of the ip group that displays the alternate
routing metric for this route.
IpRouteMetric4 is a read-write MIB object of the ip group that displays the alternate
routing metric for this route.
IpRouteNextHop is a read-write MIB object of the ip group that displays the IP address
of the next hop for this route. Next hop is the immediate IP gateway after the device
that leads to the destination.
IpRouteType is a read-write MIB object of the ip group that displays the route type.
Route type can be Direct, Indirect, Invalid, or Other. The first two refer to direct and
indirect routing in the IP architecture; Invalid means the route is invalid (the system
ignores all entries of such type); Other means the route is none of the types mentioned
above.
IpRouteProto is a read-only MIB object of the ip group that displays the routing
mechanism through which this route was learned. Routing mechanism can be local
(manually added route), netmgmt (via network management protocol), icmp (obtained
via ICMP), egp, ggp, hello, rip, is-is, es-is, ciscoIgrp, bbnSpfIgp, ospf, or bgp.
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