Autonomous System (As) Areas - Dell Force10 MXL Blade Configuration Manual

Configuration guide for the mxl 10/40gbe switch io module
Hide thumbs Also See for Force10 MXL Blade:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Autonomous System (AS) Areas

OSPF operates in a type of hierarchy. The largest entity within the hierarchy is the AS, which is a
collection of networks under a common administration that share a common routing strategy
OSPF is an intra-AS (interior gateway) routing protocol, although it is capable of receiving routes from
and sending routes to other ASs.
You can divide an AS into a number of areas, which are groups of contiguous networks and attached hosts.
Routers with multiple interfaces can participate in multiple areas. These routers, area border routers
(ABRs), maintain separate databases for each area. Areas are a logical grouping of OSPF routers identified
by an integer or dotted-decimal number.
Areas allow you to further organize your routers within the AS. One or more areas are required within the
AS. Areas are valuable in that they allow sub-networks to "hide" within the AS, thus minimizing the size
of the routing tables on all routers. An area within the AS may not see the details of another area's
topology. AS areas are known by their area number or the router's IP address.
Figure 20-1. Autonomous System Areas
356
|
Open Shortest Path First (OSPFv2)
Router F
Router E
Router D
Area 100
Router B
Router A
Router K
Area 200
Router C
Area 0
Router I
Router J
Area 300
(Figure
Router M
Router L
Router G
Router H
20-1).

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents