Configuring The Routing Table; Configuring Next-Hops; Static Route Types - Avaya G250 Administration

Media gateways
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Configuring the router

Configuring the routing table

When you configure the routing table, you can:
View information about the routing table
Add entries to the routing table
Delete entries from the routing table
Note:
To change an entry in the routing table, delete the entry and then add it as a new
Note:
entry.
The routes in the routing table are static routes. They are never timed-out, and can only be
removed manually. If you delete the interface, all static routes on the interface are also deleted.
A static route becomes inactive whenever the underlying Layer 2 interface is down, except for
permanent static routes. You can disable the interface manually using the IP admin-state
down command. For more information, see
underlying Layer 2 interface becomes active, the static route enters the routing table again.
You can monitor the status of non-permanent static routes by applying object tracking to the
route. Thus, if the track state is changed to down then the static route state is changed to
inactive, and if the track state is changed to up then the static route state is changed to active.
For more information on object tracking, see
Static routes can be advertised by routing protocols, such as RIP and OSPF. For more
information, see
similar to OSPF.

Configuring next-hops

Static routes can be configured with the following as next-hops:
Via-interface route — specifies a serial interface as the next-hop, without a specific
next-hop IP address. See
Next-hop IP address — specifies the IP address of a router as a next-hop. The next-hop
router must belong to one of the directly attached networks for which the Avaya G250/
G350 Media Gateway has an IP interface.

Static route types

Two kinds of static routes can be configured:
High Preference static routes — preferred to routes learned from any routing protocol
Low Preference static routes — used temporarily until the route is learned from a routing
protocol.
By default, a static route has low preference.
408 Administration for the Avaya G250 and Avaya G350 Media Gateways
Route redistribution
on page 441. Static routes also support load-balancing
Via-interface static route
Permanent static route
Object tracking
on page 256.
on page 409.
on page 410. When the

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