The screen displays the destinations to which the router can route traffic. (See
Figure 13-33.) For each destination, the routing table also records:
the method the router used to discover the route
•
B—BGP
•
C—directly connected
•
O—OSPF
•
R—RIP
•
S—entered manually (static)
the administrative distance—the trustworthiness of the route
the metric—the cost for the route
the next-hop address
the forwarding interface
ProCurve#show ip route
Codes: C - connected, S - static, R - RIP, O - OSPF, B - BGP
IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1
N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1
E2 - OSPF external type 2
Gateway of last resort 192.168.128.1
C
10.1.1.0/30 is directly connected, ppp 1
C
10.1.1.1/32 is directly connected, ppp 1
C
10.2.2.0/30 is directly connected, ppp 2
C
10.2.2.1/32 is directly connected, ppp 2
R
172.16.1.0/24 [120/1] via 10.1.1.1, ppp 1
R
172.16.3.0/24 [120/1] via 10.1.1.1, ppp 1
R
172.16.4.0/24 [120/1] via 10.1.1.1, ppp 1
O
192.168.65.0/24 [110/51] via 10.2.2.1, ppp 2
OSPF route
Administrative
O
192.168.72.0/24 [110/51] via 10.2.2.1, ppp 2
O
192.168.100.0/24 [110/51] via 10.2.2.1, ppp 2
C
192.168.128.0/24 is directly connected, eth 0/1
C
192.168.129.0/24 is directly connected, eth 0/2
Figure 13-33. Routing Table
You can also view specific portions of the routing table. Use the commands in
Table 13-20.
IP Routing—Configuring RIP, OSPF, BGP, and PBR
Cost
distance
Troubleshooting Routing
Next-hop and
forwarding
interface
13-147
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