Configure OSPFv3 Advanced Properties
The Advanced Properties allows you to configure options, such as syslog message generation, administrative route distances, passive OSPFv3 routing, LSA timers, and graceful restarts.
- Graceful Restarts
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The threat defense device may experience some known failure situations that should not affect packet forwarding across the switching platform. The Non-Stop Forwarding (NSF) capability allows data forwarding to continue along known routes, while the routing protocol information is being restored. This capability is useful when there is a scheduled hitless software upgrade. You can configure graceful restart on OSPFv3 using graceful-restart (RFC 5187).
NoteNSF capability is also useful in HA mode and clustering.
Configuring the NSF graceful-restart feature involves two steps; configuring capabilities and configuring a device as NSF-capable or NSF-aware. A NSF-capable device can indicate its own restart activities to neighbors and a NSF-aware device can help a restarting neighbor.
A device can be configured as NSF-capable or NSF-aware, depending on some conditions:
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A device can be configured as NSF-aware irrespective of the mode in which it is.
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A device has to be in either Failover or Spanned Etherchannel (L2) cluster mode to be configured as NSF-capable.
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For a device to be either NSF-aware or NSF-capable, it should be configured with the capability of handling opaque Link State Advertisements (LSAs)/ Link Local Signaling (LLS) block as required.
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Procedure
Step 1 | Choose threat defense device. , and edit the | ||||
Step 2 | Choose . | ||||
Step 3 | For Router ID, choose Automatic or IP Address(appears for non-cluster and a cluster in spanned etherchannel mode) or Cluster Pool (appears for a cluster in individual interface mode). If you choose IP Address, enter the IPv6 address in the IP Address field. If you choose Cluster Pool, choose the IPv6 cluster pool value from the Cluster Pool down-down field. For information on creating the cluster pool address, see Address Pools. | ||||
Step 4 | Check the Ignore LSA MOSPF check box if you want to suppress syslog messages when the route receives unsupported LSA Type 6 multicast OSPF (MOSPF) packets. | ||||
Step 5 | Select General, and configure the following:
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Step 6 | Click OK to save the general configuration. | ||||
Step 7 | Select Passive Interface, select the interfaces on which you want to enable passive OSPFv3 routing from the Available Interfaces list, and click Add to move them to the Selected Interfaces list. Passive routing assists in controlling the advertisement of OSPFv3 routing information and disables the sending and receiving of OSPFv3 routing updates on an interface. | ||||
Step 8 | Click OK to save the passive interface configuration. | ||||
Step 9 | Select Timer, and configure the following LSA pacing and SPF calculation timers:
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Step 10 | Click OK to save the LSA timer configuration. | ||||
Step 11 | Select Non Stop Forwarding, and check the Enable graceful-restart helper check box. This is checked by default. Uncheck this to disable the graceful-restart helper mode on an NSF-aware device. | ||||
Step 12 | Check the Enable link state advertisement check box to enable strict link state advertisement checking. When enabled, it indicates that the helper router will terminate the process of restarting the router if it detects that there is a change to a LSA that would be flooded to the restarting router, or if there is a changed LSA on the retransmission list of the restarting router when the graceful restart process is initiated. | ||||
Step 13 | Check the Enable graceful-restart (Use when Spanned Cluster or Failover Configured) and enter the graceful-restart interval in seconds. The range is 1-1800. The default value is 120 seconds. For a restart interval below 30 seconds, graceful restart will be terminated. | ||||
Step 14 | Click OK to save the graceful restart configuration. | ||||
Step 15 | Click Save on the Routing page to save your changes. |