Kevin,
Yes, the candidate routes sound like what I'm after.  I expect you're right
about needing a separate command for each routing protocol.  I have a
feeling that I may be asking for something that doesn't exist, at least not
for all protocols.

I've already dug around the 'show ip ospf database' commands, and I can't
find one that actually shows the internal ospf routing table, but heaven
knows there are enough combinations that I could have missed plenty.  'show
ip ospf database' by itself just shows a list of LSAs, which while useful
is not what I'm after in this case.
'show ip ospf border-routers' shows the router entries in the route table,
which is a start - but is there a way of seeing the network entries?

And another nasty one - how about static routes (short of 'show run', of
course)?

JMcL


---------------------- Forwarded by Jenny Mcleod/NSO/CSDA on 27/11/2000
03:53 pm ---------------------------


[EMAIL PROTECTED] on 27/11/2000 12:06:51 pm


To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Subject:  Re: IP routing tables



it sounds like you'd be interested in all the candidate routes a given
routing protocol would generate (whether periodically or as a reaction to
external influences).

i'm still new at this, but it seems like the closest you would come
(without getting deeply lost within their branch of the shared SMI
structure) is a set of commands such as

show ip ospf database

show ip eigrp topology

show ip rip database

(i can't tell if the differences in terminology between proprietary &
non-proprietary specifications are meaningful or significant)

i'm not sure if the same applies for EGPs . . .





[EMAIL PROTECTED]@groupstudy.com on 11/26/2000 07:07:21 PM

Please respond to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sent by:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc:    (bcc: Kevin Cullimore)
Subject:  IP routing tables


Hi all,
Does anyone know if there is an IOS command that will show the routing
table for (or contributed by) a particular routing protocol, when there are
multiple routing protocols running?
In other words, a command to show what the IP routing table would look like
if there was only a single routing protocol.

I am aware of 'show ip route [protocol]', but that appears to give a subset
of the actual routing table.  For example, 'show ip route ospf' simply
chops all the non-ospf routes out of the output of 'show ip route'.  I'd
like a command that shows what ospf (or eigrp or whatever) routes exist,
even the ones that are not actually used because they are, for example,
over-ridden by a static route for the same destination.

If anyone can work out what I'm trying to ask, congratulations, because I
don't think I've expressed it very well.  If anyone knows an answer, even
better :-)

JMcL


_________________________________
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to