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- Network Working Group J. Moy
- Request for Comments: 2178 Cascade Communications Corp.
- Obsoletes: 1583 July 1997
- Category: Standards Track
-
-
- OSPF Version 2
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
- Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
- improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
- Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
- and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
-
- Abstract
-
- This memo documents version 2 of the OSPF protocol. OSPF is a link-
- state routing protocol. It is designed to be run internal to a
- single Autonomous System. Each OSPF router maintains an identical
- database describing the Autonomous System's topology. From this
- database, a routing table is calculated by constructing a shortest-
- path tree.
-
- OSPF recalculates routes quickly in the face of topological changes,
- utilizing a minimum of routing protocol traffic. OSPF provides
- support for equal-cost multipath. An area routing capability is
- provided, enabling an additional level of routing protection and a
- reduction in routing protocol traffic. In addition, all OSPF routing
- protocol exchanges are authenticated.
-
- The differences between this memo and RFC 1583 are explained in
- Appendix G. All differences are backward-compatible in nature.
- Implementations of this memo and of RFC 1583 will interoperate.
-
- Please send comments to ospf@gated.cornell.edu.
-
- Table of Contents
-
- 1 Introduction ........................................... 5
- 1.1 Protocol Overview ...................................... 5
- 1.2 Definitions of commonly used terms ..................... 6
- 1.3 Brief history of link-state routing technology ........ 9
- 1.4 Organization of this document ......................... 10
- 1.5 Acknowledgments ....................................... 11
- 2 The link-state database: organization and calculations 11
- 2.1 Representation of routers and networks ................ 11
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- Moy Standards Track [Page 1]
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
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- 2.1.1 Representation of non-broadcast networks .............. 13
- 2.1.2 An example link-state database ........................ 14
- 2.2 The shortest-path tree ................................ 18
- 2.3 Use of external routing information ................... 20
- 2.4 Equal-cost multipath .................................. 22
- 3 Splitting the AS into Areas ........................... 22
- 3.1 The backbone of the Autonomous System ................. 23
- 3.2 Inter-area routing .................................... 23
- 3.3 Classification of routers ............................. 24
- 3.4 A sample area configuration ........................... 25
- 3.5 IP subnetting support ................................. 31
- 3.6 Supporting stub areas ................................. 32
- 3.7 Partitions of areas ................................... 33
- 4 Functional Summary .................................... 34
- 4.1 Inter-area routing .................................... 35
- 4.2 AS external routes .................................... 35
- 4.3 Routing protocol packets .............................. 35
- 4.4 Basic implementation requirements ..................... 38
- 4.5 Optional OSPF capabilities ............................ 39
- 5 Protocol data structures .............................. 40
- 6 The Area Data Structure ............................... 42
- 7 Bringing Up Adjacencies ............................... 44
- 7.1 The Hello Protocol .................................... 44
- 7.2 The Synchronization of Databases ...................... 45
- 7.3 The Designated Router ................................. 46
- 7.4 The Backup Designated Router .......................... 47
- 7.5 The graph of adjacencies .............................. 48
- 8 Protocol Packet Processing ............................ 49
- 8.1 Sending protocol packets .............................. 49
- 8.2 Receiving protocol packets ............................ 51
- 9 The Interface Data Structure .......................... 54
- 9.1 Interface states ...................................... 57
- 9.2 Events causing interface state changes ................ 59
- 9.3 The Interface state machine ........................... 61
- 9.4 Electing the Designated Router ........................ 64
- 9.5 Sending Hello packets ................................. 66
- 9.5.1 Sending Hello packets on NBMA networks ................ 67
- 10 The Neighbor Data Structure ........................... 68
- 10.1 Neighbor states ....................................... 70
- 10.2 Events causing neighbor state changes ................. 75
- 10.3 The Neighbor state machine ............................ 76
- 10.4 Whether tocome adjacent ............................ 82
- 10.5 Receiving Hello Packets ............................... 83
- 10.6 Receiving Database Description Packets ................ 85
- 10.7 Receiving Link State Request Packets .................. 88
- 10.8 Sending Database Description Packets .................. 89
- 10.9 Sending Link State Request Packets .................... 90
- 10.10 An Example ............................................ 91
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- 11 The Routing Table Structure ........................... 93
- 11.1 Routing table lookup .................................. 96
- 11.2 Sample routing table, without areas ................... 97
- 11.3 Sample routing table, with areas ...................... 97
- 12 Link State Advertisements (LSAs) ......................100
- 12.1 The LSA Header ........................................100
- 12.1.1 LS age ............................................... 101
- 12.1.2 Options .............................................. 101
- 12.1.3 LS type .............................................. 102
- 12.1.4 Link State ID ........................................ 102
- 12.1.5 Advertising Router ................................... 104
- 12.1.6 LS sequence number ................................... 104
- 12.1.7 LS checksum .......................................... 105
- 12.2 The link state database .............................. 105
- 12.3 Representation of TOS ................................ 106
- 12.4 Originating LSAs ..................................... 107
- 12.4.1 Router-LSAs .......................................... 110
- 12.4.1.1 Describing point-to-point interfaces ................. 112
- 12.4.1.2 Describing broadcast and NBMA interfaces ............. 113
- 12.4.1.3 Describing virtual links ............................. 113
- 12.4.1.4 Describing Point-to-MultiPoint interfaces ............ 114
- 12.4.1.5 Examples of router-LSAs .............................. 114
- 12.4.2 Network-LSAs ......................................... 116
- 12.4.2.1 Examples of network-LSAs ............................. 116
- 12.4.3 Summary-LSAs ......................................... 117
- 12.4.3.1 Originating summary-LSAs into stub areas ............. 119
- 12.4.3.2 Examples of summary-LSAs ............................. 119
- 12.4.4 AS-external-LSAs ..................................... 120
- 12.4.4.1 Examples of AS-external-LSAs ......................... 121
- 13 The Flooding Procedure ............................... 122
- 13.1 Determining which LSA is newer ....................... 126
- 13.2 Installing LSAs in the database ...................... 127
- 13.3 Next step in the flooding procedure .................. 128
- 13.4 Receiving self-originated LSAs ....................... 130
- 13.5 Sending Link State Acknowledgment packets ............ 131
- 13.6 Retransmitting LSAs .................................. 133
- 13.7 Receiving link state acknowledgments ................. 134
- 14 Aging The Link State Database ........................ 134
- 14.1 Premature aging of LSAs .............................. 135
- 15 Virtual Links ........................................ 135
- 16 Calculation of the routing table ..................... 137
- 16.1 Calculating the shortest-path tree for an area ....... 138
- 16.1.1 The next hop calculation ............................. 144
- 16.2 Calculating the inter-area routes .................... 145
- 16.3 Examining transit areas' summary-LSAs ................ 146
- 16.4 Calculating AS external routes ....................... 149
- 16.4.1 External path preferences ............................ 151
- 16.5 Incremental updates -- summary-LSAs .................. 151
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- 16.6 Incremental updates -- AS-external-LSAs .............. 152
- 16.7 Events generated as a result of routing table changes 153
- 16.8 Equal-cost multipath ................................. 154
- Footnotes ............................................ 155
- References ........................................... 158
- A OSPF data formats .................................... 160
- A.1 Encapsulation of OSPF packets ........................ 160
- A.2 The Options field .................................... 162
- A.3 OSPF Packet Formats .................................. 163
- A.3.1 The OSPF packet header ............................... 164
- A.3.2 The Hello packet ..................................... 166
- A.3.3 The Database Description packet ...................... 168
- A.3.4 The Link State Request packet ........................ 170
- A.3.5 The Link State Update packet ......................... 171
- A.3.6 The Link State Acknowledgment packet ................. 172
- A.4 LSA formats .......................................... 173
- A.4.1 The LSA header ....................................... 174
- A.4.2 Router-LSAs .......................................... 176
- A.4.3 Network-LSAs ......................................... 179
- A.4.4 Summary-LSAs ......................................... 180
- A.4.5 AS-external-LSAs ..................................... 182
- B Architectural Constants .............................. 184
- C Configurable Constants ............................... 186
- C.1 Global parameters .................................... 186
- C.2 Area parameters ...................................... 187
- C.3 Router interface parameters .......................... 188
- C.4 Virtual link parameters .............................. 190
- C.5 NBMA network parameters .............................. 191
- C.6 Point-to-MultiPoint network parameters ............... 191
- C.7 Host route parameters ................................ 192
- D Authentication ....................................... 193
- D.1 Null authentication .................................. 193
- D.2 Simple password authentication ....................... 193
- D.3 Cryptographic authentication ......................... 194
- D.4 Message generation ................................... 196
- D.4.1 Generating Null authentication ....................... 196
- D.4.2 Generating Simple password authentication ............ 197
- D.4.3 Generating Cryptographic authentication .............. 197
- D.5 Message verification ................................. 198
- D.5.1 Verifying Null authentication ........................ 199
- D.5.2 Verifying Simple password authentication ............. 199
- D.5.3 Verifying Cryptographic authentication ............... 199
- E An algorithm for assigning Link State IDs ............ 201
- F Multiple interfaces to the same network/subnet ....... 203
- G Differences from RFC 1583 ............................ 204
- G.1 Enhancements to OSPF authentication .................. 204
- G.2 Addition of Point-to-MultiPoint interface ............ 204
- G.3 Support for overlapping area ranges .................. 205
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- G.4 A modification to the flooding algorithm ............. 206
- G.5 Introduction of the MinLSArrival constant ............ 206
- G.6 Optionally advertising point-to-point links as subnets 207
- G.7 Advertising same external route from multiple areas .. 207
- G.8 Retransmission of initial Database Description packets 209
- G.9 Detecting interface MTU mismatches ................... 209
- G.10 Deleting the TOS routing option .................................. 6
- Security Considerations .............................. 210
- Author's Address ..................................... 211
-
- 1. Introduction
-
- This document is a specification of the Open Shortest Path First
- (OSPF) TCP/IP internet routing protocol. OSPF is classified as an
- Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP). This means that it distributes
- routing information between routers belonging to a single Autonomous
- System. The OSPF protocol is based on link-state or SPF technology.
- This is a departure from the Bellman-Ford base used by traditional
- TCP/IP internet routing protocols.
-
- The OSPF protocol was developed by the OSPF working group of the
- Internet Engineering Task Force. It has been designed expressly for
- the TCP/IP internet environment, including explicit support for CIDR
- and the tagging of externally-derived routing information. OSPF also
- provides for the authentication of routing updates, and utilizes IP
- multicast when sending/receiving the updates. In addition, much work
- has been done to produce a protocol that responds quickly to topology
- changes, yet involves small amounts of routing protocol traffic.
-
- 1.1. Protocol overview
-
- OSPF routes IP packets based solely on the destination IP address
- found in the IP packet header. IP packets are routed "as is" -- they
- are not encapsulated in any further protocol headers as they transit
- the Autonomous System. OSPF is a dynamic routing protocol. It
- quickly detects topological changes in the AS (such as router
- interface failures) and calculates new loop-free routes after a
- period of convergence. This period of convergence is short and
- involves a minimum of routing traffic.
-
- In a link-state routing protocol, each router maintains a database
- describing the Autonomous System's topology. This database is
- referred to as the link-state database. Each participating router has
- an identical database. Each individual piece of this database is a
- particular router's local state (e.g., the router's usable interfaces
- and reachable neighbors). The router distributes its local state
- throughout the Autonomous System by flooding.
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- All routers run the exact same algorithm, in parallel. From the
- link-state database, each router constructs a tree of shortest paths
- with itself as root. This shortest-path tree gives the route to each
- destination in the Autonomous System. Externally derived routing
- information appears on the tree as leaves.
-
- When several equal-cost routes to a destination exist, traffic is
- distributed equally among them. The cost of a route is described by
- a single dimensionless metric.
-
- OSPF allows sets of networks to be grouped together. Such a grouping
- is called an area. The topology of an area is hidden from the rest
- of the Autonomous System. This information hiding enables a
- significant reduction in routing traffic. Also, routing within the
- area is determined only by the area's own topology, lending the area
- protection from bad routing data. An area is a generalization of an
- IP subnetted network.
-
- OSPF enables the flexible configuration of IP subnets. Each route
- distributed by OSPF has a destination and mask. Two different
- subnets of the same IP network number may have different sizes (i.e.,
- different masks). This is commonly referred to as variable length
- subnetting. A packet is routed to the best (i.e., longest or most
- specific) match. Host routes are considered to be subnets whose
- masks are "all ones" (0xffffffff).
-
- All OSPF protocol exchanges are authenticated. This means that only
- trusted routers can participate in the Autonomous System's routing.
- A variety of authentication schemes can be used; in fact, separate
- authentication schemes can be configured for each IP subnet.
-
- Externally derived routing data (e.g., routes learned from an
- Exterior Gateway Protocol such as BGP; see [Ref23]) is advertised
- throughout the Autonomous System. This externally derived data is
- kept separate from the OSPF protocol's link state data. Each
- external route can also be tagged by the advertising router, enabling
- the passing of additional information between routers on the boundary
- of the Autonomous System.
-
- 1.2. Definitions of commonly used terms
-
- This section provides definitions for terms that have a specific
- meaning to the OSPF protocol and that are used throughout the text.
- The reader unfamiliar with the Internet Protocol Suite is referred to
- [Ref13] for an introduction to IP.
-
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- Router
- A level three Internet Protocol packet switch. Formerly called a
- gateway in much of the IP literature.
-
- Autonomous System
- A group of routers exchanging routing information via a common
- routing protocol. Abbreviated as AS.
-
- Interior Gateway Protocol
- The routing protocol spoken by the routers belonging to an
- Autonomous system. Abbreviated as IGP. Each Autonomous System has
- a single IGP. Separate Autonomous Systems may be running
- different IGPs.
-
- Router ID
- A 32-bit number assigned to each router running the OSPF protocol.
- This number uniquely identifies the router within an Autonomous
- System.
-
- Network
- In this memo, an IP network/subnet/supernet. It is possible for
- one physical network to be assigned multiple IP network/subnet
- numbers. We consider these to be separate networks. Point-to-
- point physical networks are an exception - they are considered a
- single network no matter how many (if any at all) IP
- network/subnet numbers are assigned to them.
-
- Network mask
- A 32-bit number indicating the range of IP addresses residing on a
- single IP network/subnet/supernet. This specification displays
- network masks as hexadecimal numbers. For example, the network
- mask for a class C IP network is displayed as 0xffffff00. Such a
- mask is often displayed elsewhere in the literature as
- 255.255.255.0.
-
- Point-to-point networks
- A network that joins a single pair of routers. A 56Kb serial line
- is an example of a point-to-point network.
-
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- Broadcast networks
- Networks supporting many (more than two) attached routers,
- together with the capability to address a single physical message
- to all of the attached routers (broadcast). Neighboring routers
- are discovered dynamically on these nets using OSPF's Hello
- Protocol. The Hello Protocol itself takes advantage of the
- broadcast capability. The OSPF protocol makes further use of
- multicast capabilities, if they exist. Each pair of routers on a
- broadcast network is assumed to be able to communicate directly.
- An ethernet is an example of a broadcast network.
-
- Non-broadcast networks
- Networks supporting many (more than two) routers, but having no
- broadcast capability. Neighboring routers are maintained on these
- nets using OSPF's Hello Protocol. However, due to the lack of
- broadcast capability, some configuration information may be
- necessary to aid in the discovery of neighbors. On non-broadcast
- networks, OSPF protocol packets that are normally multicast need
- to be sent to each neighboring router, in turn. An X.25 Public
- Data Network (PDN) is an example of a non-broadcast network.
-
- OSPF runs in one of two modes over non-broadcast networks. The
- first mode, called non-broadcast multi-access or NBMA, simulates
- the operation of OSPF on a broadcast network. The second mode,
- called Point-to-MultiPoint, treats the non-broadcast network as a
- collection of point-to-point links. Non-broadcast networks are
- referred to as NBMA networks or Point-to-MultiPoint networks,
- depending on OSPF's mode of operation over the network.
-
- Interface
- The connection between a router and one of its attached networks.
- An interface has state information associated with it, which is
- obtained from the underlying lower level protocols and the routing
- protocol itself. An interface to a network has associated with it
- a single IP address and mask (unless the network is an unnumbered
- point-to-point network). An interface is sometimes also referred
- to as a link.
-
- Neighboring routers
- Two routers that have interfaces to a common network. Neighbor
- relationships are maintained by, and usually dynamically
- discovered by, OSPF's Hello Protocol.
-
- Adjacency
- A relationship formed between selected neighboring routers for the
- purpose of exchanging routing information. Not every pair of
- neighboring routers become adjacent.
-
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- Link state advertisement
- Unit of data describing the local state of a router or network.
- For a router, this includes the state of the router's interfaces
- and adjacencies. Each link state advertisement is flooded
- throughout the routing domain. The collected link state
- advertisements of all routers and networks forms the protocol's
- link state database. Throughout this memo, link state
- advertisement is abbreviated as LSA.
-
- Hello Protocol
- The part of the OSPF protocol used to establish and maintain
- neighbor relationships. On broadcast networks the Hello Protocol
- can also dynamically discover neighboring routers.
-
- Flooding
- The part of the OSPF protocol that distributes and synchronizes
- the link-state database between OSPF routers.
-
- Designated Router
- Each broadcast and NBMA network that has at least two attached
- routers has a Designated Router. The Designated Router generates
- an LSA for the network and has other special responsibilities in
- the running of the protocol. The Designated Router is elected by
- the Hello Protocol.
-
- The Designated Router concept enables a reduction in the number of
- adjacencies required on a broadcast or NBMA network. This in turn
- reduces the amount of routing protocol traffic and the size of the
- link-state database.
-
- Lower-level protocols
- The underlying network access protocols that provide services to
- the Internet Protocol and in turn the OSPF protocol. Examples of
- these are the X.25 packet and frame levels for X.25 PDNs, and the
- ethernet data link layer for ethernets.
-
- 1.3. Brief history of link-state routing technology
-
- OSPF is a link state routing protocol. Such protocols are also
- referred to in the literature as SPF-based or distributed-database
- protocols. This section gives a brief description of the
- developments in link-state technology that have influenced the OSPF
- protocol.
-
- The first link-state routing protocol was developed for use in the
- ARPANET packet switching network. This protocol is described in
- [Ref3]. It has formed the starting point for all other link-state
- protocols. The homogeneous ARPANET environment, i.e., single-vendor
-
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- packet switches connected by synchronous serial lines, simplified the
- design and implementation of the original protocol.
-
- Modifications to this protocol were proposed in [Ref4]. These
- modifications dealt with increasing the fault tolerance of the
- routing protocol through, among other things, adding a checksum to
- the LSAs (thereby detecting database corruption). The paper also
- included means for reducing the routing traffic overhead in a link-
- state protocol. This was accomplished by introducing mechanisms
- which enabled the interval between LSA originations to be increased
- by an order of magnitude.
-
- A link-state algorithm has also been proposed for use as an ISO IS-IS
- routing protocol. This protocol is described in [Ref2]. The
- protocol includes methods for data and routing traffic reduction when
- operating over broadcast networks. This is accomplished by election
- of a Designated Router for each broadcast network, which then
- originates an LSA for the network.
-
- The OSPF Working Group of the IETF has extended this work in
- developing the OSPF protocol. The Designated Router concept has been
- greatly enhanced to further reduce the amount of routing traffic
- required. Multicast capabilities are utilized for additional routing
- bandwidth reduction. An area routing scheme has been developed
- enabling information hiding/protection/reduction. Finally, the
- algorithms have been tailored for efficient operation in TCP/IP
- internets.
-
- 1.4. Organization of this document
-
- The first three sections of this specification give a general
- overview of the protocol's capabilities and functions. Sections 4-16
- explain the protocol's mechanisms in detail. Packet formats,
- protocol constants and configuration items are specified in the
- appendices.
-
- Labels such as HelloInterval encountered in the text refer to
- protocol constants. They may or may not be configurable.
- Architectural constants are summarized in Appendix B. Configurable
- constants are summarized in Appendix C.
-
- The detailed specification of the protocol is presented in terms of
- data structures. This is done in order to make the explanation more
- precise. Implementations of the protocol are required to support the
- functionality described, but need not use the precise data structures
- that appear in this memo.
-
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- 1.5. Acknowledgments
-
- The author would like to thank Ran Atkinson, Fred Baker, Jeffrey
- Burgan, Rob Coltun, Dino Farinacci, Vince Fuller, Phanindra
- Jujjavarapu, Milo Medin, Tom Pusateri, Kannan Varadhan, Zhaohui Zhang
- and the rest of the OSPF Working Group for the ideas and support they
- have given to this project.
-
- The OSPF Point-to-MultiPoint interface is based on work done by Fred
- Baker.
-
- The OSPF Cryptographic Authentication option was developed by Fred
- Baker and Ran Atkinson.
-
- 2. The Link-state Database: organization and calculations
-
- The following subsections describe the organization of OSPF's link-
- state database, and the routing calculations that are performed on
- the database in order to produce a router's routing table.
-
- 2.1. Representation of routers and networks
-
- The Autonomous System's link-state database describes a directed
- graph. The vertices of the graph consist of routers and networks. A
- graph edge connects two routers when they are attached via a physical
- point-to-point network. An edge connecting a router to a network
- indicates that the router has an interface on the network. Networks
- can be either transit or stub networks. Transit networks are those
- capable of carrying data traffic that is neither locally originated
- nor locally destined. A transit network is represented by a graph
- vertex having both incoming and outgoing edges. A stub network's
- vertex has only incoming edges.
-
- The neighborhood of each network node in the graph depends on the
- network's type (point-to-point, broadcast, NBMA or Point-to-
- MultiPoint) and the number of routers having an interface to the
- network. Three cases are depicted in Figure 1a. Rectangles indicate
- routers. Circles and oblongs indicate networks. Router names are
- prefixed with the letters RT and network names with the letter N.
- Router interface names are prefixed by the letter I. Lines between
- routers indicate point-to-point networks. The left side of the
- figure shows networks with their connected routers, with the
- resulting graphs shown on the right.
-
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- **FROM**
-
- * |RT1|RT2|
- +---+Ia +---+ * ------------
- |RT1|------|RT2| T RT1| | X |
- +---+ Ib+---+ O RT2| X | |
- * Ia| | X |
- * Ib| X | |
-
- Physical point-to-point networks
-
- **FROM**
- +---+ *
- |RT7| * |RT7| N3|
- +---+ T ------------
- | O RT7| | |
- +----------------------+ * N3| X | |
- N3 *
-
- Stub networks
-
- +---+ +---+
- |RT3| |RT4| |RT3|RT4|RT5|RT6|N2 |
- +---+ +---+ * ------------------------
- | N2 | * RT3| | | | | X |
- +----------------------+ T RT4| | | | | X |
- | | O RT5| | | | | X |
- +---+ +---+ * RT6| | | | | X |
- |RT5| |RT6| * N2| X | X | X | X | |
- +---+ +---+
-
- Broadcast or NBMA networks
-
- Figure 1a: Network map components
-
- Networks and routers are represented by vertices. An edge connects
- Vertex A to Vertex B iff the intersection of Column A and Row B is
- marked with an X.
-
- The top of Figure 1a shows two routers connected by a point-to-point
- link. In the resulting link-state database graph, the two router
- vertices are directly connected by a pair of edges, one in each
- direction. Interfaces to point-to-point networks need not be assigned
- IP addresses. When interface addresses are assigned, they are
- modelled as stub links, with each router advertising a stub
- connection to the other router's interface address. Optionally, an IP
-
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- subnet can be assigned to the point-to-point network. In this case,
- both routers advertise a stub link to the IP subnet, instead of
- advertising each others' IP interface addresses.
-
- The middle of Figure 1a shows a network with only one attached router
- (i.e., a stub network). In this case, the network appears on the end
- of a stub connection in the link-state database's graph.
-
- When multiple routers are attached to a broadcast network, the link-
- state database graph shows all routers bidirectionally connected to
- the network vertex. This is pictured at the bottom of Figure 1a.
-
- Each network (stub or transit) in the graph has an IP address and
- associated network mask. The mask indicates the number of nodes on
- the network. Hosts attached directly to routers (referred to as host
- routes) appear on the graph as stub networks. The network mask for a
- host route is always 0xffffffff, which indicates the presence of a
- single node.
-
- 2.1.1. Representation of non-broadcast networks
-
- As mentioned previously, OSPF can run over non-broadcast networks in
- one of two modes: NBMA or Point-to-MultiPoint. The choice of mode
- determines the way that the Hello protocol and flooding work over the
- non-broadcast network, and the way that the network is represented in
- the link-state database.
-
- In NBMA mode, OSPF emulates operation over a broadcast network: a
- Designated Router is elected for the NBMA network, and the Designated
- Router originates an LSA for the network. The graph representation
- for broadcast networks and NBMA networks is identical. This
- representation is pictured in the middle of Figure 1a.
-
- NBMA mode is the most efficient way to run OSPF over non-broadcast
- networks, both in terms of link-state database size and in terms of
- the amount of routing protocol traffic. However, it has one
- significant restriction: it requires all routers attached to the NBMA
- network to be able to communicate directly. This restriction may be
- met on some non-broadcast networks, such as an ATM subnet utilizing
- SVCs. But it is often not met on other non-broadcast networks, such
- as PVC-only Frame Relay networks. On non-broadcast networks where not
- all routers can communicate directly you can break the non-broadcast
- network into logical subnets, with the routers on each subnet being
- able to communicate directly, and then run each separate subnet as an
- NBMA network (see [Ref15]). This however requires quite a bit of
- administrative overhead, and is prone to misconfiguration. It is
- probably better to run such a non-broadcast network in Point-to-
- Multipoint mode.
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 13]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- In Point-to-MultiPoint mode, OSPF treats all router-to-router
- connections over the non-broadcast network as if they were point-to-
- point links. No Designated Router is elected for the network, nor is
- there an LSA generated for the network. In fact, a vertex for the
- Point-to-MultiPoint network does not appear in the graph of the
- link-state database.
-
- Figure 1b illustrates the link-state database representation of a
- Point-to-MultiPoint network. On the left side of the figure, a
- Point-to-MultiPoint network is pictured. It is assumed that all
- routers can communicate directly, except for routers RT4 and RT5. I3
- though I6 indicate the routers' IP interface addresses on the Point-
- to-MultiPoint network. In the graphical representation of the link-
- state database, routers that can communicate directly over the
- Point-to-MultiPoint network are joined by bidirectional edges, and
- each router also has a stub connection to its own IP interface
- address (which is in contrast to the representation of real point-
- to-point links; see Figure 1a).
-
- On some non-broadcast networks, use of Point-to-MultiPoint mode and
- data-link protocols such as Inverse ARP (see [Ref14]) will allow
- autodiscovery of OSPF neighbors even though broadcast support is not
- available.
-
- 2.1.2. An example link-state database
-
- Figure 2 shows a sample map of an Autonomous System. The rectangle
- labelled H1 indicates a host, which has a SLIP connection to Router
- RT12. Router RT12 is therefore advertising a host route. Lines
- between routers indicate physical point-to-point networks. The only
- point-to-point network that has been assigned interface addresses is
- the one joining Routers RT6 and RT10. Routers RT5 and RT7 have BGP
- connections to other Autonomous Systems. A set of BGP-learned routes
- have been displayed for both of these routers.
-
- A cost is associated with the output side of each router interface.
- This cost is configurable by the system administrator. The lower the
- cost,the more likely the interface is to be used to forward data
- traffic. Costs are also associated with the externally derived
- routing data (e.g., the BGP-learned routes).
-
- The directed graph resulting from the map in Figure 2 is depicted in
- Figure 3. Arcs are labelled with the cost of the corresponding
- router output interface. Arcs having no labelled cost have a cost of
- 0. Note that arcs leading from networks to routers always have cost
- 0; they are significant nonetheless. Note also that the externally
- derived routing data appears on the graph as stubs.
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 14]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- **FROM**
- +---+ +---+
- |RT3| |RT4| |RT3|RT4|RT5|RT6|
- +---+ +---+ * --------------------
- I3| N2 |I4 * RT3| | X | X | X |
- +----------------------+ T RT4| X | | | X |
- I5| |I6 O RT5| X | | | X |
- +---+ +---+ * RT6| X | X | X | |
- |RT5| |RT6| * I3| X | | | |
- +---+ +---+ I4| | X | | |
- I5| | | X | |
- I6| | | | X |
-
-
- Figure 1b: Network map components
- Point-to-MultiPoint networks
-
- All routers can communicate directly over N2, except
- routers RT4 and RT5. I3 through I6 indicate IP
- interface addresses
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 15]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- +
- | 3+---+ N12 N14
- N1|--|RT1|\ 1 \ N13 /
- | +---+ \ 8\ |8/8
- + \ ____ \|/
- / \ 1+---+8 8+---+6
- * N3 *---|RT4|------|RT5|--------+
- \____/ +---+ +---+ |
- + / | |7 |
- | 3+---+ / | | |
- N2|--|RT2|/1 |1 |6 |
- | +---+ +---+8 6+---+ |
- + |RT3|--------------|RT6| |
- +---+ +---+ |
- |2 Ia|7 |
- | | |
- +---------+ | |
- N4 | |
- | |
- | |
- N11 | |
- +---------+ | |
- | | | N12
- |3 | |6 2/
- +---+ | +---+/
- |RT9| | |RT7|---N15
- +---+ | +---+ 9
- |1 + | |1
- _|__ | Ib|5 __|_
- / \ 1+----+2 | 3+----+1 / \
- * N9 *------|RT11|----|---|RT10|---* N6 *
- \____/ +----+ | +----+ \____/
- | | |
- |1 + |1
- +--+ 10+----+ N8 +---+
- |H1|-----|RT12| |RT8|
- +--+SLIP +----+ +---+
- |2 |4
- | |
- +---------+ +--------+
- N10 N7
-
- Figure 2: A sample Autonomous System
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 16]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- **FROM**
-
- |RT|RT|RT|RT|RT|RT|RT|RT|RT|RT|RT|RT|
- |1 |2 |3 |4 |5 |6 |7 |8 |9 |10|11|12|N3|N6|N8|N9|
- ----- ---------------------------------------------
- RT1| | | | | | | | | | | | |0 | | | |
- RT2| | | | | | | | | | | | |0 | | | |
- RT3| | | | | |6 | | | | | | |0 | | | |
- RT4| | | | |8 | | | | | | | |0 | | | |
- RT5| | | |8 | |6 |6 | | | | | | | | | |
- RT6| | |8 | |7 | | | | |5 | | | | | | |
- RT7| | | | |6 | | | | | | | | |0 | | |
- * RT8| | | | | | | | | | | | | |0 | | |
- * RT9| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |0 |
- T RT10| | | | | |7 | | | | | | | |0 |0 | |
- O RT11| | | | | | | | | | | | | | |0 |0 |
- * RT12| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |0 |
- * N1|3 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
- N2| |3 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
- N3|1 |1 |1 |1 | | | | | | | | | | | | |
- N4| | |2 | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
- N6| | | | | | |1 |1 | |1 | | | | | | |
- N7| | | | | | | |4 | | | | | | | | |
- N8| | | | | | | | | |3 |2 | | | | | |
- N9| | | | | | | | |1 | |1 |1 | | | | |
- N10| | | | | | | | | | | |2 | | | | |
- N11| | | | | | | | |3 | | | | | | | |
- N12| | | | |8 | |2 | | | | | | | | | |
- N13| | | | |8 | | | | | | | | | | | |
- N14| | | | |8 | | | | | | | | | | | |
- N15| | | | | | |9 | | | | | | | | | |
- H1| | | | | | | | | | | |10| | | | |
-
-
- Figure 3: The resulting directed graph
-
- Networks and routers are represented by vertices.
- An edge of cost X connects Vertex A to Vertex B iff
- the intersection of Column A and Row B is marked
- with an X.
-
- The link-state database is pieced together from LSAs generated by the
- routers. In the associated graphical representation, the
- neighborhood of each router or transit network is represented in a
- single, separate LSA. Figure 4 shows these LSAs graphically. Router
- RT12 has an interface to two broadcast networks and a SLIP line to a
- host. Network N6 is a broadcast network with three attached routers.
- The cost of all links from Network N6 to its attached routers is 0.
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 17]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- Note that the LSA for Network N6 is actually generated by one of the
- network's attached routers: the router that has been elected
- Designated Router for the network.
-
- 2.2. The shortest-path tree
-
- When no OSPF areas are configured, each router in the Autonomous
- System has an identical link-state database, leading to an identical
- graphical representation. A router generates its routing table from
- this graph by calculating a tree of shortest paths with the router
- itself as root. Obviously, the shortest- path tree depends on the
- router doing the calculation. The shortest-path tree for Router RT6
- in our example is depicted in Figure 5.
-
- The tree gives the entire path to any destination network or host.
- However, only the next hop to the destination is used in the
- forwarding process. Note also that the best route to any router has
- also been calculated. For the processing of external data, we note
- the next hop and distance to any router advertising external routes.
- The resulting routing table for Router RT6 is pictured in Table 2.
- Note that there is a separate route for each end of a numbered
- point-to-point network (in this case, the serial line between Routers
- RT6 and RT10).
-
-
- **FROM** **FROM**
-
- |RT12|N9|N10|H1| |RT9|RT11|RT12|N9|
- * -------------------- * ----------------------
- * RT12| | | | | * RT9| | | |0 |
- T N9|1 | | | | T RT11| | | |0 |
- O N10|2 | | | | O RT12| | | |0 |
- * H1|10 | | | | * N9| | | | |
- * *
- RT12's router-LSA N9's network-LSA
-
- Figure 4: Individual link state components
-
- Networks and routers are represented by vertices.
- An edge of cost X connects Vertex A to Vertex B iff
- the intersection of Column A and Row B is marked
- with an X.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 18]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- RT6(origin)
- RT5 o------------o-----------o Ib
- /|\ 6 |\ 7
- 8/8|8\ | \
- / | \ 6| \
- o | o | \7
- N12 o N14 | \
- N13 2 | \
- N4 o-----o RT3 \
- / \ 5
- 1/ RT10 o-------o Ia
- / |\
- RT4 o-----o N3 3| \1
- /| | \ N6 RT7
- / | N8 o o---------o
- / | | | /|
- RT2 o o RT1 | | 2/ |9
- / | | |RT8 / |
- /3 |3 RT11 o o o o
- / | | | N12 N15
- N2 o o N1 1| |4
- | |
- N9 o o N7
- /|
- / |
- N11 RT9 / |RT12
- o--------o-------o o--------o H1
- 3 | 10
- |2
- |
- o N10
-
-
- Figure 5: The SPF tree for Router RT6
-
- Edges that are not marked with a cost have a cost of of zero (these
- are network-to-router links). Routes to networks N12-N15 are external
- information that is considered in Section 2.3
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 19]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- Destination Next Hop Distance
- __________________________________
- N1 RT3 10
- N2 RT3 10
- N3 RT3 7
- N4 RT3 8
- Ib * 7
- Ia RT10 12
- N6 RT10 8
- N7 RT10 12
- N8 RT10 10
- N9 RT10 11
- N10 RT10 13
- N11 RT10 14
- H1 RT10 21
- __________________________________
- RT5 RT5 6
- RT7 RT10 8
-
- Table 2: The portion of Router RT6's routing table listing local
- destinations.
-
- Routes to networks belonging to other AS'es (such as N12) appear as
- dashed lines on the shortest path tree in Figure 5. Use of this
- externally derived routing information is considered in the next
- section.
-
- 2.3. Use of external routing information
-
- After the tree is created the external routing information is
- examined. This external routing information may originate from
- another routing protocol such as BGP, or be statically configured
- (static routes). Default routes can also be included as part of the
- Autonomous System's external routing information.
-
- External routing information is flooded unaltered throughout the AS.
- In our example, all the routers in the Autonomous System know that
- Router RT7 has two external routes, with metrics 2 and 9.
-
- OSPF supports two types of external metrics. Type 1 external metrics
- are expressed in the same units as OSPF interface cost (i.e., in
- terms of the link state metric). Type 2 external metrics are an
- order of magnitude larger; any Type 2 metric is considered greater
- than the cost of any path internal to the AS. Use of Type 2 external
- metrics assumes that routing between AS'es is the major cost of
- routing a packet, and eliminates the need for conversion of external
- costs to internal link state metrics.
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 20]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- As an example of Type 1 external metric processing, suppose that the
- Routers RT7 and RT5 in Figure 2 are advertising Type 1 external
- metrics. For each advertised external route, the total cost from
- Router RT6 is calculated as the sum of the external route's
- advertised cost and the distance from Router RT6 to the advertising
- router. When two routers are advertising the same external
- destination, RT6 picks the advertising router providing the minimum
- total cost. RT6 then sets the next hop to the external destination
- equal to the next hop that would be used when routing packets to the
- chosen advertising router.
-
- In Figure 2, both Router RT5 and RT7 are advertising an external
- route to destination Network N12. Router RT7 is preferred since it
- is advertising N12 at a distance of 10 (8+2) to Router RT6, which is
- better than Router RT5's 14 (6+8). Table 3 shows the entries that
- are added to the routing table when external routes are examined:
-
-
-
- Destination Next Hop Distance
- __________________________________
- N12 RT10 10
- N13 RT5 14
- N14 RT5 14
- N15 RT10 17
-
-
- Table 3: The portion of Router RT6's routing table
- listing external destinations.
-
- Processing of Type 2 external metrics is simpler. The AS boundary
- router advertising the smallest external metric is chosen, regardless
- of the internal distance to the AS boundary router. Suppose in our
- example both Router RT5 and Router RT7 were advertising Type 2
- external routes. Then all traffic destined for Network N12 would be
- forwarded to Router RT7, since 2 < 8. When several equal-cost Type 2
- routes exist, the internal distance to the advertising routers is
- used to break the tie.
-
- Both Type 1 and Type 2 external metrics can be present in the AS at
- the same time. In that event, Type 1 external metrics always take
- precedence.
-
- This section has assumed that packets destined for external
- destinations are always routed through the advertising AS boundary
- router. This is not always desirable. For example, suppose in
- Figure 2 there is an additional router attached to Network N6, called
- Router RTX. Suppose further that RTX does not participate in OSPF
-
-
-
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- routing, but does exchange BGP information with the AS boundary
- router RT7. Then, Router RT7 would end up advertising OSPF external
- routes for all destinations that should be routed to RTX. An extra
- hop will sometimes be introduced if packets for these destinations
- need always be routed first to Router RT7 (the advertising router).
-
- To deal with this situation, the OSPF protocol allows an AS boundary
- router to specify a "forwarding address" in its AS- external-LSAs. In
- the above example, Router RT7 would specify RTX's IP address as the
- "forwarding address" for all those destinations whose packets should
- be routed directly to RTX.
-
- The "forwarding address" has one other application. It enables
- routers in the Autonomous System's interior to function as "route
- servers". For example, in Figure 2 the router RT6 could become a
- route server, gaining external routing information through a
- combination of static configuration and external routing protocols.
- RT6 would then start advertising itself as an AS boundary router, and
- would originate a collection of OSPF AS-external-LSAs. In each AS-
- external-LSA, Router RT6 would specify the correct Autonomous System
- exit point to use for the destination through appropriate setting of
- the LSA's "forwarding address" field.
-
- 2.4. Equal-cost multipath
-
- The above discussion has been simplified by considering only a single
- route to any destination. In reality, if multiple equal-cost routes
- to a destination exist, they are all discovered and used. This
- requires no conceptual changes to the algorithm, and its discussion
- is postponed until we consider the tree-building process in more
- detail.
-
- With equal cost multipath, a router potentially has several available
- next hops towards any given destination.
-
- 3. Splitting the AS into Areas
-
- OSPF allows collections of contiguous networks and hosts to be
- grouped together. Such a group, together with the routers having
- interfaces to any one of the included networks, is called an area.
- Each area runs a separate copy of the basic link-state routing
- algorithm. This means that each area has its own link-state database
- and corresponding graph, as explained in the previous section.
-
- The topology of an area is invisible from the outside of the area.
- Conversely, routers internal to a given area know nothing of the
- detailed topology external to the area. This isolation of knowledge
- enables the protocol to effect a marked reduction in routing traffic
-
-
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-
-
- as compared to treating the entire Autonomous System as a single
- link-state domain.
-
- With the introduction of areas, it is no longer true that all routers
- in the AS have an identical link-state database. A router actually
- has a separate link-state database for each area it is connected to.
- (Routers connected to multiple areas are called area border routers).
- Two routers belonging to the same area have, for that area, identical
- area link-state databases.
-
- Routing in the Autonomous System takes place on two levels, depending
- on whether the source and destination of a packet reside in the same
- area (intra-area routing is used) or different areas (inter-area
- routing is used). In intra-area routing, the packet is routed solely
- on information obtained within the area; no routing information
- obtained from outside the area can be used. This protects intra-area
- routing from the injection of bad routing information. We discuss
- inter-area routing in Section 3.2.
-
- 3.1. The backbone of the Autonomous System
-
- The OSPF backbone is the special OSPF Area 0 (often written as Area
- 0.0.0.0, since OSPF Area ID's are typically formatted as IP
- addresses). The OSPF backbone always contains all area border
- routers. The backbone is responsible for distributing routing
- information between non-backbone areas. The backbone must be
- contiguous. However, it need not be physically contiguous; backbone
- connectivity can be established/maintained through the configuration
- of virtual links.
-
- Virtual links can be configured between any two backbone routers that
- have an interface to a common non-backbone area. Virtual links
- belong to the backbone. The protocol treats two routers joined by a
- virtual link as if they were connected by an unnumbered point-to-
- point backbone network. On the graph of the backbone, two such
- routers are joined by arcs whose costs are the intra-area distances
- between the two routers. The routing protocol traffic that flows
- along the virtual link uses intra-area routing only.
-
- 3.2. Inter-area routing
-
- When routing a packet between two non-backbone areas the backbone is
- used. The path that the packet will travel can be broken up into
- three contiguous pieces: an intra-area path from the source to an
- area border router, a backbone path between the source and
- destination areas, and then another intra-area path to the
- destination. The algorithm finds the set of such paths that have the
- smallest cost.
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 23]
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- Looking at this another way, inter-area routing can be pictured as
- forcing a star configuration on the Autonomous System, with the
- backbone as hub and each of the non-backbone areas as spokes.
-
- The topology of the backbone dictates the backbone paths used between
- areas. The topology of the backbone can be enhanced by adding
- virtual links. This gives the system administrator some control over
- the routes taken by inter-area traffic.
-
- The correct area border router to use as the packet exits the source
- area is chosen in exactly the same way routers advertising external
- routes are chosen. Each area border router in an area summarizes for
- the area its cost to all networks external to the area. After the
- SPF tree is calculated for the area, routes to all inter-area
- destinations are calculated by examining the summaries of the area
- border routers.
-
- 3.3. Classification of routers
-
- Before the introduction of areas, the only OSPF routers having a
- specialized function were those advertising external routing
- information, such as Router RT5 in Figure 2. When the AS is split
- into OSPF areas, the routers are further divided according to
- function into the following four overlapping categories:
-
-
- Internal routers
- A router with all directly connected networks belonging to the
- same area. These routers run a single copy of the basic routing
- algorithm.
-
- Area border routers
- A router that attaches to multiple areas. Area border routers run
- multiple copies of the basic algorithm, one copy for each attached
- area. Area border routers condense the topological information of
- their attached areas for distribution to the backbone. The
- backbone in turn distributes the information to the other areas.
-
- Backbone routers
- A router that has an interface to the backbone area. This
- includes all routers that interface to more than one area (i.e.,
- area border routers). However, backbone routers do not have to be
- area border routers. Routers with all interfaces connecting to
- the backbone area are supported.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 24]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- AS boundary routers
- A router that exchanges routing information with routers belonging
- to other Autonomous Systems. Such a router advertises AS external
- routing information throughout the Autonomous System. The paths
- to each AS boundary router are known by every router in the AS.
- This classification is completely independent of the previous
- classifications: AS boundary routers may be internal or area
- border routers, and may or may not participate in the backbone.
-
- 3.4. A sample area configuration
-
- Figure 6 shows a sample area configuration. The first area consists
- of networks N1-N4, along with their attached routers RT1-RT4. The
- second area consists of networks N6-N8, along with their attached
- routers RT7, RT8, RT10 and RT11. The third area consists of networks
- N9-N11 and Host H1, along with their attached routers RT9, RT11 and
- RT12. The third area has been configured so that networks N9-N11 and
- Host H1 will all be grouped into a single route, when advertised
- external to the area (see Section 3.5 for more details).
-
- In Figure 6, Routers RT1, RT2, RT5, RT6, RT8, RT9 and RT12 are
- internal routers. Routers RT3, RT4, RT7, RT10 and RT11 are area
- border routers. Finally, as before, Routers RT5 and RT7 are AS
- boundary routers.
-
- Figure 7 shows the resulting link-state database for the Area 1. The
- figure completely describes that area's intra-area routing.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
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- Moy Standards Track [Page 25]
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- ...........................
- . + .
- . | 3+---+ . N12 N14
- . N1|--|RT1|\ 1 . \ N13 /
- . | +---+ \ . 8\ |8/8
- . + \ ____ . \|/
- . / \ 1+---+8 8+---+6
- . * N3 *---|RT4|------|RT5|--------+
- . \____/ +---+ +---+ |
- . + / \ . |7 |
- . | 3+---+ / \ . | |
- . N2|--|RT2|/1 1\ . |6 |
- . | +---+ +---+8 6+---+ |
- . + |RT3|------|RT6| |
- . +---+ +---+ |
- . 2/ . Ia|7 |
- . / . | |
- . +---------+ . | |
- .Area 1 N4 . | |
- ........................... | |
- .......................... | |
- . N11 . | |
- . +---------+ . | |
- . | . | | N12
- . |3 . Ib|5 |6 2/
- . +---+ . +----+ +---+/
- . |RT9| . .........|RT10|.....|RT7|---N15.
- . +---+ . . +----+ +---+ 9 .
- . |1 . . + /3 1\ |1 .
- . _|__ . . | / \ __|_ .
- . / \ 1+----+2 |/ \ / \ .
- . * N9 *------|RT11|----| * N6 * .
- . \____/ +----+ | \____/ .
- . | . . | | .
- . |1 . . + |1 .
- . +--+ 10+----+ . . N8 +---+ .
- . |H1|-----|RT12| . . |RT8| .
- . +--+SLIP +----+ . . +---+ .
- . |2 . . |4 .
- . | . . | .
- . +---------+ . . +--------+ .
- . N10 . . N7 .
- . . .Area 2 .
- .Area 3 . ................................
- ..........................
-
- Figure 6: A sample OSPF area configuration
-
-
-
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- It also shows the complete view of the internet for the two internal
- routers RT1 and RT2. It is the job of the area border routers, RT3
- and RT4, to advertise into Area 1 the distances to all destinations
- external to the area. These are indicated in Figure 7 by the dashed
- stub routes. Also, RT3 and RT4 must advertise into Area 1 the
- location of the AS boundary routers RT5 and RT7. Finally, AS-
- external-LSAs from RT5 and RT7 are flooded throughout the entire AS,
- and in particular throughout Area 1. These LSAs are included in Area
- 1's database, and yield routes to Networks N12-N15.
-
- Routers RT3 and RT4 must also summarize Area 1's topology for
- distribution to the backbone. Their backbone LSAs are shown in Table
- 4. These summaries show which networks are contained in Area 1
- (i.e., Networks N1-N4), and the distance to these networks from the
- routers RT3 and RT4 respectively.
-
- The link-state database for the backbone is shown in Figure 8. The
- set of routers pictured are the backbone routers. Router RT11 is a
- backbone router because it belongs to two areas. In order to make
- the backbone connected, a virtual link has been configured between
- Routers R10 and R11.
-
- The area border routers RT3, RT4, RT7, RT10 and RT11 condense the
- routing information of their attached non-backbone areas for
- distribution via the backbone; these are the dashed stubs that appear
- in Figure 8. Remember that the third area has been configured to
- condense Networks N9-N11 and Host H1 into a single route. This
- yields a single dashed line for networks N9-N11 and Host H1 in Figure
- 8. Routers RT5 and RT7 are AS boundary routers; their externally
- derived information also appears on the graph in Figure 8 as stubs.
-
-
- Network RT3 adv. RT4 adv.
- _____________________________
- N1 4 4
- N2 4 4
- N3 1 1
- N4 2 3
-
- Table 4: Networks advertised to the backbone
- by Routers RT3 and RT4.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- |RT|RT|RT|RT|RT|RT|
- |1 |2 |3 |4 |5 |7 |N3|
- ----- -------------------
- RT1| | | | | | |0 |
- RT2| | | | | | |0 |
- RT3| | | | | | |0 |
- * RT4| | | | | | |0 |
- * RT5| | |14|8 | | | |
- T RT7| | |20|14| | | |
- O N1|3 | | | | | | |
- * N2| |3 | | | | | |
- * N3|1 |1 |1 |1 | | | |
- N4| | |2 | | | | |
- Ia,Ib| | |20|27| | | |
- N6| | |16|15| | | |
- N7| | |20|19| | | |
- N8| | |18|18| | | |
- N9-N11,H1| | |29|36| | | |
- N12| | | | |8 |2 | |
- N13| | | | |8 | | |
- N14| | | | |8 | | |
- N15| | | | | |9 | |
-
- Figure 7: Area 1's Database.
-
- Networks and routers are represented by vertices.
- An edge of cost X connects Vertex A to Vertex B iff
- the intersection of Column A and Row B is marked
- with an X.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- **FROM**
-
- |RT|RT|RT|RT|RT|RT|RT
- |3 |4 |5 |6 |7 |10|11|
- ------------------------
- RT3| | | |6 | | | |
- RT4| | |8 | | | | |
- RT5| |8 | |6 |6 | | |
- RT6|8 | |7 | | |5 | |
- RT7| | |6 | | | | |
- * RT10| | | |7 | | |2 |
- * RT11| | | | | |3 | |
- T N1|4 |4 | | | | | |
- O N2|4 |4 | | | | | |
- * N3|1 |1 | | | | | |
- * N4|2 |3 | | | | | |
- Ia| | | | | |5 | |
- Ib| | | |7 | | | |
- N6| | | | |1 |1 |3 |
- N7| | | | |5 |5 |7 |
- N8| | | | |4 |3 |2 |
- N9-N11,H1| | | | | | |11|
- N12| | |8 | |2 | | |
- N13| | |8 | | | | |
- N14| | |8 | | | | |
- N15| | | | |9 | | |
-
- Figure 8: The backbone's database.
-
- Networks and routers are represented by vertices.
- An edge of cost X connects Vertex A to Vertex B iff
- the intersection of Column A and Row B is marked
- with an X.
-
- The backbone enables the exchange of summary information between area
- border routers. Every area border router hears the area summaries
- from all other area border routers. It then forms a picture of the
- distance to all networks outside of its area by examining the
- collected LSAs, and adding in the backbone distance to each
- advertising router.
-
- Again using Routers RT3 and RT4 as an example, the procedure goes as
- follows: They first calculate the SPF tree for the backbone. This
- gives the distances to all other area border routers. Also noted are
- the distances to networks (Ia and Ib) and AS boundary routers (RT5
- and RT7) that belong to the backbone. This calculation is shown in
- Table 5.
-
-
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-
- Next, by looking at the area summaries from these area border
- routers, RT3 and RT4 can determine the distance to all networks
- outside their area. These distances are then advertised internally
- to the area by RT3 and RT4. The advertisements that Router RT3 and
- RT4 will make into Area 1 are shown in Table 6. Note that Table 6
- assumes that an area range has been configured for the backbone which
- groups Ia and Ib into a single LSA.
-
- The information imported into Area 1 by Routers RT3 and RT4 enables
- an internal router, such as RT1, to choose an area border router
- intelligently. Router RT1 would use RT4 for traffic to Network N6,
- RT3 for traffic to Network N10, and would load share between the two
- for traffic to Network N8.
-
- dist from dist from
- RT3 RT4
- __________________________________
- to RT3 * 21
- to RT4 22 *
- to RT7 20 14
- to RT10 15 22
- to RT11 18 25
- __________________________________
- to Ia 20 27
- to Ib 15 22
- __________________________________
- to RT5 14 8
- to RT7 20 14
-
- Table 5: Backbone distances calculated
- by Routers RT3 and RT4.
-
-
- Destination RT3 adv. RT4 adv.
- _________________________________
- Ia,Ib 20 27
- N6 16 15
- N7 20 19
- N8 18 18
- N9-N11,H1 29 36
- _________________________________
- RT5 14 8
- RT7 20 14
-
- Table 6: Destinations advertised into Area 1
- by Routers RT3 and RT4.
-
-
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-
- Router RT1 can also determine in this manner the shortest path to the
- AS boundary routers RT5 and RT7. Then, by looking at RT5 and RT7's
- AS-external-LSAs, Router RT1 can decide between RT5 or RT7 when
- sending to a destination in another Autonomous System (one of the
- networks N12-N15).
-
- Note that a failure of the line between Routers RT6 and RT10 will
- cause the backbone to become disconnected. Configuring a virtual
- link between Routers RT7 and RT10 will give the backbone more
- connectivity and more resistance to such failures.
-
- 3.5. IP subnetting support
-
- OSPF attaches an IP address mask to each advertised route. The mask
- indicates the range of addresses being described by the particular
- route. For example, a summary-LSA for the destination 128.185.0.0
- with a mask of 0xffff0000 actually is describing a single route to
- the collection of destinations 128.185.0.0 - 128.185.255.255.
- Similarly, host routes are always advertised with a mask of
- 0xffffffff, indicating the presence of only a single destination.
-
- Including the mask with each advertised destination enables the
- implementation of what is commonly referred to as variable-length
- subnetting. This means that a single IP class A, B, or C network
- number can be broken up into many subnets of various sizes. For
- example, the network 128.185.0.0 could be broken up into 62
- variable-sized subnets: 15 subnets of size 4K, 15 subnets of size
- 256, and 32 subnets of size 8. Table 7 shows some of the resulting
- network addresses together with their masks.
-
-
- Network address IP address mask Subnet size
- _______________________________________________
- 128.185.16.0 0xfffff000 4K
- 128.185.1.0 0xffffff00 256
- 128.185.0.8 0xfffffff8 8
-
-
- Table 7: Some sample subnet sizes.
-
-
- There are many possible ways of dividing up a class A, B, and C
- network into variable sized subnets. The precise procedure for doing
- so is beyond the scope of this specification. This specification
- however establishes the following guideline: When an IP packet is
- forwarded, it is always forwarded to the network that is the best
- match for the packet's destination. Here best match is synonymous
- with the longest or most specific match. For example, the default
-
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-
- route with destination of 0.0.0.0 and mask 0x00000000 is always a
- match for every IP destination. Yet it is always less specific than
- any other match. Subnet masks must be assigned so that the best
- match for any IP destination is unambiguous.
-
- Attaching an address mask to each route also enables the support of
- IP supernetting. For example, a single physical network segment could
- be assigned the [address,mask] pair [192.9.4.0,0xfffffc00]. The
- segment would then be single IP network, containing addresses from
- the four consecutive class C network numbers 192.9.4.0 through
- 192.9.7.0. Such addressing is now becoming commonplace with the
- advent of CIDR (see [Ref10]).
-
- In order to get better aggregation at area boundaries, area address
- ranges can be employed (see Section C.2 for more details). Each
- address range is defined as an [address,mask] pair. Many separate
- networks may then be contained in a single address range, just as a
- subnetted network is composed of many separate subnets. Area border
- routers then summarize the area contents (for distribution to the
- backbone) by advertising a single route for each address range. The
- cost of the route is the maximum cost to any of the networks falling
- in the specified range.
-
- For example, an IP subnetted network might be configured as a single
- OSPF area. In that case, a single address range could be configured:
- a class A, B, or C network number along with its natural IP mask.
- Inside the area, any number of variable sized subnets could be
- defined. However, external to the area a single route for the entire
- subnetted network would be distributed, hiding even the fact that the
- network is subnetted at all. The cost of this route is the maximum
- of the set of costs to the component subnets.
-
- 3.6. Supporting stub areas
-
- In some Autonomous Systems, the majority of the link-state database
- may consist of AS-external-LSAs. An OSPF AS-external-LSA is usually
- flooded throughout the entire AS. However, OSPF allows certain areas
- to be configured as "stub areas". AS-external-LSAs are not flooded
- into/throughout stub areas; routing to AS external destinations in
- these areas is based on a (per-area) default only. This reduces the
- link-state database size, and therefore the memory requirements, for
- a stub area's internal routers.
-
- In order to take advantage of the OSPF stub area support, default
- routing must be used in the stub area. This is accomplished as
- follows. One or more of the stub area's area border routers must
- advertise a default route into the stub area via summary-LSAs. These
- summary defaults are flooded throughout the stub area, but no
-
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- further. (For this reason these defaults pertain only to the
- particular stub area). These summary default routes will be used for
- any destination that is not explicitly reachable by an intra-area or
- inter-area path (i.e., AS external destinations).
-
- An area can be configured as a stub when there is a single exit point
- from the area, or when the choice of exit point need not be made on a
- per-external-destination basis. For example, Area 3 in Figure 6
- could be configured as a stub area, because all external traffic must
- travel though its single area border router RT11. If Area 3 were
- configured as a stub, Router RT11 would advertise a default route for
- distribution inside Area 3 (in a summary-LSA), instead of flooding
- the AS-external-LSAs for Networks N12-N15 into/throughout the area.
-
- The OSPF protocol ensures that all routers belonging to an area agree
- on whether the area has been configured as a stub. This guarantees
- that no confusion will arise in the flooding of AS-external-LSAs.
-
- There are a couple of restrictions on the use of stub areas. Virtual
- links cannot be configured through stub areas. In addition, AS
- boundary routers cannot be placed internal to stub areas.
-
- 3.7. Partitions of areas
-
- OSPF does not actively attempt to repair area partitions. When an
- area becomes partitioned, each component simply becomes a separate
- area. The backbone then performs routing between the new areas.
- Some destinations reachable via intra-area routing before the
- partition will now require inter-area routing.
-
- However, in order to maintain full routing after the partition, an
- address range must not be split across multiple components of the
- area partition. Also, the backbone itself must not partition. If it
- does, parts of the Autonomous System will become unreachable.
- Backbone partitions can be repaired by configuring virtual links (see
- Section 15).
-
- Another way to think about area partitions is to look at the
- Autonomous System graph that was introduced in Section 2. Area IDs
- can be viewed as colors for the graph's edges.[1] Each edge of the
- graph connects to a network, or is itself a point-to-point network.
- In either case, the edge is colored with the network's Area ID.
-
- A group of edges, all having the same color, and interconnected by
- vertices, represents an area. If the topology of the Autonomous
- System is intact, the graph will have several regions of color, each
- color being a distinct Area ID.
-
-
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-
- When the AS topology changes, one of the areas may become
- partitioned. The graph of the AS will then have multiple regions of
- the same color (Area ID). The routing in the Autonomous System will
- continue to function as long as these regions of same color are
- connected by the single backbone region.
-
- 4. Functional Summary
-
- A separate copy of OSPF's basic routing algorithm runs in each area.
- Routers having interfaces to multiple areas run multiple copies of
- the algorithm. A brief summary of the routing algorithm follows.
-
- When a router starts, it first initializes the routing protocol data
- structures. The router then waits for indications from the lower-
- level protocols that its interfaces are functional.
-
- A router then uses the OSPF's Hello Protocol to acquire neighbors.
- The router sends Hello packets to its neighbors, and in turn receives
- their Hello packets. On broadcast and point-to-point networks, the
- router dynamically detects its neighboring routers by sending its
- Hello packets to the multicast address AllSPFRouters. On non-
- broadcast networks, some configuration information may be necessary
- in order to discover neighbors. On broadcast and NBMA networks the
- Hello Protocol also elects a Designated router for the network.
-
- The router will attempt to form adjacencies with some of its newly
- acquired neighbors. Link-state databases are synchronized between
- pairs of adjacent routers. On broadcast and NBMA networks, the
- Designated Router determines which routers should become adjacent.
-
- Adjacencies control the distribution of routing information. Routing
- updates are sent and received only on adjacencies.
-
- A router periodically advertises its state, which is also called link
- state. Link state is also advertised when a router's state changes.
- A router's adjacencies are reflected in the contents of its LSAs.
- This relationship between adjacencies and link state allows the
- protocol to detect dead routers in a timely fashion.
-
- LSAs are flooded throughout the area. The flooding algorithm is
- reliable, ensuring that all routers in an area have exactly the same
- link-state database. This database consists of the collection of
- LSAs originated by each router belonging to the area. From this
- database each router calculates a shortest-path tree, with itself as
- root. This shortest-path tree in turn yields a routing table for the
- protocol.
-
-
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-
- 4.1. Inter-area routing
-
- The previous section described the operation of the protocol within a
- single area. For intra-area routing, no other routing information is
- pertinent. In order to be able to route to destinations outside of
- the area, the area border routers inject additional routing
- information into the area. This additional information is a
- distillation of the rest of the Autonomous System's topology.
-
- This distillation is accomplished as follows: Each area border router
- is by definition connected to the backbone. Each area border router
- summarizes the topology of its attached non-backbone areas for
- transmission on the backbone, and hence to all other area border
- routers. An area border router then has complete topological
- information concerning the backbone, and the area summaries from each
- of the other area border routers. From this information, the router
- calculates paths to all inter-area destinations. The router then
- advertises these paths into its attached areas. This enables the
- area's internal routers to pick the best exit router when forwarding
- traffic inter-area destinations.
-
- 4.2. AS external routes
-
- Routers that have information regarding other Autonomous Systems can
- flood this information throughout the AS. This external routing
- information is distributed verbatim to every participating router.
- There is one exception: external routing information is not flooded
- into "stub" areas (see Section 3.6).
-
- To utilize external routing information, the path to all routers
- advertising external information must be known throughout the AS
- (excepting the stub areas). For that reason, the locations of these
- AS boundary routers are summarized by the (non-stub) area border
- routers.
-
- 4.3. Routing protocol packets
-
- The OSPF protocol runs directly over IP, using IP protocol 89. OSPF
- does not provide any explicit fragmentation/reassembly support. When
- fragmentation is necessary, IP fragmentation/reassembly is used.
- OSPF protocol packets have been designed so that large protocol
- packets can generally be split into several smaller protocol packets.
- This practice is recommended; IP fragmentation should be avoided
- whenever possible.
-
- Routing protocol packets should always be sent with the IP TOS field
- set to 0. If at all possible, routing protocol packets should be
- given preference over regular IP data traffic, both when being sent
-
-
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- and received. As an aid to accomplishing this, OSPF protocol packets
- should have their IP precedence field set to the value Internetwork
- Control (see [Ref5]).
-
- All OSPF protocol packets share a common protocol header that is
- described in Appendix A. The OSPF packet types are listed below in
- Table 8. Their formats are also described in Appendix A.
-
-
- Type Packet name
- Protocol function
- __________________________________________________________
- 1 Hello Discover/maintain neighbors
- 2 Database Description Summarize database contents
- 3 Link State Request Database download
- 4 Link State Update Database update
- 5 Link State Ack Flooding acknowledgment
-
-
- Table 8: OSPF packet types.
-
- OSPF's Hello protocol uses Hello packets to discover and maintain
- neighbor relationships. The Database Description and Link State
- Request packets are used in the forming of adjacencies. OSPF's
- reliable update mechanism is implemented by the Link State Update and
- Link State Acknowledgment packets.
-
- Each Link State Update packet carries a set of new link state
- advertisements (LSAs) one hop further away from their point of
- origination. A single Link State Update packet may contain the LSAs
- of several routers. Each LSA is tagged with the ID of the
- originating router and a checksum of its link state contents. Each
- LSA also has a type field; the different types of OSPF LSAs are
- listed below in Table 9.
-
- OSPF routing packets (with the exception of Hellos) are sent only
- over adjacencies. This means that all OSPF protocol packets travel a
- single IP hop, except those that are sent over virtual adjacencies.
- The IP source address of an OSPF protocol packet is one end of a
- router adjacency, and the IP destination address is either the other
- end of the adjacency or an IP multicast address.
-
-
-
-
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-
- LS LSA LSA description
- type name
- ________________________________________________________
- 1 Router-LSAs Originated by all routers.
- This LSA describes
- the collected states of the
- router's interfaces to an
- area. Flooded throughout a
- single area only.
- ________________________________________________________
- 2 Network-LSAs Originated for broadcast
- and NBMA networks by
- the Designated Router. This
- LSA contains the
- list of routers connected
- to the network. Flooded
- throughout a single area only.
- ________________________________________________________
- 3,4 Summary-LSAs Originated by area border
- routers, and flooded through-
- out the LSA's associated
- area. Each summary-LSA
- describes a route to a
- destination outside the area,
- yet still inside the AS
- (i.e., an inter-area route).
- Type 3 summary-LSAs describe
- routes to networks. Type 4
- summary-LSAs describe
- routes to AS boundary routers.
- ________________________________________________________
- 5 AS-external-LSAs Originated by AS boundary
- routers, and flooded through-
- out the AS. Each
- AS-external-LSA describes
- a route to a destination in
- another Autonomous System.
- Default routes for the AS can
- also be described by
- AS-external-LSAs.
-
- Table 9: OSPF link state advertisements (LSAs).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- 4.4. Basic implementation requirements
-
- An implementation of OSPF requires the following pieces of system
- support:
-
- Timers
- Two different kind of timers are required. The first kind, called
- "single shot timers", fire once and cause a protocol event to be
- processed. The second kind, called "interval timers", fire at
- continuous intervals. These are used for the sending of packets
- at regular intervals. A good example of this is the regular
- broadcast of Hello packets. The granularity of both kinds of
- timers is one second.
-
- Interval timers should be implemented to avoid drift. In some
- router implementations, packet processing can affect timer
- execution. When multiple routers are attached to a single
- network, all doing broadcasts, this can lead to the
- synchronization of routing packets (which should be avoided). If
- timers cannot be implemented to avoid drift, small random amounts
- should be added to/subtracted from the interval timer at each
- firing.
-
- IP multicast
- Certain OSPF packets take the form of IP multicast datagrams.
- Support for receiving and sending IP multicast datagrams, along
- with the appropriate lower-level protocol support, is required.
- The IP multicast datagrams used by OSPF never travel more than one
- hop. For this reason, the ability to forward IP multicast
- datagrams is not required. For information on IP multicast, see
- [Ref7].
-
- Variable-length subnet support
- The router's IP protocol support must include the ability to
- divide a single IP class A, B, or C network number into many
- subnets of various sizes. This is commonly called variable-length
- subnetting; see Section 3.5 for details.
-
- IP supernetting support
- The router's IP protocol support must include the ability to
- aggregate contiguous collections of IP class A, B, and C networks
- into larger quantities called supernets. Supernetting has been
- proposed as one way to improve the scaling of IP routing in the
- worldwide Internet. For more information on IP supernetting, see
- [Ref10].
-
-
-
-
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- Lower-level protocol support
- The lower level protocols referred to here are the network access
- protocols, such as the Ethernet data link layer. Indications must
- be passed from these protocols to OSPF as the network interface
- goes up and down. For example, on an ethernet it would be
- valuable to know when the ethernet transceiver cable becomes
- unplugged.
-
- Non-broadcast lower-level protocol support
- On non-broadcast networks, the OSPF Hello Protocol can be aided by
- providing an indication when an attempt is made to send a packet
- to a dead or non-existent router. For example, on an X.25 PDN a
- dead neighboring router may be indicated by the reception of a
- X.25 clear with an appropriate cause and diagnostic, and this
- information would be passed to OSPF.
-
- List manipulation primitives
- Much of the OSPF functionality is described in terms of its
- operation on lists of LSAs. For example, the collection of LSAs
- that will be retransmitted to an adjacent router until
- acknowledged are described as a list. Any particular LSA may be
- on many such lists. An OSPF implementation needs to be able to
- manipulate these lists, adding and deleting constituent LSAs as
- necessary.
-
- Tasking support
- Certain procedures described in this specification invoke other
- procedures. At times, these other procedures should be executed
- in-line, that is, before the current procedure is finished. This
- is indicated in the text by instructions to execute a procedure.
- At other times, the other procedures are to be executed only when
- the current procedure has finished. This is indicated by
- instructions to schedule a task.
-
- 4.5. Optional OSPF capabilities
-
- The OSPF protocol defines several optional capabilities. A router
- indicates the optional capabilities that it supports in its OSPF
- Hello packets, Database Description packets and in its LSAs. This
- enables routers supporting a mix of optional capabilities to coexist
- in a single Autonomous System.
-
- Some capabilities must be supported by all routers attached to a
- specific area. In this case, a router will not accept a neighbor's
- Hello Packet unless there is a match in reported capabilities (i.e.,
- a capability mismatch prevents a neighbor relationship from forming).
- An example of this is the ExternalRoutingCapability (see below).
-
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- Other capabilities can be negotiated during the Database Exchange
- process. This is accomplished by specifying the optional
- capabilities in Database Description packets. A capability mismatch
- with a neighbor in this case will result in only a subset of the link
- state database being exchanged between the two neighbors.
-
- The routing table build process can also be affected by the
- presence/absence of optional capabilities. For example, since the
- optional capabilities are reported in LSAs, routers incapable of
- certain functions can be avoided when building the shortest path
- tree.
-
- The OSPF optional capabilities defined in this memo are listed below.
- See Section A.2 for more information.
-
- ExternalRoutingCapability
- Entire OSPF areas can be configured as "stubs" (see Section 3.6).
- AS-external-LSAs will not be flooded into stub areas. This
- capability is represented by the E-bit in the OSPF Options field
- (see Section A.2). In order to ensure consistent configuration of
- stub areas, all routers interfacing to such an area must have the
- E-bit clear in their Hello packets (see Sections 9.5 and 10.5).
-
- 5. Protocol Data Structures
-
- The OSPF protocol is described herein in terms of its operation on
- various protocol data structures. The following list comprises the
- top-level OSPF data structures. Any initialization that needs to be
- done is noted. OSPF areas, interfaces and neighbors also have
- associated data structures that are described later in this
- specification.
-
- Router ID
- A 32-bit number that uniquely identifies this router in the AS.
- One possible implementation strategy would be to use the smallest
- IP interface address belonging to the router. If a router's OSPF
- Router ID is changed, the router's OSPF software should be
- restarted before the new Router ID takes effect. In this case the
- router should flush its self-originated LSAs from the routing
- domain (see Section 14.1) before restarting, or they will persist
- for up to MaxAge minutes.
-
- Area structures
- Each one of the areas to which the router is connected has its own
- data structure. This data structure describes the working of the
- basic OSPF algorithm. Remember that each area runs a separate
- copy of the basic OSPF algorithm.
-
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- Backbone (area) structure
- The OSPF backbone area is responsible for the dissemination of
- inter-area routing information.
-
- Virtual links configured
- The virtual links configured with this router as one endpoint. In
- order to have configured virtual links, the router itself must be
- an area border router. Virtual links are identified by the Router
- ID of the other endpoint -- which is another area border router.
- These two endpoint routers must be attached to a common area,
- called the virtual link's Transit area. Virtual links are part of
- the backbone, and behave as if they were unnumbered point-to-point
- networks between the two routers. A virtual link uses the intra-
- area routing of its Transit area to forward packets. Virtual
- links are brought up and down through the building of the
- shortest-path trees for the Transit area.
-
- List of external routes
- These are routes to destinations external to the Autonomous
- System, that have been gained either through direct experience
- with another routing protocol (such as BGP), or through
- configuration information, or through a combination of the two
- (e.g., dynamic external information to be advertised by OSPF with
- configured metric). Any router having these external routes is
- called an AS boundary router. These routes are advertised by the
- router into the OSPF routing domain via AS-external-LSAs.
-
- List of AS-external-LSAs
- Part of the link-state database. These have originated from the
- AS boundary routers. They comprise routes to destinations
- external to the Autonomous System. Note that, if the router is
- itself an AS boundary router, some of these AS-external-LSAs have
- been self-originated.
-
- The routing table
- Derived from the link-state database. Each entry in the routing
- table is indexed by a destination, and contains the destination's
- cost and a set of paths to use in forwarding packets to the
- destination. A path is described by its type and next hop. For
- more information, see Section 11.
-
-
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- Figure 9 shows the collection of data structures present in a typical
- router. The router pictured is RT10, from the map in Figure 6. Note
- that Router RT10 has a virtual link configured to Router RT11, with
- Area 2 as the link's Transit area. This is indicated by the dashed
- line in Figure 9. When the virtual link becomes active, through the
- building of the shortest path tree for Area 2, it becomes an
- interface to the backbone (see the two backbone interfaces depicted
- in Figure 9).
-
-
- +----+
- |RT10|------+
- +----+ \+-------------+
- / \ |Routing Table|
- / \ +-------------+
- / \
- +------+ / \ +--------+
- |Area 2|---+ +---|Backbone|
- +------+***********+ +--------+
- / \ * / \
- / \ * / \
- +---------+ +---------+ +------------+ +------------+
- |Interface| |Interface| |Virtual Link| |Interface Ib|
- | to N6 | | to N8 | | to RT11 | +------------+
- +---------+ +---------+ +------------+ |
- / \ | | |
- / \ | | |
- +--------+ +--------+ | +-------------+ +------------+
- |Neighbor| |Neighbor| | |Neighbor RT11| |Neighbor RT6|
- | RT8 | | RT7 | | +-------------+ +------------+
- +--------+ +--------+ |
- |
- +-------------+
- |Neighbor RT11|
- +-------------+
-
-
- Figure 9: Router RT10's Data structures
-
- 6. The Area Data Structure
-
- The area data structure contains all the information used to run the
- basic OSPF routing algorithm. Each area maintains its own link-state
- database. A network belongs to a single area, and a router interface
- connects to a single area. Each router adjacency also belongs to a
- single area.
-
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- The OSPF backbone is the special OSPF area responsible for
- disseminating inter-area routing information.
-
- The area link-state database consists of the collection of router-
- LSAs, network-LSAs and summary-LSAs that have originated from the
- area's routers. This information is flooded throughout a single area
- only. The list of AS-external-LSAs (see Section 5) is also considered
- to be part of each area's link-state database.
-
- Area ID
- A 32-bit number identifying the area. The Area ID of 0.0.0.0 is
- reserved for the backbone.
-
- List of area address ranges
- In order to aggregate routing information at area boundaries, area
- address ranges can be employed. Each address range is specified by
- an [address,mask] pair and a status indication of either Advertise
- or DoNotAdvertise (see Section 12.4.3).
-
- Associated router interfaces
- This router's interfaces connecting to the area. A router
- interface belongs to one and only one area (or the backbone). For
- the backbone area this list includes all the virtual links. A
- virtual link is identified by the Router ID of its other endpoint;
- its cost is the cost of the shortest intra-area path through the
- Transit area that exists between the two routers.
-
- List of router-LSAs
- A router-LSA is generated by each router in the area. It
- describes the state of the router's interfaces to the area.
-
- List of network-LSAs
- One network-LSA is generated for each transit broadcast and NBMA
- network in the area. A network-LSA describes the set of routers
- currently connected to the network.
-
- List of summary-LSAs
- Summary-LSAs originate from the area's area border routers. They
- describe routes to destinations internal to the Autonomous System,
- yet external to the area (i.e., inter-area destinations).
-
- Shortest-path tree
- The shortest-path tree for the area, with this router itself as
- root. Derived from the collected router-LSAs and network-LSAs by
- the Dijkstra algorithm (see Section 16.1).
-
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- TransitCapability
- This parameter indicates whether the area can carry data traffic
- that neither originates nor terminates in the area itself. This
- parameter is calculated when the area's shortest-path tree is
- built (see Section 16.1, where TransitCapability is set to TRUE if
- and only if there are one or more fully adjacent virtual links
- using the area as Transit area), and is used as an input to a
- subsequent step of the routing table build process (see Section
- 16.3). When an area's TransitCapability is set to TRUE, the area
- is said to be a "transit area".
-
- ExternalRoutingCapability
- Whether AS-external-LSAs will be flooded into/throughout the area.
- This is a configurable parameter. If AS-external-LSAs are
- excluded from the area, the area is called a "stub". Within stub
- areas, routing to AS external destinations will be based solely on
- a default summary route. The backbone cannot be configured as a
- stub area. Also, virtual links cannot be configured through stub
- areas. For more information, see Section 3.6.
-
- StubDefaultCost
- If the area has been configured as a stub area, and the router
- itself is an area border router, then the StubDefaultCost
- indicates the cost of the default summary-LSA that the router
- should advertise into the area. See Section 12.4.3 for more
- information.
-
- Unless otherwise specified, the remaining sections of this document
- refer to the operation of the OSPF protocol within a single area.
-
- 7. Bringing Up Adjacencies
-
- OSPF creates adjacencies between neighboring routers for the purpose
- of exchanging routing information. Not every two neighboring routers
- will become adjacent. This section covers the generalities involved
- in creating adjacencies. For further details consult Section 10.
-
- 7.1. The Hello Protocol
-
- The Hello Protocol is responsible for establishing and maintaining
- neighbor relationships. It also ensures that communication between
- neighbors is bidirectional. Hello packets are sent periodically out
- all router interfaces. Bidirectional communication is indicated when
- the router sees itself listed in the neighbor's Hello Packet. On
- broadcast and NBMA networks, the Hello Protocol elects a Designated
- Router for the network.
-
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- The Hello Protocol works differently on broadcast networks, NBMA
- networks and Point-to-MultiPoint networks. On broadcast networks,
- each router advertises itself by periodically multicasting Hello
- Packets. This allows neighbors to be discovered dynamically. These
- Hello Packets contain the router's view of the Designated Router's
- identity, and the list of routers whose Hello Packets have been seen
- recently.
-
- On NBMA networks some configuration information may be necessary for
- the operation of the Hello Protocol. Each router that may
- potentially become Designated Router has a list of all other routers
- attached to the network. A router, having Designated Router
- potential, sends Hello Packets to all other potential Designated
- Routers when its interface to the NBMA network first becomes
- operational. This is an attempt to find the Designated Router for
- the network. If the router itself is elected Designated Router, it
- begins sending Hello Packets to all other routers attached to the
- network.
-
- On Point-to-MultiPoint networks, a router sends Hello Packets to all
- neighbors with which it can communicate directly. These neighbors may
- be discovered dynamically through a protocol such as Inverse ARP (see
- [Ref14]), or they may be configured.
-
- After a neighbor has been discovered, bidirectional communication
- ensured, and (if on a broadcast or NBMA network) a Designated Router
- elected, a decision is made regarding whether or not an adjacency
- should be formed with the neighbor (see Section 10.4). If an
- adjacency is to be formed, the first step is to synchronize the
- neighbors' link-state databases. This is covered in the next
- section.
-
- 7.2. The Synchronization of Databases
-
- In a link-state routing algorithm, it is very important for all
- routers' link-state databases to stay synchronized. OSPF simplifies
- this by requiring only adjacent routers to remain synchronized. The
- synchronization process begins as soon as the routers attempt to
- bring up the adjacency. Each router describes its database by
- sending a sequence of Database Description packets to its neighbor.
- Each Database Description Packet describes a set of LSAs belonging to
- the router's database. When the neighbor sees an LSA that is more
- recent than its own database copy, it makes a note that this newer
- LSA should be requested.
-
- This sending and receiving of Database Description packets is called
- the "Database Exchange Process". During this process, the two
- routers form a master/slave relationship. Each Database Description
-
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- Packet has a sequence number. Database Description Packets sent by
- the master (polls) are acknowledged by the slave through echoing of
- the sequence number. Both polls and their responses contain
- summaries of link state data. The master is the only one allowed to
- retransmit Database Description Packets. It does so only at fixed
- intervals, the length of which is the configured per-interface
- constant RxmtInterval.
-
- Each Database Description contains an indication that there are more
- packets to follow --- the M-bit. The Database Exchange Process is
- over when a router has received and sent Database Description Packets
- with the M-bit off.
-
- During and after the Database Exchange Process, each router has a
- list of those LSAs for which the neighbor has more up-to-date
- instances. These LSAs are requested in Link State Request Packets.
- Link State Request packets that are not satisfied are retransmitted
- at fixed intervals of time RxmtInterval. When the Database
- Description Process has completed and all Link State Requests have
- been satisfied, the databases are deemed synchronized and the routers
- are marked fully adjacent. At this time the adjacency is fully
- functional and is advertised in the two routers' router-LSAs.
-
- The adjacency is used by the flooding procedure as soon as the
- Database Exchange Process begins. This simplifies database
- synchronization, and guarantees that it finishes in a predictable
- period of time.
-
- 7.3. The Designated Router
-
- Every broadcast and NBMA network has a Designated Router. The
- Designated Router performs two main functions for the routing
- protocol:
-
- o The Designated Router originates a network-LSA on behalf of
- the network. This LSA lists the set of routers (including
- the Designated Router itself) currently attached to the
- network. The Link State ID for this LSA (see Section
- 12.1.4) is the IP interface address of the Designated
- Router. The IP network number can then be obtained by using
- the network's subnet/network mask.
-
- o The Designated Router becomes adjacent to all other routers
- on the network. Since the link state databases are
- synchronized across adjacencies (through adjacency bring-up
- and then the flooding procedure), the Designated Router
- plays a central part in the synchronization process.
-
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-
- The Designated Router is elected by the Hello Protocol. A router's
- Hello Packet contains its Router Priority, which is configurable on a
- per-interface basis. In general, when a router's interface to a
- network first becomes functional, it checks to see whether there is
- currently a Designated Router for the network. If there is, it
- accepts that Designated Router, regardless of its Router Priority.
- (This makes it harder to predict the identity of the Designated
- Router, but ensures that the Designated Router changes less often.
- See below.) Otherwise, the router itself becomes Designated Router
- if it has the highest Router Priority on the network. A more
- detailed (and more accurate) description of Designated Router
- election is presented in Section 9.4.
-
- The Designated Router is the endpoint of many adjacencies. In order
- to optimize the flooding procedure on broadcast networks, the
- Designated Router multicasts its Link State Update Packets to the
- address AllSPFRouters, rather than sending separate packets over each
- adjacency.
-
- Section 2 of this document discusses the directed graph
- representation of an area. Router nodes are labelled with their
- Router ID. Transit network nodes are actually labelled with the IP
- address of their Designated Router. It follows that when the
- Designated Router changes, it appears as if the network node on the
- graph is replaced by an entirely new node. This will cause the
- network and all its attached routers to originate new LSAs. Until
- the link-state databases again converge, some temporary loss of
- connectivity may result. This may result in ICMP unreachable
- messages being sent in response to data traffic. For that reason,
- the Designated Router should change only infrequently. Router
- Priorities should be configured so that the most dependable router on
- a network eventually becomes Designated Router.
-
- 7.4. The Backup Designated Router
-
- In order to make the transition to a new Designated Router smoother,
- there is a Backup Designated Router for each broadcast and NBMA
- network. The Backup Designated Router is also adjacent to all
- routers on the network, and becomes Designated Router when the
- previous Designated Router fails. If there were no Backup Designated
- Router, when a new Designated Router became necessary, new
- adjacencies would have to be formed between the new Designated Router
- and all other routers attached to the network. Part of the adjacency
- forming process is the synchronizing of link-state databases, which
- can potentially take quite a long time. During this time, the
- network would not be available for transit data traffic. The Backup
- Designated obviates the need to form these adjacencies, since they
- already exist. This means the period of disruption in transit
-
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- traffic lasts only as long as it takes to flood the new LSAs (which
- announce the new Designated Router).
-
- The Backup Designated Router does not generate a network-LSA for the
- network. (If it did, the transition to a new Designated Router would
- be even faster. However, this is a tradeoff between database size
- and speed of convergence when the Designated Router disappears.)
-
- The Backup Designated Router is also elected by the Hello Protocol.
- Each Hello Packet has a field that specifies the Backup Designated
- Router for the network.
-
- In some steps of the flooding procedure, the Backup Designated Router
- plays a passive role, letting the Designated Router do more of the
- work. This cuts down on the amount of local routing traffic. See
- Section 13.3 for more information.
-
- 7.5. The graph of adjacencies
-
- An adjacency is bound to the network that the two routers have in
- common. If two routers have multiple networks in common, they may
- have multiple adjacencies between them.
-
- One can picture the collection of adjacencies on a network as forming
- an undirected graph. The vertices consist of routers, with an edge
- joining two routers if they are adjacent. The graph of adjacencies
- describes the flow of routing protocol packets, and in particular
- Link State Update Packets, through the Autonomous System.
-
- Two graphs are possible, depending on whether a Designated Router is
- elected for the network. On physical point-to-point networks,
- Point-to-MultiPoint networks and virtual links, neighboring routers
- become adjacent whenever they can communicate directly. In contrast,
- on broadcast and NBMA networks only the Designated Router and the
- Backup Designated Router become adjacent to all other routers
- attached to the network.
-
- These graphs are shown in Figure 10. It is assumed that Router RT7
- has become the Designated Router, and Router RT3 the Backup
- Designated Router, for the Network N2. The Backup Designated Router
- performs a lesser function during the flooding procedure than the
- Designated Router (see Section 13.3). This is the reason for the
- dashed lines connecting the Backup Designated Router RT3.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- +---+ +---+
- |RT1|------------|RT2| o---------------o
- +---+ N1 +---+ RT1 RT2
-
-
-
- RT7
- o---------+
- +---+ +---+ +---+ /|\ |
- |RT7| |RT3| |RT4| / | \ |
- +---+ +---+ +---+ / | \ |
- | | | / | \ |
- +-----------------------+ RT5o RT6o oRT4 |
- | | N2 * * * |
- +---+ +---+ * * * |
- |RT5| |RT6| * * * |
- +---+ +---+ *** |
- o---------+
- RT3
-
-
- Figure 10: The graph of adjacencies
-
- 8. Protocol Packet Processing
-
- This section discusses the general processing of OSPF routing
- protocol packets. It is very important that the router link-state
- databases remain synchronized. For this reason, routing protocol
- packets should get preferential treatment over ordinary data packets,
- both in sending and receiving.
-
- Routing protocol packets are sent along adjacencies only (with the
- exception of Hello packets, which are used to discover the
- adjacencies). This means that all routing protocol packets travel a
- single IP hop, except those sent over virtual links.
-
- All routing protocol packets begin with a standard header. The
- sections below provide details on how to fill in and verify this
- standard header. Then, for each packet type, the section giving more
- details on that particular packet type's processing is listed.
-
- 8.1. Sending protocol packets
-
- When a router sends a routing protocol packet, it fills in the fields
- of the standard OSPF packet header as follows. For more details on
- the header format consult Section A.3.1:
-
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- Version #
- Set to 2, the version number of the protocol as documented in this
- specification.
-
- Packet type
- The type of OSPF packet, such as Link state Update or Hello
- Packet.
-
- Packet length
- The length of the entire OSPF packet in bytes, including the
- standard OSPF packet header.
-
- Router ID
- The identity of the router itself (who is originating the packet).
-
- Area ID
- The OSPF area that the packet is being sent into.
-
- Checksum
- The standard IP 16-bit one's complement checksum of the entire
- OSPF packet, excluding the 64-bit authentication field. This
- checksum is calculated as part of the appropriate authentication
- procedure; for some OSPF authentication types, the checksum
- calculation is omitted. See Section D.4 for details.
-
- AuType and Authentication
- Each OSPF packet exchange is authenticated. Authentication types
- are assigned by the protocol and are documented in Appendix D. A
- different authentication procedure can be used for each IP
- network/subnet. Autype indicates the type of authentication
- procedure in use. The 64-bit authentication field is then for use
- by the chosen authentication procedure. This procedure should be
- the last called when forming the packet to be sent. See Section
- D.4 for details.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- The IP destination address for the packet is selected as follows. On
- physical point-to-point networks, the IP destination is always set to
- the address AllSPFRouters. On all other network types (including
- virtual links), the majority of OSPF packets are sent as unicasts,
- i.e., sent directly to the other end of the adjacency. In this case,
- the IP destination is just the Neighbor IP address associated with
- the other end of the adjacency (see Section 10). The only packets
- not sent as unicasts are on broadcast networks; on these networks
- Hello packets are sent to the multicast destination AllSPFRouters,
- the Designated Router and its Backup send both Link State Update
- Packets and Link State Acknowledgment Packets to the multicast
- address AllSPFRouters, while all other routers send both their Link
- State Update and Link State Acknowledgment Packets to the multicast
- address AllDRouters.
-
- Retransmissions of Link State Update packets are ALWAYS sent as
- unicasts.
-
- The IP source address should be set to the IP address of the sending
- interface. Interfaces to unnumbered point-to-point networks have no
- associated IP address. On these interfaces, the IP source should be
- set to any of the other IP addresses belonging to the router. For
- this reason, there must be at least one IP address assigned to the
- router.[2] Note that, for most purposes, virtual links act precisely
- the same as unnumbered point-to-point networks. However, each
- virtual link does have an IP interface address (discovered during the
- routing table build process) which is used as the IP source when
- sending packets over the virtual link.
-
- For more information on the format of specific OSPF packet types,
- consult the sections listed in Table 10.
-
-
- Type Packet name detailed section (transmit)
- _________________________________________________________
- 1 Hello Section 9.5
- 2 Database description Section 10.8
- 3 Link state request Section 10.9
- 4 Link state update Section 13.3
- 5 Link state ack Section 13.5
-
- Table 10: Sections describing OSPF protocol packet transmission.
-
- 8.2. Receiving protocol packets
-
- Whenever a protocol packet is received by the router it is marked
- with the interface it was received on. For routers that have virtual
- links configured, it may not be immediately obvious which interface
-
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- to associate the packet with. For example, consider the Router RT11
- depicted in Figure 6. If RT11 receives an OSPF protocol packet on
- its interface to Network N8, it may want to associate the packet with
- the interface to Area 2, or with the virtual link to Router RT10
- (which is part of the backbone). In the following, we assume that
- the packet is initially associated with the non-virtual link.[3]
-
- In order for the packet to be accepted at the IP level, it must pass
- a number of tests, even before the packet is passed to OSPF for
- processing:
-
- o The IP checksum must be correct.
-
- o The packet's IP destination address must be the IP address
- of the receiving interface, or one of the IP multicast
- addresses AllSPFRouters or AllDRouters.
-
- o The IP protocol specified must be OSPF (89).
-
- o Locally originated packets should not be passed on to OSPF.
- That is, the source IP address should be examined to make
- sure this is not a multicast packet that the router itself
- generated.
-
- Next, the OSPF packet header is verified. The fields specified
- in the header must match those configured for the receiving
- interface. If they do not, the packet should be discarded:
-
-
- o The version number field must specify protocol version 2.
-
- o The Area ID found in the OSPF header must be verified. If
- both of the following cases fail, the packet should be
- discarded. The Area ID specified in the header must either:
-
- (1) Match the Area ID of the receiving interface. In this
- case, the packet has been sent over a single hop.
- Therefore, the packet's IP source address is required to
- be on the same network as the receiving interface. This
- can be verified by comparing the packet's IP source
- address to the interface's IP address, after masking
- both addresses with the interface mask. This comparison
- should not be performed on point-to-point networks. On
- point-to-point networks, the interface addresses of each
- end of the link are assigned independently, if they are
- assigned at all.
-
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- (2) Indicate the backbone. In this case, the packet has
- been sent over a virtual link. The receiving router
- must be an area border router, and the Router ID
- specified in the packet (the source router) must be the
- other end of a configured virtual link. The receiving
- interface must also attach to the virtual link's
- configured Transit area. If all of these checks
- succeed, the packet is accepted and is from now on
- associated with the virtual link (and the backbone
- area).
-
- o Packets whose IP destination is AllDRouters should only be
- accepted if the state of the receiving interface is DR or
- Backup (see Section 9.1).
-
- o The AuType specified in the packet must match the AuType
- specified for the associated area.
-
- o The packet must be authenticated. The authentication
- procedure is indicated by the setting of AuType (see
- Appendix D). The authentication procedure may use one or
- more Authentication keys, which can be configured on a per-
- interface basis. The authentication procedure may also
- verify the checksum field in the OSPF packet header (which,
- when used, is set to the standard IP 16-bit one's complement
- checksum of the OSPF packet's contents after excluding the
- 64-bit authentication field). If the authentication
- procedure fails, the packet should be discarded.
-
- If the packet type is Hello, it should then be further processed by
- the Hello Protocol (see Section 10.5). All other packet types are
- sent/received only on adjacencies. This means that the packet must
- have been sent by one of the router's active neighbors. If the
- receiving interface connects to a broadcast network, Point-to-
- MultiPoint network or NBMA network the sender is identified by the IP
- source address found in the packet's IP header. If the receiving
- interface connects to a point-to-point network or a virtual link, the
- sender is identified by the Router ID (source router) found in the
- packet's OSPF header. The data structure associated with the
- receiving interface contains the list of active neighbors. Packets
- not matching any active neighbor are discarded.
-
- At this point all received protocol packets are associated with an
- active neighbor. For the further input processing of specific packet
- types, consult the sections listed in Table 11.
-
-
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-
- Type Packet name detailed section (receive)
- ________________________________________________________
- 1 Hello Section 10.5
- 2 Database description Section 10.6
- 3 Link state request Section 10.7
- 4 Link state update Section 13
- 5 Link state ack Section 13.7
-
- Table 11: Sections describing OSPF protocol packet reception.
-
- 9. The Interface Data Structure
-
- An OSPF interface is the connection between a router and a network.
- We assume a single OSPF interface to each attached network/subnet,
- although supporting multiple interfaces on a single network is
- considered in Appendix F. Each interface structure has at most one IP
- interface address.
-
- An OSPF interface can be considered to belong to the area that
- contains the attached network. All routing protocol packets
- originated by the router over this interface are labelled with the
- interface's Area ID. One or more router adjacencies may develop over
- an interface. A router's LSAs reflect the state of its interfaces and
- their associated adjacencies.
-
- The following data items are associated with an interface. Note that
- a number of these items are actually configuration for the attached
- network; such items must be the same for all routers connected to the
- network.
-
- Type
- The OSPF interface type is either point-to-point, broadcast, NBMA,
- Point-to-MultiPoint or virtual link.
-
- State
- The functional level of an interface. State determines whether or
- not full adjacencies are allowed to form over the interface.
- State is also reflected in the router's LSAs.
-
- IP interface address
- The IP address associated with the interface. This appears as the
- IP source address in all routing protocol packets originated over
- this interface. Interfaces to unnumbered point-to-point networks
- do not have an associated IP address.
-
- IP interface mask
- Also referred to as the subnet mask, this indicates the portion of
- the IP interface address that identifies the attached network.
-
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-
- Masking the IP interface address with the IP interface mask yields
- the IP network number of the attached network. On point-to-point
- networks and virtual links, the IP interface mask is not defined.
- On these networks, the link itself is not assigned an IP network
- number, and so the addresses of each side of the link are assigned
- independently, if they are assigned at all.
-
- Area ID
- The Area ID of the area to which the attached network belongs.
- All routing protocol packets originating from the interface are
- labelled with this Area ID.
-
- HelloInterval
- The length of time, in seconds, between the Hello packets that the
- router sends on the interface. Advertised in Hello packets sent
- out this interface.
-
- RouterDeadInterval
- The number of seconds before the router's neighbors will declare
- it down, when they stop hearing the router's Hello Packets.
- Advertised in Hello packets sent out this interface.
-
- InfTransDelay
- The estimated number of seconds it takes to transmit a Link State
- Update Packet over this interface. LSAs contained in the Link
- State Update packet will have their age incremented by this amount
- before transmission. This value should take into account
- transmission and propagation delays; it must be greater than zero.
-
- Router Priority
- An 8-bit unsigned integer. When two routers attached to a network
- both attempt to become Designated Router, the one with the highest
- Router Priority takes precedence. A router whose Router Priority
- is set to 0 is ineligible to become Designated Router on the
- attached network. Advertised in Hello packets sent out this
- interface.
-
- Hello Timer
- An interval timer that causes the interface to send a Hello
- packet. This timer fires every HelloInterval seconds. Note that
- on non-broadcast networks a separate Hello packet is sent to each
- qualified neighbor.
-
- Wait Timer
- A single shot timer that causes the interface to exit the Waiting
- state, and as a consequence select a Designated Router on the
- network. The length of the timer is RouterDeadInterval seconds.
-
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- List of neighboring routers
- The other routers attached to this network. This list is formed
- by the Hello Protocol. Adjacencies will be formed to some of
- these neighbors. The set of adjacent neighbors can be determined
- by an examination of all of the neighbors' states.
-
- Designated Router
- The Designated Router selected for the attached network. The
- Designated Router is selected on all broadcast and NBMA networks
- by the Hello Protocol. Two pieces of identification are kept for
- the Designated Router: its Router ID and its IP interface address
- on the network. The Designated Router advertises link state for
- the network; this network-LSA is labelled with the Designated
- Router's IP address. The Designated Router is initialized to
- 0.0.0.0, which indicates the lack of a Designated Router.
-
- Backup Designated Router
- The Backup Designated Router is also selected on all broadcast and
- NBMA networks by the Hello Protocol. All routers on the attached
- network become adjacent to both the Designated Router and the
- Backup Designated Router. The Backup Designated Router becomes
- Designated Router when the current Designated Router fails. The
- Backup Designated Router is initialized to 0.0.0.0, indicating the
- lack of a Backup Designated Router.
-
- Interface output cost(s)
- The cost of sending a data packet on the interface, expressed in
- the link state metric. This is advertised as the link cost for
- this interface in the router-LSA. The cost of an interface must be
- greater than zero.
-
- RxmtInterval
- The number of seconds between LSA retransmissions, for adjacencies
- belonging to this interface. Also used when retransmitting
- Database Description and Link State Request Packets.
-
- AuType
- The type of authentication used on the attached network/subnet.
- Authentication types are defined in Appendix D. All OSPF packet
- exchanges are authenticated. Different authentication schemes may
- be used on different networks/subnets.
-
-
-
-
-
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- Authentication key
- This configured data allows the authentication procedure to
- generate and/or verify OSPF protocol packets. The Authentication
- key can be configured on a per-interface basis. For example, if
- the AuType indicates simple password, the Authentication key would
- be a 64-bit clear password which is inserted into the OSPF packet
- header. If instead Autype indicates Cryptographic authentication,
- then the Authentication key is a shared secret which enables the
- generation/verification of message digests which are appended to
- the OSPF protocol packets. When Cryptographic authentication is
- used, multiple simultaneous keys are supported in order to achieve
- smooth key transition (see Section D.3).
-
- 9.1. Interface states
-
- The various states that router interfaces may attain is documented in
- this section. The states are listed in order of progressing
- functionality. For example, the inoperative state is listed first,
- followed by a list of intermediate states before the final, fully
- functional state is achieved. The specification makes use of this
- ordering by sometimes making references such as "those interfaces in
- state greater than X". Figure 11 shows the graph of interface state
- changes. The arcs of the graph are labelled with the event causing
- the state change. These events are documented in Section 9.2. The
- interface state machine is described in more detail in Section 9.3.
-
- Down
- This is the initial interface state. In this state, the lower-
- level protocols have indicated that the interface is unusable. No
- protocol traffic at all will be sent or received on such a
- interface. In this state, interface parameters should be set to
- their initial values.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- +----+ UnloopInd +--------+
- |Down|<--------------|Loopback|
- +----+ +--------+
- |
- |InterfaceUp
- +-------+ | +--------------+
- |Waiting|<-+-------------->|Point-to-point|
- +-------+ +--------------+
- |
- WaitTimer|BackupSeen
- |
- |
- | NeighborChange
- +------+ +-+<---------------- +-------+
- |Backup|<----------|?|----------------->|DROther|
- +------+---------->+-+<-----+ +-------+
- Neighbor | |
- Change | |Neighbor
- | |Change
- | +--+
- +---->|DR|
- +--+
-
- Figure 11: Interface State changes
-
- In addition to the state transitions pictured,
- Event InterfaceDown always forces Down State, and
- Event LoopInd always forces Loopback State
-
- All interface timers should be disabled, and there should be no
- adjacencies associated with the interface.
-
- Loopback
- In this state, the router's interface to the network is looped
- back. The interface may be looped back in hardware or software.
- The interface will be unavailable for regular data traffic.
- However, it may still be desirable to gain information on the
- quality of this interface, either through sending ICMP pings to
- the interface or through something like a bit error test. For
- this reason, IP packets may still be addressed to an interface in
- Loopback state. To facilitate this, such interfaces are
- advertised in router-LSAs as single host routes, whose destination
- is the IP interface address.[4]
-
-
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-
- Waiting
- In this state, the router is trying to determine the identity of
- the (Backup) Designated Router for the network. To do this, the
- router monitors the Hello Packets it receives. The router is not
- allowed to elect a Backup Designated Router nor a Designated
- Router until it transitions out of Waiting state. This prevents
- unnecessary changes of (Backup) Designated Router.
-
- Point-to-point
- In this state, the interface is operational, and connects either
- to a physical point-to-point network or to a virtual link. Upon
- entering this state, the router attempts to form an adjacency with
- the neighboring router. Hello Packets are sent to the neighbor
- every HelloInterval seconds.
-
- DR Other
- The interface is to a broadcast or NBMA network on which another
- router has been selected to be the Designated Router. In this
- state, the router itself has not been selected Backup Designated
- Router either. The router forms adjacencies to both the
- Designated Router and the Backup Designated Router (if they
- exist).
-
- Backup
- In this state, the router itself is the Backup Designated Router
- on the attached network. It will be promoted to Designated Router
- when the present Designated Router fails. The router establishes
- adjacencies to all other routers attached to the network. The
- Backup Designated Router performs slightly different functions
- during the Flooding Procedure, as compared to the Designated
- Router (see Section 13.3). See Section 7.4 for more details on
- the functions performed by the Backup Designated Router.
-
- DR In this state, this router itself is the Designated Router
- on the attached network. Adjacencies are established to all other
- routers attached to the network. The router must also originate a
- network-LSA for the network node. The network-LSA will contain
- links to all routers (including the Designated Router itself)
- attached to the network. See Section 7.3 for more details on the
- functions performed by the Designated Router.
-
- 9.2. Events causing interface state changes
-
- State changes can be effected by a number of events. These events
- are pictured as the labelled arcs in Figure 11. The label
- definitions are listed below. For a detailed explanation of the
- effect of these events on OSPF protocol operation, consult Section
- 9.3.
-
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- InterfaceUp
- Lower-level protocols have indicated that the network interface is
- operational. This enables the interface to transition out of Down
- state. On virtual links, the interface operational indication is
- actually a result of the shortest path calculation (see Section
- 16.7).
-
- WaitTimer
- The Wait Timer has fired, indicating the end of the waiting period
- that is required before electing a (Backup) Designated Router.
-
- BackupSeen
- The router has detected the existence or non-existence of a Backup
- Designated Router for the network. This is done in one of two
- ways. First, an Hello Packet may be received from a neighbor
- claiming to be itself the Backup Designated Router.
- Alternatively, an Hello Packet may be received from a neighbor
- claiming to be itself the Designated Router, and indicating that
- there is no Backup Designated Router. In either case there must
- be bidirectional communication with the neighbor, i.e., the router
- must also appear in the neighbor's Hello Packet. This event
- signals an end to the Waiting state.
-
- NeighborChange
- There has been a change in the set of bidirectional neighbors
- associated with the interface. The (Backup) Designated Router
- needs to be recalculated. The following neighbor changes lead to
- the NeighborChange event. For an explanation of neighbor states,
- see Section 10.1.
-
- o Bidirectional communication has been established to a
- neighbor. In other words, the state of the neighbor has
- transitioned to 2-Way or higher.
-
- o There is no longer bidirectional communication with a
- neighbor. In other words, the state of the neighbor has
- transitioned to Init or lower.
-
- o One of the bidirectional neighbors is newly declaring
- itself as either Designated Router or Backup Designated
- Router. This is detected through examination of that
- neighbor's Hello Packets.
-
- o One of the bidirectional neighbors is no longer
- declaring itself as Designated Router, or is no longer
- declaring itself as Backup Designated Router. This is
- again detected through examination of that neighbor's
- Hello Packets.
-
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-
- o The advertised Router Priority for a bidirectional
- neighbor has changed. This is again detected through
- examination of that neighbor's Hello Packets.
-
- LoopInd
- An indication has been received that the interface is now looped
- back to itself. This indication can be received either from
- network management or from the lower level protocols.
-
- UnloopInd
- An indication has been received that the interface is no longer
- looped back. As with the LoopInd event, this indication can be
- received either from network management or from the lower level
- protocols.
-
- InterfaceDown
- Lower-level protocols indicate that this interface is no longer
- functional. No matter what the current interface state is, the new
- interface state will be Down.
-
- 9.3. The Interface state machine
-
- A detailed description of the interface state changes follows. Each
- state change is invoked by an event (Section 9.2). This event may
- produce different effects, depending on the current state of the
- interface. For this reason, the state machine below is organized by
- current interface state and received event. Each entry in the state
- machine describes the resulting new interface state and the required
- set of additional actions.
-
- When an interface's state changes, it may be necessary to originate a
- new router-LSA. See Section 12.4 for more details.
-
- Some of the required actions below involve generating events for the
- neighbor state machine. For example, when an interface becomes
- inoperative, all neighbor connections associated with the interface
- must be destroyed. For more information on the neighbor state
- machine, see Section 10.3.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- State(s): Down
-
- Event: InterfaceUp
-
- New state: Depends upon action routine
-
- Action: Start the interval Hello Timer, enabling the
- periodic sending of Hello packets out the interface.
- If the attached network is a physical point-to-point
- network, Point-to-MultiPoint network or virtual
- link, the interface state transitions to Point-to-
- Point. Else, if the router is not eligible to
- become Designated Router the interface state
- transitions to DR Other.
-
- Otherwise, the attached network is a broadcast or
- NBMA network and the router is eligible to become
- Designated Router. In this case, in an attempt to
- discover the attached network's Designated Router
- the interface state is set to Waiting and the single
- shot Wait Timer is started. Additionally, if the
- network is an NBMA network examine the configured
- list of neighbors for this interface and generate
- the neighbor event Start for each neighbor that is
- also eligible to become Designated Router.
-
- State(s): Waiting
-
- Event: BackupSeen
-
- New state: Depends upon action routine.
-
- Action: Calculate the attached network's Backup Designated
- Router and Designated Router, as shown in Section
- 9.4. As a result of this calculation, the new state
- of the interface will be either DR Other, Backup or
- DR.
-
-
- State(s): Waiting
-
- Event: WaitTimer
-
- New state: Depends upon action routine.
-
-
-
-
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-
- Action: Calculate the attached network's Backup Designated
- Router and Designated Router, as shown in Section
- 9.4. As a result of this calculation, the new state
- of the interface will be either DR Other, Backup or
- DR.
-
-
- State(s): DR Other, Backup or DR
-
- Event: NeighborChange
-
- New state: Depends upon action routine.
-
- Action: Recalculate the attached network's Backup Designated
- Router and Designated Router, as shown in Section
- 9.4. As a result of this calculation, the new state
- of the interface will be either DR Other, Backup or
- DR.
-
-
- State(s): Any State
-
- Event: InterfaceDown
-
- New state: Down
-
- Action: All interface variables are reset, and interface
- timers disabled. Also, all neighbor connections
- associated with the interface are destroyed. This
- is done by generating the event KillNbr on all
- associated neighbors (see Section 10.2).
-
-
- State(s): Any State
-
- Event: LoopInd
-
- New state: Loopback
-
- Action: Since this interface is no longer connected to the
- attached network the actions associated with the
- above InterfaceDown event are executed.
-
-
- State(s): Loopback
-
- Event: UnloopInd
-
-
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-
- New state: Down
-
- Action: No actions are necessary. For example, the
- interface variables have already been reset upon
- entering the Loopback state. Note that reception of
- an InterfaceUp event is necessary before the
- interface again becomes fully functional.
-
- 9.4. Electing the Designated Router
-
- This section describes the algorithm used for calculating a network's
- Designated Router and Backup Designated Router. This algorithm is
- invoked by the Interface state machine. The initial time a router
- runs the election algorithm for a network, the network's Designated
- Router and Backup Designated Router are initialized to 0.0.0.0. This
- indicates the lack of both a Designated Router and a Backup
- Designated Router.
-
- The Designated Router election algorithm proceeds as follows: Call
- the router doing the calculation Router X. The list of neighbors
- attached to the network and having established bidirectional
- communication with Router X is examined. This list is precisely the
- collection of Router X's neighbors (on this network) whose state is
- greater than or equal to 2-Way (see Section 10.1). Router X itself
- is also considered to be on the list. Discard all routers from the
- list that are ineligible to become Designated Router. (Routers
- having Router Priority of 0 are ineligible to become Designated
- Router.) The following steps are then executed, considering only
- those routers that remain on the list:
-
- (1) Note the current values for the network's Designated Router
- and Backup Designated Router. This is used later for
- comparison purposes.
-
- (2) Calculate the new Backup Designated Router for the network
- as follows. Only those routers on the list that have not
- declared themselves to be Designated Router are eligible to
- become Backup Designated Router. If one or more of these
- routers have declared themselves Backup Designated Router
- (i.e., they are currently listing themselves as Backup
- Designated Router, but not as Designated Router, in their
- Hello Packets) the one having highest Router Priority is
- declared to be Backup Designated Router. In case of a tie,
- the one having the highest Router ID is chosen. If no
- routers have declared themselves Backup Designated Router,
-
-
-
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-
- choose the router having highest Router Priority, (again
- excluding those routers who have declared themselves
- Designated Router), and again use the Router ID to break
- ties.
-
- (3) Calculate the new Designated Router for the network as
- follows. If one or more of the routers have declared
- themselves Designated Router (i.e., they are currently
- listing themselves as Designated Router in their Hello
- Packets) the one having highest Router Priority is declared
- to be Designated Router. In case of a tie, the one having
- the highest Router ID is chosen. If no routers have
- declared themselves Designated Router, assign the Designated
- Router to be the same as the newly elected Backup Designated
- Router.
-
- (4) If Router X is now newly the Designated Router or newly the
- Backup Designated Router, or is now no longer the Designated
- Router or no longer the Backup Designated Router, repeat
- steps 2 and 3, and then proceed to step 5. For example, if
- Router X is now the Designated Router, when step 2 is
- repeated X will no longer be eligible for Backup Designated
- Router election. Among other things, this will ensure that
- no router will declare itself both Backup Designated Router
- and Designated Router.[5]
-
- (5) As a result of these calculations, the router itself may now
- be Designated Router or Backup Designated Router. See
- Sections 7.3 and 7.4 for the additional duties this would
- entail. The router's interface state should be set
- accordingly. If the router itself is now Designated Router,
- the new interface state is DR. If the router itself is now
- Backup Designated Router, the new interface state is Backup.
- Otherwise, the new interface state is DR Other.
-
- (6) If the attached network is an NBMA network, and the router
- itself has just become either Designated Router or Backup
- Designated Router, it must start sending Hello Packets to
- those neighbors that are not eligible to become Designated
- Router (see Section 9.5.1). This is done by invoking the
- neighbor event Start for each neighbor having a Router
- Priority of 0.
-
- (7) If the above calculations have caused the identity of either
- the Designated Router or Backup Designated Router to change,
- the set of adjacencies associated with this interface will
- need to be modified. Some adjacencies may need to be
- formed, and others may need to be broken. To accomplish
-
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- this, invoke the event AdjOK? on all neighbors whose state
- is at least 2-Way. This will cause their eligibility for
- adjacency to be reexamined (see Sections 10.3 and 10.4).
-
-
- The reason behind the election algorithm's complexity is the desire
- for an orderly transition from Backup Designated Router to Designated
- Router, when the current Designated Router fails. This orderly
- transition is ensured through the introduction of hysteresis: no new
- Backup Designated Router can be chosen until the old Backup accepts
- its new Designated Router responsibilities.
-
- The above procedure may elect the same router to be both Designated
- Router and Backup Designated Router, although that router will never
- be the calculating router (Router X) itself. The elected Designated
- Router may not be the router having the highest Router Priority, nor
- will the Backup Designated Router necessarily have the second highest
- Router Priority. If Router X is not itself eligible to become
- Designated Router, it is possible that neither a Backup Designated
- Router nor a Designated Router will be selected in the above
- procedure. Note also that if Router X is the only attached router
- that is eligible to become Designated Router, it will select itself
- as Designated Router and there will be no Backup Designated Router
- for the network.
-
- 9.5. Sending Hello packets
-
- Hello packets are sent out each functioning router interface. They
- are used to discover and maintain neighbor relationships.[6] On
- broadcast and NBMA networks, Hello Packets are also used to elect the
- Designated Router and Backup Designated Router.
-
- The format of an Hello packet is detailed in Section A.3.2. The
- Hello Packet contains the router's Router Priority (used in choosing
- the Designated Router), and the interval between Hello Packets sent
- out the interface (HelloInterval). The Hello Packet also indicates
- how often a neighbor must be heard from to remain active
- (RouterDeadInterval). Both HelloInterval and RouterDeadInterval must
- be the same for all routers attached to a common network. The Hello
- packet also contains the IP address mask of the attached network
- (Network Mask). On unnumbered point-to-point networks and on virtual
- links this field should be set to 0.0.0.0.
-
- The Hello packet's Options field describes the router's optional OSPF
- capabilities. One optional capability is defined in this
- specification (see Sections 4.5 and A.2). The E-bit of the Options
- field should be set if and only if the attached area is capable of
- processing AS-external-LSAs (i.e., it is not a stub area). If the E-
-
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- bit is set incorrectly the neighboring routers will refuse to accept
- the Hello Packet (see Section 10.5). Unrecognized bits in the Hello
- Packet's Options field should be set to zero.
-
- In order to ensure two-way communication between adjacent routers,
- the Hello packet contains the list of all routers on the network from
- which Hello Packets have been seen recently. The Hello packet also
- contains the router's current choice for Designated Router and Backup
- Designated Router. A value of 0.0.0.0 in these fields means that one
- has not yet been selected.
-
- On broadcast networks and physical point-to-point networks, Hello
- packets are sent every HelloInterval seconds to the IP multicast
- address AllSPFRouters. On virtual links, Hello packets are sent as
- unicasts (addressed directly to the other end of the virtual link)
- every HelloInterval seconds. On Point-to-MultiPoint networks,
- separate Hello packets are sent to each attached neighbor every
- HelloInterval seconds. Sending of Hello packets on NBMA networks is
- covered in the next section.
-
- 9.5.1. Sending Hello packets on NBMA networks
-
- Static configuration information may be necessary in order for the
- Hello Protocol to function on non-broadcast networks (see Sections
- C.5 and C.6). On NBMA networks, every attached router which is
- eligible to become Designated Router becomes aware of all of its
- neighbors on the network (either through configuration or by some
- unspecified mechanism). Each neighbor is labelled with the
- neighbor's Designated Router eligibility.
-
- The interface state must be at least Waiting for any Hello Packets to
- be sent out the NBMA interface. Hello Packets are then sent directly
- (as unicasts) to some subset of a router's neighbors. Sometimes an
- Hello Packet is sent periodically on a timer; at other times it is
- sent as a response to a received Hello Packet. A router's hello-
- sending behavior varies depending on whether the router itself is
- eligible to become Designated Router.
-
- If the router is eligible to become Designated Router, it must
- periodically send Hello Packets to all neighbors that are also
- eligible. In addition, if the router is itself the Designated Router
- or Backup Designated Router, it must also send periodic Hello Packets
- to all other neighbors. This means that any two eligible routers are
- always exchanging Hello Packets, which is necessary for the correct
- operation of the Designated Router election algorithm. To minimize
- the number of Hello Packets sent, the number of eligible routers on
- an NBMA network should be kept small.
-
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-
- If the router is not eligible to become Designated Router, it must
- periodically send Hello Packets to both the Designated Router and the
- Backup Designated Router (if they exist). It must also send an Hello
- Packet in reply to an Hello Packet received from any eligible
- neighbor (other than the current Designated Router and Backup
- Designated Router). This is needed to establish an initial
- bidirectional relationship with any potential Designated Router.
-
- When sending Hello packets periodically to any neighbor, the interval
- between Hello Packets is determined by the neighbor's state. If the
- neighbor is in state Down, Hello Packets are sent every PollInterval
- seconds. Otherwise, Hello Packets are sent every HelloInterval
- seconds.
-
- 10. The Neighbor Data Structure
-
- An OSPF router converses with its neighboring routers. Each separate
- conversation is described by a "neighbor data structure". Each
- conversation is bound to a particular OSPF router interface, and is
- identified either by the neighboring router's OSPF Router ID or by
- its Neighbor IP address (see below). Thus if the OSPF router and
- another router have multiple attached networks in common, multiple
- conversations ensue, each described by a unique neighbor data
- structure. Each separate conversation is loosely referred to in the
- text as being a separate "neighbor".
-
- The neighbor data structure contains all information pertinent to the
- forming or formed adjacency between the two neighbors. (However,
- remember that not all neighbors become adjacent.) An adjacency can
- be viewed as a highly developed conversation between two routers.
-
- State
- The functional level of the neighbor conversation. This is
- described in more detail in Section 10.1.
-
- Inactivity Timer
- A single shot timer whose firing indicates that no Hello Packet
- has been seen from this neighbor recently. The length of the
- timer is RouterDeadInterval seconds.
-
- Master/Slave
- When the two neighbors are exchanging databases, they form a
- master/slave relationship. The master sends the first Database
- Description Packet, and is the only part that is allowed to
- retransmit. The slave can only respond to the master's Database
- Description Packets. The master/slave relationship is negotiated
- in state ExStart.
-
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-
- DD Sequence Number
- The DD Sequence number of the Database Description packet that is
- currently being sent to the neighbor.
-
- Last received Database Description packet
- The initialize(I), more (M) and master(MS) bits, Options field,
- and DD sequence number contained in the last Database Description
- packet received from the neighbor. Used to determine whether the
- next Database Description packet received from the neighbor is a
- duplicate.
-
- Neighbor ID
- The OSPF Router ID of the neighboring router. The Neighbor ID is
- learned when Hello packets are received from the neighbor, or is
- configured if this is a virtual adjacency (see Section C.4).
-
- Neighbor Priority
- The Router Priority of the neighboring router. Contained in the
- neighbor's Hello packets, this item is used when selecting the
- Designated Router for the attached network.
-
- Neighbor IP address
- The IP address of the neighboring router's interface to the
- attached network. Used as the Destination IP address when
- protocol packets are sent as unicasts along this adjacency. Also
- used in router-LSAs as the Link ID for the attached network if the
- neighboring router is selected to be Designated Router (see
- Section 12.4.1). The Neighbor IP address is learned when Hello
- packets are received from the neighbor. For virtual links, the
- Neighbor IP address is learned during the routing table build
- process (see Section 15).
-
- Neighbor Options
- The optional OSPF capabilities supported by the neighbor. Learned
- during the Database Exchange process (see Section 10.6). The
- neighbor's optional OSPF capabilities are also listed in its Hello
- packets. This enables received Hello Packets to be rejected (i.e.,
- neighbor relationships will not even start to form) if there is a
- mismatch in certain crucial OSPF capabilities (see Section 10.5).
- The optional OSPF capabilities are documented in Section 4.5.
-
- Neighbor's Designated Router
- The neighbor's idea of the Designated Router. If this is the
- neighbor itself, this is important in the local calculation of the
- Designated Router. Defined only on broadcast and NBMA networks.
-
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- Neighbor's Backup Designated Router
- The neighbor's idea of the Backup Designated Router. If this is
- the neighbor itself, this is important in the local calculation of
- the Backup Designated Router. Defined only on broadcast and NBMA
- networks.
-
- The next set of variables are lists of LSAs. These lists describe
- subsets of the area link-state database. This memo defines five
- distinct types of LSAs, all of which may be present in an area link-
- state database: router-LSAs, network-LSAs, and Type 3 and 4 summary-
- LSAs (all stored in the area data structure), and AS- external-LSAs
- (stored in the global data structure).
-
- Link state retransmission list
- The list of LSAs that have been flooded but not acknowledged on
- this adjacency. These will be retransmitted at intervals until
- they are acknowledged, or until the adjacency is destroyed.
-
- Database summary list
- The complete list of LSAs that make up the area link-state
- database, at the moment the neighbor goes into Database Exchange
- state. This list is sent to the neighbor in Database Description
- packets.
-
- Link state request list
- The list of LSAs that need to be received from this neighbor in
- order to synchronize the two neighbors' link-state databases.
- This list is created as Database Description packets are received,
- and is then sent to the neighbor in Link State Request packets.
- The list is depleted as appropriate Link State Update packets are
- received.
-
- 10.1. Neighbor states
-
- The state of a neighbor (really, the state of a conversation being
- held with a neighboring router) is documented in the following
- sections. The states are listed in order of progressing
- functionality. For example, the inoperative state is listed first,
- followed by a list of intermediate states before the final, fully
- functional state is achieved. The specification makes use of this
- ordering by sometimes making references such as "those
- neighbors/adjacencies in state greater than X". Figures 12 and 13
- show the graph of neighbor state changes. The arcs of the graphs are
- labelled with the event causing the state change. The neighbor
- events are documented in Section 10.2.
-
-
-
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-
- The graph in Figure 12 shows the state changes effected by the Hello
- Protocol. The Hello Protocol is responsible for neighbor acquisition
- and maintenance, and for ensuring two way communication between
- neighbors.
-
- The graph in Figure 13 shows the forming of an adjacency. Not every
- two neighboring routers become adjacent (see Section 10.4). The
- adjacency starts to form when the neighbor is in state ExStart.
- After the two routers discover their master/slave status, the state
- transitions to Exchange. At this point the neighbor starts to be
- used in the flooding procedure, and the two neighboring routers begin
- synchronizing their databases. When this synchronization is
- finished, the neighbor is in state Full and we say that the two
- routers are fully adjacent. At this point the adjacency is listed in
- LSAs.
-
- For a more detailed description of neighbor state changes, together
- with the additional actions involved in each change, see Section
- 10.3.
-
- Down
- This is the initial state of a neighbor conversation. It
- indicates that there has been no recent information received from
- the neighbor. On NBMA networks, Hello packets may still be sent to
- "Down" neighbors, although at a reduced frequency (see Section
- 9.5.1).
-
-
-
-
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-
- +----+
- |Down|
- +----+
- |\
- | \Start
- | \ +-------+
- Hello | +---->|Attempt|
- Received | +-------+
- | |
- +----+<-+ |HelloReceived
- |Init|<---------------+
- +----+<--------+
- | |
- |2-Way |1-Way
- |Received |Received
- | |
- +-------+ | +-----+
- |ExStart|<--------+------->|2-Way|
- +-------+ +-----+
-
- Figure 12: Neighbor state changes (Hello Protocol)
-
- In addition to the state transitions pictured,
- Event KillNbr always forces Down State,
- Event Inactivity Timer always forces Down State,
- Event LLDown always forces Down State
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
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-
- +-------+
- |ExStart|
- +-------+
- |
- NegotiationDone|
- +->+--------+
- |Exchange|
- +--+--------+
- |
- Exchange|
- Done |
- +----+ | +-------+
- |Full|<---------+----->|Loading|
- +----+<-+ +-------+
- | LoadingDone |
- +------------------+
-
- Figure 13: Neighbor state changes (Database Exchange)
-
- In addition to the state transitions pictured,
- Event SeqNumberMismatch forces ExStart state,
- Event BadLSReq forces ExStart state,
- Event 1-Way forces Init state,
- Event KillNbr always forces Down State,
- Event InactivityTimer always forces Down State,
- Event LLDown always forces Down State,
- Event AdjOK? leads to adjacency forming/breaking
-
-
-
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-
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-
- Attempt
- This state is only valid for neighbors attached to NBMA networks.
- It indicates that no recent information has been received from the
- neighbor, but that a more concerted effort should be made to
- contact the neighbor. This is done by sending the neighbor Hello
- packets at intervals of HelloInterval (see Section 9.5.1).
-
- Init
- In this state, an Hello packet has recently been seen from the
- neighbor. However, bidirectional communication has not yet been
- established with the neighbor (i.e., the router itself did not
- appear in the neighbor's Hello packet). All neighbors in this
- state (or higher) are listed in the Hello packets sent from the
- associated interface.
-
- 2-Way
- In this state, communication between the two routers is
- bidirectional. This has been assured by the operation of the
- Hello Protocol. This is the most advanced state short of
- beginning adjacency establishment. The (Backup) Designated Router
- is selected from the set of neighbors in state 2-Way or greater.
-
- ExStart
- This is the first step in creating an adjacency between the two
- neighboring routers. The goal of this step is to decide which
- router is the master, and to decide upon the initial DD sequence
- number. Neighbor conversations in this state or greater are
- called adjacencies.
-
- Exchange
- In this state the router is describing its entire link state
- database by sending Database Description packets to the neighbor.
- Each Database Description Packet has a DD sequence number, and is
- explicitly acknowledged. Only one Database Description Packet is
- allowed outstanding at any one time. In this state, Link State
- Request Packets may also be sent asking for the neighbor's more
- recent LSAs. All adjacencies in Exchange state or greater are
- used by the flooding procedure. In fact, these adjacencies are
- fully capable of transmitting and receiving all types of OSPF
- routing protocol packets.
-
- Loading
- In this state, Link State Request packets are sent to the neighbor
- asking for the more recent LSAs that have been discovered (but not
- yet received) in the Exchange state.
-
-
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-
- Full
- In this state, the neighboring routers are fully adjacent. These
- adjacencies will now appear in router-LSAs and network-LSAs.
-
- 10.2. Events causing neighbor state changes
-
- State changes can be effected by a number of events. These events
- are shown in the labels of the arcs in Figures 12 and 13. The label
- definitions are as follows:
-
- HelloReceived
- An Hello packet has been received from the neighbor.
-
- Start
- This is an indication that Hello Packets should now be sent to the
- neighbor at intervals of HelloInterval seconds. This event is
- generated only for neighbors associated with NBMA networks.
-
- 2-WayReceived
- Bidirectional communication has been realized between the two
- neighboring routers. This is indicated by the router seeing
- itself in the neighbor's Hello packet.
-
- NegotiationDone
- The Master/Slave relationship has been negotiated, and DD sequence
- numbers have been exchanged. This signals the start of the
- sending/receiving of Database Description packets. For more
- information on the generation of this event, consult Section 10.8.
-
- ExchangeDone
- Both routers have successfully transmitted a full sequence of
- Database Description packets. Each router now knows what parts of
- its link state database are out of date. For more information on
- the generation of this event, consult Section 10.8.
-
- BadLSReq
- A Link State Request has been received for an LSA not contained in
- the database. This indicates an error in the Database Exchange
- process.
-
- Loading Done
- Link State Updates have been received for all out-of-date portions
- of the database. This is indicated by the Link state request list
- becoming empty after the Database Exchange process has completed.
-
-
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-
- AdjOK?
- A decision must be made as to whether an adjacency should be
- established/maintained with the neighbor. This event will start
- some adjacencies forming, and destroy others.
-
- The following events cause well developed neighbors to revert to
- lesser states. Unlike the above events, these events may occur when
- the neighbor conversation is in any of a number of states.
-
- SeqNumberMismatch
- A Database Description packet has been received that either a) has
- an unexpected DD sequence number, b) unexpectedly has the Init bit
- set or c) has an Options field differing from the last Options
- field received in a Database Description packet. Any of these
- conditions indicate that some error has occurred during adjacency
- establishment.
-
- 1-Way
- An Hello packet has been received from the neighbor, in which the
- router is not mentioned. This indicates that communication with
- the neighbor is not bidirectional.
-
- KillNbr
- This is an indication that all communication with the neighbor is
- now impossible, forcing the neighbor to revert to Down state.
-
- InactivityTimer
- The inactivity Timer has fired. This means that no Hello packets
- have been seen recently from the neighbor. The neighbor reverts to
- Down state.
-
- LLDown
- This is an indication from the lower level protocols that the
- neighbor is now unreachable. For example, on an X.25 network this
- could be indicated by an X.25 clear indication with appropriate
- cause and diagnostic fields. This event forces the neighbor into
- Down state.
-
- 10.3. The Neighbor state machine
-
- A detailed description of the neighbor state changes follows. Each
- state change is invoked by an event (Section 10.2). This event may
- produce different effects, depending on the current state of the
- neighbor. For this reason, the state machine below is organized by
- current neighbor state and received event. Each entry in the state
- machine describes the resulting new neighbor state and the required
- set of additional actions.
-
-
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-
- When a neighbor's state changes, it may be necessary to rerun the
- Designated Router election algorithm. This is determined by whether
- the interface NeighborChange event is generated (see Section 9.2).
- Also, if the Interface is in DR state (the router is itself
- Designated Router), changes in neighbor state may cause a new
- network-LSA to be originated (see Section 12.4).
-
- When the neighbor state machine needs to invoke the interface state
- machine, it should be done as a scheduled task (see Section 4.4).
- This simplifies things, by ensuring that neither state machine will
- be executed recursively.
-
-
- State(s): Down
-
- Event: Start
-
- New state: Attempt
-
- Action: Send an Hello Packet to the neighbor (this neighbor
- is always associated with an NBMA network) and start
- the Inactivity Timer for the neighbor. The timer's
- later firing would indicate that communication with
- the neighbor was not attained.
-
-
- State(s): Attempt
-
- Event: HelloReceived
-
- New state: Init
-
- Action: Restart the Inactivity Timer for the neighbor, since
- the neighbor has now been heard from.
-
-
- State(s): Down
-
- Event: HelloReceived
-
- New state: Init
-
- Action: Start the Inactivity Timer for the neighbor. The
- timer's later firing would indicate that the neighbor
- is dead.
-
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-
- State(s): Init or greater
-
- Event: HelloReceived
-
- New state: No state change.
-
- Action: Restart the Inactivity Timer for the neighbor, since
- the neighbor has again been heard from.
-
-
- State(s): Init
-
- Event: 2-WayReceived
-
- New state: Depends upon action routine.
-
- Action: Determine whether an adjacency should be established
- with the neighbor (see Section 10.4). If not, the
- new neighbor state is 2-Way.
-
- Otherwise (an adjacency should be established) the
- neighbor state transitions to ExStart. Upon
- entering this state, the router increments the DD
- sequence number in the neighbor data structure. If
- this is the first time that an adjacency has been
- attempted, the DD sequence number should be assigned
- some unique value (like the time of day clock). It
- then declares itself master (sets the master/slave
- bit to master), and starts sending Database
- Description Packets, with the initialize (I), more
- (M) and master (MS) bits set. This Database
- Description Packet should be otherwise empty. This
- Database Description Packet should be retransmitted
- at intervals of RxmtInterval until the next state is
- entered (see Section 10.8).
-
-
- State(s): ExStart
-
- Event: NegotiationDone
-
- New state: Exchange
-
- Action: The router must list the contents of its entire area
- link state database in the neighbor Database summary
- list. The area link state database consists of the
- router-LSAs, network-LSAs and summary-LSAs contained
- in the area structure, along with the AS-external-
-
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-
- LSAs contained in the global structure. AS-
- external-LSAs are omitted from a virtual neighbor's
- Database summary list. AS-external-LSAs are omitted
- from the Database summary list if the area has been
- configured as a stub (see Section 3.6). LSAs whose
- age is equal to MaxAge are instead added to the
- neighbor's Link state retransmission list. A
- summary of the Database summary list will be sent to
- the neighbor in Database Description packets. Each
- Database Description Packet has a DD sequence
- number, and is explicitly acknowledged. Only one
- Database Description Packet is allowed outstanding
- at any one time. For more detail on the sending and
- receiving of Database Description packets, see
- Sections 10.8 and 10.6.
-
-
- State(s): Exchange
-
- Event: ExchangeDone
-
- New state: Depends upon action routine.
-
- Action: If the neighbor Link state request list is empty,
- the new neighbor state is Full. No other action is
- required. This is an adjacency's final state.
-
- Otherwise, the new neighbor state is Loading. Start
- (or continue) sending Link State Request packets to
- the neighbor (see Section 10.9). These are requests
- for the neighbor's more recent LSAs (which were
- discovered but not yet received in the Exchange
- state). These LSAs are listed in the Link state
- request list associated with the neighbor.
-
-
- State(s): Loading
-
- Event: Loading Done
-
- New state: Full
-
- Action: No action required. This is an adjacency's final
- state.
-
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- State(s): 2-Way
-
- Event: AdjOK?
-
- New state: Depends upon action routine.
-
- Action: Determine whether an adjacency should be formed with
- the neighboring router (see Section 10.4). If not,
- the neighbor state remains at 2-Way. Otherwise,
- transition the neighbor state to ExStart and perform
- the actions associated with the above state machine
- entry for state Init and event 2-WayReceived.
-
-
- State(s): ExStart or greater
-
- Event: AdjOK?
-
- New state: Depends upon action routine.
-
- Action: Determine whether the neighboring router should
- still be adjacent. If yes, there is no state change
- and no further action is necessary.
-
- Otherwise, the (possibly partially formed) adjacency
- must be destroyed. The neighbor state transitions
- to 2-Way. The Link state retransmission list,
- Database summary list and Link state request list
- are cleared of LSAs.
-
-
- State(s): Exchange or greater
-
- Event: SeqNumberMismatch
-
- New state: ExStart
-
- Action: The (possibly partially formed) adjacency is torn
- down, and then an attempt is made at
- reestablishment. The neighbor state first
- transitions to ExStart. The Link state
- retransmission list, Database summary list and Link
- state request list are cleared of LSAs. Then the
- router increments the DD sequence number in the
- neighbor data structure, declares itself master
- (sets the master/slave bit to master), and starts
- sending Database Description Packets, with the
- initialize (I), more (M) and master (MS) bits set.
-
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-
- This Database Description Packet should be otherwise
- empty (see Section 10.8).
-
-
- State(s): Exchange or greater
-
- Event: BadLSReq
-
- New state: ExStart
-
- Action: The action for event BadLSReq is exactly the same as
- for the neighbor event SeqNumberMismatch. The
- (possibly partially formed) adjacency is torn down,
- and then an attempt is made at reestablishment. For
- more information, see the neighbor state machine
- entry that is invoked when event SeqNumberMismatch
- is generated in state Exchange or greater.
-
-
- State(s): Any state
-
- Event: KillNbr
-
- New state: Down
-
- Action: The Link state retransmission list, Database summary
- list and Link state request list are cleared of
- LSAs. Also, the Inactivity Timer is disabled.
-
-
- State(s): Any state
-
- Event: LLDown
-
- New state: Down
-
- Action: The Link state retransmission list, Database summary
- list and Link state request list are cleared of
- LSAs. Also, the Inactivity Timer is disabled.
-
-
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- State(s): Any state
-
- Event: InactivityTimer
-
- New state: Down
-
- Action: The Link state retransmission list, Database summary
- list and Link state request list are cleared of
- LSAs.
-
-
- State(s): 2-Way or greater
-
- Event: 1-WayReceived
-
- New state: Init
-
- Action: The Link state retransmission list, Database summary
- list and Link state request list are cleared of
- LSAs.
-
-
- State(s): 2-Way or greater
-
- Event: 2-WayReceived
-
- New state: No state change.
-
- Action: No action required.
-
-
- State(s): Init
-
- Event: 1-WayReceived
-
- New state: No state change.
-
- Action: No action required.
-
-
- 10.4. Whether to become adjacent
-
- Adjacencies are established with some subset of the router's
- neighbors. Routers connected by point-to-point networks, Point-to-
- MultiPoint networks and virtual links always become adjacent. On
- broadcast and NBMA networks, all routers become adjacent to both the
- Designated Router and the Backup Designated Router.
-
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-
- The adjacency-forming decision occurs in two places in the neighbor
- state machine. First, when bidirectional communication is initially
- established with the neighbor, and secondly, when the identity of the
- attached network's (Backup) Designated Router changes. If the
- decision is made to not attempt an adjacency, the state of the
- neighbor communication stops at 2-Way.
-
- An adjacency should be established with a bidirectional neighbor when
- at least one of the following conditions holds:
-
- o The underlying network type is point-to-point
-
- o The underlying network type is Point-to-MultiPoint
-
- o The underlying network type is virtual link
-
- o The router itself is the Designated Router
-
- o The router itself is the Backup Designated Router
-
- o The neighboring router is the Designated Router
-
- o The neighboring router is the Backup Designated Router
-
- 10.5. Receiving Hello Packets
-
- This section explains the detailed processing of a received Hello
- Packet. (See Section A.3.2 for the format of Hello packets.) The
- generic input processing of OSPF packets will have checked the
- validity of the IP header and the OSPF packet header. Next, the
- values of the Network Mask, HelloInterval, and RouterDeadInterval
- fields in the received Hello packet must be checked against the
- values configured for the receiving interface. Any mismatch causes
- processing to stop and the packet to be dropped. In other words, the
- above fields are really describing the attached network's
- configuration. However, there is one exception to the above rule: on
- point-to-point networks and on virtual links, the Network Mask in the
- received Hello Packet should be ignored.
-
- The receiving interface attaches to a single OSPF area (this could be
- the backbone). The setting of the E-bit found in the Hello Packet's
- Options field must match this area's ExternalRoutingCapability. If
- AS-external-LSAs are not flooded into/throughout the area (i.e, the
- area is a "stub") the E-bit must be clear in received Hello Packets,
- otherwise the E-bit must be set. A mismatch causes processing to
- stop and the packet to be dropped. The setting of the rest of the
- bits in the Hello Packet's Options field should be ignored.
-
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- At this point, an attempt is made to match the source of the Hello
- Packet to one of the receiving interface's neighbors. If the
- receiving interface connects to a broadcast, Point-to-MultiPoint or
- NBMA network the source is identified by the IP source address found
- in the Hello's IP header. If the receiving interface connects to a
- point-to-point link or a virtual link, the source is identified by
- the Router ID found in the Hello's OSPF packet header. The
- interface's current list of neighbors is contained in the interface's
- data structure. If a matching neighbor structure cannot be found,
- (i.e., this is the first time the neighbor has been detected), one is
- created. The initial state of a newly created neighbor is set to
- Down.
-
- When receiving an Hello Packet from a neighbor on a broadcast,
- Point-to-MultiPoint or NBMA network, set the neighbor structure's
- Neighbor ID equal to the Router ID found in the packet's OSPF header.
- When receiving an Hello on a point-to-point network (but not on a
- virtual link) set the neighbor structure's Neighbor IP address to the
- packet's IP source address.
-
- Now the rest of the Hello Packet is examined, generating events to be
- given to the neighbor and interface state machines. These state
- machines are specified either to be executed or scheduled (see
- Section 4.4). For example, by specifying below that the neighbor
- state machine be executed in line, several neighbor state transitions
- may be effected by a single received Hello:
-
- o Each Hello Packet causes the neighbor state machine to be
- executed with the event HelloReceived.
-
- o Then the list of neighbors contained in the Hello Packet is
- examined. If the router itself appears in this list, the
- neighbor state machine should be executed with the event 2-
- WayReceived. Otherwise, the neighbor state machine should
- be executed with the event 1-WayReceived, and the processing
- of the packet stops.
-
- o Next, the Hello Packet's Router Priority field is examined.
- If this field is different than the one previously received
- from the neighbor, the receiving interface's state machine
- is scheduled with the event NeighborChange. In any case,
- the Router Priority field in the neighbor data structure
- should be updated accordingly.
-
- o Next the Designated Router field in the Hello Packet is
- examined. If the neighbor is both declaring itself to be
- Designated Router (Designated Router field = Neighbor IP
- address) and the Backup Designated Router field in the
-
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- packet is equal to 0.0.0.0 and the receiving interface is in
- state Waiting, the receiving interface's state machine is
- scheduled with the event BackupSeen. Otherwise, if the
- neighbor is declaring itself to be Designated Router and it
- had not previously, or the neighbor is not declaring itself
- Designated Router where it had previously, the receiving
- interface's state machine is scheduled with the event
- NeighborChange. In any case, the Neighbors' Designated
- Router item in the neighbor structure is updated
- accordingly.
-
- o Finally, the Backup Designated Router field in the Hello
- Packet is examined. If the neighbor is declaring itself to
- be Backup Designated Router (Backup Designated Router field
- = Neighbor IP address) and the receiving interface is in
- state Waiting, the receiving interface's state machine is
- scheduled with the event BackupSeen. Otherwise, if the
- neighbor is declaring itself to be Backup Designated Router
- and it had not previously, or the neighbor is not declaring
- itself Backup Designated Router where it had previously, the
- receiving interface's state machine is scheduled with the
- event NeighborChange. In any case, the Neighbor's Backup
- Designated Router item in the neighbor structure is updated
- accordingly.
-
- On NBMA networks, receipt of an Hello Packet may also cause an Hello
- Packet to be sent back to the neighbor in response. See Section 9.5.1
- for more details.
-
- 10.6. Receiving Database Description Packets
-
- This section explains the detailed processing of a received Database
- Description Packet. The incoming Database Description Packet has
- already been associated with a neighbor and receiving interface by
- the generic input packet processing (Section 8.2). Whether the
- Database Description packet should be accepted, and if so, how it
- should be further processed depends upon the neighbor state.
-
- If a Database Description packet is accepted, the following packet
- fields should be saved in the corresponding neighbor data structure
- under "last received Database Description packet": the packet's
- initialize(I), more (M) and master(MS) bits, Options field, and DD
- sequence number. If these fields are set identically in two
- consecutive Database Description packets received from the neighbor,
- the second Database Description packet is considered to be a
- "duplicate" in the processing described below.
-
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- If the Interface MTU field in the Database Description packet
- indicates an IP datagram size that is larger than the router can
- accept on the receiving interface without fragmentation, the Database
- Description packet is rejected. Otherwise, if the neighbor state is:
-
- Down
- The packet should be rejected.
-
- Attempt
- The packet should be rejected.
-
- Init
- The neighbor state machine should be executed with the event 2-
- WayReceived. This causes an immediate state change to either
- state 2-Way or state ExStart. If the new state is ExStart, the
- processing of the current packet should then continue in this new
- state by falling through to case ExStart below.
-
- 2-Way
- The packet should be ignored. Database Description Packets are
- used only for the purpose of bringing up adjacencies.[7]
-
- ExStart
- If the received packet matches one of the following cases, then
- the neighbor state machine should be executed with the event
- NegotiationDone (causing the state to transition to Exchange), the
- packet's Options field should be recorded in the neighbor
- structure's Neighbor Options field and the packet should be
- accepted as next in sequence and processed further (see below).
- Otherwise, the packet should be ignored.
-
- o The initialize(I), more (M) and master(MS) bits are set,
- the contents of the packet are empty, and the neighbor's
- Router ID is larger than the router's own. In this case
- the router is now Slave. Set the master/slave bit to
- slave, and set the neighbor data structure's DD sequence
- number to that specified by the master.
-
- o The initialize(I) and master(MS) bits are off, the
- packet's DD sequence number equals the neighbor data
- structure's DD sequence number (indicating
- acknowledgment) and the neighbor's Router ID is smaller
- than the router's own. In this case the router is
- Master.
-
-
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- Exchange
- Duplicate Database Description packets are discarded by the
- master, and cause the slave to retransmit the last Database
- Description packet that it had sent. Otherwise (the packet is not
- a duplicate):
-
- o If the state of the MS-bit is inconsistent with the
- master/slave state of the connection, generate the
- neighbor event SeqNumberMismatch and stop processing the
- packet.
-
- o If the initialize(I) bit is set, generate the neighbor
- event SeqNumberMismatch and stop processing the packet.
-
- o If the packet's Options field indicates a different set
- of optional OSPF capabilities than were previously
- received from the neighbor (recorded in the Neighbor
- Options field of the neighbor structure), generate the
- neighbor event SeqNumberMismatch and stop processing the
- packet.
-
- o Database Description packets must be processed in
- sequence, as indicated by the packets' DD sequence
- numbers. If the router is master, the next packet
- received should have DD sequence number equal to the DD
- sequence number in the neighbor data structure. If the
- router is slave, the next packet received should have DD
- sequence number equal to one more than the DD sequence
- number stored in the neighbor data structure. In either
- case, if the packet is the next in sequence it should be
- accepted and its contents processed as specified below.
-
- o Else, generate the neighbor event SeqNumberMismatch and
- stop processing the packet.
-
- Loading or Full
- In this state, the router has sent and received an entire sequence
- of Database Description Packets. The only packets received should
- be duplicates (see above). In particular, the packet's Options
- field should match the set of optional OSPF capabilities
- previously indicated by the neighbor (stored in the neighbor
- structure's Neighbor Options field). Any other packets received,
- including the reception of a packet with the Initialize(I) bit
- set, should generate the neighbor event SeqNumberMismatch.[8]
- Duplicates should be discarded by the master. The slave must
- respond to duplicates by repeating the last Database Description
- packet that it had sent.
-
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-
- When the router accepts a received Database Description Packet as the
- next in sequence the packet contents are processed as follows. For
- each LSA listed, the LSA's LS type is checked for validity. If the
- LS type is unknown (e.g., not one of the LS types 1-5 defined by this
- specification), or if this is an AS-external-LSA (LS type = 5) and
- the neighbor is associated with a stub area, generate the neighbor
- event SeqNumberMismatch and stop processing the packet. Otherwise,
- the router looks up the LSA in its database to see whether it also
- has an instance of the LSA. If it does not, or if the database copy
- is less recent (see Section 13.1), the LSA is put on the Link state
- request list so that it can be requested (immediately or at some
- later time) in Link State Request Packets.
-
- When the router accepts a received Database Description Packet as the
- next in sequence, it also performs the following actions, depending
- on whether it is master or slave:
-
- Master
- Increments the DD sequence number in the neighbor data structure.
- If the router has already sent its entire sequence of Database
- Description Packets, and the just accepted packet has the more bit
- (M) set to 0, the neighbor event ExchangeDone is generated.
- Otherwise, it should send a new Database Description to the slave.
-
- Slave
- Sets the DD sequence number in the neighbor data structure to the
- DD sequence number appearing in the received packet. The slave
- must send a Database Description Packet in reply. If the received
- packet has the more bit (M) set to 0, and the packet to be sent by
- the slave will also have the M-bit set to 0, the neighbor event
- ExchangeDone is generated. Note that the slave always generates
- this event before the master.
-
- 10.7. Receiving Link State Request Packets
-
- This section explains the detailed processing of received Link State
- Request packets. Received Link State Request Packets specify a list
- of LSAs that the neighbor wishes to receive. Link State Request
- Packets should be accepted when the neighbor is in states Exchange,
- Loading, or Full. In all other states Link State Request Packets
- should be ignored.
-
-
-
-
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- Each LSA specified in the Link State Request packet should be located
- in the router's database, and copied into Link State Update packets
- for transmission to the neighbor. These LSAs should NOT be placed on
- the Link state retransmission list for the neighbor. If an LSA
- cannot be found in the database, something has gone wrong with the
- Database Exchange process, and neighbor event BadLSReq should be
- generated.
-
- 10.8. Sending Database Description Packets
-
- This section describes how Database Description Packets are sent to a
- neighbor. The Database Description packet's Interface MTU field is
- set to the size of the largest IP datagram that can be sent out the
- sending interface, without fragmentation. Common MTUs in use in the
- Internet can be found in Table 7-1 of [Ref22]. Interface MTU should
- be set to 0 in Database Description packets sent over virtual links.
-
- The router's optional OSPF capabilities (see Section 4.5) are
- transmitted to the neighbor in the Options field of the Database
- Description packet. The router should maintain the same set of
- optional capabilities throughout the Database Exchange and flooding
- procedures. If for some reason the router's optional capabilities
- change, the Database Exchange procedure should be restarted by
- reverting to neighbor state ExStart. One optional capability is
- defined in this specification (see Sections 4.5 and A.2). The E-bit
- should be set if and only if the attached network belongs to a non-
- stub area. Unrecognized bits in the Options field should be set to
- zero. The sending of Database Description packets depends on the
- neighbor's state. In state ExStart the router sends empty Database
- Description packets, with the initialize (I), more (M) and master
- (MS) bits set. These packets are retransmitted every RxmtInterval
- seconds.
-
- In state Exchange the Database Description Packets actually contain
- summaries of the link state information contained in the router's
- database. Each LSA in the area's link-state database (at the time
- the neighbor transitions into Exchange state) is listed in the
- neighbor Database summary list. Each new Database Description Packet
- copies its DD sequence number from the neighbor data structure and
- then describes the current top of the Database summary list. Items
- are removed from the Database summary list when the previous packet
- is acknowledged.
-
- In state Exchange, the determination of when to send a Database
- Description packet depends on whether the router is master or slave:
-
-
-
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- Master
- Database Description packets are sent when either a) the slave
- acknowledges the previous Database Description packet by echoing
- the DD sequence number or b) RxmtInterval seconds elapse without
- an acknowledgment, in which case the previous Database Description
- packet is retransmitted.
-
- Slave
- Database Description packets are sent only in response to Database
- Description packets received from the master. If the Database
- Description packet received from the master is new, a new Database
- Description packet is sent, otherwise the previous Database
- Description packet is resent.
-
- In states Loading and Full the slave must resend its last Database
- Description packet in response to duplicate Database Description
- packets received from the master. For this reason the slave must
- wait RouterDeadInterval seconds before freeing the last Database
- Description packet. Reception of a Database Description packet from
- the master after this interval will generate a SeqNumberMismatch
- neighbor event.
-
- 10.9. Sending Link State Request Packets
-
- In neighbor states Exchange or Loading, the Link state request list
- contains a list of those LSAs that need to be obtained from the
- neighbor. To request these LSAs, a router sends the neighbor the
- beginning of the Link state request list, packaged in a Link State
- Request packet.
-
- When the neighbor responds to these requests with the proper Link
- State Update packet(s), the Link state request list is truncated and
- a new Link State Request packet is sent. This process continues
- until the Link state request list becomes empty. Unsatisfied Link
- State Request packets are retransmitted at intervals of RxmtInterval.
- There should be at most one Link State Request packet outstanding at
- any one time.
-
- When the Link state request list becomes empty, and the neighbor
- state is Loading (i.e., a complete sequence of Database Description
- packets has been sent to and received from the neighbor), the Loading
- Done neighbor event is generated.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- 10.10. An Example
-
- Figure 14 shows an example of an adjacency forming. Routers RT1 and
- RT2 are both connected to a broadcast network. It is assumed that
- RT2 is the Designated Router for the network, and that RT2 has a
- higher Router ID than Router RT1.
-
- The neighbor state changes realized by each router are listed on the
- sides of the figure.
-
- At the beginning of Figure 14, Router RT1's interface to the network
- becomes operational. It begins sending Hello Packets, although it
- doesn't know the identity of the Designated Router or of any other
- neighboring routers. Router RT2 hears this hello (moving the
- neighbor to Init state), and in its next Hello Packet indicates that
- it is itself the Designated Router and that it has heard Hello
- Packets from RT1. This in turn causes RT1 to go to state ExStart, as
- it starts to bring up the adjacency.
-
- RT1 begins by asserting itself as the master. When it sees that RT2
- is indeed the master (because of RT2's higher Router ID), RT1
- transitions to slave state and adopts its neighbor's DD sequence
- number. Database Description packets are then exchanged, with polls
- coming from the master (RT2) and responses from the slave (RT1).
- This sequence of Database Description Packets ends when both the poll
- and associated response has the M-bit off.
-
- In this example, it is assumed that RT2 has a completely up to date
- database. In that case, RT2 goes immediately into Full state. RT1
- will go into Full state after updating the necessary parts of its
- database. This is done by sending Link State Request Packets, and
- receiving Link State Update Packets in response. Note that, while
- RT1 has waited until a complete set of Database Description Packets
- has been received (from RT2) before sending any Link State Request
- Packets, this need not be the case. RT1 could have interleaved the
- sending of Link State Request Packets with the reception of Database
- Description Packets.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- +---+ +---+
- |RT1| |RT2|
- +---+ +---+
-
- Down Down
- Hello(DR=0,seen=0)
- ------------------------------>
- Hello (DR=RT2,seen=RT1,...) Init
- <------------------------------
- ExStart D-D (Seq=x,I,M,Master)
- ------------------------------>
- D-D (Seq=y,I,M,Master) ExStart
- <------------------------------
- Exchange D-D (Seq=y,M,Slave)
- ------------------------------>
- D-D (Seq=y+1,M,Master) Exchange
- <------------------------------
- D-D (Seq=y+1,M,Slave)
- ------------------------------>
- ...
- ...
- ...
- D-D (Seq=y+n, Master)
- <------------------------------
- D-D (Seq=y+n, Slave)
- Loading ------------------------------>
- LS Request Full
- ------------------------------>
- LS Update
- <------------------------------
- LS Request
- ------------------------------>
- LS Update
- <------------------------------
- Full
-
-
- Figure 14: An adjacency bring-up example
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- 11. The Routing Table Structure
-
- The routing table data structure contains all the information
- necessary to forward an IP data packet toward its destination. Each
- routing table entry describes the collection of best paths to a
- particular destination. When forwarding an IP data packet, the
- routing table entry providing the best match for the packet's IP
- destination is located. The matching routing table entry then
- provides the next hop towards the packet's destination. OSPF also
- provides for the existence of a default route (Destination ID =
- DefaultDestination, Address Mask = 0x00000000). When the default
- route exists, it matches all IP destinations (although any other
- matching entry is a better match). Finding the routing table entry
- that best matches an IP destination is further described in Section
- 11.1.
-
- There is a single routing table in each router. Two sample routing
- tables are described in Sections 11.2 and 11.3. The building of the
- routing table is discussed in Section 16.
-
- The rest of this section defines the fields found in a routing table
- entry. The first set of fields describes the routing table entry's
- destination.
-
- Destination Type
- Destination type is either "network" or "router". Only network entries
- are actually used when forwarding IP data traffic. Router routing
- table entries are used solely as intermediate steps in the routing
- table build process.
-
- A network is a range of IP addresses, to which IP data traffic may be
- forwarded. This includes IP networks (class A, B, or C), IP subnets,
- IP supernets and single IP hosts. The default route also falls into
- this category.
-
- Router entries are kept for area border routers and AS boundary
- routers. Routing table entries for area border routers are used when
- calculating the inter-area routes (see Section 16.2), and when
- maintaining configured virtual links (see Section 15). Routing table
- entries for AS boundary routers are used when calculating the AS
- external routes (see Section 16.4).
-
- Destination ID
- The destination's identifier or name. This depends on the
- Destination Type. For networks, the identifier is their associated IP
- address. For routers, the identifier is the OSPF Router ID.[9]
-
-
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- Address Mask
- Only defined for networks. The network's IP address together with its
- address mask defines a range of IP addresses. For IP subnets, the
- address mask is referred to as the subnet mask. For host routes, the
- mask is "all ones" (0xffffffff).
-
- Optional Capabilities
- When the destination is a router this field indicates the optional
- OSPF capabilities supported by the destination router. The only
- optional capability defined by this specification is the ability to
- process AS-external-LSAs. For a further discussion of OSPF's optional
- capabilities, see Section 4.5.
-
- The set of paths to use for a destination may vary based on the OSPF
- area to which the paths belong. This means that there may be
- multiple routing table entries for the same destination, depending on
- the values of the next field.
-
- Area
- This field indicates the area whose link state information has led
- to the routing table entry's collection of paths. This is called
- the entry's associated area. For sets of AS external paths, this
- field is not defined. For destinations of type "router", there
- may be separate sets of paths (and therefore separate routing
- table entries) associated with each of several areas. For example,
- this will happen when two area border routers share multiple areas
- in common. For destinations of type "network", only the set of
- paths associated with the best area (the one providing the
- preferred route) is kept.
-
- The rest of the routing table entry describes the set of paths to the
- destination. The following fields pertain to the set of paths as a
- whole. In other words, each one of the paths contained in a routing
- table entry is of the same path-type and cost (see below).
-
- Path-type
- There are four possible types of paths used to route traffic to
- the destination, listed here in order of preference: intra-area,
- inter-area, type 1 external or type 2 external. Intra-area paths
- indicate destinations belonging to one of the router's attached
- areas. Inter-area paths are paths to destinations in other OSPF
- areas. These are discovered through the examination of received
- summary-LSAs. AS external paths are paths to destinations
- external to the AS. These are detected through the examination of
- received AS-external-LSAs.
-
-
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- Cost
- The link state cost of the path to the destination. For all paths
- except type 2 external paths this describes the entire path's
- cost. For Type 2 external paths, this field describes the cost of
- the portion of the path internal to the AS. This cost is
- calculated as the sum of the costs of the path's constituent
- links.
-
- Type 2 cost
- Only valid for type 2 external paths. For these paths, this field
- indicates the cost of the path's external portion. This cost has
- been advertised by an AS boundary router, and is the most
- significant part of the total path cost. For example, a type 2
- external path with type 2 cost of 5 is always preferred over a
- path with type 2 cost of 10, regardless of the cost of the two
- paths' internal components.
-
- Link State Origin
- Valid only for intra-area paths, this field indicates the LSA
- (router-LSA or network-LSA) that directly references the
- destination. For example, if the destination is a transit
- network, this is the transit network's network-LSA. If the
- destination is a stub network, this is the router-LSA for the
- attached router. The LSA is discovered during the shortest-path
- tree calculation (see Section 16.1). Multiple LSAs may reference
- the destination, however a tie-breaking scheme always reduces the
- choice to a single LSA. The Link State Origin field is not used by
- the OSPF protocol, but it is used by the routing table calculation
- in OSPF's Multicast routing extensions (MOSPF).
-
- When multiple paths of equal path-type and cost exist to a
- destination (called elsewhere "equal-cost" paths), they are stored in
- a single routing table entry. Each one of the "equal-cost" paths is
- distinguished by the following fields:
-
- Next hop
- The outgoing router interface to use when forwarding traffic to
- the destination. On broadcast, Point-to-MultiPoint and NBMA
- networks, the next hop also includes the IP address of the next
- router (if any) in the path towards the destination.
-
- Advertising router
- Valid only for inter-area and AS external paths. This field
- indicates the Router ID of the router advertising the summary-LSA
- or AS-external-LSA that led to this path.
-
-
-
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-
- 11.1. Routing table lookup
-
- When an IP data packet is received, an OSPF router finds the routing
- table entry that best matches the packet's destination. This routing
- table entry then provides the outgoing interface and next hop router
- to use in forwarding the packet. This section describes the process
- of finding the best matching routing table entry. The process
- consists of a number of steps, wherein the collection of routing
- table entries is progressively pruned. In the end, the single
- routing table entry remaining is called the "best match".
-
- Before the lookup begins, "discard" routing table entries should be
- inserted into the routing table for each of the router's active area
- address ranges (see Section 3.5). (An area range is considered
- "active" if the range contains one or more networks reachable by
- intra-area paths.) The destination of a "discard" entry is the set of
- addresses described by its associated active area address range, and
- the path type of each "discard" entry is set to "inter-area".[10]
-
- Note that the steps described below may fail to produce a best match
- routing table entry (i.e., all existing routing table entries are
- pruned for some reason or another), or the best match routing table
- entry may be one of the above "discard" routing table entries. In
- these cases, the packet's IP destination is considered unreachable.
- Instead of being forwarded, the packet should be discarded and an
- ICMP destination unreachable message should be returned to the
- packet's source.
-
- (1) Select the complete set of "matching" routing table entries
- from the routing table. Each routing table entry describes
- a (set of) path(s) to a range of IP addresses. If the data
- packet's IP destination falls into an entry's range of IP
- addresses, the routing table entry is called a match. (It is
- quite likely that multiple entries will match the data
- packet. For example, a default route will match all
- packets.)
-
- (2) Reduce the set of matching entries to those having the most
- preferential path-type (see Section 11). OSPF has a four
- level hierarchy of paths. Intra-area paths are the most
- preferred, followed in order by inter-area, type 1 external
- and type 2 external paths.
-
- (3) Select the remaining routing table entry that provides the
- most specific (longest) match. Another way of saying this is
- to choose the remaining entry that specifies the narrowest
- range of IP addresses.[11] For example, the entry for the
- address/mask pair of (128.185.1.0, 0xffffff00) is more
-
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- specific than an entry for the pair (128.185.0.0,
- 0xffff0000). The default route is the least specific match,
- since it matches all destinations.
-
- 11.2. Sample routing table, without areas
-
- Consider the Autonomous System pictured in Figure 2. No OSPF areas
- have been configured. A single metric is shown per outbound
- interface. The calculation of Router RT6's routing table proceeds as
- described in Section 2.2. The resulting routing table is shown in
- Table 12. Destination types are abbreviated: Network as "N", Router
- as "R".
-
- There are no instances of multiple equal-cost shortest paths in this
- example. Also, since there are no areas, there are no inter-area
- paths.
-
- Routers RT5 and RT7 are AS boundary routers. Intra-area routes have
- been calculated to Routers RT5 and RT7. This allows external routes
- to be calculated to the destinations advertised by RT5 and RT7 (i.e.,
- Networks N12, N13, N14 and N15). It is assumed all AS-external-LSAs
- originated by RT5 and RT7 are advertising type 1 external metrics.
- This results in type 1 external paths being calculated to
- destinations N12-N15.
-
- 11.3. Sample routing table, with areas
-
- Consider the previous example, this time split into OSPF areas. An
- OSPF area configuration is pictured in Figure 6. Router RT4's
- routing table will be described for this area configuration. Router
- RT4 has a connection to Area 1 and a backbone connection. This
- causes Router RT4 to view the AS as the concatenation of the two
- graphs shown in Figures 7 and 8. The resulting routing table is
- displayed in Table 13.
-
-
-
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- Type Dest Area Path Type Cost Next Adv.
- Hop(s) Router(s)
- ____________________________________________________________
- N N1 0 intra-area 10 RT3 *
- N N2 0 intra-area 10 RT3 *
- N N3 0 intra-area 7 RT3 *
- N N4 0 intra-area 8 RT3 *
- N Ib 0 intra-area 7 * *
- N Ia 0 intra-area 12 RT10 *
- N N6 0 intra-area 8 RT10 *
- N N7 0 intra-area 12 RT10 *
- N N8 0 intra-area 10 RT10 *
- N N9 0 intra-area 11 RT10 *
- N N10 0 intra-area 13 RT10 *
- N N11 0 intra-area 14 RT10 *
- N H1 0 intra-area 21 RT10 *
- R RT5 0 intra-area 6 RT5 *
- R RT7 0 intra-area 8 RT10 *
- ____________________________________________________________
- N N12 * type 1 ext. 10 RT10 RT7
- N N13 * type 1 ext. 14 RT5 RT5
- N N14 * type 1 ext. 14 RT5 RT5
- N N15 * type 1 ext. 17 RT10 RT7
-
-
- Table 12: The routing table for Router RT6
- (no configured areas).
-
- Again, Routers RT5 and RT7 are AS boundary routers. Routers RT3,
- RT4, RT7, RT10 and RT11 are area border routers. Note that there are
- two routing entries for the area border router RT3, since it has two
- areas in common with RT4 (Area 1 and the backbone).
-
- Backbone paths have been calculated to all area border routers.
- These are used when determining the inter-area routes. Note that all
- of the inter-area routes are associated with the backbone; this is
- always the case when the calculating router is itself an area border
- router. Routing information is condensed at area boundaries. In
- this example, we assume that Area 3 has been defined so that networks
- N9-N11 and the host route to H1 are all condensed to a single route
- when advertised into the backbone (by Router RT11). Note that the
- cost of this route is the maximum of the set of costs to its
- individual components.
-
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- There is a virtual link configured between Routers RT10 and RT11.
- Without this configured virtual link, RT11 would be unable to
- advertise a route for networks N9-N11 and Host H1 into the backbone,
- and there would not be an entry for these networks in Router RT4's
- routing table.
-
- In this example there are two equal-cost paths to Network N12.
- However, they both use the same next hop (Router RT5).
-
-
- Type Dest Area Path Type Cost Next Adv.
- Hops(s) Router(s)
- __________________________________________________________________
- N N1 1 intra-area 4 RT1 *
- N N2 1 intra-area 4 RT2 *
- N N3 1 intra-area 1 * *
- N N4 1 intra-area 3 RT3 *
- R RT3 1 intra-area 1 * *
- __________________________________________________________________
- N Ib 0 intra-area 22 RT5 *
- N Ia 0 intra-area 27 RT5 *
- R RT3 0 intra-area 21 RT5 *
- R RT5 0 intra-area 8 * *
- R RT7 0 intra-area 14 RT5 *
- R RT10 0 intra-area 22 RT5 *
- R RT11 0 intra-area 25 RT5 *
- __________________________________________________________________
- N N6 0 inter-area 15 RT5 RT7
- N N7 0 inter-area 19 RT5 RT7
- N N8 0 inter-area 18 RT5 RT7
- N N9-N11,H1 0 inter-area 36 RT5 RT11
- __________________________________________________________________
- N N12 * type 1 ext. 16 RT5 RT5,RT7
- N N13 * type 1 ext. 16 RT5 RT5
- N N14 * type 1 ext. 16 RT5 RT5
- N N15 * type 1 ext. 23 RT5 RT7
-
- Table 13: Router RT4's routing table
- in the presence of areas.
-
-
- Router RT4's routing table would improve (i.e., some of the paths in
- the routing table would become shorter) if an additional virtual link
- were configured between Router RT4 and Router RT3. The new virtual
- link would itself be associated with the first entry for area border
- router RT3 in Table 13 (an intra-area path through Area 1). This
- would yield a cost of 1 for the virtual link. The routing table
- entries changes that would be caused by the addition of this virtual
-
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-
- link are shown in Table 14.
-
- 12. Link State Advertisements (LSAs)
-
- Each router in the Autonomous System originates one or more link
- state advertisements (LSAs). This memo defines five distinct types
- of LSAs, which are described in Section 4.3. The collection of LSAs
- forms the link-state database. Each separate type of LSA has a
- separate function. Router-LSAs and network-LSAs describe how an
- area's routers and networks are interconnected. Summary-LSAs provide
- a way of condensing an area's routing information. AS-external-LSAs
- provide a way of transparently advertising externally-derived routing
- information throughout the Autonomous System.
-
- Each LSA begins with a standard 20-byte header. This LSA header is
- discussed below.
-
- Type Dest Area Path Type Cost Next Adv.
- Hop(s) Router(s)
- ________________________________________________________________
- N Ib 0 intra-area 16 RT3 *
- N Ia 0 intra-area 21 RT3 *
- R RT3 0 intra-area 1 * *
- R RT10 0 intra-area 16 RT3 *
- R RT11 0 intra-area 19 RT3 *
- ________________________________________________________________
- N N9-N11,H1 0 inter-area 30 RT3 RT11
-
-
- Table 14: Changes resulting from an
- additional virtual link.
-
- 12.1. The LSA Header
-
- The LSA header contains the LS type, Link State ID and Advertising
- Router fields. The combination of these three fields uniquely
- identifies the LSA.
-
- There may be several instances of an LSA present in the Autonomous
- System, all at the same time. It must then be determined which
- instance is more recent. This determination is made by examining the
- LS sequence, LS checksum and LS age fields. These fields are also
- contained in the 20-byte LSA header.
-
- Several of the OSPF packet types list LSAs. When the instance is not
- important, an LSA is referred to by its LS type, Link State ID and
- Advertising Router (see Link State Request Packets). Otherwise, the
- LS sequence number, LS age and LS checksum fields must also be
-
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- referenced.
-
- A detailed explanation of the fields contained in the LSA header
- follows.
-
- 12.1.1. LS age
-
- This field is the age of the LSA in seconds. It should be processed
- as an unsigned 16-bit integer. It is set to 0 when the LSA is
- originated. It must be incremented by InfTransDelay on every hop of
- the flooding procedure. LSAs are also aged as they are held in each
- router's database.
-
- The age of an LSA is never incremented past MaxAge. LSAs having age
- MaxAge are not used in the routing table calculation. When an LSA's
- age first reaches MaxAge, it is reflooded. An LSA of age MaxAge is
- finally flushed from the database when it is no longer needed to
- ensure database synchronization. For more information on the aging
- of LSAs, consult Section 14.
-
- The LS age field is examined when a router receives two instances of
- an LSA, both having identical LS sequence numbers and LS checksums.
- An instance of age MaxAge is then always accepted as most recent;
- this allows old LSAs to be flushed quickly from the routing domain.
- Otherwise, if the ages differ by more than MaxAgeDiff, the instance
- having the smaller age is accepted as most recent.[12] See Section
- 13.1 for more details.
-
- 12.1.2. Options
-
- The Options field in the LSA header indicates which optional
- capabilities are associated with the LSA. OSPF's optional
- capabilities are described in Section 4.5. One optional capability is
- defined by this specification, represented by the E-bit found in the
- Options field. The unrecognized bits in the Options field should be
- set to zero. The E-bit represents OSPF's ExternalRoutingCapability.
- This bit should be set in all LSAs associated with the backbone, and
- all LSAs associated with non-stub areas (see Section 3.6). It should
- also be set in all AS-external-LSAs. It should be reset in all
- router-LSAs, network-LSAs and summary-LSAs associated with a stub
- area. For all LSAs, the setting of the E-bit is for informational
- purposes only; it does not affect the routing table calculation.
-
-
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- 12.1.3. LS type
-
- The LS type field dictates the format and function of the LSA. LSAs
- of different types have different names (e.g., router-LSAs or
- network-LSAs). All LSA types defined by this memo, except the AS-
- external-LSAs (LS type = 5), are flooded throughout a single area
- only. AS-external-LSAs are flooded throughout the entire Autonomous
- System, excepting stub areas (see Section 3.6). Each separate LSA
- type is briefly described below in Table 15.
-
- 12.1.4. Link State ID
-
- This field identifies the piece of the routing domain that is being
- described by the LSA. Depending on the LSA's LS type, the Link State
- ID takes on the values listed in Table 16.
-
- Actually, for Type 3 summary-LSAs (LS type = 3) and AS-external-LSAs
- (LS type = 5), the Link State ID may additionally have one or more of
- the destination network's "host" bits set. For example, when
- originating an AS-external-LSA for the network 10.0.0.0 with mask of
- 255.0.0.0, the Link State ID can be set to anything in the range
- 10.0.0.0 through 10.255.255.255 inclusive (although 10.0.0.0 should
- be used whenever possible). The freedom to set certain host bits
- allows a router to originate separate LSAs for two networks having
- the same address but different masks. See Appendix E for details.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- LS Type LSA description
- ________________________________________________
- 1 These are the router-LSAs.
- They describe the collected
- states of the router's
- interfaces. For more information,
- consult Section 12.4.1.
- ________________________________________________
- 2 These are the network-LSAs.
- They describe the set of routers
- attached to the network. For
- more information, consult
- Section 12.4.2.
- ________________________________________________
- 3 or 4 These are the summary-LSAs.
- They describe inter-area routes,
- and enable the condensation of
- routing information at area
- borders. Originated by area border
- routers, the Type 3 summary-LSAs
- describe routes to networks while the
- Type 4 summary-LSAs describe routes to
- AS boundary routers.
- ________________________________________________
- 5 These are the AS-external-LSAs.
- Originated by AS boundary routers,
- they describe routes
- to destinations external to the
- Autonomous System. A default route for
- the Autonomous System can also be
- described by an AS-external-LSA.
-
- Table 15: OSPF link state advertisements (LSAs).
-
- LS Type Link State ID
- _______________________________________________
- 1 The originating router's Router ID.
- 2 The IP interface address of the
- network's Designated Router.
- 3 The destination network's IP address.
- 4 The Router ID of the described AS
- boundary router.
- 5 The destination network's IP address.
-
-
- Table 16: The LSA's Link State ID.
-
-
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-
- When the LSA is describing a network (LS type = 2, 3 or 5), the
- network's IP address is easily derived by masking the Link State ID
- with the network/subnet mask contained in the body of the LSA. When
- the LSA is describing a router (LS type = 1 or 4), the Link State ID
- is always the described router's OSPF Router ID.
-
- When an AS-external-LSA (LS Type = 5) is describing a default route,
- its Link State ID is set to DefaultDestination (0.0.0.0).
-
- 12.1.5. Advertising Router
-
- This field specifies the OSPF Router ID of the LSA's originator. For
- router-LSAs, this field is identical to the Link State ID field.
- Network-LSAs are originated by the network's Designated Router.
- Summary-LSAs originated by area border routers. AS-external-LSAs are
- originated by AS boundary routers.
-
- 12.1.6. LS sequence number
-
-
- The sequence number field is a signed 32-bit integer. It is used to
- detect old and duplicate LSAs. The space of sequence numbers is
- linearly ordered. The larger the sequence number (when compared as
- signed 32-bit integers) the more recent the LSA. To describe to
- sequence number space more precisely, let N refer in the discussion
- below to the constant 2**31.
-
- The sequence number -N (0x80000000) is reserved (and unused). This
- leaves -N + 1 (0x80000001) as the smallest (and therefore oldest)
- sequence number; this sequence number is referred to as the constant
- InitialSequenceNumber. A router uses InitialSequenceNumber the first
- time it originates any LSA. Afterwards, the LSA's sequence number is
- incremented each time the router originates a new instance of the
- LSA. When an attempt is made to increment the sequence number past
- the maximum value of N - 1 (0x7fffffff; also referred to as
- MaxSequenceNumber), the current instance of the LSA must first be
- flushed from the routing domain. This is done by prematurely aging
- the LSA (see Section 14.1) and reflooding it. As soon as this flood
- has been acknowledged by all adjacent neighbors, a new instance can
- be originated with sequence number of InitialSequenceNumber.
-
- The router may be forced to promote the sequence number of one of its
- LSAs when a more recent instance of the LSA is unexpectedly received
- during the flooding process. This should be a rare event. This may
- indicate that an out-of-date LSA, originated by the router itself
- before its last restart/reload, still exists in the Autonomous
- System. For more information see Section 13.4.
-
-
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- 12.1.7. LS checksum
-
- This field is the checksum of the complete contents of the LSA,
- excepting the LS age field. The LS age field is excepted so that an
- LSA's age can be incremented without updating the checksum. The
- checksum used is the same that is used for ISO connectionless
- datagrams; it is commonly referred to as the Fletcher checksum. It
- is documented in Annex B of [Ref6]. The LSA header also contains the
- length of the LSA in bytes; subtracting the size of the LS age field
- (two bytes) yields the amount of data to checksum.
-
- The checksum is used to detect data corruption of an LSA. This
- corruption can occur while an LSA is being flooded, or while it is
- being held in a router's memory. The LS checksum field cannot take
- on the value of zero; the occurrence of such a value should be
- considered a checksum failure. In other words, calculation of the
- checksum is not optional.
-
- The checksum of an LSA is verified in two cases: a) when it is
- received in a Link State Update Packet and b) at times during the
- aging of the link state database. The detection of a checksum
- failure leads to separate actions in each case. See Sections 13 and
- 14 for more details.
-
- Whenever the LS sequence number field indicates that two instances of
- an LSA are the same, the LS checksum field is examined. If there is
- a difference, the instance with the larger LS checksum is considered
- to be most recent.[13] See Section 13.1 for more details.
-
- 12.2. The link state database
-
- A router has a separate link state database for every area to which
- it belongs. All routers belonging to the same area have identical
- link state databases for the area.
-
- The databases for each individual area are always dealt with
- separately. The shortest path calculation is performed separately
- for each area (see Section 16). Components of the area link-state
- database are flooded throughout the area only. Finally, when an
- adjacency (belonging to Area A) is being brought up, only the
- database for Area A is synchronized between the two routers.
-
- The area database is composed of router-LSAs, network-LSAs and
- summary-LSAs (all listed in the area data structure). In addition,
- external routes (AS-external-LSAs) are included in all non-stub area
- databases (see Section 3.6).
-
-
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-
- An implementation of OSPF must be able to access individual pieces of
- an area database. This lookup function is based on an LSA's LS type,
- Link State ID and Advertising Router.[14] There will be a single
- instance (the most up-to-date) of each LSA in the database. The
- database lookup function is invoked during the LSA flooding procedure
- (Section 13) and the routing table calculation (Section 16). In
- addition, using this lookup function the router can determine whether
- it has itself ever originated a particular LSA, and if so, with what
- LS sequence number.
-
- An LSA is added to a router's database when either a) it is received
- during the flooding process (Section 13) or b) it is originated by
- the router itself (Section 12.4). An LSA is deleted from a router's
- database when either a) it has been overwritten by a newer instance
- during the flooding process (Section 13) or b) the router originates
- a newer instance of one of its self-originated LSAs (Section 12.4) or
- c) the LSA ages out and is flushed from the routing domain (Section
- 14).
-
- Whenever an LSA is deleted from the database it must also be removed
- from all neighbors' Link state retransmission lists (see Section 10).
-
- 12.3. Representation of TOS
-
- For backward compatibility with previous versions of the OSPF
- specification ([Ref9]), TOS-specific information can be included in
- router-LSAs, summary-LSAs and AS-external-LSAs. The encoding of TOS
- in OSPF LSAs is specified in Table 17. That table relates the OSPF
- encoding to the IP packet header's TOS field (defined in [Ref12]).
- The OSPF encoding is expressed as a decimal integer, and the IP
- packet header's TOS field is expressed in the binary TOS values used
- in [Ref12].
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- OSPF encoding RFC 1349 TOS values
- ___________________________________________
- 0 0000 normal service
- 2 0001 minimize monetary cost
- 4 0010 maximize reliability
- 6 0011
- 8 0100 maximize throughput
- 10 0101
- 12 0110
- 14 0111
- 16 1000 minimize delay
- 18 1001
- 20 1010
- 22 1011
- 24 1100
- 26 1101
-
- 12.1.3. LS type 1110
- 30 1111
-
- Table 17: Representing TOS in OSPF.
-
- 12.4. Originating LSAs
-
- Into any given OSPF area, a router will originate several LSAs. Each
- router originates a router-LSA. If the router is also the Designated
- Router for any of the area's networks, it will originate network-LSAs
- for those networks.
-
- Area border routers originate a single summary-LSA for each known
- inter-area destination. AS boundary routers originate a single AS-
- external-LSA for each known AS external destination. Destinations
- are advertised one at a time so that the change in any single route
- can be flooded without reflooding the entire collection of routes.
- During the flooding procedure, many LSAs can be carried by a single
- Link State Update packet.
-
- As an example, consider Router RT4 in Figure 6. It is an area border
- router, having a connection to Area 1 and the backbone. Router RT4
- originates 5 distinct LSAs into the backbone (one router-LSA, and one
- summary-LSA for each of the networks N1-N4). Router RT4 will also
- originate 8 distinct LSAs into Area 1 (one router-LSA and seven
- summary-LSAs as pictured in Figure 7). If RT4 has been selected as
- Designated Router for Network N3, it will also originate a network-
- LSA for N3 into Area 1.
-
- In this same figure, Router RT5 will be originating 3 distinct AS-
- external-LSAs (one for each of the networks N12-N14). These will be
- flooded throughout the entire AS, assuming that none of the areas
-
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- have been configured as stubs. However, if area 3 has been
- configured as a stub area, the AS-external-LSAs for networks N12-N14
- will not be flooded into area 3 (see Section 3.6). Instead, Router
- RT11 would originate a default summary- LSA that would be flooded
- throughout area 3 (see Section 12.4.3). This instructs all of area
- 3's internal routers to send their AS external traffic to RT11.
-
- Whenever a new instance of an LSA is originated, its LS sequence
- number is incremented, its LS age is set to 0, its LS checksum is
- calculated, and the LSA is added to the link state database and
- flooded out the appropriate interfaces. See Section 13.2 for details
- concerning the installation of the LSA into the link state database.
- See Section 13.3 for details concerning the flooding of newly
- originated LSAs.
-
- The ten events that can cause a new instance of an LSA to be
- originated are:
-
- (1) The LS age field of one of the router's self-originated LSAs
- reaches the value LSRefreshTime. In this case, a new
- instance of the LSA is originated, even though the contents
- of the LSA (apart from the LSA header) will be the same.
- This guarantees periodic originations of all LSAs. This
- periodic updating of LSAs adds robustness to the link state
- algorithm. LSAs that solely describe unreachable
- destinations should not be refreshed, but should instead be
- flushed from the routing domain (see Section 14.1).
-
- When whatever is being described by an LSA changes, a new LSA is
- originated. However, two instances of the same LSA may not be
- originated within the time period MinLSInterval. This may require
- that the generation of the next instance be delayed by up to
- MinLSInterval. The following events may cause the contents of an LSA
- to change. These events should cause new originations if and only if
- the contents of the new LSA would be different:
-
- (2) An interface's state changes (see Section 9.1). This may
- mean that it is necessary to produce a new instance of the
- router-LSA.
-
- (3) An attached network's Designated Router changes. A new
- router-LSA should be originated. Also, if the router itself
- is now the Designated Router, a new network-LSA should be
- produced. If the router itself is no longer the Designated
- Router, any network-LSA that it might have originated for
- the network should be flushed from the routing domain (see
- Section 14.1).
-
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- (4) One of the neighboring routers changes to/from the FULL
- state. This may mean that it is necessary to produce a new
- instance of the router-LSA. Also, if the router is itself
- the Designated Router for the attached network, a new
- network-LSA should be produced.
-
- The next four events concern area border routers only:
-
- (5) An intra-area route has been added/deleted/modified in the
- routing table. This may cause a new instance of a summary-
- LSA (for this route) to be originated in each attached area
- (possibly including the backbone).
-
- (6) An inter-area route has been added/deleted/modified in the
- routing table. This may cause a new instance of a summary-
- LSA (for this route) to be originated in each attached area
- (but NEVER for the backbone).
-
- (7) The router becomes newly attached to an area. The router
- must then originate summary-LSAs into the newly attached
- area for all pertinent intra-area and inter-area routes in
- the router's routing table. See Section 12.4.3 for more
- details.
-
- (8) When the state of one of the router's configured virtual
- links changes, it may be necessary to originate a new
- router-LSA into the virtual link's Transit area (see the
- discussion of the router-LSA's bit V in Section 12.4.1), as
- well as originating a new router-LSA into the backbone.
-
- The last two events concern AS boundary routers (and former AS
- boundary routers) only:
-
- (9) An external route gained through direct experience with an
- external routing protocol (like BGP) changes. This will
- cause an AS boundary router to originate a new instance of
- an AS-external-LSA.
-
- (10)
- A router ceases to be an AS boundary router, perhaps after
- restarting. In this situation the router should flush all
- AS-external-LSAs that it had previously originated. These
- LSAs can be flushed via the premature aging procedure
- specified in Section 14.1.
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- The construction of each type of LSA is explained in detail below. In
- general, these sections describe the contents of the LSA body (i.e.,
- the part coming after the 20-byte LSA header). For information
- concerning the building of the LSA header, see Section 12.1.
-
- 12.4.1. Router-LSAs
-
- A router originates a router-LSA for each area that it belongs to.
- Such an LSA describes the collected states of the router's links to
- the area. The LSA is flooded throughout the particular area, and no
- further. The format of a router-LSA is shown in Appendix A (Section
- A.4.2). The first 20 bytes of the LSA consist of the generic LSA
- header that was discussed in Section 12.1. router-LSAs have LS type
- = 1.
-
- A router also indicates whether it is an area border router, or an AS
- boundary router, by setting the appropriate bits
-
- ....................................
- . 192.1.2 Area 1 .
- . + .
- . | .
- . | 3+---+1 .
- . N1 |--|RT1|-----+ .
- . | +---+ \ .
- . | \ _______N3 .
- . + \/ \ . 1+---+
- . * 192.1.1 *------|RT4|
- . + /\_______/ . +---+
- . | / | .
- . | 3+---+1 / | .
- . N2 |--|RT2|-----+ 1| .
- . | +---+ +---+8 . 6+---+
- . | |RT3|----------------|RT6|
- . + +---+ . +---+
- . 192.1.3 |2 . 18.10.0.6|7
- . | . |
- . +------------+ .
- . 192.1.4 (N4) .
- ....................................
-
- Figure 15: Area 1 with IP addresses shown
-
- (bit B and bit E, respectively) in its router-LSAs. This enables
- paths to those types of routers to be saved in the routing table, for
- later processing of summary-LSAs and AS-external-LSAs. Bit B should
- be set whenever the router is actively attached to two or more areas,
- even if the router is not currently attached to the OSPF backbone
-
-
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-
- area. Bit E should never be set in a router-LSA for a stub area
- (stub areas cannot contain AS boundary routers).
-
- In addition, the router sets bit V in its router-LSA for Area A if
- and only if the router is the endpoint of one or more fully adjacent
- virtual links having Area A as their Transit area. The setting of bit
- V enables other routers in Area A to discover whether the area
- supports transit traffic (see TransitCapability in Section 6).
-
- The router-LSA then describes the router's working connections (i.e.,
- interfaces or links) to the area. Each link is typed according to
- the kind of attached network. Each link is also labelled with its
- Link ID. This Link ID gives a name to the entity that is on the
- other end of the link. Table 18 summarizes the values used for the
- Type and Link ID fields.
-
- Link type Description Link ID
- __________________________________________________
- 1 Point-to-point Neighbor Router ID
- link
- 2 Link to transit Interface address of
- network Designated Router
- 3 Link to stub IP network number
- network
- 4 Virtual link Neighbor Router ID
-
- Table 18: Link descriptions in the
- router-LSA.
-
- In addition, the Link Data field is specified for each link. This
- field gives 32 bits of extra information for the link. For links to
- transit networks, numbered point-to-point links and virtual links,
- this field specifies the IP interface address of the associated
- router interface (this is needed by the routing table calculation,
- see Section 16.1.1). For links to stub networks, this field
- specifies the stub network's IP address mask. For unnumbered point-
- to-point links, the Link Data field should be set to the unnumbered
- interface's MIB-II [Ref8] ifIndex value.
-
- Finally, the cost of using the link for output is specified. The
- output cost of a link is configurable. With the exception of links to
- stub networks, the output cost must always be non-zero.
-
- To further describe the process of building the list of link
- descriptions, suppose a router wishes to build a router-LSA for Area
- A. The router examines its collection of interface data structures.
- For each interface, the following steps are taken:
-
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-
- o If the attached network does not belong to Area A, no
- links are added to the LSA, and the next interface should be
- examined.
-
- o If the state of the interface is Down, no links are added.
-
- o If the state of the interface is Loopback, add a Type 3
- link (stub network) as long as this is not an interface to an
- unnumbered point-to-point network. The Link ID should be set to
- the IP interface address, the Link Data set to the
- mask 0xffffffff (indicating a host route), and the cost set to 0.
-
- o Otherwise, the link descriptions added to the router-LSA
- depend on the OSPF interface type. Link descriptions used for
- point-to-point interfaces are specified in Section 12.4.1.1, for
- virtual links in Section 12.4.1.2, for broadcast and NBMA
- interfaces in 12.4.1.3, and for Point-to-MultiPoint interfaces in
- 12.4.1.4.
-
- After consideration of all the router interfaces, host links are
- added to the router-LSA by examining the list of attached hosts
- belonging to Area A. A host route is represented as a Type 3 link
- (stub network) whose Link ID is the host's IP address, Link Data is
- the mask of all ones (0xffffffff), and cost the host's configured
- cost (see Section C.7).
-
- 12.4.1.1. Describing point-to-point interfaces
-
- For point-to-point interfaces, one or more link descriptions are
- added to the router-LSA as follows:
-
- o If the neighboring router is fully adjacent, add a
- Type 1 link (point-to-point). The Link ID should be set to the
- Router ID of the neighboring router. For numbered point-to-point
- networks, the Link Data should specify the IP interface address.
- For unnumbered point-to-point networks, the Link Data field
- should specify the interface's MIB-II [Ref8] ifIndex value. The
- cost should be set to the output cost of the point-to-point
- interface.
-
- o In addition, as long as the state of the interface
- is "Point-to-Point" (and regardless of the neighboring router
- state), a Type 3 link (stub network) should be added. There are
- two forms that this stub link can take:
-
-
-
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-
- Option 1
- Assuming that the neighboring router's IP address is known, set
- the Link ID of the Type 3 link to the neighbor's IP address, the
- Link Data to the mask 0xffffffff (indicating a host route), and
- the cost to the interface's configured output cost.[15]
-
- Option 2
- If a subnet has been assigned to the point-to-point link, set the
- Link ID of the Type 3 link to the subnet's IP address, the Link
- Data to the subnet's mask, and the cost to the interface's
- configured output cost.[16]
-
- 12.4.1.2. Describing broadcast and NBMA interfaces
-
- For operational broadcast and NBMA interfaces, a single link
- description is added to the router-LSA as follows:
-
- o If the state of the interface is Waiting, add a Type
- 3 link (stub network) with Link ID set to the IP network number
- of the attached network, Link Data set to the attached network's
- address mask, and cost equal to the interface's configured output
- cost.
-
- o Else, there has been a Designated Router elected for
- the attached network. If the router is fully adjacent to the
- Designated Router, or if the router itself is Designated Router
- and is fully adjacent to at least one other router, add a single
- Type 2 link (transit network) with Link ID set to the IP
- interface address of the attached network's Designated Router
- (which may be the router itself), Link Data set to the router's
- own IP interface address, and cost equal to the interface's
- configured output cost. Otherwise, add a link as if the
- interface state were Waiting (see above).
-
- 12.4.1.3. Describing virtual links
-
- For virtual links, a link description is added to the router-LSA only
- when the virtual neighbor is fully adjacent. In this case, add a Type
- 4 link (virtual link) with Link ID set to the Router ID of the
- virtual neighbor, Link Data set to the IP interface address
- associated with the virtual link and cost set to the cost calculated
- for the virtual link during the routing table calculation (see
- Section 15).
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- 12.4.1.4. Describing Point-to-MultiPoint interfaces
-
- For operational Point-to-MultiPoint interfaces, one or more link
- descriptions are added to the router-LSA as follows:
-
- o A single Type 3 link (stub network) is added with
- Link ID set to the router's own IP interface address, Link Data
- set to the mask 0xffffffff (indicating a host route), and cost
- set to 0.
-
- o For each fully adjacent neighbor associated with the
- interface, add an additional Type 1 link (point-to-point) with
- Link ID set to the Router ID of the neighboring router, Link Data
- set to the IP interface address and cost equal to the interface's
- configured output cost.
-
- 12.4.1.5. Examples of router-LSAs
-
- Consider the router-LSAs generated by Router RT3, as pictured in
- Figure 6. The area containing Router RT3 (Area 1) has been redrawn,
- with actual network addresses, in Figure 15. Assume that the last
- byte of all of RT3's interface addresses is 3, giving it the
- interface addresses 192.1.1.3 and 192.1.4.3, and that the other
- routers have similar addressing schemes. In addition, assume that
- all links are functional, and that Router IDs are assigned as the
- smallest IP interface address.
-
- RT3 originates two router-LSAs, one for Area 1 and one for the
- backbone. Assume that Router RT4 has been selected as the Designated
- router for network 192.1.1.0. RT3's router-LSA for Area 1 is then
- shown below. It indicates that RT3 has two connections to Area 1,
- the first a link to the transit network 192.1.1.0 and the second a
- link to the stub network 192.1.4.0. Note that the transit network is
- identified by the IP interface of its Designated Router (i.e., the
- Link ID = 192.1.1.4 which is the Designated Router RT4's IP interface
- to 192.1.1.0). Note also that RT3 has indicated that it is an area
- border router.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
- ; RT3's router-LSA for Area 1
-
- LS age = 0 ;always true on origination
- Options = (E-bit) ;
- LS type = 1 ;indicates router-LSA
- Link State ID = 192.1.1.3 ;RT3's Router ID
- Advertising Router = 192.1.1.3 ;RT3's Router ID
- bit E = 0 ;not an AS boundary router
- bit B = 1 ;area border router
- #links = 2
- Link ID = 192.1.1.4 ;IP address of Desig. Rtr.
- Link Data = 192.1.1.3 ;RT3's IP interface to net
- Type = 2 ;connects to transit network
- # TOS metrics = 0
- metric = 1
-
- Link ID = 192.1.4.0 ;IP Network number
- Link Data = 0xffffff00 ;Network mask
- Type = 3 ;connects to stub network
- # TOS metrics = 0
- metric = 2
-
- Next RT3's router-LSA for the backbone is shown. It indicates that
- RT3 has a single attachment to the backbone. This attachment is via
- an unnumbered point-to-point link to Router RT6. RT3 has again
- indicated that it is an area border router.
-
-
- ; RT3's router-LSA for the backbone
-
- LS age = 0 ;always true on origination
- Options = (E-bit) ;
- LS type = 1 ;indicates router-LSA
- Link State ID = 192.1.1.3 ;RT3's router ID
- Advertising Router = 192.1.1.3 ;RT3's router ID
- bit E = 0 ;not an AS boundary router
- bit B = 1 ;area border router
- #links = 1
- Link ID = 18.10.0.6 ;Neighbor's Router ID
- Link Data = 0.0.0.3 ;MIB-II ifIndex of P-P link
- Type = 1 ;connects to router
- # TOS metrics = 0
- metric = 8
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- 12.4.2. Network-LSAs
-
- A network-LSA is generated for every transit broadcast or NBMA
- network. (A transit network is a network having two or more attached
- routers). The network-LSA describes all the routers that are
- attached to the network.
-
- The Designated Router for the network originates the LSA. The
- Designated Router originates the LSA only if it is fully adjacent to
- at least one other router on the network. The network-LSA is flooded
- throughout the area that contains the transit network, and no
- further. The network-LSA lists those routers that are fully adjacent
- to the Designated Router; each fully adjacent router is identified by
- its OSPF Router ID. The Designated Router includes itself in this
- list.
-
- The Link State ID for a network-LSA is the IP interface address of
- the Designated Router. This value, masked by the network's address
- mask (which is also contained in the network-LSA) yields the
- network's IP address.
-
- A router that has formerly been the Designated Router for a network,
- but is no longer, should flush the network-LSA that it had previously
- originated. This LSA is no longer used in the routing table
- calculation. It is flushed by prematurely incrementing the LSA's age
- to MaxAge and reflooding (see Section 14.1). In addition, in those
- rare cases where a router's Router ID has changed, any network-LSAs
- that were originated with the router's previous Router ID must be
- flushed. Since the router may have no idea what it's previous Router
- ID might have been, these network-LSAs are indicated by having their
- Link State ID equal to one of the router's IP interface addresses and
- their Advertising Router equal to some value other than the router's
- current Router ID (see Section 13.4 for more details).
-
- 12.4.2.1. Examples of network-LSAs
-
- Again consider the area configuration in Figure 6. Network-LSAs are
- originated for Network N3 in Area 1, Networks N6 and N8 in Area 2,
- and Network N9 in Area 3. Assuming that Router RT4 has been selected
- as the Designated Router for Network N3, the following network-LSA is
- generated by RT4 on behalf of Network N3 (see Figure 15 for the
- address assignments):
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- ; Network-LSA for Network N3
-
- LS age = 0 ;always true on origination
- Options = (E-bit) ;
- LS type = 2 ;indicates network-LSA
- Link State ID = 192.1.1.4 ;IP address of Desig. Rtr.
- Advertising Router = 192.1.1.4 ;RT4's Router ID
- Network Mask = 0xffffff00
- Attached Router = 192.1.1.4 ;Router ID
- Attached Router = 192.1.1.1 ;Router ID
- Attached Router = 192.1.1.2 ;Router ID
- Attached Router = 192.1.1.3 ;Router ID
-
- 12.4.3. Summary-LSAs
-
- The destination described by a summary-LSA is either an IP network,
- an AS boundary router or a range of IP addresses. Summary-LSAs are
- flooded throughout a single area only. The destination described is
- one that is external to the area, yet still belongs to the Autonomous
- System.
-
- Summary-LSAs are originated by area border routers. The precise
- summary routes to advertise into an area are determined by examining
- the routing table structure (see Section 11) in accordance with the
- algorithm described below. Note that only intra-area routes are
- advertised into the backbone, while both intra-area and inter-area
- routes are advertised into the other areas.
-
- To determine which routes to advertise into an attached Area A, each
- routing table entry is processed as follows. Remember that each
- routing table entry describes a set of equal-cost best paths to a
- particular destination:
-
- o Only Destination Types of network and AS boundary router
- are advertised in summary-LSAs. If the routing table entry's
- Destination Type is area border router, examine the next routing
- table entry.
-
- o AS external routes are never advertised in summary-LSAs.
- If the routing table entry has Path-type of type 1 external or
- type 2 external, examine the next routing table entry.
-
- o Else, if the area associated with this set of paths is
- the Area A itself, do not generate a summary-LSA for the
- route.[17]
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- o Else, if the next hops associated with this set of paths
- belong to Area A itself, do not generate a summary-LSA for the
- route.[18] This is the logical equivalent of a Distance Vector
- protocol's split horizon logic.
-
- o Else, if the routing table cost equals or exceeds the
- value LSInfinity, a summary-LSA cannot be generated for this
- route.
-
- o Else, if the destination of this route is an AS boundary
- router, a summary-LSA should be originated if and only if the
- routing table entry describes the preferred path to the AS
- boundary router (see Step 3 of Section 16.4). If so, a Type 4
- summary-LSA is originated for the destination, with Link State ID
- equal to the AS boundary router's Router ID and metric equal to
- the routing table entry's cost. Note: these LSAs should not be
- generated if Area A has been configured as a stub area.
-
- o Else, the Destination type is network. If this is an
- inter-area route, generate a Type 3 summary-LSA for the
- destination, with Link State ID equal to the network's address (if
- necessary, the Link State ID can also have one or more of the
- network's host bits set; see Appendix E for details) and metric
- equal to the routing table cost.
-
- o The one remaining case is an intra-area route to a network. This
- means that the network is contained in one of the router's
- directly attached areas. In general, this information must be
- condensed before appearing in summary-LSAs. Remember that an area
- has a configured list of address ranges, each range consisting of
- an [address,mask] pair and a status indication of either Advertise
- or DoNotAdvertise. At most a single Type 3 summary-LSA is
- originated for each range. When the range's status indicates
- Advertise, a Type 3 summary-LSA is generated with Link State ID
- equal to the range's address (if necessary, the Link State ID can
- also have one or more of the range's "host" bits set; see Appendix
- E for details) and cost equal to the largest cost of any of the
- component networks. When the range's status indicates
- DoNotAdvertise, the Type 3 summary-LSA is suppressed and the
- component networks remain hidden from other areas.
-
- By default, if a network is not contained in any explicitly
- configured address range, a Type 3 summary-LSA is generated with Link
- State ID equal to the network's address (if necessary, the Link State
- ID can also have one or more of the network's "host" bits set; see
- Appendix E for details) and metric equal to the network's routing
- table cost.
-
-
-
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-
-
- If an area is capable of carrying transit traffic (i.e., its
- TransitCapability is set to TRUE), routing information concerning
- backbone networks should not be condensed before being summarized
- into the area. Nor should the advertisement of backbone networks
- into transit areas be suppressed. In other words, the backbone's
- configured ranges should be ignored when originating summary-LSAs
- into transit areas.
-
- If a router advertises a summary-LSA for a destination which then
- becomes unreachable, the router must then flush the LSA from the
- routing domain by setting its age to MaxAge and reflooding (see
- Section 14.1). Also, if the destination is still reachable, yet can
- no longer be advertised according to the above procedure (e.g., it is
- now an inter-area route, when it used to be an intra-area route
- associated with some non-backbone area; it would thus no longer be
- advertisable to the backbone), the LSA should also be flushed from
- the routing domain.
-
- 12.4.3.1. Originating summary-LSAs into stub areas
-
- The algorithm in Section 12.4.3 is optional when Area A is an OSPF
- stub area. Area border routers connecting to a stub area can
- originate summary-LSAs into the area according to the Section
- 12.4.3's algorithm, or can choose to originate only a subset of the
- summary-LSAs, possibly under configuration control. The fewer LSAs
- originated, the smaller the stub area's link state database, further
- reducing the demands on its routers' resources. However, omitting
- LSAs may also lead to sub-optimal inter-area routing, although
- routing will continue to function.
-
- As specified in Section 12.4.3, Type 4 summary-LSAs (ASBR-summary-
- LSAs) are never originated into stub areas.
-
- In a stub area, instead of importing external routes each area border
- router originates a "default summary-LSA" into the area. The Link
- State ID for the default summary-LSA is set to DefaultDestination,
- and the metric set to the (per-area) configurable parameter
- StubDefaultCost. Note that StubDefaultCost need not be configured
- identically in all of the stub area's area border routers.
-
- 12.4.3.2. Examples of summary-LSAs
-
- Consider again the area configuration in Figure 6. Routers RT3, RT4,
- RT7, RT10 and RT11 are all area border routers, and therefore are
- originating summary-LSAs. Consider in particular Router RT4. Its
- routing table was calculated as the example in Section 11.3. RT4
- originates summary-LSAs into both the backbone and Area 1. Into the
- backbone, Router RT4 originates separate LSAs for each of the
-
-
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-
- networks N1-N4. Into Area 1, Router RT4 originates separate LSAs for
- networks N6-N8 and the AS boundary routers RT5,RT7. It also
- condenses host routes Ia and Ib into a single summary-LSA. Finally,
- the routes to networks N9,N10,N11 and Host H1 are advertised by a
- single summary-LSA. This condensation was originally performed by
- the router RT11.
-
- These LSAs are illustrated graphically in Figures 7 and 8. Two of
- the summary-LSAs originated by Router RT4 follow. The actual IP
- addresses for the networks and routers in question have been assigned
- in Figure 15.
-
- ; Summary-LSA for Network N1,
- ; originated by Router RT4 into the backbone
-
- LS age = 0 ;always true on origination
- Options = (E-bit) ;
- LS type = 3 ;Type 3 summary-LSA
- Link State ID = 192.1.2.0 ;N1's IP network number
- Advertising Router = 192.1.1.4 ;RT4's ID
- metric = 4
-
- ; Summary-LSA for AS boundary router RT7
- ; originated by Router RT4 into Area 1
-
- LS age = 0 ;always true on origination
- Options = (E-bit) ;
- LS type = 4 ;Type 4 summary-LSA
- Link State ID = Router RT7's ID
- Advertising Router = 192.1.1.4 ;RT4's ID
- metric = 14
-
- 12.4.4. AS-external-LSAs
-
- AS-external-LSAs describe routes to destinations external to the
- Autonomous System. Most AS-external-LSAs describe routes to specific
- external destinations; in these cases the LSA's Link State ID is set
- to the destination network's IP address (if necessary, the Link State
- ID can also have one or more of the network's "host" bits set; see
- Appendix E for details). However, a default route for the Autonomous
- System can be described in an AS-external-LSA by setting the LSA's
- Link State ID to DefaultDestination (0.0.0.0). AS-external-LSAs are
- originated by AS boundary routers. An AS boundary router originates
- a single AS-external-LSA for each external route that it has learned,
- either through another routing protocol (such as BGP), or through
- configuration information.
-
-
-
-
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-
- AS-external-LSAs are the only type of LSAs that are flooded
- throughout the entire Autonomous System; all other types of LSAs are
- specific to a single area. However, AS-external-LSAs are not flooded
- into/throughout stub areas (see Section 3.6). This enables a
- reduction in link state database size for routers internal to stub
- areas.
-
- The metric that is advertised for an external route can be one of two
- types. Type 1 metrics are comparable to the link state metric. Type
- 2 metrics are assumed to be larger than the cost of any intra-AS
- path.
-
- If a router advertises an AS-external-LSA for a destination which
- then becomes unreachable, the router must then flush the LSA from the
- routing domain by setting its age to MaxAge and reflooding (see
- Section 14.1).
-
- 12.4.4.1. Examples of AS-external-LSAs
-
- Consider once again the AS pictured in Figure 6. There are two AS
- boundary routers: RT5 and RT7. Router RT5 originates three AS-
- external-LSAs, for networks N12-N14. Router RT7 originates two AS-
- external-LSAs, for networks N12 and N15. Assume that RT7 has learned
- its route to N12 via BGP, and that it wishes to advertise a Type 2
- metric to the AS. RT7 would then originate the following LSA for
- N12:
-
- ; AS-external-LSA for Network N12,
- ; originated by Router RT7
-
- LS age = 0 ;always true on origination
- Options = (E-bit) ;
- LS type = 5 ;AS-external-LSA
- Link State ID = N12's IP network number
- Advertising Router = Router RT7's ID
- bit E = 1 ;Type 2 metric
- metric = 2
- Forwarding address = 0.0.0.0
-
- In the above example, the forwarding address field has been set to
- 0.0.0.0, indicating that packets for the external destination should
- be forwarded to the advertising OSPF router (RT7). This is not always
- desirable. Consider the example pictured in Figure 16. There are
- three OSPF routers (RTA, RTB and RTC) connected to a common network.
- Only one of these routers, RTA, is exchanging BGP information with
- the non-OSPF router RTX. RTA must then originate AS- external-LSAs
- for those destinations it has learned from RTX. By using the AS-
- external-LSA's forwarding address field, RTA can specify that packets
-
-
-
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-
- for these destinations be forwarded directly to RTX. Without this
- feature, Routers RTB and RTC would take an extra hop to get to these
- destinations.
-
- Note that when the forwarding address field is non-zero, it should
- point to a router belonging to another Autonomous System.
-
- A forwarding address can also be specified for the default route. For
- example, in figure 16 RTA may want to specify that all externally-
- destined packets should by default be forwarded to its BGP peer RTX.
- The resulting AS-external-LSA is pictured below. Note that the Link
- State ID is set to DefaultDestination.
-
- ; Default route, originated by Router RTA
- ; Packets forwarded through RTX
-
- LS age = 0 ;always true on origination
- Options = (E-bit) ;
- LS type = 5 ;AS-external-LSA
- Link State ID = DefaultDestination ; default route
- Advertising Router = Router RTA's ID
- bit E = 1 ;Type 2 metric
- metric = 1
- Forwarding address = RTX's IP address
-
- In figure 16, suppose instead that both RTA and RTB exchange BGP
- information with RTX. In this case, RTA and RTB would originate the
- same set of AS-external-LSAs. These LSAs, if they specify the same
- metric, would be functionally equivalent since they would specify the
- same destination and forwarding address (RTX). This leads to a clear
- duplication of effort. If only one of RTA or RTB originated the set
- of AS-external-LSAs, the routing would remain the same, and the size
- of the link state database would decrease. However, it must be
- unambiguously defined as to which router originates the LSAs
- (otherwise neither may, or the identity of the originator may
- oscillate). The following rule is thereby established: if two
- routers, both reachable from one another, originate functionally
- equivalent AS-external-LSAs (i.e., same destination, cost and non-
- zero forwarding address), then the LSA originated by the router
- having the highest OSPF Router ID is used. The router having the
- lower OSPF Router ID can then flush its LSA. Flushing an LSA is
- discussed in Section 14.1.
-
- 13. The Flooding Procedure
-
- Link State Update packets provide the mechanism for flooding LSAs. A
- Link State Update packet may contain several distinct LSAs, and
- floods each LSA one hop further from its point of origination. To
-
-
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- make the flooding procedure reliable, each LSA must be acknowledged
- separately. Acknowledgments are transmitted in Link State
- Acknowledgment packets. Many separate acknowledgments can also be
- grouped together into a single packet.
-
- The flooding procedure starts when a Link State Update packet has
- been received. Many consistency checks have been made on the
- received packet before being handed to the flooding procedure (see
- Section 8.2). In particular, the Link State Update packet has been
- associated with a particular neighbor, and a particular area. If the
- neighbor is in a lesser state than Exchange, the packet should be
- dropped without further processing.
-
- +
- |
- +---+.....|.BGP
- |RTA|-----|.....+---+
- +---+ |-----|RTX|
- | +---+
- +---+ |
- |RTB|-----|
- +---+ |
- |
- +---+ |
- |RTC|-----|
- +---+ |
- |
- +
-
- Figure 16: Forwarding address example
-
- All types of LSAs, other than AS-external-LSAs, are associated with a
- specific area. However, LSAs do not contain an area field. An LSA's
- area must be deduced from the Link State Update packet header.
-
- For each LSA contained in a Link State Update packet, the following
- steps are taken:
-
-
- (1) Validate the LSA's LS checksum. If the checksum turns out to be
- invalid, discard the LSA and get the next one from the Link
- State Update packet.
-
- (2) Examine the LSA's LS type. If the LS type is unknown, discard
- the LSA and get the next one from the Link State Update Packet.
- This specification defines LS types 1-5 (see Section 4.3).
-
- (3) Else if this is an AS-external-LSA (LS type = 5), and the area
-
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- has been configured as a stub area, discard the LSA and get the
- next one from the Link State Update Packet. AS-external-LSAs
- are not flooded into/throughout stub areas (see Section 3.6).
-
- (4) Else if the LSA's LS age is equal to MaxAge, and there is
- currently no instance of the LSA in the router's link state
- database, then take the following actions:
-
- (a) Acknowledge the receipt of the LSA by sending a Link State
- Acknowledgment packet back to the sending neighbor (see
- Section 13.5).
-
- (b) Purge all outstanding requests for equal or previous
- instances of the LSA from the sending neighbor's Link State
- Request list (see Section 10).
-
- (c) If the sending neighbor is in state Exchange or in state
- Loading, then install the MaxAge LSA in the link state
- database. Otherwise, simply discard the LSA. In either
- case, examine the next LSA (if any) listed in the Link State
- Update packet.
-
- (5) Otherwise, find the instance of this LSA that is currently
- contained in the router's link state database. If there is no
- database copy, or the received LSA is more recent than the
- database copy (see Section 13.1 below for the determination of
- which LSA is more recent) the following steps must be performed:
-
- (a) If there is already a database copy, and if the database
- copy was installed less than MinLSArrival seconds ago,
- discard the new LSA (without acknowledging it) and examine
- the next LSA (if any) listed in the Link State Update
- packet.
-
- (b) Otherwise immediately flood the new LSA out some subset of
- the router's interfaces (see Section 13.3). In some cases
- (e.g., the state of the receiving interface is DR and the
- LSA was received from a router other than the Backup DR) the
- LSA will be flooded back out the receiving interface. This
- occurrence should be noted for later use by the
- acknowledgment process (Section 13.5).
-
- (c) Remove the current database copy from all neighbors' Link
- state retransmission lists.
-
- (d) Install the new LSA in the link state database (replacing
- the current database copy). This may cause the routing
- table calculation to be scheduled. In addition, timestamp
-
-
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-
- the new LSA with the current time (i.e., the time it was
- received). The flooding procedure cannot overwrite the
- newly installed LSA until MinLSArrival seconds have elapsed.
- The LSA installation process is discussed further in Section
- 13.2.
-
- (e) Possibly acknowledge the receipt of the LSA by sending a
- Link State Acknowledgment packet back out the receiving
- interface. This is explained below in Section 13.5.
-
- (f) If this new LSA indicates that it was originated by the
- receiving router itself (i.e., is considered a self-
- originated LSA), the router must take special action, either
- updating the LSA or in some cases flushing it from the
- routing domain. For a description of how self-originated
- LSAs are detected and subsequently handled, see Section
- 13.4.
-
- (6) Else, if there is an instance of the LSA on the sending
- neighbor's Link state request list, an error has occurred in the
- Database Exchange process. In this case, restart the Database
- Exchange process by generating the neighbor event BadLSReq for
- the sending neighbor and stop processing the Link State Update
- packet.
-
- (7) Else, if the received LSA is the same instance as the database
- copy (i.e., neither one is more recent) the following two steps
- should be performed:
-
- (a) If the LSA is listed in the Link state retransmission list
- for the receiving adjacency, the router itself is expecting
- an acknowledgment for this LSA. The router should treat the
- received LSA as an acknowledgment by removing the LSA from
- the Link state retransmission list. This is termed an
- "implied acknowledgment". Its occurrence should be noted
- for later use by the acknowledgment process (Section 13.5).
-
- (b) Possibly acknowledge the receipt of the LSA by sending a
- Link State Acknowledgment packet back out the receiving
- interface. This is explained below in Section 13.5.
-
- (8) Else, the database copy is more recent. If the database copy
- has LS age equal to MaxAge and LS sequence number equal to
- MaxSequenceNumber, simply discard the received LSA without
- acknowledging it. (In this case, the LSA's LS sequence number is
- wrapping, and the MaxSequenceNumber LSA must be completely
- flushed before any new LSA instance can be introduced).
- Otherwise, send the database copy back to the sending neighbor,
-
-
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-
- encapsulated within a Link State Update Packet. The Link State
- Update Packet should be unicast to the neighbor. In so doing, do
- not put the database copy of the LSA on the neighbor's link
- state retransmission list, and do not acknowledge the received
- (less recent) LSA instance.
-
- 13.1. Determining which LSA is newer
-
- When a router encounters two instances of an LSA, it must determine
- which is more recent. This occurred above when comparing a received
- LSA to its database copy. This comparison must also be done during
- the Database Exchange procedure which occurs during adjacency bring-
- up.
-
- An LSA is identified by its LS type, Link State ID and Advertising
- Router. For two instances of the same LSA, the LS sequence number,
- LS age, and LS checksum fields are used to determine which instance
- is more recent:
-
- o The LSA having the newer LS sequence number is more recent.
- See Section 12.1.6 for an explanation of the LS sequence number
- space. If both instances have the same LS sequence number, then:
-
- o If the two instances have different LS checksums, then the
- instance having the larger LS checksum (when considered as a 16-
- bit unsigned integer) is considered more recent.
-
- o Else, if only one of the instances has its LS age field set
- to MaxAge, the instance of age MaxAge is considered to be more
- recent.
-
- o Else, if the LS age fields of the two instances differ by
- more than MaxAgeDiff, the instance having the smaller (younger)
- LS age is considered to be more recent.
-
- o Else, the two instances are considered to be identical.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- 13.2. Installing LSAs in the database
-
- Installing a new LSA in the database, either as the result of
- flooding or a newly self-originated LSA, may cause the OSPF routing
- table structure to be recalculated. The contents of the new LSA
- should be compared to the old instance, if present. If there is no
- difference, there is no need to recalculate the routing table. When
- comparing an LSA to its previous instance, the following are all
- considered to be differences in contents:
-
- o The LSA's Options field has changed.
-
- o One of the LSA instances has LS age set to MaxAge, and
- the other does not.
-
- o The length field in the LSA header has changed.
-
- o The body of the LSA (i.e., anything outside the 20-byte
- LSA header) has changed. Note that this excludes changes in LS
- Sequence Number and LS Checksum.
-
- If the contents are different, the following pieces of the routing
- table must be recalculated, depending on the new LSA's LS type field:
-
- Router-LSAs and network-LSAs
- The entire routing table must be recalculated, starting with the
- shortest path calculations for each area (not just the area whose
- link-state database has changed). The reason that the shortest
- path calculation cannot be restricted to the single changed area
- has to do with the fact that AS boundary routers may belong to
- multiple areas. A change in the area currently providing the best
- route may force the router to use an intra-area route provided by
- a different area.[19]
-
- Summary-LSAs
- The best route to the destination described by the summary-LSA
- must be recalculated (see Section 16.5). If this destination is
- an AS boundary router, it may also be necessary to re-examine all
- the AS-external-LSAs.
-
- AS-external-LSAs
- The best route to the destination described by the AS-external-LSA
- must be recalculated (see Section 16.6).
-
- Also, any old instance of the LSA must be removed from the
- database when the new LSA is installed. This old instance must
- also be removed from all neighbors' Link state retransmission
- lists (see Section 10).
-
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-
- 13.3. Next step in the flooding procedure
-
- When a new (and more recent) LSA has been received, it must be
- flooded out some set of the router's interfaces. This section
- describes the second part of flooding procedure (the first part being
- the processing that occurred in Section 13), namely, selecting the
- outgoing interfaces and adding the LSA to the appropriate neighbors'
- Link state retransmission lists. Also included in this part of the
- flooding procedure is the maintenance of the neighbors' Link state
- request lists.
-
- This section is equally applicable to the flooding of an LSA that the
- router itself has just originated (see Section 12.4).
-
- For these LSAs, this section provides the entirety of the flooding
- procedure (i.e., the processing of Section 13 is not performed,
- since, for example, the LSA has not been received from a neighbor and
- therefore does not need to be acknowledged).
-
- Depending upon the LSA's LS type, the LSA can be flooded out only
- certain interfaces. These interfaces, defined by the following, are
- called the eligible interfaces:
-
- AS-external-LSAs (LS Type = 5)
- AS-external-LSAs are flooded throughout the entire AS, with the
- exception of stub areas (see Section 3.6). The eligible
- interfaces are all the router's interfaces, excluding virtual
- links and those interfaces attaching to stub areas.
-
- All other LS types
- All other types are specific to a single area (Area A). The
- eligible interfaces are all those interfaces attaching to the Area
- A. If Area A is the backbone, this includes all the virtual
- links.
-
- Link state databases must remain synchronized over all adjacencies
- associated with the above eligible interfaces. This is accomplished
- by executing the following steps on each eligible interface. It
- should be noted that this procedure may decide not to flood an LSA
- out a particular interface, if there is a high probability that the
- attached neighbors have already received the LSA. However, in these
- cases the flooding procedure must be absolutely sure that the
- neighbors eventually do receive the LSA, so the LSA is still added to
- each adjacency's Link state retransmission list. For each eligible
- interface:
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- (1) Each of the neighbors attached to this interface are
- examined, to determine whether they must receive the new
- LSA. The following steps are executed for each neighbor:
-
- (a) If the neighbor is in a lesser state than Exchange, it
- does not participate in flooding, and the next neighbor
- should be examined.
-
- (b) Else, if the adjacency is not yet full (neighbor state
- is Exchange or Loading), examine the Link state request
- list associated with this adjacency. If there is an
- instance of the new LSA on the list, it indicates that
- the neighboring router has an instance of the LSA
- already. Compare the new LSA to the neighbor's copy:
-
- o If the new LSA is less recent, then examine the next
- neighbor.
-
- o If the two copies are the same instance, then delete
- the LSA from the Link state request list, and
- examine the next neighbor.[20]
-
- o Else, the new LSA is more recent. Delete the LSA
- from the Link state request list.
-
- (c) If the new LSA was received from this neighbor, examine
- the next neighbor.
-
- (d) At this point we are not positive that the neighbor has
- an up-to-date instance of this new LSA. Add the new LSA
- to the Link state retransmission list for the adjacency.
- This ensures that the flooding procedure is reliable;
- the LSA will be retransmitted at intervals until an
- acknowledgment is seen from the neighbor.
-
- (2) The router must now decide whether to flood the new LSA out
- this interface. If in the previous step, the LSA was NOT
- added to any of the Link state retransmission lists, there
- is no need to flood the LSA out the interface and the next
- interface should be examined.
-
- (3) If the new LSA was received on this interface, and it was
- received from either the Designated Router or the Backup
- Designated Router, chances are that all the neighbors have
- received the LSA already. Therefore, examine the next
- interface.
-
-
-
-
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-
- (4) If the new LSA was received on this interface, and the
- interface state is Backup (i.e., the router itself is the
- Backup Designated Router), examine the next interface. The
- Designated Router will do the flooding on this interface.
- However, if the Designated Router fails the router (i.e.,
- the Backup Designated Router) will end up retransmitting the
- updates.
-
- (5) If this step is reached, the LSA must be flooded out the
- interface. Send a Link State Update packet (including the
- new LSA as contents) out the interface. The LSA's LS age
- must be incremented by InfTransDelay (which must be > 0)
- when it is copied into the outgoing Link State Update packet
- (until the LS age field reaches the maximum value of
- MaxAge).
-
- On broadcast networks, the Link State Update packets are
- multicast. The destination IP address specified for the
- Link State Update Packet depends on the state of the
- interface. If the interface state is DR or Backup, the
- address AllSPFRouters should be used. Otherwise, the
- address AllDRouters should be used.
-
- On non-broadcast networks, separate Link State Update
- packets must be sent, as unicasts, to each adjacent neighbor
- (i.e., those in state Exchange or greater). The destination
- IP addresses for these packets are the neighbors' IP
- addresses.
-
- 13.4. Receiving self-originated LSAs
-
- It is a common occurrence for a router to receive self-originated
- LSAs via the flooding procedure. A self-originated LSA is detected
- when either 1) the LSA's Advertising Router is equal to the router's
- own Router ID or 2) the LSA is a network-LSA and its Link State ID is
- equal to one of the router's own IP interface addresses.
-
- However, if the received self-originated LSA is newer than the last
- instance that the router actually originated, the router must take
- special action. The reception of such an LSA indicates that there
- are LSAs in the routing domain that were originated by the router
- before the last time it was restarted. In most cases, the router
- must then advance the LSA's LS sequence number one past the received
- LS sequence number, and originate a new instance of the LSA.
-
- It may be the case the router no longer wishes to originate the
- received LSA. Possible examples include: 1) the LSA is a summary-LSA
- or AS-external-LSA and the router no longer has an (advertisable)
-
-
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-
- route to the destination, 2) the LSA is a network-LSA but the router
- is no longer Designated Router for the network or 3) the LSA is a
- network-LSA whose Link State ID is one of the router's own IP
- interface addresses but whose Advertising Router is not equal to the
- router's own Router ID (this latter case should be rare, and it
- indicates that the router's Router ID has changed since originating
- the LSA). In all these cases, instead of updating the LSA, the LSA
- should be flushed from the routing domain by incrementing the
- received LSA's LS age to MaxAge and reflooding (see Section 14.1).
-
- 13.5. Sending Link State Acknowledgment packets
-
- Each newly received LSA must be acknowledged. This is usually done
- by sending Link State Acknowledgment packets. However,
- acknowledgments can also be accomplished implicitly by sending Link
- State Update packets (see step 7a of Section 13).
-
- Many acknowledgments may be grouped together into a single Link State
- Acknowledgment packet. Such a packet is sent back out the interface
- which received the LSAs. The packet can be sent in one of two ways:
- delayed and sent on an interval timer, or sent directly (as a
- unicast) to a particular neighbor. The particular acknowledgment
- strategy used depends on the circumstances surrounding the receipt of
- the LSA.
-
- Sending delayed acknowledgments accomplishes several things: 1) it
- facilitates the packaging of multiple acknowledgments in a single
- Link State Acknowledgment packet, 2) it enables a single Link State
- Acknowledgment packet to indicate acknowledgments to several
- neighbors at once (through multicasting) and 3) it randomizes the
- Link State Acknowledgment packets sent by the various routers
- attached to a common network. The fixed interval between a router's
- delayed transmissions must be short (less than RxmtInterval) or
- needless retransmissions will ensue.
-
- Direct acknowledgments are sent to a particular neighbor in response
- to the receipt of duplicate LSAs. These acknowledgments are sent as
- unicasts, and are sent immediately when the duplicate is received.
-
- The precise procedure for sending Link State Acknowledgment packets
- is described in Table 19. The circumstances surrounding the receipt
- of the LSA are listed in the left column. The acknowledgment action
- then taken is listed in one of the two right columns. This action
- depends on the state of the concerned interface; interfaces in state
- Backup behave differently from interfaces in all other states.
- Delayed acknowledgments must be delivered to all adjacent routers
- associated with the interface. On broadcast networks, this is
- accomplished by sending the delayed Link State Acknowledgment packets
-
-
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-
- as multicasts. The Destination IP address used depends on the state
- of the interface. If the interface state is DR or Backup, the
- destination AllSPFRouters is used. In all other states, the
- destination AllDRouters is used. On non-broadcast networks, delayed
- Link State Acknowledgment packets must be unicast separately over
- each adjacency (i.e., neighbor whose state is >= Exchange).
-
- Action taken in state
- Circumstances Backup All other states
- _______________________________________________________________
- LSA has No acknowledgment No acknowledgment
- been flooded back sent. sent.
- out receiving in-
- terface (see Sec-
- tion 13, step 5b).
- _______________________________________________________________
- LSA is Delayed acknowledg- Delayed ack-
- more recent than ment sent if adver- nowledgment sent.
- database copy, but tisement received
- was not flooded from Designated
- back out receiving Router, otherwise
- interface do nothing
- _______________________________________________________________
- LSA is a Delayed acknowledg- No acknowledgment
- duplicate, and was ment sent if adver- sent.
- treated as an im- tisement received
- plied acknowledg- from Designated
- ment (see Section Router, otherwise
- 13, step 7a). do nothing
- _______________________________________________________________
- LSA is a Direct acknowledg- Direct acknowledg-
- duplicate, and was ment sent. ment sent.
- not treated as an
- implied ack-
- nowledgment.
- _______________________________________________________________
- LSA's LS Direct acknowledg- Direct acknowledg-
- age is equal to ment sent. ment sent.
- MaxAge, and there is
- no current instance
- of the LSA
- in the link state
- database (see
- Section 13, step 4).
-
-
- Table 19: Sending link state acknowledgments.
-
-
-
-
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-
- The reasoning behind sending the above packets as multicasts is best
- explained by an example. Consider the network configuration depicted
- in Figure 15. Suppose RT4 has been elected as Designated Router, and
- RT3 as Backup Designated Router for the network N3. When Router RT4
- floods a new LSA to Network N3, it is received by routers RT1, RT2,
- and RT3. These routers will not flood the LSA back onto net N3, but
- they still must ensure that their link-state databases remain
- synchronized with their adjacent neighbors. So RT1, RT2, and RT4 are
- waiting to see an acknowledgment from RT3. Likewise, RT4 and RT3 are
- both waiting to see acknowledgments from RT1 and RT2. This is best
- achieved by sending the acknowledgments as multicasts.
-
- The reason that the acknowledgment logic for Backup DRs is slightly
- different is because they perform differently during the flooding of
- LSAs (see Section 13.3, step 4).
-
-
- 13.6. Retransmitting LSAs
-
- LSAs flooded out an adjacency are placed on the adjacency's Link
- state retransmission list. In order to ensure that flooding is
- reliable, these LSAs are retransmitted until they are acknowledged.
- The length of time between retransmissions is a configurable per-
- interface value, RxmtInterval. If this is set too low for an
- interface, needless retransmissions will ensue. If the value is set
- too high, the speed of the flooding, in the face of lost packets, may
- be affected.
-
- Several retransmitted LSAs may fit into a single Link State Update
- packet. When LSAs are to be retransmitted, only the number fitting
- in a single Link State Update packet should be sent. Another packet
- of retransmissions can be sent whenever some of the LSAs are
- acknowledged, or on the next firing of the retransmission timer.
-
- Link State Update Packets carrying retransmissions are always sent as
- unicasts (directly to the physical address of the neighbor). They
- are never sent as multicasts. Each LSA's LS age must be incremented
- by InfTransDelay (which must be > 0) when it is copied into the
- outgoing Link State Update packet (until the LS age field reaches the
- maximum value of MaxAge).
-
- If an adjacent router goes down, retransmissions may occur until the
- adjacency is destroyed by OSPF's Hello Protocol. When the adjacency
- is destroyed, the Link state retransmission list is cleared.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- 13.7. Receiving link state acknowledgments
-
- Many consistency checks have been made on a received Link State
- Acknowledgment packet before it is handed to the flooding procedure.
- In particular, it has been associated with a particular neighbor. If
- this neighbor is in a lesser state than Exchange, the Link State
- Acknowledgment packet is discarded.
-
- Otherwise, for each acknowledgment in the Link State Acknowledgment
- packet, the following steps are performed:
-
-
- o Does the LSA acknowledged have an instance on the Link state
- retransmission list for the neighbor? If not, examine the
- next acknowledgment. Otherwise:
-
- o If the acknowledgment is for the same instance that is
- contained on the list, remove the item from the list and
- examine the next acknowledgment. Otherwise:
-
- o Log the questionable acknowledgment, and examine the next
- one.
-
- 14. Aging The Link State Database
-
- Each LSA has an LS age field. The LS age is expressed in seconds.
- An LSA's LS age field is incremented while it is contained in a
- router's database. Also, when copied into a Link State Update Packet
- for flooding out a particular interface, the LSA's LS age is
- incremented by InfTransDelay.
-
- An LSA's LS age is never incremented past the value MaxAge. LSAs
- having age MaxAge are not used in the routing table calculation. As
- a router ages its link state database, an LSA's LS age may reach
- MaxAge.[21] At this time, the router must attempt to flush the LSA
- from the routing domain. This is done simply by reflooding the
- MaxAge LSA just as if it was a newly originated LSA (see Section
- 13.3).
-
- When creating a Database summary list for a newly forming adjacency,
- any MaxAge LSAs present in the link state database are added to the
- neighbor's Link state retransmission list instead of the neighbor's
- Database summary list. See Section 10.3 for more details.
-
- A MaxAge LSA must be removed immediately from the router's link state
- database as soon as both a) it is no longer contained on any neighbor
- Link state retransmission lists and b) none of the router's neighbors
- are in states Exchange or Loading.
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-
- When, in the process of aging the link state database, an LSA's LS
- age hits a multiple of CheckAge, its LS checksum should be verified.
- If the LS checksum is incorrect, a program or memory error has been
- detected, and at the very least the router itself should be
- restarted.
-
- 14.1. Premature aging of LSAs
-
- An LSA can be flushed from the routing domain by setting its LS age
- to MaxAge and reflooding the LSA. This procedure follows the same
- course as flushing an LSA whose LS age has naturally reached the
- value MaxAge (see Section 14). In particular, the MaxAge LSA is
- removed from the router's link state database as soon as a) it is no
- longer contained on any neighbor Link state retransmission lists and
- b) none of the router's neighbors are in states Exchange or Loading.
- We call the setting of an LSA's LS age to MaxAge "premature aging".
-
- Premature aging is used when it is time for a self-originated LSA's
- sequence number field to wrap. At this point, the current LSA
- instance (having LS sequence number MaxSequenceNumber) must be
- prematurely aged and flushed from the routing domain before a new
- instance with sequence number equal to InitialSequenceNumber can be
- originated. See Section 12.1.6 for more information.
-
- Premature aging can also be used when, for example, one of the
- router's previously advertised external routes is no longer
- reachable. In this circumstance, the router can flush its AS-
- external-LSA from the routing domain via premature aging. This
- procedure is preferable to the alternative, which is to originate a
- new LSA for the destination specifying a metric of LSInfinity.
- Premature aging is also be used when unexpectedly receiving self-
- originated LSAs during the flooding procedure (see Section 13.4).
-
- A router may only prematurely age its own self-originated LSAs. The
- router may not prematurely age LSAs that have been originated by
- other routers. An LSA is considered self- originated when either 1)
- the LSA's Advertising Router is equal to the router's own Router ID
- or 2) the LSA is a network-LSA and its Link State ID is equal to one
- of the router's own IP interface addresses.
-
- 15. Virtual Links
-
- The single backbone area (Area ID = 0.0.0.0) cannot be disconnected,
- or some areas of the Autonomous System will become unreachable. To
- establish/maintain connectivity of the backbone, virtual links can be
- configured through non-backbone areas. Virtual links serve to
- connect physically separate components of the backbone. The two
- endpoints of a virtual link are area border routers. The virtual
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- link must be configured in both routers. The configuration
- information in each router consists of the other virtual endpoint
- (the other area border router), and the non-backbone area the two
- routers have in common (called the Transit area). Virtual links
- cannot be configured through stub areas (see Section 3.6).
-
- The virtual link is treated as if it were an unnumbered point-to-
- point network belonging to the backbone and joining the two area
- border routers. An attempt is made to establish an adjacency over
- the virtual link. When this adjacency is established, the virtual
- link will be included in backbone router-LSAs, and OSPF packets
- pertaining to the backbone area will flow over the adjacency. Such
- an adjacency has been referred to in this document as a "virtual
- adjacency".
-
- In each endpoint router, the cost and viability of the virtual link
- is discovered by examining the routing table entry for the other
- endpoint router. (The entry's associated area must be the configured
- Transit area). This is called the virtual link's corresponding
- routing table entry. The InterfaceUp event occurs for a virtual link
- when its corresponding routing table entry becomes reachable.
- Conversely, the InterfaceDown event occurs when its routing table
- entry becomes unreachable. In other words, the virtual link's
- viability is determined by the existence of an intra-area path,
- through the Transit area, between the two endpoints. Note that a
- virtual link whose underlying path has cost greater than hexadecimal
- 0xffff (the maximum size of an interface cost in a router-LSA) should
- be considered inoperational (i.e., treated the same as if the path
- did not exist).
-
- The other details concerning virtual links are as follows:
-
- o AS-external-LSAs are NEVER flooded over virtual adjacencies. This
- would be duplication of effort, since the same AS-external-LSAs are
- already flooded throughout the virtual link's Transit area. For this
- same reason, AS-external-LSAs are not summarized over virtual
- adjacencies during the Database Exchange process.
-
- o The cost of a virtual link is NOT configured. It is defined to be
- the cost of the intra-area path between the two defining area border
- routers. This cost appears in the virtual link's corresponding
- routing table entry. When the cost of a virtual link changes, a new
- router-LSA should be originated for the backbone area.
-
- o Just as the virtual link's cost and viability are determined by the
- routing table build process (through construction of the routing
- table entry for the other endpoint), so are the IP interface address
- for the virtual interface and the virtual neighbor's IP address.
-
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- These are used when sending OSPF protocol packets over the virtual
- link. Note that when one (or both) of the virtual link endpoints
- connect to the Transit area via an unnumbered point-to-point link, it
- may be impossible to calculate either the virtual interface's IP
- address and/or the virtual neighbor's IP address, thereby causing the
- virtual link to fail.
-
- o In each endpoint's router-LSA for the backbone, the virtual link is
- represented as a Type 4 link whose Link ID is set to the virtual
- neighbor's OSPF Router ID and whose Link Data is set to the virtual
- interface's IP address. See Section 12.4.1 for more information.
-
- o A non-backbone area can carry transit data traffic (i.e., is
- considered a "transit area") if and only if it serves as the Transit
- area for one or more fully adjacent virtual links (see
- TransitCapability in Sections 6 and 16.1). Such an area requires
- special treatment when summarizing backbone networks into it (see
- Section 12.4.3), and during the routing calculation (see Section
- 16.3).
-
- o The time between link state retransmissions, RxmtInterval, is
- configured for a virtual link. This should be well over the expected
- round-trip delay between the two routers. This may be hard to
- estimate for a virtual link; it is better to err on the side of
- making it too large.
-
- 16. Calculation of the routing table
-
- This section details the OSPF routing table calculation. Using its
- attached areas' link state databases as input, a router runs the
- following algorithm, building its routing table step by step. At
- each step, the router must access individual pieces of the link state
- databases (e.g., a router-LSA originated by a certain router). This
- access is performed by the lookup function discussed in Section 12.2.
- The lookup process may return an LSA whose LS age is equal to MaxAge.
- Such an LSA should not be used in the routing table calculation, and
- is treated just as if the lookup process had failed.
-
- The OSPF routing table's organization is explained in Section 11.
- Two examples of the routing table build process are presented in
- Sections 11.2 and 11.3. This process can be broken into the
- following steps:
-
- (1) The present routing table is invalidated. The routing table is
- built again from scratch. The old routing table is saved so
- that changes in routing table entries can be identified.
-
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-
- (2) The intra-area routes are calculated by building the shortest-
- path tree for each attached area. In particular, all routing
- table entries whose Destination Type is "area border router" are
- calculated in this step. This step is described in two parts.
- At first the tree is constructed by only considering those links
- between routers and transit networks. Then the stub networks
- are incorporated into the tree. During the area's shortest-path
- tree calculation, the area's TransitCapability is also
- calculated for later use in Step 4.
-
- (3) The inter-area routes are calculated, through examination of
- summary-LSAs. If the router is attached to multiple areas
- (i.e., it is an area border router), only backbone summary-LSAs
- are examined.
-
- (4) In area border routers connecting to one or more transit areas
- (i.e, non-backbone areas whose TransitCapability is found to be
- TRUE), the transit areas' summary-LSAs are examined to see
- whether better paths exist using the transit areas than were
- found in Steps 2-3 above.
-
- (5) Routes to external destinations are calculated, through
- examination of AS-external-LSAs. The locations of the AS
- boundary routers (which originate the AS-external-LSAs) have
- been determined in steps 2-4.
-
- Steps 2-5 are explained in further detail below.
-
- Changes made to routing table entries as a result of these
- calculations can cause the OSPF protocol to take further actions.
- For example, a change to an intra-area route will cause an area
- border router to originate new summary-LSAs (see Section 12.4). See
-
- Section 16.7 for a complete list of the OSPF protocol actions
- resulting from routing table changes.
-
- 16.1. Calculating the shortest-path tree for an area
-
- This calculation yields the set of intra-area routes associated with
- an area (called hereafter Area A). A router calculates the
- shortest-path tree using itself as the root.[22] The formation of the
- shortest path tree is done here in two stages. In the first stage,
- only links between routers and transit networks are considered.
- Using the Dijkstra algorithm, a tree is formed from this subset of
- the link state database. In the second stage, leaves are added to
- the tree by considering the links to stub networks.
-
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-
- The procedure will be explained using the graph terminology that was
- introduced in Section 2. The area's link state database is
- represented as a directed graph. The graph's vertices are routers,
- transit networks and stub networks. The first stage of the procedure
- concerns only the transit vertices (routers and transit networks) and
- their connecting links. Throughout the shortest path calculation,
- the following data is also associated with each transit vertex:
-
-
- Vertex (node) ID
- A 32-bit number uniquely identifying the vertex. For router
- vertices this is the router's OSPF Router ID. For network
- vertices, this is the IP address of the network's Designated
- Router.
-
- An LSA
- Each transit vertex has an associated LSA. For router
- vertices, this is a router-LSA. For transit networks, this
- is a network-LSA (which is actually originated by the
- network's Designated Router). In any case, the LSA's Link
- State ID is always equal to the above Vertex ID.
-
- List of next hops
- The list of next hops for the current set of shortest paths
- from the root to this vertex. There can be multiple
- shortest paths due to the equal-cost multipath capability.
- Each next hop indicates the outgoing router interface to use
- when forwarding traffic to the destination. On broadcast,
- Point-to-MultiPoint and NBMA networks, the next hop also
- includes the IP address of the next router (if any) in the
- path towards the destination.
-
- Distance from root
- The link state cost of the current set of shortest paths
- from the root to the vertex. The link state cost of a path
- is calculated as the sum of the costs of the path's
- constituent links (as advertised in router-LSAs and
- network-LSAs). One path is said to be "shorter" than
- another if it has a smaller link state cost.
-
-
- The first stage of the procedure (i.e., the Dijkstra algorithm) can
- now be summarized as follows. At each iteration of the algorithm,
- there is a list of candidate vertices. Paths from the root to these
- vertices have been found, but not necessarily the shortest ones.
- However, the paths to the candidate vertex that is closest to the
- root are guaranteed to be shortest; this vertex is added to the
- shortest-path tree, removed from the candidate list, and its adjacent
-
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- vertices are examined for possible addition to/modification of the
- candidate list. The algorithm then iterates again. It terminates
- when the candidate list becomes empty.
-
- The following steps describe the algorithm in detail. Remember that
- we are computing the shortest path tree for Area A. All references
- to link state database lookup below are from Area A's database.
-
- (1) Initialize the algorithm's data structures. Clear the list
- of candidate vertices. Initialize the shortest-path tree to
- only the root (which is the router doing the calculation).
- Set Area A's TransitCapability to FALSE.
-
- (2) Call the vertex just added to the tree vertex V. Examine
- the LSA associated with vertex V. This is a lookup in the
- Area A's link state database based on the Vertex ID. If
- this is a router-LSA, and bit V of the router-LSA (see
- Section A.4.2) is set, set Area A's TransitCapability to
- TRUE. In any case, each link described by the LSA gives the
- cost to an adjacent vertex. For each described link, (say
- it joins vertex V to vertex W):
-
- (a) If this is a link to a stub network, examine the next
- link in V's LSA. Links to stub networks will be
- considered in the second stage of the shortest path
- calculation.
-
- (b) Otherwise, W is a transit vertex (router or transit
- network). Look up the vertex W's LSA (router-LSA or
- network-LSA) in Area A's link state database. If the
- LSA does not exist, or its LS age is equal to MaxAge, or
- it does not have a link back to vertex V, examine the
- next link in V's LSA.[23]
-
- (c) If vertex W is already on the shortest-path tree,
- examine the next link in the LSA.
-
- (d) Calculate the link state cost D of the resulting path
- from the root to vertex W. D is equal to the sum of the
- link state cost of the (already calculated) shortest
- path to vertex V and the advertised cost of the link
- between vertices V and W. If D is:
-
- o Greater than the value that already appears for
- vertex W on the candidate list, then examine the
- next link.
-
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- o Equal to the value that appears for vertex W on the
- candidate list, calculate the set of next hops that
- result from using the advertised link. Input to
- this calculation is the destination (W), and its
- parent (V). This calculation is shown in Section
- 16.1.1. This set of hops should be added to the
- next hop values that appear for W on the candidate
- list.
-
- o Less than the value that appears for vertex W on the
- candidate list, or if W does not yet appear on the
- candidate list, then set the entry for W on the
- candidate list to indicate a distance of D from the
- root. Also calculate the list of next hops that
- result from using the advertised link, setting the
- next hop values for W accordingly. The next hop
- calculation is described in Section 16.1.1; it takes
- as input the destination (W) and its parent (V).
-
- (3) If at this step the candidate list is empty, the shortest-
- path tree (of transit vertices) has been completely built
- and this stage of the procedure terminates. Otherwise,
- choose the vertex belonging to the candidate list that is
- closest to the root, and add it to the shortest-path tree
- (removing it from the candidate list in the process). Note
- that when there is a choice of vertices closest to the root,
- network vertices must be chosen before router vertices in
- order to necessarily find all equal-cost paths. This is
- consistent with the tie-breakers that were introduced in the
- modified Dijkstra algorithm used by OSPF's Multicast routing
- extensions (MOSPF).
-
- (4) Possibly modify the routing table. For those routing table
- entries modified, the associated area will be set to Area A,
- the path type will be set to intra-area, and the cost will
- be set to the newly discovered shortest path's calculated
- distance.
-
- If the newly added vertex is an area border router or AS
- boundary router, a routing table entry is added whose
- destination type is "router". The Options field found in
- the associated router-LSA is copied into the routing table
- entry's Optional capabilities field. Call the newly added
- vertex Router X. If Router X is the endpoint of one of the
- calculating router's virtual links, and the virtual link
- uses Area A as Transit area: the virtual link is declared
- up, the IP address of the virtual interface is set to the IP
- address of the outgoing interface calculated above for
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- Router X, and the virtual neighbor's IP address is set to
- Router X's interface address (contained in Router X's
- router-LSA) that points back to the root of the shortest-
- path tree; equivalently, this is the interface that points
- back to Router X's parent vertex on the shortest-path tree
- (similar to the calculation in Section 16.1.1).
-
- If the newly added vertex is a transit network, the routing
- table entry for the network is located. The entry's
- Destination ID is the IP network number, which can be
- obtained by masking the Vertex ID (Link State ID) with its
- associated subnet mask (found in the body of the associated
- network-LSA). If the routing table entry already exists
- (i.e., there is already an intra-area route to the
- destination installed in the routing table), multiple
- vertices have mapped to the same IP network. For example,
- this can occur when a new Designated Router is being
- established. In this case, the current routing table entry
- should be overwritten if and only if the newly found path is
- just as short and the current routing table entry's Link
- State Origin has a smaller Link State ID than the newly
- added vertex' LSA.
-
- If there is no routing table entry for the network (the
- usual case), a routing table entry for the IP network should
- be added. The routing table entry's Link State Origin
- should be set to the newly added vertex' LSA.
-
- (5) Iterate the algorithm by returning to Step 2.
-
- The stub networks are added to the tree in the procedure's second
- stage. In this stage, all router vertices are again examined. Those
- that have been determined to be unreachable in the above first phase
- are discarded. For each reachable router vertex (call it V), the
- associated router-LSA is found in the link state database. Each stub
- network link appearing in the LSA is then examined, and the following
- steps are executed:
-
-
- (1) Calculate the distance D of stub network from the root. D
- is equal to the distance from the root to the router vertex
- (calculated in stage 1), plus the stub network link's
- advertised cost. Compare this distance to the current best
- cost to the stub network. This is done by looking up the
- stub network's current routing table entry. If the
- calculated distance D is larger, go on to examine the next
- stub network link in the LSA.
-
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-
- (2) If this step is reached, the stub network's routing table
- entry must be updated. Calculate the set of next hops that
- would result from using the stub network link. This
- calculation is shown in Section 16.1.1; input to this
- calculation is the destination (the stub network) and the
- parent vertex (the router vertex). If the distance D is the
- same as the current routing table cost, simply add this set
- of next hops to the routing table entry's list of next hops.
- In this case, the routing table already has a Link State
- Origin. If this Link State Origin is a router-LSA whose
- Link State ID is smaller than V's Router ID, reset the Link
- State Origin to V's router-LSA.
-
- Otherwise D is smaller than the routing table cost.
- Overwrite the current routing table entry by setting the
- routing table entry's cost to D, and by setting the entry's
- list of next hops to the newly calculated set. Set the
- routing table entry's Link State Origin to V's router-LSA.
- Then go on to examine the next stub network link.
-
- For all routing table entries added/modified in the second stage, the
- associated area will be set to Area A and the path type will be set to
- intra-area. When the list of reachable router-LSAs is exhausted, the
- second stage is completed. At this time, all intra-area routes
- associated with Area A have been determined.
-
- The specification does not require that the above two stage method be
- used to calculate the shortest path tree. However, if another
- algorithm is used, an identical tree must be produced. For this
- reason, it is important to note that links between transit vertices
- must be bidirectional in order to be included in the above tree. It
- should also be mentioned that more efficient algorithms exist for
- calculating the tree; for example, the incremental SPF algorithm
- described in [Ref1].
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- 16.1.1. The next hop calculation
-
- This section explains how to calculate the current set of next hops
- to use for a destination. Each next hop consists of the outgoing
- interface to use in forwarding packets to the destination together
- with the IP address of the next hop router (if any). The next hop
- calculation is invoked each time a shorter path to the destination is
- discovered. This can happen in either stage of the shortest-path
- tree calculation (see Section 16.1). In stage 1 of the shortest-path
- tree calculation a shorter path is found as the destination is added
- to the candidate list, or when the destination's entry on the
- candidate list is modified (Step 2d of Stage 1). In stage 2 a
- shorter path is discovered each time the destination's routing table
- entry is modified (Step 2 of Stage 2).
-
- The set of next hops to use for the destination may be recalculated
- several times during the shortest-path tree calculation, as shorter
- and shorter paths are discovered. In the end, the destination's
- routing table entry will always reflect the next hops resulting from
- the absolute shortest path(s).
-
- Input to the next hop calculation is a) the destination and b) its
- parent in the current shortest path between the root (the calculating
- router) and the destination. The parent is always a transit vertex
- (i.e., always a router or a transit network).
-
- If there is at least one intervening router in the current shortest
- path between the destination and the root, the destination simply
- inherits the set of next hops from the parent. Otherwise, there are
- two cases. In the first case, the parent vertex is the root (the
- calculating router itself). This means that the destination is
- either a directly connected network or directly connected router.
- The outgoing interface in this case is simply the OSPF interface
- connecting to the destination network/router. If the destination is a
- router which connects to the calculating router via a Point-to-
- MultiPoint network, the destination's next hop IP address(es) can be
- determined by examining the destination's router-LSA: each link
- pointing back to the calculating router and having a Link Data field
- belonging to the Point-to-MultiPoint network provides an IP address
- of the next hop router. If the destination is a directly connected
- network, or a router which connects to the calculating router via a
- point-to-point interface, no next hop IP address is required. If the
- destination is a router connected to the calculating router via a
- virtual link, the setting of the next hop should be deferred until
- the calculation in Section 16.3.
-
-
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- In the second case, the parent vertex is a network that directly
- connects the calculating router to the destination router. The list
- of next hops is then determined by examining the destination's
- router-LSA. For each link in the router-LSA that points back to the
- parent network, the link's Link Data field provides the IP address of
- a next hop router. The outgoing interface to use can then be derived
- from the next hop IP address (or it can be inherited from the parent
- network).
-
- 16.2. Calculating the inter-area routes
-
- The inter-area routes are calculated by examining summary-LSAs. If
- the router has active attachments to multiple areas, only backbone
- summary-LSAs are examined. Routers attached to a single area examine
- that area's summary-LSAs. In either case, the summary-LSAs examined
- below are all part of a single area's link state database (call it
- Area A).
-
- Summary-LSAs are originated by the area border routers. Each
- summary-LSA in Area A is considered in turn. Remember that the
- destination described by a summary-LSA is either a network (Type 3
- summary-LSAs) or an AS boundary router (Type 4 summary-LSAs). For
- each summary-LSA:
-
-
- (1) If the cost specified by the LSA is LSInfinity, or if the
- LSA's LS age is equal to MaxAge, then examine the the next
- LSA.
-
- (2) If the LSA was originated by the calculating router itself,
- examine the next LSA.
-
- (3) If it is a Type 3 summary-LSA, and the collection of
- destinations described by the summary-LSA equals one of the
- router's configured area address ranges (see Section 3.5),
- and the particular area address range is active, then the
- summary-LSA should be ignored. "Active" means that there
- are one or more reachable (by intra-area paths) networks
- contained in the area range.
-
- (4) Else, call the destination described by the LSA N (for Type
- 3 summary-LSAs, N's address is obtained by masking the LSA's
- Link State ID with the network/subnet mask contained in the
- body of the LSA), and the area border originating the LSA
- BR. Look up the routing table entry for BR having Area A as
- its associated area. If no such entry exists for router BR
- (i.e., BR is unreachable in Area A), do nothing with this
- LSA and consider the next in the list. Else, this LSA
-
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- describes an inter-area path to destination N, whose cost is
- the distance to BR plus the cost specified in the LSA. Call
- the cost of this inter-area path IAC.
-
- (5) Next, look up the routing table entry for the destination N.
- (If N is an AS boundary router, look up the "router" routing
- table entry associated with Area A). If no entry exists for
- N or if the entry's path type is "type 1 external" or "type
- 2 external", then install the inter-area path to N, with
- associated area Area A, cost IAC, next hop equal to the list
- of next hops to router BR, and Advertising router equal to
- BR.
-
- (6) Else, if the paths present in the table are intra-area
- paths, do nothing with the LSA (intra-area paths are always
- preferred).
-
- (7) Else, the paths present in the routing table are also
- inter-area paths. Install the new path through BR if it is
- cheaper, overriding the paths in the routing table.
- Otherwise, if the new path is the same cost, add it to the
- list of paths that appear in the routing table entry.
-
- 16.3. Examining transit areas' summary-LSAs
-
- This step is only performed by area border routers attached to one or
- more non-backbone areas that are capable of carrying transit traffic
- (i.e., "transit areas", or those areas whose TransitCapability
- parameter has been set to TRUE in Step 2 of the Dijkstra algorithm
- (see Section 16.1).
-
- The purpose of the calculation below is to examine the transit areas
- to see whether they provide any better (shorter) paths than the paths
- previously calculated in Sections 16.1 and 16.2. Any paths found
- that are better than or equal to previously discovered paths are
- installed in the routing table.
-
- The calculation proceeds as follows. All the transit areas' summary-
- LSAs are examined in turn. Each such summary-LSA describes a route
- through a transit area Area A to a Network N (N's address is obtained
- by masking the LSA's Link State ID with the network/subnet mask
- contained in the body of the LSA) or in the case of a Type 4
- summary-LSA, to an AS boundary router N. Suppose also that the
- summary-LSA was originated by an area border router BR.
-
- (1) If the cost advertised by the summary-LSA is LSInfinity, or
- if the LSA's LS age is equal to MaxAge, then examine the
- next LSA.
-
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-
- (2) If the summary-LSA was originated by the calculating router
- itself, examine the next LSA.
-
- (3) Look up the routing table entry for N. (If N is an AS
- boundary router, look up the "router" routing table entry
- associated with the backbone area). If it does not exist, or
- if the route type is other than intra-area or inter-area, or
- if the area associated with the routing table entry is not
- the backbone area, then examine the next LSA. In other
- words, this calculation only updates backbone intra-area
- routes found in Section 16.1 and inter-area routes found in
- Section 16.2.
-
- (4) Look up the routing table entry for the advertising router
- BR associated with the Area A. If it is unreachable, examine
- the next LSA. Otherwise, the cost to destination N is the
- sum of the cost in BR's Area A routing table entry and the
- cost advertised in the LSA. Call this cost IAC.
-
- (5) If this cost is less than the cost occurring in N's routing
- table entry, overwrite N's list of next hops with those used
- for BR, and set N's routing table cost to IAC. Else, if IAC
- is the same as N's current cost, add BR's list of next hops
- to N's list of next hops. In any case, the area associated
- with N's routing table entry must remain the backbone area,
- and the path type (either intra-area or inter-area) must
- also remain the same.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- . Area 1 (transit) . +
- . . |
- . +---+1 1+---+100 |
- . |RT2|----------|RT4|=========|
- . 1/+---+********* +---+ |
- . /******* . |
- . 1/*Virtual . |
- 1+---+/* Link . Net|work
- =======|RT1|* . | N1
- +---+\ . |
- . \ . |
- . \ . |
- . 1\+---+1 1+---+20 |
- . |RT3|----------|RT5|=========|
- . +---+ +---+ |
- . . |
- ........................ +
-
-
- Figure 17: Routing through transit areas
-
- It is important to note that the above calculation never makes
- unreachable destinations reachable, but instead just potentially
- finds better paths to already reachable destinations. The
- calculation installs any better cost found into the routing table
- entry, from which it may be readvertised in summary-LSAs to other
- areas.
-
- As an example of the calculation, consider the Autonomous System
- pictured in Figure 17. There is a single non-backbone area (Area 1)
- that physically divides the backbone into two separate pieces. To
- maintain connectivity of the backbone, a virtual link has been
- configured between routers RT1 and RT4. On the right side of the
- figure, Network N1 belongs to the backbone. The dotted lines indicate
- that there is a much shorter intra-area backbone path between router
- RT5 and Network N1 (cost 20) than there is between Router RT4 and
- Network N1 (cost 100). Both Router RT4 and Router RT5 will inject
- summary-LSAs for Network N1 into Area 1.
-
- After the shortest-path tree has been calculated for the backbone in
- Section 16.1, Router RT1 (left end of the virtual link) will have
- calculated a path through Router RT4 for all data traffic destined
- for Network N1. However, since Router RT5 is so much closer to
- Network N1, all routers internal to Area 1 (e.g., Routers RT2 and
- RT3) will forward their Network N1 traffic towards Router RT5,
- instead of RT4. And indeed, after examining Area 1's summary-LSAs by
- the above calculation, Router RT1 will also forward Network N1
- traffic towards RT5. Note that in this example the virtual link
-
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-
- enables transit data traffic to be forwarded through Area 1, but the
- actual path the transit data traffic takes does not follow the
- virtual link. In other words, virtual links allow transit traffic to
- be forwarded through an area, but do not dictate the precise path
- that the traffic will take.
-
- 16.4. Calculating AS external routes
-
- AS external routes are calculated by examining AS-external-LSAs.
- Each of the AS-external-LSAs is considered in turn. Most AS-
- external-LSAs describe routes to specific IP destinations. An AS-
- external-LSA can also describe a default route for the Autonomous
- System (Destination ID = DefaultDestination, network/subnet mask =
- 0x00000000). For each AS-external-LSA:
-
- (1) If the cost specified by the LSA is LSInfinity, or if the
- LSA's LS age is equal to MaxAge, then examine the next LSA.
-
- (2) If the LSA was originated by the calculating router itself,
- examine the next LSA.
-
- (3) Call the destination described by the LSA N. N's address is
- obtained by masking the LSA's Link State ID with the
- network/subnet mask contained in the body of the LSA. Look
- up the routing table entries (potentially one per attached
- area) for the AS boundary router (ASBR) that originated the
- LSA. If no entries exist for router ASBR (i.e., ASBR is
- unreachable), do nothing with this LSA and consider the next
- in the list.
-
- Else, this LSA describes an AS external path to destination
- N. Examine the forwarding address specified in the AS-
- external-LSA. This indicates the IP address to which
- packets for the destination should be forwarded.
-
- If the forwarding address is set to 0.0.0.0, packets should
- be sent to the ASBR itself. Among the multiple routing table
- entries for the ASBR, select the preferred entry as follows.
- If RFC1583Compatibility is set to "disabled", prune the set
- of routing table entries for the ASBR as described in
- Section 16.4.1. In any case, among the remaining routing
- table entries, select the routing table entry with the least
- cost; when there are multiple least cost routing table
- entries the entry whose associated area has the largest OSPF
- Area ID (when considered as an unsigned 32-bit integer) is
- chosen.
-
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-
- If the forwarding address is non-zero, look up the
- forwarding address in the routing table.[24] The matching
- routing table entry must specify an intra-area or inter-area
- path; if no such path exists, do nothing with the LSA and
- consider the next in the list.
-
- (4) Let X be the cost specified by the preferred routing table
- entry for the ASBR/forwarding address, and Y the cost
- specified in the LSA. X is in terms of the link state
- metric, and Y is a type 1 or 2 external metric.
-
- (5) Look up the routing table entry for the destination N. If
- no entry exists for N, install the AS external path to N,
- with next hop equal to the list of next hops to the
- forwarding address, and advertising router equal to ASBR.
- If the external metric type is 1, then the path-type is set
- to type 1 external and the cost is equal to X+Y. If the
- external metric type is 2, the path-type is set to type 2
- external, the link state component of the route's cost is X,
- and the type 2 cost is Y.
-
- (6) Compare the AS external path described by the LSA with the
- existing paths in N's routing table entry, as follows. If
- the new path is preferred, it replaces the present paths in
- N's routing table entry. If the new path is of equal
- preference, it is added to N's routing table entry's list of
- paths.
-
- (a) Intra-area and inter-area paths are always preferred
- over AS external paths.
-
- (b) Type 1 external paths are always preferred over type 2
- external paths. When all paths are type 2 external
- paths, the paths with the smallest advertised type 2
- metric are always preferred.
-
- (c) If the new AS external path is still indistinguishable
- from the current paths in the N's routing table entry,
- and RFC1583Compatibility is set to "disabled", select
- the preferred paths based on the intra-AS paths to the
- ASBR/forwarding addresses, as specified in Section
- 16.4.1.
-
-
-
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-
- (d) If the new AS external path is still indistinguishable
- from the current paths in the N's routing table entry,
- select the preferred path based on a least cost
- comparison. Type 1 external paths are compared by
- looking at the sum of the distance to the forwarding
- address and the advertised type 1 metric (X+Y). Type 2
- external paths advertising equal type 2 metrics are
- compared by looking at the distance to the forwarding
- addresses.
-
- 16.4.1. External path preferences
-
- When multiple intra-AS paths are available to ASBRs/forwarding
- addresses, the following rules indicate which paths are preferred.
- These rules apply when the same ASBR is reachable through multiple
- areas, or when trying to decide which of several AS-external-LSAs
- should be preferred. In the former case the paths all terminate at
- the same ASBR, while in the latter the paths terminate at separate
- ASBRs/forwarding addresses. In either case, each path is represented
- by a separate routing table entry as defined in Section 11.
-
- This section only applies when RFC1583Compatibility is set to
- "disabled".
-
- The path preference rules, stated from highest to lowest preference,
- are as follows. Note that as a result of these rules, there may still
- be multiple paths of the highest preference. In this case, the path
- to use must be determined based on cost, as described in Section
- 16.4.
-
- o Intra-area paths using non-backbone areas are always the
- most preferred.
-
- o Otherwise, intra-area backbone paths are preferred.
-
- o Inter-area paths are the least preferred.
-
- 16.5. Incremental updates -- summary-LSAs
-
- When a new summary-LSA is received, it is not necessary to
- recalculate the entire routing table. Call the destination described
- by the summary-LSA N (N's address is obtained by masking the LSA's
- Link State ID with the network/subnet mask contained in the body of
- the LSA), and let Area A be the area to which the LSA belongs. There
- are then two separate cases:
-
-
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-
- Case 1: Area A is the backbone and/or the router is not an area
- border router.
- In this case, the following calculations must be performed.
- First, if there is presently an inter-area route to the
- destination N, N's routing table entry is invalidated, saving the
- entry's values for later comparisons. Then the calculation in
- Section 16.2 is run again for the single destination N. In this
- calculation, all of Area A's summary-LSAs that describe a route to
- N are examined. In addition, if the router is an area border
- router attached to one or more transit areas, the calculation in
- Section 16.3 must be run again for the single destination. If the
- results of these calculations have changed the cost/path to an AS
- boundary router (as would be the case for a Type 4 summary-LSA) or
- to any forwarding addresses, all AS- external-LSAs will have to be
- reexamined by rerunning the calculation in Section 16.4.
- Otherwise, if N is now newly unreachable, the calculation in
- Section 16.4 must be rerun for the single destination N, in case
- an alternate external route to N exists.
-
- Case 2: Area A is a transit area and the router is an area border
- router.
- In this case, the following calculations must be performed.
- First, if N's routing table entry presently contains one or more
- inter-area paths that utilize the transit area Area A, these paths
- should be removed. If this removes all paths from the routing
- table entry, the entry should be invalidated. The entry's old
- values should be saved for later comparisons. Next the calculation
- in Section 16.3 must be run again for the single destination N. If
- the results of this calculation have caused the cost to N to
- increase, the complete routing table calculation must be rerun
- starting with the Dijkstra algorithm specified in Section 16.1.
- Otherwise, if the cost/path to an AS boundary router (as would be
- the case for a Type 4 summary-LSA) or to any forwarding addresses
- has changed, all AS-external-LSAs will have to be reexamined by
- rerunning the calculation in Section 16.4. Otherwise, if N is now
- newly unreachable, the calculation in Section 16.4 must be rerun
- for the single destination N, in case an alternate external route
- to N exists.
-
- 16.6. Incremental updates -- AS-external-LSAs
-
- When a new AS-external-LSA is received, it is not necessary to
- recalculate the entire routing table. Call the destination described
- by the AS-external-LSA N. N's address is obtained by masking the
- LSA's Link State ID with the network/subnet mask contained in the
- body of the LSA. If there is already an intra- area or inter-area
- route to the destination, no recalculation is necessary (internal
- routes take precedence).
-
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- Otherwise, the procedure in Section 16.4 will have to be performed,
- but only for those AS-external-LSAs whose destination is N. Before
- this procedure is performed, the present routing table entry for N
- should be invalidated.
-
- 16.7. Events generated as a result of routing table changes
-
- Changes to routing table entries sometimes cause the OSPF area border
- routers to take additional actions. These routers need to act on the
- following routing table changes:
-
- o The cost or path type of a routing table entry has changed.
- If the destination described by this entry is a Network or AS
- boundary router, and this is not simply a change of AS external
- routes, new summary-LSAs may have to be generated (potentially one
- for each attached area, including the backbone). See Section
- 12.4.3 for more information. If a previously advertised entry has
- been deleted, or is no longer advertisable to a particular area,
- the LSA must be flushed from the routing domain by setting its LS
- age to MaxAge and reflooding (see Section 14.1).
-
- o A routing table entry associated with a configured virtual
- link has changed. The destination of such a routing table entry
- is an area border router. The change indicates a modification to
- the virtual link's cost or viability.
-
- If the entry indicates that the area border router is newly
- reachable, the corresponding virtual link is now operational. An
- InterfaceUp event should be generated for the virtual link, which
- will cause a virtual adjacency to begin to form (see Section
- 10.3). At this time the virtual link's IP interface address and
- the virtual neighbor's Neighbor IP address are also calculated.
-
- If the entry indicates that the area border router is no longer
- reachable, the virtual link and its associated adjacency should be
- destroyed. This means an InterfaceDown event should be generated
- for the associated virtual link.
-
- If the cost of the entry has changed, and there is a fully
- established virtual adjacency, a new router-LSA for the backbone
- must be originated. This in turn may cause further routing table
- changes.
-
-
-
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-
- 16.8. Equal-cost multipath
-
- The OSPF protocol maintains multiple equal-cost routes to all
- destinations. This can be seen in the steps used above to calculate
- the routing table, and in the definition of the routing table
- structure.
-
- Each one of the multiple routes will be of the same type (intra-area,
- inter-area, type 1 external or type 2 external), cost, and will have
- the same associated area. However, each route specifies a separate
- next hop and Advertising router.
-
- There is no requirement that a router running OSPF keep track of all
- possible equal-cost routes to a destination. An implementation may
- choose to keep only a fixed number of routes to any given
- destination. This does not affect any of the algorithms presented in
- this specification.
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
- Footnotes
-
- [1]The graph's vertices represent either routers, transit networks,
- or stub networks. Since routers may belong to multiple areas, it is
- not possible to color the graph's vertices.
-
- [2]It is possible for all of a router's interfaces to be unnumbered
- point-to-point links. In this case, an IP address must be assigned
- to the router. This address will then be advertised in the router's
- router-LSA as a host route.
-
- [3]Note that in these cases both interfaces, the non-virtual and the
- virtual, would have the same IP address.
-
- [4]Note that no host route is generated for, and no IP packets can be
- addressed to, interfaces to unnumbered point-to-point networks. This
- is regardless of such an interface's state.
-
- [5]It is instructive to see what happens when the Designated Router
- for the network crashes. Call the Designated Router for the network
- RT1, and the Backup Designated Router RT2. If Router RT1 crashes (or
- maybe its interface to the network dies), the other routers on the
- network will detect RT1's absence within RouterDeadInterval seconds.
- All routers may not detect this at precisely the same time; the
- routers that detect RT1's absence before RT2 does will, for a time,
- select RT2 to be both Designated Router and Backup Designated Router.
- When RT2 detects that RT1 is gone it will move itself to Designated
- Router. At this time, the remaining router having highest Router
- Priority will be selected as Backup Designated Router.
-
- [6]On point-to-point networks, the lower level protocols indicate
- whether the neighbor is up and running. Likewise, existence of the
- neighbor on virtual links is indicated by the routing table
- calculation. However, in both these cases, the Hello Protocol is
- still used. This ensures that communication between the neighbors is
- bidirectional, and that each of the neighbors has a functioning
- routing protocol layer.
-
- [7]When the identity of the Designated Router is changing, it may be
- quite common for a neighbor in this state to send the router a
- Database Description packet; this means that there is some momentary
- disagreement on the Designated Router's identity.
-
- [8]Note that it is possible for a router to resynchronize any of its
- fully established adjacencies by setting the adjacency's state back
- to ExStart. This will cause the other end of the adjacency to
- process a SeqNumberMismatch event, and therefore to also go back to
- ExStart state.
-
-
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-
-
- [9]The address space of IP networks and the address space of OSPF
- Router IDs may overlap. That is, a network may have an IP address
- which is identical (when considered as a 32-bit number) to some
- router's Router ID.
-
- [10]"Discard" entries are necessary to ensure that route
- summarization at area boundaries will not cause packet looping.
-
- [11]It is assumed that, for two different address ranges matching the
- destination, one range is more specific than the other. Non-
- contiguous subnet masks can be configured to violate this assumption.
- Such subnet mask configurations cannot be handled by the OSPF
- protocol.
-
- [12]MaxAgeDiff is an architectural constant. It indicates the
- maximum dispersion of ages, in seconds, that can occur for a single
- LSA instance as it is flooded throughout the routing domain. If two
- LSAs differ by more than this, they are assumed to be different
- instances of the same LSA. This can occur when a router restarts and
- loses track of the LSA's previous LS sequence number. See Section
- 13.4 for more details.
-
- [13]When two LSAs have different LS checksums, they are assumed to be
- separate instances. This can occur when a router restarts, and loses
- track of the LSA's previous LS sequence number. In the case where
- the two LSAs have the same LS sequence number, it is not possible to
- determine which LSA is actually newer. However, if the wrong LSA is
- accepted as newer, the originating router will simply originate
- another instance. See Section 13.4 for further details.
-
- [14]There is one instance where a lookup must be done based on
- partial information. This is during the routing table calculation,
- when a network-LSA must be found based solely on its Link State ID.
- The lookup in this case is still well defined, since no two network-
- LSAs can have the same Link State ID.
-
- [15]This is the way RFC 1583 specified point-to-point representation.
- It has three advantages: a) it does not require allocating a subnet
- to the point-to-point link, b) it tends to bias the routing so that
- packets destined for the point-to-point interface will actually be
- received over the interface (which is useful for diagnostic purposes)
- and c) it allows network bootstrapping of a neighbor, without
- requiring that the bootstrap program contain an OSPF implementation.
-
- [16]This is the more traditional point-to-point representation used
- by protocols such as RIP.
-
-
-
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-
-
- [17]This clause covers the case: Inter-area routes are not summarized
- to the backbone. This is because inter-area routes are always
- associated with the backbone area.
-
- [18]This clause is only invoked when a non-backbone Area A supports
- transit data traffic (i.e., has TransitCapability set to TRUE). For
- example, in the area configuration of Figure 6, Area 2 can support
- transit traffic due to the configured virtual link between Routers
- RT10 and RT11. As a result, Router RT11 need only originate a single
- summary-LSA into Area 2 (having the collapsed destination N9-N11,H1),
- since all of Router RT11's other eligible routes have next hops
- belonging to Area 2 itself (and as such only need be advertised by
- other area border routers; in this case, Routers RT10 and RT7).
-
- [19]By keeping more information in the routing table, it is possible
- for an implementation to recalculate the shortest path tree for only
- a single area. In fact, there are incremental algorithms that allow
- an implementation to recalculate only a portion of a single area's
- shortest path tree [Ref1]. However, these algorithms are beyond the
- scope of this specification.
-
- [20]This is how the Link state request list is emptied, which
- eventually causes the neighbor state to transition to Full. See
- Section 10.9 for more details.
-
- [21]It should be a relatively rare occurrence for an LSA's LS age to
- reach MaxAge in this fashion. Usually, the LSA will be replaced by a
- more recent instance before it ages out.
-
- [22]Strictly speaking, because of equal-cost multipath, the algorithm
- does not create a tree. We continue to use the "tree" terminology
- because that is what occurs most often in the existing literature.
-
- [23]Note that the presence of any link back to V is sufficient; it
- need not be the matching half of the link under consideration from V
- to W. This is enough to ensure that, before data traffic flows
- between a pair of neighboring routers, their link state databases
- will be synchronized.
-
- [24]When the forwarding address is non-zero, it should point to a
- router belonging to another Autonomous System. See Section 12.4.4
- for more details.
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- References
-
- [Ref1] McQuillan, J., I. Richer and E. Rosen, "ARPANET Routing
- Algorithm Improvements", BBN Technical Report 3803, April
- 1978.
-
- [Ref2] Digital Equipment Corporation, "Information processing
- systems -- Data communications -- Intermediate System to
- Intermediate System Intra-Domain Routing Protocol", October
- 1987.
-
- [Ref3] McQuillan, J. et.al., "The New Routing Algorithm for the
- ARPANET", IEEE Transactions on Communications, May 1980.
-
- [Ref4] Perlman, R., "Fault-Tolerant Broadcast of Routing
- Information", Computer Networks, December 1983.
-
- [Ref5] Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5, RFC 791,
- USC/Information Sciences Institute, September 1981.
-
- [Ref6] McKenzie, A., "ISO Transport Protocol specification ISO DP
- 8073", RFC 905, ISO, April 1984.
-
- [Ref7] Deering, S., "Host extensions for IP multicasting", STD 5,
- RFC 1112, Stanford University, May 1988.
-
- [Ref8] McCloghrie, K., and M. Rose, "Management Information Base
- for network management of TCP/IP-based internets: MIB-II",
- STD 17, RFC 1213, Hughes LAN Systems, Performance Systems
- International, March 1991.
-
- [Ref9] Moy, J., "OSPF Version 2", RFC 1583, Proteon, Inc., March
- 1994.
-
- [Ref10] Fuller, V., T. Li, J. Yu, and K. Varadhan, "Classless
- Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR): an Address Assignment and
- Aggregation Strategy", RFC1519, BARRNet, cisco, MERIT,
- OARnet, September 1993.
-
- [Ref11] Reynolds, J., and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers", STD 2, RFC
- 1700, USC/Information Sciences Institute, October 1994.
-
- [Ref12] Almquist, P., "Type of Service in the Internet Protocol
- Suite", RFC 1349, July 1992.
-
- [Ref13] Leiner, B., et.al., "The DARPA Internet Protocol Suite", DDN
- Protocol Handbook, April 1985.
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 158]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- [Ref14] Bradley, T., and C. Brown, "Inverse Address Resolution
- Protocol", RFC 1293, January 1992.
-
- [Ref15] deSouza, O., and M. Rodrigues, "Guidelines for Running OSPF
- Over Frame Relay Networks", RFC 1586, March 1994.
-
- [Ref16] Bellovin, S., "Security Problems in the TCP/IP Protocol
- Suite", ACM Computer Communications Review, Volume 19,
- Number 2, pp. 32-38, April 1989.
-
- [Ref17] Rivest, R., "The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm", RFC 1321,
- April 1992.
-
- [Ref18] Moy, J., "Multicast Extensions to OSPF", RFC 1584, Proteon,
- Inc., March 1994.
-
- [Ref19] Coltun, R. and V. Fuller, "The OSPF NSSA Option", RFC 1587,
- RainbowBridge Communications, Stanford University, March
- 1994.
-
- [Ref20] Ferguson, D., "The OSPF External Attributes LSA", work in
- progress.
-
- [Ref21] Moy, J., "Extending OSPF to Support Demand Circuits", RFC
- 1793, Cascade, April 1995.
-
- [Ref22] Mogul, J. and S. Deering, "Path MTU Discovery", RFC 1191,
- DECWRL, Stanford University, November 1990.
-
- [Ref23] Rekhter, Y. and T. Li, "A Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-
- 4)", RFC 1771, T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM Corp., cisco
- Systems, March 1995.
-
- [Ref24] Hinden, R., "Internet Routing Protocol Standardization
- Criteria", BBN, October 1991.
-
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- A. OSPF data formats
-
- This appendix describes the format of OSPF protocol packets and OSPF
- LSAs. The OSPF protocol runs directly over the IP network layer.
- Before any data formats are described, the details of the OSPF
- encapsulation are explained.
-
- Next the OSPF Options field is described. This field describes
- various capabilities that may or may not be supported by pieces of
- the OSPF routing domain. The OSPF Options field is contained in OSPF
- Hello packets, Database Description packets and in OSPF LSAs.
-
- OSPF packet formats are detailed in Section A.3. A description of
- OSPF LSAs appears in Section A.4.
-
- A.1 Encapsulation of OSPF packets
-
- OSPF runs directly over the Internet Protocol's network layer. OSPF
- packets are therefore encapsulated solely by IP and local data-link
- headers.
-
- OSPF does not define a way to fragment its protocol packets, and
- depends on IP fragmentation when transmitting packets larger than the
- network MTU. If necessary, the length of OSPF packets can be up to
- 65,535 bytes (including the IP header). The OSPF packet types that
- are likely to be large (Database Description Packets, Link State
- Request, Link State Update, and Link State Acknowledgment packets)
- can usually be split into several separate protocol packets, without
- loss of functionality. This is recommended; IP fragmentation should
- be avoided whenever possible. Using this reasoning, an attempt should
- be made to limit the sizes of OSPF packets sent over virtual links to
- 576 bytes unless Path MTU Discovery is being performed (see [Ref22]).
-
- The other important features of OSPF's IP encapsulation are:
-
- o Use of IP multicast. Some OSPF messages are multicast, when
- sent over broadcast networks. Two distinct IP multicast addresses
- are used. Packets sent to these multicast addresses should never
- be forwarded; they are meant to travel a single hop only. To
- ensure that these packets will not travel multiple hops, their IP
- TTL must be set to 1.
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-
-
- AllSPFRouters
- This multicast address has been assigned the value 224.0.0.5. All
- routers running OSPF should be prepared to receive packets sent to
- this address. Hello packets are always sent to this destination.
- Also, certain OSPF protocol packets are sent to this address
- during the flooding procedure.
-
- AllDRouters
- This multicast address has been assigned the value 224.0.0.6. Both
- the Designated Router and Backup Designated Router must be
- prepared to receive packets destined to this address. Certain
- OSPF protocol packets are sent to this address during the flooding
- procedure.
-
- o OSPF is IP protocol number 89. This number has been registered
- with the Network Information Center. IP protocol number
- assignments are documented in [Ref11].
-
- o All OSPF routing protocol packets are sent using the normal
- service TOS value of binary 0000 defined in [Ref12].
-
- o Routing protocol packets are sent with IP precedence set to
- Internetwork Control. OSPF protocol packets should be given
- precedence over regular IP data traffic, in both sending and
- receiving. Setting the IP precedence field in the IP header to
- Internetwork Control [Ref5] may help implement this objective.
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- A.2 The Options field
-
- The OSPF Options field is present in OSPF Hello packets, Database
- Description packets and all LSAs. The Options field enables OSPF
- routers to support (or not support) optional capabilities, and to
- communicate their capability level to other OSPF routers. Through
- this mechanism routers of differing capabilities can be mixed within
- an OSPF routing domain.
-
- When used in Hello packets, the Options field allows a router to
- reject a neighbor because of a capability mismatch. Alternatively,
- when capabilities are exchanged in Database Description packets a
- router can choose not to forward certain LSAs to a neighbor because
- of its reduced functionality. Lastly, listing capabilities in LSAs
- allows routers to forward traffic around reduced functionality
- routers, by excluding them from parts of the routing table
- calculation.
-
- Five bits of the OSPF Options field have been assigned, although only
- one (the E-bit) is described completely by this memo. Each bit is
- described briefly below. Routers should reset (i.e. clear)
- unrecognized bits in the Options field when sending Hello packets or
- Database Description packets and when originating LSAs. Conversely,
- routers encountering unrecognized Option bits in received Hello
- Packets, Database Description packets or LSAs should ignore the
- capability and process the packet/LSA normally.
-
- +------------------------------------+
- | * | * | DC | EA | N/P | MC | E | * |
- +------------------------------------+
-
- The Options field
-
- E-bit
- This bit describes the way AS-external-LSAs are flooded, as
- described in Sections 3.6, 9.5, 10.8 and 12.1.2 of this memo.
-
- MC-bit
- This bit describes whether IP multicast datagrams are forwarded
- according to the specifications in [Ref18].
-
- N/P-bit
- This bit describes the handling of Type-7 LSAs, as specified in
- [Ref19].
-
- EA-bit
- This bit describes the router's willingness to receive and
- forward External-Attributes-LSAs, as specified in [Ref20].
-
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-
- DC-bit
- This bit describes the router's handling of demand circuits, as
- specified in [Ref21].
-
- A.3 OSPF Packet Formats
-
- There are five distinct OSPF packet types. All OSPF packet types
- begin with a standard 24 byte header. This header is described
- first. Each packet type is then described in a succeeding section.
- In these sections each packet's division into fields is displayed,
- and then the field definitions are enumerated.
-
- All OSPF packet types (other than the OSPF Hello packets) deal with
- lists of LSAs. For example, Link State Update packets implement the
- flooding of LSAs throughout the OSPF routing domain. Because of
- this, OSPF protocol packets cannot be parsed unless the format of
- LSAs is also understood. The format of LSAs is described in Section
- A.4.
-
- The receive processing of OSPF packets is detailed in Section 8.2.
- The sending of OSPF packets is explained in Section 8.1.
-
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- A.3.1 The OSPF packet header
-
- Every OSPF packet starts with a standard 24 byte header. This header
- contains all the information necessary to determine whether the
- packet should be accepted for further processing. This determination
- is described in Section 8.2 of the specification.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Version # | Type | Packet length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Router ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Area ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Checksum | AuType |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Authentication |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Authentication |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Version #
- The OSPF version number. This specification documents version 2
- of the protocol.
-
- Type
- The OSPF packet types are as follows. See Sections A.3.2 through
- A.3.6 for details.
-
- Type Description
- ________________________________
- 1 Hello
- 2 Database Description
- 3 Link State Request
- 4 Link State Update
- 5 Link State Acknowledgment
-
-
- Packet length
- The length of the OSPF protocol packet in bytes. This length
- includes the standard OSPF header.
-
- Router ID
- The Router ID of the packet's source.
-
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-
-
- Area ID
- A 32 bit number identifying the area that this packet belongs
- to. All OSPF packets are associated with a single area. Most
- travel a single hop only. Packets travelling over a virtual
- link are labelled with the backbone Area ID of 0.0.0.0.
-
- Checksum
- The standard IP checksum of the entire contents of the packet,
- starting with the OSPF packet header but excluding the 64-bit
- authentication field. This checksum is calculated as the 16-bit
- one's complement of the one's complement sum of all the 16-bit
- words in the packet, excepting the authentication field. If the
- packet's length is not an integral number of 16-bit words, the
- packet is padded with a byte of zero before checksumming. The
- checksum is considered to be part of the packet authentication
- procedure; for some authentication types the checksum
- calculation is omitted.
-
- AuType
- Identifies the authentication procedure to be used for the
- packet. Authentication is discussed in Appendix D of the
- specification. Consult Appendix D for a list of the currently
- defined authentication types.
-
- Authentication
- A 64-bit field for use by the authentication scheme. See
- Appendix D for details.
-
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- Moy Standards Track [Page 165]
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- A.3.2 The Hello packet
-
- Hello packets are OSPF packet type 1. These packets are sent
- periodically on all interfaces (including virtual links) in order to
- establish and maintain neighbor relationships. In addition, Hello
- Packets are multicast on those physical networks having a multicast
- or broadcast capability, enabling dynamic discovery of neighboring
- routers.
-
- All routers connected to a common network must agree on certain
- parameters (Network mask, HelloInterval and RouterDeadInterval).
- These parameters are included in Hello packets, so that differences
- can inhibit the forming of neighbor relationships. A detailed
- explanation of the receive processing for Hello packets is presented
- in Section 10.5. The sending of Hello packets is covered in Section
- 9.5.
-
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Version # | 1 | Packet length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Router ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Area ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Checksum | AuType |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Authentication |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Authentication |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Network Mask |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | HelloInterval | Options | Rtr Pri |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | RouterDeadInterval |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Designated Router |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Backup Designated Router |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Neighbor |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | ... |
-
-
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- Moy Standards Track [Page 166]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- Network mask
- The network mask associated with this interface. For example,
- if the interface is to a class B network whose third byte is
- used for subnetting, the network mask is 0xffffff00.
-
- Options
- The optional capabilities supported by the router, as documented
- in Section A.2.
-
- HelloInterval
- The number of seconds between this router's Hello packets.
-
- Rtr Pri
- This router's Router Priority. Used in (Backup) Designated
- Router election. If set to 0, the router will be ineligible to
- become (Backup) Designated Router.
-
- RouterDeadInterval
- The number of seconds before declaring a silent router down.
-
- Designated Router
- The identity of the Designated Router for this network, in the
- view of the sending router. The Designated Router is identified
- here by its IP interface address on the network. Set to 0.0.0.0
- if there is no Designated Router.
-
- Backup Designated Router
- The identity of the Backup Designated Router for this network,
- in the view of the sending router. The Backup Designated Router
- is identified here by its IP interface address on the network.
- Set to 0.0.0.0 if there is no Backup Designated Router.
-
- Neighbor
- The Router IDs of each router from whom valid Hello packets have
- been seen recently on the network. Recently means in the last
- RouterDeadInterval seconds.
-
-
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- Moy Standards Track [Page 167]
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- A.3.3 The Database Description packet
-
- Database Description packets are OSPF packet type 2. These packets
- are exchanged when an adjacency is being initialized. They describe
- the contents of the link-state database. Multiple packets may be
- used to describe the database. For this purpose a poll-response
- procedure is used. One of the routers is designated to be the master,
- the other the slave. The master sends Database Description packets
- (polls) which are acknowledged by Database Description packets sent
- by the slave (responses). The responses are linked to the polls via
- the packets' DD sequence numbers.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Version # | 2 | Packet length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Router ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Area ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Checksum | AuType |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Authentication |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Authentication |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Interface MTU | Options |0|0|0|0|0|I|M|MS
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | DD sequence number |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | |
- +- -+
- | |
- +- An LSA Header -+
- | |
- +- -+
- | |
- +- -+
- | |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | ... |
-
-
- The format of the Database Description packet is very similar to both
- the Link State Request and Link State Acknowledgment packets. The
- main part of all three is a list of items, each item describing a
- piece of the link-state database. The sending of Database
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 168]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- Description Packets is documented in Section 10.8. The reception of
- Database Description packets is documented in Section 10.6.
-
- Interface MTU
- The size in bytes of the largest IP datagram that can be sent out
- the associated interface, without fragmentation. The MTUs of
- common Internet link types can be found in Table 7-1 of [Ref22].
- Interface MTU should be set to 0 in Database Description packets
- sent over virtual links.
-
- Options
- The optional capabilities supported by the router, as documented
- in Section A.2.
-
- I-bit
- The Init bit. When set to 1, this packet is the first in the
- sequence of Database Description Packets.
-
- M-bit
- The More bit. When set to 1, it indicates that more Database
- Description Packets are to follow.
-
- MS-bit
- The Master/Slave bit. When set to 1, it indicates that the router
- is the master during the Database Exchange process. Otherwise,
- the router is the slave.
-
- DD sequence number
- Used to sequence the collection of Database Description Packets.
- The initial value (indicated by the Init bit being set) should be
- unique. The DD sequence number then increments until the complete
- database description has been sent.
-
- The rest of the packet consists of a (possibly partial) list of the
- link-state database's pieces. Each LSA in the database is described
- by its LSA header. The LSA header is documented in Section A.4.1. It
- contains all the information required to uniquely identify both the
- LSA and the LSA's current instance.
-
-
-
-
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-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- A.3.4 The Link State Request packet
-
- Link State Request packets are OSPF packet type 3. After exchanging
- Database Description packets with a neighboring router, a router may
- find that parts of its link-state database are out-of-date. The Link
- State Request packet is used to request the pieces of the neighbor's
- database that are more up-to-date. Multiple Link State Request
- packets may need to be used.
-
- A router that sends a Link State Request packet has in mind the
- precise instance of the database pieces it is requesting. Each
- instance is defined by its LS sequence number, LS checksum, and LS
- age, although these fields are not specified in the Link State
- Request Packet itself. The router may receive even more recent
- instances in response.
-
- The sending of Link State Request packets is documented in Section
- 10.9. The reception of Link State Request packets is documented in
- Section 10.7.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Version # | 3 | Packet length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Router ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Area ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Checksum | AuType |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Authentication |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Authentication |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS type |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Link State ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Advertising Router |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | ... |
-
- Each LSA requested is specified by its LS type, Link State ID, and
- Advertising Router. This uniquely identifies the LSA, but not its
- instance. Link State Request packets are understood to be requests
- for the most recent instance (whatever that might be).
-
-
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- Moy Standards Track [Page 170]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- A.3.5 The Link State Update packet
-
- Link State Update packets are OSPF packet type 4. These packets
- implement the flooding of LSAs. Each Link State Update packet
- carries a collection of LSAs one hop further from their origin.
- Several LSAs may be included in a single packet.
-
- Link State Update packets are multicast on those physical networks
- that support multicast/broadcast. In order to make the flooding
- procedure reliable, flooded LSAs are acknowledged in Link State
- Acknowledgment packets. If retransmission of certain LSAs is
- necessary, the retransmitted LSAs are always carried by unicast Link
- State Update packets. For more information on the reliable flooding
- of LSAs, consult Section 13.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Version # | 4 | Packet length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Router ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Area ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Checksum | AuType |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Authentication |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Authentication |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | # LSAs |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | |
- +- +-+
- | LSAs |
- +- +-+
- | ... |
-
-
-
- # LSAs
- The number of LSAs included in this update.
-
- The body of the Link State Update packet consists of a list of LSAs.
- Each LSA begins with a common 20 byte header, described in Section
- A.4.1. Detailed formats of the different types of LSAs are described
- in Section A.4.
-
-
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-
-
- A.3.6 The Link State Acknowledgment packet
-
- Link State Acknowledgment Packets are OSPF packet type 5. To make
- the flooding of LSAs reliable, flooded LSAs are explicitly
- acknowledged. This acknowledgment is accomplished through the
- sending and receiving of Link State Acknowledgment packets. Multiple
- LSAs can be acknowledged in a single Link State Acknowledgment
- packet.
-
- Depending on the state of the sending interface and the sender of the
- corresponding Link State Update packet, a Link State Acknowledgment
- packet is sent either to the multicast address AllSPFRouters, to the
- multicast address AllDRouters, or as a unicast. The sending of Link
- State Acknowledgment packets is documented in Section 13.5. The
- reception of Link State Acknowledgment packets is documented in
- Section 13.7.
-
- The format of this packet is similar to that of the Data Description
- packet. The body of both packets is simply a list of LSA headers.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Version # | 5 | Packet length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Router ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Area ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Checksum | AuType |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Authentication |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Authentication |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | |
- +- -+
- | |
- +- An LSA Header -+
- | |
- +- -+
- | |
- +- -+
- | |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | ... |
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
- Each acknowledged LSA is described by its LSA header. The LSA header
- is documented in Section A.4.1. It contains all the information
- required to uniquely identify both the LSA and the LSA's current
- instance.
-
- A.4 LSA formats
-
- This memo defines five distinct types of LSAs. Each LSA begins with
- a standard 20 byte LSA header. This header is explained in Section
- A.4.1. Succeeding sections then diagram the separate LSA types.
-
- Each LSA describes a piece of the OSPF routing domain. Every router
- originates a router-LSA. In addition, whenever the router is elected
- Designated Router, it originates a network-LSA. Other types of LSAs
- may also be originated (see Section 12.4). All LSAs are then flooded
- throughout the OSPF routing domain. The flooding algorithm is
- reliable, ensuring that all routers have the same collection of LSAs.
- (See Section 13 for more information concerning the flooding
- algorithm). This collection of LSAs is called the link-state
- database.
-
- From the link state database, each router constructs a shortest path
- tree with itself as root. This yields a routing table (see Section
- 11). For the details of the routing table build process, see Section
- 16.
-
-
-
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-
-
- A.4.1 The LSA header
-
- All LSAs begin with a common 20 byte header. This header contains
- enough information to uniquely identify the LSA (LS type, Link State
- ID, and Advertising Router). Multiple instances of the LSA may exist
- in the routing domain at the same time. It is then necessary to
- determine which instance is more recent. This is accomplished by
- examining the LS age, LS sequence number and LS checksum fields that
- are also contained in the LSA header.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS age | Options | LS type |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Link State ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Advertising Router |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS sequence number |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS checksum | length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
-
- LS age
- The time in seconds since the LSA was originated.
-
- Options
- The optional capabilities supported by the described portion of
- the routing domain. OSPF's optional capabilities are documented
- in Section A.2.
-
- LS type
- The type of the LSA. Each LSA type has a separate advertisement
- format. The LSA types defined in this memo are as follows (see
- Section 12.1.3 for further explanation):
-
-
- LS Type Description
- ___________________________________
- 1 Router-LSAs
- 2 Network-LSAs
- 3 Summary-LSAs (IP network)
- 4 Summary-LSAs (ASBR)
- 5 AS-external-LSAs
-
-
-
-
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-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- Link State ID
- This field identifies the portion of the internet environment
- that is being described by the LSA. The contents of this field
- depend on the LSA's LS type. For example, in network-LSAs the
- Link State ID is set to the IP interface address of the
- network's Designated Router (from which the network's IP address
- can be derived). The Link State ID is further discussed in
- Section 12.1.4.
-
- Advertising Router
- The Router ID of the router that originated the LSA. For
- example, in network-LSAs this field is equal to the Router ID of
- the network's Designated Router.
-
- LS sequence number
- Detects old or duplicate LSAs. Successive instances of an LSA
- are given successive LS sequence numbers. See Section 12.1.6
- for more details.
-
- LS checksum
- The Fletcher checksum of the complete contents of the LSA,
- including the LSA header but excluding the LS age field. See
- Section 12.1.7 for more details.
-
- length
- The length in bytes of the LSA. This includes the 20 byte LSA
- header.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- A.4.2 Router-LSAs
-
- Router-LSAs are the Type 1 LSAs. Each router in an area originates a
- router-LSA. The LSA describes the state and cost of the router's
- links (i.e., interfaces) to the area. All of the router's links to
- the area must be described in a single router-LSA. For details
- concerning the construction of router-LSAs, see Section 12.4.1.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS age | Options | 1 |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Link State ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Advertising Router |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS sequence number |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS checksum | length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | 0 |V|E|B| 0 | # links |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Link ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Link Data |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type | # TOS | metric |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | ... |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | TOS | 0 | TOS metric |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Link ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Link Data |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | ... |
-
-
- In router-LSAs, the Link State ID field is set to the router's OSPF
- Router ID. Router-LSAs are flooded throughout a single area only.
-
- bit V
- When set, the router is an endpoint of one or more fully adjacent
- virtual links having the described area as Transit area (V is for
- virtual link endpoint).
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 176]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- bit E
- When set, the router is an AS boundary router (E is for external).
-
- bit B
- When set, the router is an area border router (B is for border).
-
- # links
- The number of router links described in this LSA. This must be
- the total collection of router links (i.e., interfaces) to the
- area.
-
- The following fields are used to describe each router link (i.e.,
- interface). Each router link is typed (see the below Type field).
- The Type field indicates the kind of link being described. It may be
- a link to a transit network, to another router or to a stub network.
- The values of all the other fields describing a router link depend on
- the link's Type. For example, each link has an associated 32-bit
- Link Data field. For links to stub networks this field specifies the
- network's IP address mask. For other link types the Link Data field
- specifies the router interface's IP address.
-
- Type
- A quick description of the router link. One of the following.
- Note that host routes are classified as links to stub networks
- with network mask of 0xffffffff.
-
- Type Description
- __________________________________________________
- 1 Point-to-point connection to another router
- 2 Connection to a transit network
- 3 Connection to a stub network
- 4 Virtual link
-
- Link ID
- Identifies the object that this router link connects to. Value
- depends on the link's Type. When connecting to an object that
- also originates an LSA (i.e., another router or a transit
- network) the Link ID is equal to the neighboring LSA's Link
- State ID. This provides the key for looking up the neighboring
- LSA in the link state database during the routing table
- calculation. See Section 12.2 for more details.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 177]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- Type Link ID
- ______________________________________
- 1 Neighboring router's Router ID
- 2 IP address of Designated Router
- 3 IP network/subnet number
- 4 Neighboring router's Router ID
-
- Link Data
- Value again depends on the link's Type field. For connections to
- stub networks, Link Data specifies the network's IP address
- mask. For unnumbered point-to-point connections, it specifies
- the interface's MIB-II [Ref8] ifIndex value. For the other link
- types it specifies the router interface's IP address. This
- latter piece of information is needed during the routing table
- build process, when calculating the IP address of the next hop.
- See Section 16.1.1 for more details.
-
- # TOS
- The number of different TOS metrics given for this link, not
- counting the required link metric (referred to as the TOS 0
- metric in [Ref9]). For example, if no additional TOS metrics
- are given, this field is set to 0.
-
- metric
- The cost of using this router link.
-
- Additional TOS-specific information may also be included, for
- backward compatibility with previous versions of the OSPF
- specification ([Ref9]). Within each link, and for each desired TOS,
- TOS TOS-specific link information may be encoded as follows:
-
- TOS IP Type of Service that this metric refers to. The encoding of
- TOS in OSPF LSAs is described in Section 12.3.
-
- TOS metric
- TOS-specific metric information.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 178]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- A.4.3 Network-LSAs
-
- Network-LSAs are the Type 2 LSAs. A network-LSA is originated for
- each broadcast and NBMA network in the area which supports two or
- more routers. The network-LSA is originated by the network's
- Designated Router. The LSA describes all routers attached to the
- network, including the Designated Router itself. The LSA's Link
- State ID field lists the IP interface address of the Designated
- Router.
-
- The distance from the network to all attached routers is zero. This
- is why metric fields need not be specified in the network-LSA. For
- details concerning the construction of network-LSAs, see Section
- 12.4.2.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS age | Options | 2 |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Link State ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Advertising Router |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS sequence number |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS checksum | length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Network Mask |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Attached Router |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | ... |
-
-
- Network Mask
- The IP address mask for the network. For example, a class A
- network would have the mask 0xff000000.
-
- Attached Router
- The Router IDs of each of the routers attached to the network.
- Actually, only those routers that are fully adjacent to the
- Designated Router are listed. The Designated Router includes
- itself in this list. The number of routers included can be
- deduced from the LSA header's length field.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 179]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- A.4.4 Summary-LSAs
-
- Summary-LSAs are the Type 3 and 4 LSAs. These LSAs are originated by
- area border routers. Summary-LSAs describe inter-area destinations.
- For details concerning the construction of summary-LSAs, see Section
- 12.4.3.
-
- Type 3 summary-LSAs are used when the destination is an IP network.
- In this case the LSA's Link State ID field is an IP network number
- (if necessary, the Link State ID can also have one or more of the
- network's "host" bits set; see Appendix E for details). When the
- destination is an AS boundary router, a Type 4 summary-LSA is used,
- and the Link State ID field is the AS boundary router's OSPF Router
- ID. (To see why it is necessary to advertise the location of each
- ASBR, consult Section 16.4.) Other than the difference in the Link
- State ID field, the format of Type 3 and 4 summary-LSAs is identical.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS age | Options | 3 or 4 |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Link State ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Advertising Router |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS sequence number |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS checksum | length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Network Mask |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | 0 | metric |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | TOS | TOS metric |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | ... |
-
-
- For stub areas, Type 3 summary-LSAs can also be used to describe a
- (per-area) default route. Default summary routes are used in stub
- areas instead of flooding a complete set of external routes. When
- describing a default summary route, the summary-LSA's Link State ID
- is always set to DefaultDestination (0.0.0.0) and the Network Mask is
- set to 0.0.0.0.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 180]
-
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-
-
- Network Mask
- For Type 3 summary-LSAs, this indicates the destination network's
- IP address mask. For example, when advertising the location of a
- class A network the value 0xff000000 would be used. This field is
- not meaningful and must be zero for Type 4 summary-LSAs.
-
- metric
- The cost of this route. Expressed in the same units as the
- interface costs in the router-LSAs.
-
- Additional TOS-specific information may also be included, for
- backward compatibility with previous versions of the OSPF
- specification ([Ref9]). For each desired TOS, TOS-specific
- information is encoded as follows:
-
- TOS IP Type of Service that this metric refers to. The encoding of
- TOS in OSPF LSAs is described in Section 12.3.
-
- TOS metric
- TOS-specific metric information.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 181]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- A.4.5 AS-external-LSAs
-
- AS-external-LSAs are the Type 5 LSAs. These LSAs are originated by
- AS boundary routers, and describe destinations external to the AS.
- For details concerning the construction of AS-external-LSAs, see
- Section 12.4.3.
-
- AS-external-LSAs usually describe a particular external destination.
- For these LSAs the Link State ID field specifies an IP network number
- (if necessary, the Link State ID can also have one or more of the
- network's "host" bits set; see Appendix E for details). AS-
- external-LSAs are also used to describe a default route. Default
- routes are used when no specific route exists to the destination.
- When describing a default route, the Link State ID is always set to
- DefaultDestination (0.0.0.0) and the Network Mask is set to 0.0.0.0.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS age | Options | 5 |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Link State ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Advertising Router |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS sequence number |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | LS checksum | length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Network Mask |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- |E| 0 | metric |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Forwarding address |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | External Route Tag |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- |E| TOS | TOS metric |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Forwarding address |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | External Route Tag |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | ... |
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 182]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- Network Mask
- The IP address mask for the advertised destination. For
- example, when advertising a class A network the mask 0xff000000
- would be used.
-
- bit E
- The type of external metric. If bit E is set, the metric
- specified is a Type 2 external metric. This means the metric is
- considered larger than any link state path. If bit E is zero,
- the specified metric is a Type 1 external metric. This means
- that it is expressed in the same units as the link state metric
- (i.e., the same units as interface cost).
-
- metric
- The cost of this route. Interpretation depends on the external
- type indication (bit E above).
-
- Forwarding address
- Data traffic for the advertised destination will be forwarded to
- this address. If the Forwarding address is set to 0.0.0.0, data
- traffic will be forwarded instead to the LSA's originator (i.e.,
- the responsible AS boundary router).
-
- External Route Tag
- A 32-bit field attached to each external route. This is not
- used by the OSPF protocol itself. It may be used to communicate
- information between AS boundary routers; the precise nature of
- such information is outside the scope of this specification.
-
- Additional TOS-specific information may also be included, for
- backward compatibility with previous versions of the OSPF
- specification ([Ref9]). For each desired TOS, TOS-specific
- information is encoded as follows:
-
- TOS The Type of Service that the following fields concern. The
- encoding of TOS in OSPF LSAs is described in Section 12.3.
-
- bit E
- For backward-compatibility with [Ref9].
-
- TOS metric
- TOS-specific metric information.
-
- Forwarding address
- For backward-compatibility with [Ref9].
-
- External Route Tag
- For backward-compatibility with [Ref9].
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 183]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- B. Architectural Constants
-
- Several OSPF protocol parameters have fixed architectural values.
- These parameters have been referred to in the text by names such as
- LSRefreshTime. The same naming convention is used for the
- configurable protocol parameters. They are defined in Appendix C.
-
- The name of each architectural constant follows, together with its
- value and a short description of its function.
-
- LSRefreshTime
- The maximum time between distinct originations of any particular
- LSA. If the LS age field of one of the router's self-originated
- LSAs reaches the value LSRefreshTime, a new instance of the LSA is
- originated, even though the contents of the LSA (apart from the
- LSA header) will be the same. The value of LSRefreshTime is set
- to 30 minutes.
-
- MinLSInterval
- The minimum time between distinct originations of any particular
- LSA. The value of MinLSInterval is set to 5 seconds.
-
- MinLSArrival
- For any particular LSA, the minimum time that must elapse
- between reception of new LSA instances during flooding. LSA
- instances received at higher frequencies are discarded. The value
- of MinLSArrival is set to 1 second.
-
- MaxAge
- The maximum age that an LSA can attain. When an LSA's LS age field
- reaches MaxAge, it is reflooded in an attempt to flush the LSA
- from the routing domain (See Section 14). LSAs of age MaxAge are
- not used in the routing table calculation. The value of MaxAge is
- set to 1 hour.
-
- CheckAge
- When the age of an LSA in the link state database hits a multiple
- of CheckAge, the LSA's checksum is verified. An incorrect
- checksum at this time indicates a serious error. The value of
- CheckAge is set to 5 minutes.
-
- MaxAgeDiff
- The maximum time dispersion that can occur, as an LSA is flooded
- throughout the AS. Most of this time is accounted for by the LSAs
- sitting on router output queues (and therefore not aging) during
- the flooding process. The value of MaxAgeDiff is set to 15
- minutes.
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 184]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- LSInfinity
- The metric value indicating that the destination described by an
- LSA is unreachable. Used in summary-LSAs and AS-external-LSAs as
- an alternative to premature aging (see Section 14.1). It is
- defined to be the 24-bit binary value of all ones: 0xffffff.
-
- DefaultDestination
- The Destination ID that indicates the default route. This route
- is used when no other matching routing table entry can be found.
- The default destination can only be advertised in AS-external-
- LSAs and in stub areas' type 3 summary-LSAs. Its value is the IP
- address 0.0.0.0. Its associated Network Mask is also always
- 0.0.0.0.
-
- InitialSequenceNumber
- The value used for LS Sequence Number when originating the first
- instance of any LSA. Its value is the signed 32-bit integer
- 0x80000001.
-
- MaxSequenceNumber
- The maximum value that LS Sequence Number can attain. Its value
- is the signed 32-bit integer 0x7fffffff.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 185]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- C. Configurable Constants
-
- The OSPF protocol has quite a few configurable parameters. These
- parameters are listed below. They are grouped into general
- functional categories (area parameters, interface parameters, etc.).
- Sample values are given for some of the parameters.
-
- Some parameter settings need to be consistent among groups of
- routers. For example, all routers in an area must agree on that
- area's parameters, and all routers attached to a network must agree
- on that network's IP network number and mask.
-
- Some parameters may be determined by router algorithms outside of
- this specification (e.g., the address of a host connected to the
- router via a SLIP line). From OSPF's point of view, these items are
- still configurable.
-
- C.1 Global parameters
-
- In general, a separate copy of the OSPF protocol is run for each
- area. Because of this, most configuration parameters are defined on
- a per-area basis. The few global configuration parameters are listed
- below.
-
- Router ID
- This is a 32-bit number that uniquely identifies the router in
- the Autonomous System. One algorithm for Router ID assignment is
- to choose the largest or smallest IP address assigned to the
- router. If a router's OSPF Router ID is changed, the router's
- OSPF software should be restarted before the new Router ID takes
- effect. Before restarting in order to change its Router ID, the
- router should flush its self-originated LSAs from the routing
- domain (see Section 14.1), or they will persist for up to MaxAge
- minutes.
-
- RFC1583Compatibility
- Controls the preference rules used in Section 16.4 when choosing
- among multiple AS-external-LSAs advertising the same destination.
- When set to "enabled", the preference rules remain those
- specified by RFC 1583 ([Ref9]). When set to "disabled", the
- preference rules are those stated in Section 16.4.1, which
- prevent routing loops when AS- external-LSAs for the same
- destination have been originated from different areas (see
- Section G.7). Set to "enabled" by default.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 186]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- In order to minimize the chance of routing loops, all OSPF
- routers in an OSPF routing domain should have
- RFC1583Compatibility set identically. When there are routers
- present that have not been updated with the functionality
- specified in Section 16.4.1 of this memo, all routers should have
- RFC1583Compatibility set to "enabled". Otherwise, all routers
- should have RFC1583Compatibility set to "disabled", preventing
- all routing loops.
-
- C.2 Area parameters
-
- All routers belonging to an area must agree on that area's
- configuration. Disagreements between two routers will lead to an
- inability for adjacencies to form between them, with a resulting
- hindrance to the flow of routing protocol and data traffic. The
- following items must be configured for an area:
-
- Area ID
- This is a 32-bit number that identifies the area. The Area ID of
- 0.0.0.0 is reserved for the backbone. If the area represents a
- subnetted network, the IP network number of the subnetted network
- may be used for the Area ID.
-
- List of address ranges
- An OSPF area is defined as a list of address ranges. Each address
- range consists of the following items:
-
- [IP address, mask]
- Describes the collection of IP addresses contained in the
- address range. Networks and hosts are assigned to an area
- depending on whether their addresses fall into one of the
- area's defining address ranges. Routers are viewed as
- belonging to multiple areas, depending on their attached
- networks' area membership.
-
- Status Set to either Advertise or DoNotAdvertise. Routing
- information is condensed at area boundaries. External to the
- area, at most a single route is advertised (via a summary-
- LSA) for each address range. The route is advertised if and
- only if the address range's Status is set to Advertise.
- Unadvertised ranges allow the existence of certain networks
- to be intentionally hidden from other areas. Status is set to
- Advertise by default.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Moy Standards Track [Page 187]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- As an example, suppose an IP subnetted network is to be its
- own OSPF area. The area would be configured as a single
- address range, whose IP address is the address of the
- subnetted network, and whose mask is the natural class A, B,
- or C address mask. A single route would be advertised
- external to the area, describing the entire subnetted
- network.
-
- ExternalRoutingCapability
- Whether AS-external-LSAs will be flooded into/throughout the
- area. If AS-external-LSAs are excluded from the area, the
- area is called a "stub". Internal to stub areas, routing to
- external destinations will be based solely on a default
- summary route. The backbone cannot be configured as a stub
- area. Also, virtual links cannot be configured through stub
- areas. For more information, see Section 3.6.
-
- StubDefaultCost
- If the area has been configured as a stub area, and the
- router itself is an area border router, then the
- StubDefaultCost indicates the cost of the default summary-LSA
- that the router should advertise into the area.
-
- C.3 Router interface parameters
-
- Some of the configurable router interface parameters (such as IP
- interface address and subnet mask) actually imply properties of the
- attached networks, and therefore must be consistent across all the
- routers attached to that network. The parameters that must be
- configured for a router interface are:
-
- IP interface address
- The IP protocol address for this interface. This uniquely
- identifies the router over the entire internet. An IP address is
- not required on point-to-point networks. Such a point-to-point
- network is called "unnumbered".
-
- IP interface mask
- Also referred to as the subnet/network mask, this indicates the
- portion of the IP interface address that identifies the attached
- network. Masking the IP interface address with the IP interface
- mask yields the IP network number of the attached network. On
- point-to-point networks and virtual links, the IP interface mask
- is not defined. On these networks, the link itself is not
- assigned an IP network number, and so the addresses of each side
- of the link are assigned independently, if they are assigned at
- all.
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- Area ID
- The OSPF area to which the attached network belongs.
-
- Interface output cost
- The cost of sending a packet on the interface, expressed in the
- link state metric. This is advertised as the link cost for this
- interface in the router's router-LSA. The interface output cost
- must always be greater than 0.
-
- RxmtInterval
- The number of seconds between LSA retransmissions, for
- adjacencies belonging to this interface. Also used when
- retransmitting Database Description and Link State Request
- Packets. This should be well over the expected round-trip delay
- between any two routers on the attached network. The setting of
- this value should be conservative or needless retransmissions
- will result. Sample value for a local area network: 5 seconds.
-
- InfTransDelay
- The estimated number of seconds it takes to transmit a Link State
- Update Packet over this interface. LSAs contained in the update
- packet must have their age incremented by this amount before
- transmission. This value should take into account the
- transmission and propagation delays of the interface. It must be
- greater than 0. Sample value for a local area network: 1 second.
-
- Router Priority
- An 8-bit unsigned integer. When two routers attached to a network
- both attempt to become Designated Router, the one with the
- highest Router Priority takes precedence. If there is still a
- tie, the router with the highest Router ID takes precedence. A
- router whose Router Priority is set to 0 is ineligible to become
- Designated Router on the attached network. Router Priority is
- only configured for interfaces to broadcast and NBMA networks.
-
- HelloInterval
- The length of time, in seconds, between the Hello Packets that
- the router sends on the interface. This value is advertised in
- the router's Hello Packets. It must be the same for all routers
- attached to a common network. The smaller the HelloInterval, the
- faster topological changes will be detected; however, more OSPF
- routing protocol traffic will ensue. Sample value for a X.25 PDN
- network: 30 seconds. Sample value for a local area network: 10
- seconds.
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- RouterDeadInterval
- After ceasing to hear a router's Hello Packets, the number of
- seconds before its neighbors declare the router down. This is
- also advertised in the router's Hello Packets in their
- RouterDeadInterval field. This should be some multiple of the
- HelloInterval (say 4). This value again must be the same for all
- routers attached to a common network.
-
- AuType
- Identifies the authentication procedure to be used on the
- attached network. This value must be the same for all routers
- attached to the network. See Appendix D for a discussion of the
- defined authentication types.
-
- Authentication key
- This configured data allows the authentication procedure to
- verify OSPF protocol packets received over the interface. For
- example, if the AuType indicates simple password, the
- Authentication key would be a clear 64-bit password.
- Authentication keys associated with the other OSPF authentication
- types are discussed in Appendix D.
-
- C.4 Virtual link parameters
-
- Virtual links are used to restore/increase connectivity of the
- backbone. Virtual links may be configured between any pair of area
- border routers having interfaces to a common (non-backbone) area.
- The virtual link appears as an unnumbered point-to-point link in the
- graph for the backbone. The virtual link must be configured in both
- of the area border routers.
-
- A virtual link appears in router-LSAs (for the backbone) as if it
- were a separate router interface to the backbone. As such, it has
- all of the parameters associated with a router interface (see Section
- C.3). Although a virtual link acts like an unnumbered point-to-point
- link, it does have an associated IP interface address. This address
- is used as the IP source in OSPF protocol packets it sends along the
- virtual link, and is set dynamically during the routing table build
- process. Interface output cost is also set dynamically on virtual
- links to be the cost of the intra-area path between the two routers.
- The parameter RxmtInterval must be configured, and should be well
- over the expected round-trip delay between the two routers. This may
- be hard to estimate for a virtual link; it is better to err on the
- side of making it too large. Router Priority is not used on virtual
- links.
-
-
-
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-
-
- A virtual link is defined by the following two configurable
- parameters: the Router ID of the virtual link's other endpoint, and
- the (non-backbone) area through which the virtual link runs (referred
- to as the virtual link's Transit area). Virtual links cannot be
- configured through stub areas.
-
- C.5 NBMA network parameters
-
- OSPF treats an NBMA network much like it treats a broadcast network.
- Since there may be many routers attached to the network, a Designated
- Router is selected for the network. This Designated Router then
- originates a network-LSA, which lists all routers attached to the
- NBMA network.
-
- However, due to the lack of broadcast capabilities, it may be
- necessary to use configuration parameters in the Designated Router
- selection. These parameters will only need to be configured in those
- routers that are themselves eligible to become Designated Router
- (i.e., those router's whose Router Priority for the network is non-
- zero), and then only if no automatic procedure for discovering
- neighbors exists:
-
- List of all other attached routers
- The list of all other routers attached to the NBMA network. Each
- router is listed by its IP interface address on the network.
- Also, for each router listed, that router's eligibility to become
- Designated Router must be defined. When an interface to a NBMA
- network comes up, the router sends Hello Packets only to those
- neighbors eligible to become Designated Router, until the
- identity of the Designated Router is discovered.
-
- PollInterval
- If a neighboring router has become inactive (Hello Packets have
- not been seen for RouterDeadInterval seconds), it may still be
- necessary to send Hello Packets to the dead neighbor. These
- Hello Packets will be sent at the reduced rate PollInterval,
- which should be much larger than HelloInterval. Sample value for
- a PDN X.25 network: 2 minutes.
-
- C.6 Point-to-MultiPoint network parameters
-
- On Point-to-MultiPoint networks, it may be necessary to configure the
- set of neighbors that are directly reachable over the Point-to-
- MultiPoint network. Each neighbor is identified by its IP address on
- the Point-to-MultiPoint network. Designated Routers are not elected
- on Point-to-MultiPoint networks, so the Designated Router eligibility
- of configured neighbors is undefined.
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
- Alternatively, neighbors on Point-to-MultiPoint networks may be
- dynamically discovered by lower-level protocols such as Inverse ARP
- ([Ref14]).
-
- C.7 Host route parameters
-
- Host routes are advertised in router-LSAs as stub networks with mask
- 0xffffffff. They indicate either router interfaces to point-to-point
- networks, looped router interfaces, or IP hosts that are directly
- connected to the router (e.g., via a SLIP line). For each host
- directly connected to the router, the following items must be
- configured:
-
- Host IP address
- The IP address of the host.
-
- Cost of link to host
- The cost of sending a packet to the host, in terms of the link
- state metric. However, since the host probably has only a single
- connection to the internet, the actual configured cost in many
- cases is unimportant (i.e., will have no effect on routing).
-
- Area ID
- The OSPF area to which the host belongs.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- D. Authentication
-
- All OSPF protocol exchanges are authenticated. The OSPF packet
- header (see Section A.3.1) includes an authentication type field, and
- 64-bits of data for use by the appropriate authentication scheme
- (determined by the type field).
-
- The authentication type is configurable on a per-interface (or
- equivalently, on a per-network/subnet) basis. Additional
- authentication data is also configurable on a per-interface basis.
-
- Authentication types 0, 1 and 2 are defined by this specification.
- All other authentication types are reserved for definition by the
- IANA (iana@ISI.EDU). The current list of authentication types is
- described below in Table 20.
-
- AuType Description
- ___________________________________________
- 0 Null authentication
- 1 Simple password
- 2 Cryptographic authentication
- All others Reserved for assignment by the
- IANA (iana@ISI.EDU)
-
-
- Table 20: OSPF authentication types.
-
-
- D.1 Null authentication
-
- Use of this authentication type means that routing exchanges over the
- network/subnet are not authenticated. The 64-bit authentication field
- in the OSPF header can contain anything; it is not examined on packet
- reception. When employing Null authentication, the entire contents of
- each OSPF packet (other than the 64-bit authentication field) are
- checksummed in order to detect data corruption.
-
- D.2 Simple password authentication
-
- Using this authentication type, a 64-bit field is configured on a
- per-network basis. All packets sent on a particular network must
- have this configured value in their OSPF header 64-bit authentication
- field. This essentially serves as a "clear" 64- bit password. In
- addition, the entire contents of each OSPF packet (other than the
- 64-bit authentication field) are checksummed in order to detect data
- corruption.
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- Simple password authentication guards against routers inadvertently
- joining the routing domain; each router must first be configured with
- its attached networks' passwords before it can participate in
- routing. However, simple password authentication is vulnerable to
- passive attacks currently widespread in the Internet (see [Ref16]).
- Anyone with physical access to the network can learn the password and
- compromise the security of the OSPF routing domain.
-
- D.3 Cryptographic authentication
-
- Using this authentication type, a shared secret key is configured in
- all routers attached to a common network/subnet. For each OSPF
- protocol packet, the key is used to generate/verify a "message
- digest" that is appended to the end of the OSPF packet. The message
- digest is a one-way function of the OSPF protocol packet and the
- secret key. Since the secret key is never sent over the network in
- the clear, protection is provided against passive attacks.
-
- The algorithms used to generate and verify the message digest are
- specified implicitly by the secret key. This specification completely
- defines the use of OSPF Cryptographic authentication when the MD5
- algorithm is used.
-
- In addition, a non-decreasing sequence number is included in each
- OSPF protocol packet to protect against replay attacks. This
- provides long term protection; however, it is still possible to
- replay an OSPF packet until the sequence number changes. To implement
- this feature, each neighbor data structure
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | 0 | Key ID | Auth Data Len |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Cryptographic sequence number |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
- Figure 18: Usage of the Authentication field
- in the OSPF packet header when Cryptographic
- Authentication is employed
-
- contains a new field called the "cryptographic sequence number".
- This field is initialized to zero, and is also set to zero whenever
- the neighbor's state transitions to "Down". Whenever an OSPF packet
- is accepted as authentic, the cryptographic sequence number is set to
- the received packet's sequence number.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- This specification does not provide a rollover procedure for the
- cryptographic sequence number. When the cryptographic sequence number
- that the router is sending hits the maximum value, the router should
- reset the cryptographic sequence number that it is sending back to 0.
- After this is done, the router's neighbors will reject the router's
- OSPF packets for a period of RouterDeadInterval, and then the router
- will be forced to reestablish all adjacencies over the interface.
- However, it is expected that many implementations will use "seconds
- since reboot" (or "seconds since 1960", etc.) as the cryptographic
- sequence number. Such a choice will essentially prevent rollover,
- since the cryptographic sequence number field is 32 bits in length.
-
- The OSPF Cryptographic authentication option does not provide
- confidentiality.
-
- When cryptographic authentication is used, the 64-bit Authentication
- field in the standard OSPF packet header is redefined as shown in
- Figure 18. The new field definitions are as follows:
-
- Key ID
- This field identifies the algorithm and secret key used to create
- the message digest appended to the OSPF packet. Key Identifiers
- are unique per-interface (or equivalently, per- subnet).
-
- Auth Data Len
- The length in bytes of the message digest appended to the OSPF
- packet.
-
- Cryptographic sequence number
- An unsigned 32-bit non-decreasing sequence number. Used to guard
- against replay attacks.
-
- The message digest appended to the OSPF packet is not actually
- considered part of the OSPF protocol packet: the message digest is
- not included in the OSPF header's packet length, although it is
- included in the packet's IP header length field.
-
- Each key is identified by the combination of interface and Key ID. An
- interface may have multiple keys active at any one time. This
- enables smooth transition from one key to another. Each key has four
- time constants associated with it. These time constants can be
- expressed in terms of a time-of-day clock, or in terms of a router's
- local clock (e.g., number of seconds since last reboot):
-
- KeyStartAccept
- The time that the router will start accepting packets that
- have been created with the given key.
-
-
-
-
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-
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-
-
- KeyStartGenerate
- The time that the router will start using the key for packet
- generation.
-
- KeyStopGenerate
- The time that the router will stop using the key for packet
- generation.
-
- KeyStopAccept
- The time that the router will stop accepting packets that
- have been created with the given key.
-
- In order to achieve smooth key transition, KeyStartAccept should be
- less than KeyStartGenerate and KeyStopGenerate should be less than
- KeyStopAccept. If KeyStopGenerate and KeyStopAccept are left
- unspecified, the key's lifetime is infinite. When a new key replaces
- an old, the KeyStartGenerate time for the new key must be less than
- or equal to the KeyStopGenerate time of the old key.
-
- Key storage should persist across a system restart, warm or cold, to
- avoid operational issues. In the event that the last key associated
- with an interface expires, it is unacceptable to revert to an
- unauthenticated condition, and not advisable to disrupt routing.
- Therefore, the router should send a "last authentication key
- expiration" notification to the network manager and treat the key as
- having an infinite lifetime until the lifetime is extended, the key
- is deleted by network management, or a new key is configured.
-
- D.4 Message generation
-
- After building the contents of an OSPF packet, the authentication
- procedure indicated by the sending interface's Autype value is called
- before the packet is sent. The authentication procedure modifies the
- OSPF packet as follows.
-
- D.4.1 Generating Null authentication
-
- When using Null authentication, the packet is modified as follows:
-
- (1) The Autype field in the standard OSPF header is set to
- 0.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- Moy Standards Track [Page 196]
-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- (2) The checksum field in the standard OSPF header is set to
- the standard IP checksum of the entire contents of the packet,
- starting with the OSPF packet header but excluding the 64-bit
- authentication field. This checksum is calculated as the 16-bit
- one's complement of the one's complement sum of all the 16-bit
- words in the packet, excepting the authentication field. If the
- packet's length is not an integral number of 16-bit words, the
- packet is padded with a byte of zero before checksumming.
-
- D.4.2 Generating Simple password authentication
-
- When using Simple password authentication, the packet is modified as
- follows:
-
- (1) The Autype field in the standard OSPF header is set to 1.
-
- (2) The checksum field in the standard OSPF header is set to the
- standard IP checksum of the entire contents of the packet,
- starting with the OSPF packet header but excluding the 64-bit
- authentication field. This checksum is calculated as the 16-bit
- one's complement of the one's complement sum of all the 16-bit
- words in the packet, excepting the authentication field. If the
- packet's length is not an integral number of 16-bit words, the
- packet is padded with a byte of zero before checksumming.
-
- (3) The 64-bit authentication field in the OSPF packet header
- is set to the 64-bit password (i.e., authentication key) that has
- been configured for the interface.
-
- D.4.3 Generating Cryptographic authentication
-
- When using Cryptographic authentication, there may be multiple keys
- configured for the interface. In this case, among the keys that are
- valid for message generation (i.e, that have KeyStartGenerate <=
- current time < KeyStopGenerate) choose the one with the most recent
- KeyStartGenerate time. Using this key, modify the packet as follows:
-
- (1) The Autype field in the standard OSPF header is set to
- 2.
-
- (2) The checksum field in the standard OSPF header is not
- calculated, but is instead set to 0.
-
- (3) The Key ID (see Figure 18) is set to the chosen key's
- Key ID.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- (4) The Auth Data Len field is set to the length in bytes of
- the message digest that will be appended to the OSPF packet. When
- using MD5 as the authentication algorithm, Auth Data Len will be
- 16.
-
- (5) The 32-bit Cryptographic sequence number (see Figure 18)
- is set to a non-decreasing value (i.e., a value at least as large
- as the last value sent out the interface). The precise values to
- use in the cryptographic sequence number field are
- implementation-specific. For example, it may be based on a
- simple counter, or be based on the system's clock.
-
- (6) The message digest is then calculated and appended to
- the OSPF packet. The authentication algorithm to be used in
- calculating the digest is indicated by the key itself. Input to
- the authentication algorithm consists of the OSPF packet and the
- secret key. When using MD5 as the authentication algorithm, the
- message digest calculation proceeds as follows:
-
- (a) The 16 byte MD5 key is appended to the OSPF packet.
-
- (b) Trailing pad and length fields are added, as specified in
- [Ref17].
-
- (c) The MD5 authentication algorithm is run over the
- concatenation of the OSPF packet, secret key, pad and
- length fields, producing a 16 byte message digest (see
- [Ref17]).
-
- (d) The MD5 digest is written over the OSPF key (i.e.,
- appended to the original OSPF packet). The digest is not
- counted in the OSPF packet's length field, but is included
- in the packet's IP length field. Any trailing pad or
- length fields beyond the digest are not counted or
- transmitted.
-
- D.5 Message verification
-
- When an OSPF packet has been received on an interface, it must be
- authenticated. The authentication procedure is indicated by the
- setting of Autype in the standard OSPF packet header, which matches
- the setting of Autype for the receiving OSPF interface.
-
- If an OSPF protocol packet is accepted as authentic, processing of
- the packet continues as specified in Section 8.2. Packets which fail
- authentication are discarded.
-
-
-
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-
-
- D.5.1 Verifying Null authentication
-
- When using Null authentication, the checksum field in the OSPF header
- must be verified. It must be set to the 16-bit one's complement of
- the one's complement sum of all the 16-bit words in the packet,
- excepting the authentication field. (If the packet's length is not
- an integral number of 16-bit words, the packet is padded with a byte
- of zero before checksumming.)
-
- D.5.2 Verifying Simple password authentication
-
- When using Simple password authentication, the received OSPF packet
- is authenticated as follows:
-
- (1) The checksum field in the OSPF header must be verified.
- It must be set to the 16-bit one's complement of the
- one's complement sum of all the 16-bit words in the
- packet, excepting the authentication field. (If the
- packet's length is not an integral number of 16-bit
- words, the packet is padded with a byte of zero before
- checksumming.)
-
- (2) The 64-bit authentication field in the OSPF packet
- header must be equal to the 64-bit password (i.e.,
- authentication key) that has been configured for the
- interface.
-
- D.5.3 Verifying Cryptographic authentication
-
- When using Cryptographic authentication, the received OSPF packet is
- authenticated as follows:
-
- (1) Locate the receiving interface's configured key having
- Key ID equal to that specified in the received OSPF
- packet (see Figure 18). If the key is not found, or if
- the key is not valid for reception (i.e., current time <
- KeyStartAccept or current time >= KeyStopAccept), the
- OSPF packet is discarded.
-
- (2) If the cryptographic sequence number found in the OSPF
- header (see Figure 18) is less than the cryptographic
- sequence number recorded in the sending neighbor's data
- structure, the OSPF packet is discarded.
-
- (3) Verify the appended message digest in the following
- steps:
-
- (a) The received digest is set aside.
-
-
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-
-
- (b) A new digest is calculated, as specified in Step 6
- of Section D.4.3.
-
- (c) The calculated and received digests are compared. If
- they do not match, the OSPF packet is discarded. If
- they do match, the OSPF protocol packet is accepted
- as authentic, and the "cryptographic sequence
- number" in the neighbor's data structure is set to
- the sequence number found in the packet's OSPF
- header.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- E. An algorithm for assigning Link State IDs
-
- The Link State ID in AS-external-LSAs and summary-LSAs is usually set
- to the described network's IP address. However, if necessary one or
- more of the network's host bits may be set in the Link State ID.
- This allows the router to originate separate LSAs for networks having
- the same address, yet different masks. Such networks can occur in the
- presence of supernetting and subnet 0s (see [Ref10]).
-
- This appendix gives one possible algorithm for setting the host bits
- in Link State IDs. The choice of such an algorithm is a local
- decision. Separate routers are free to use different algorithms,
- since the only LSAs affected are the ones that the router itself
- originates. The only requirement on the algorithms used is that the
- network's IP address should be used as the Link State ID whenever
- possible; this maximizes interoperability with OSPF implementations
- predating RFC 1583.
-
- The algorithm below is stated for AS-external-LSAs. This is only for
- clarity; the exact same algorithm can be used for summary-LSAs.
- Suppose that the router wishes to originate an AS-external-LSA for a
- network having address NA and mask NM1. The following steps are then
- used to determine the LSA's Link State ID:
-
- (1) Determine whether the router is already originating an AS-
- external-LSA with Link State ID equal to NA (in such an LSA the
- router itself will be listed as the LSA's Advertising Router).
- If not, the Link State ID is set equal to NA and the algorithm
- terminates. Otherwise,
-
- (2) Obtain the network mask from the body of the already existing
- AS-external-LSA. Call this mask NM2. There are then two cases:
-
- o NM1 is longer (i.e., more specific) than NM2. In this case,
- set the Link State ID in the new LSA to be the network
- [NA,NM1] with all the host bits set (i.e., equal to NA or'ed
- together with all the bits that are not set in NM1, which is
- network [NA,NM1]'s broadcast address).
-
- o NM2 is longer than NM1. In this case, change the existing
- LSA (having Link State ID of NA) to reference the new
- network [NA,NM1] by incrementing the sequence number,
- changing the mask in the body to NM1 and inserting the cost
- of the new network. Then originate a new LSA for the old
- network [NA,NM2], with Link State ID equal to NA or'ed
- together with the bits that are not set in NM2 (i.e.,
- network [NA,NM2]'s broadcast address).
-
-
-
-
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-
- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- The above algorithm assumes that all masks are contiguous; this
- ensures that when two networks have the same address, one mask is
- more specific than the other. The algorithm also assumes that no
- network exists having an address equal to another network's broadcast
- address. Given these two assumptions, the above algorithm always
- produces unique Link State IDs. The above algorithm can also be
- reworded as follows: When originating an AS-external-LSA, try to use
- the network number as the Link State ID. If that produces a
- conflict, examine the two networks in conflict. One will be a subset
- of the other. For the less specific network, use the network number
- as the Link State ID and for the more specific use the network's
- broadcast address instead (i.e., flip all the "host" bits to 1). If
- the most specific network was originated first, this will cause you
- to originate two LSAs at once.
-
- As an example of the algorithm, consider its operation when the
- following sequence of events occurs in a single router (Router A).
-
- (1) Router A wants to originate an AS-external-LSA for
- [10.0.0.0,255.255.255.0]:
-
- (a) A Link State ID of 10.0.0.0 is used.
-
- (2) Router A then wants to originate an AS-external-LSA for
- [10.0.0.0,255.255.0.0]:
-
- (a) The LSA for [10.0.0,0,255.255.255.0] is reoriginated using a
- new Link State ID of 10.0.0.255.
-
- (b) A Link State ID of 10.0.0.0 is used for
- [10.0.0.0,255.255.0.0].
-
- (3) Router A then wants to originate an AS-external-LSA for
- [10.0.0.0,255.0.0.0]:
-
- (a) The LSA for [10.0.0.0,255.255.0.0] is reoriginated using a
- new Link State ID of 10.0.255.255.
-
- (b) A Link State ID of 10.0.0.0 is used for
- [10.0.0.0,255.0.0.0].
-
- (c) The network [10.0.0.0,255.255.255.0] keeps its Link State ID
- of 10.0.0.255.
-
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-
- F. Multiple interfaces to the same network/subnet
-
- There are at least two ways to support multiple physical interfaces
- to the same IP subnet. Both methods will interoperate with
- implementations of RFC 1583 (and of course this memo). The two
- methods are sketched briefly below. An assumption has been made that
- each interface has been assigned a separate IP address (otherwise,
- support for multiple interfaces is more of a link-level or ARP issue
- than an OSPF issue).
-
- Method 1:
- Run the entire OSPF functionality over both interfaces, sending and
- receiving hellos, flooding, supporting separate interface and
- neighbor FSMs for each interface, etc. When doing this all other
- routers on the subnet will treat the two interfaces as separate
- neighbors, since neighbors are identified (on broadcast and NBMA
- networks) by their IP address.
-
- Method 1 has the following disadvantages:
-
- (1) You increase the total number of neighbors and adjacencies.
-
- (2) You lose the bidirectionality test on both interfaces, since
- bidirectionality is based on Router ID.
-
- (3) You have to consider both interfaces together during the
- Designated Router election, since if you declare both to be
- DR simultaneously you can confuse the tie-breaker (which is
- Router ID).
-
- Method 2:
- Run OSPF over only one interface (call it the primary interface),
- but include both the primary and secondary interfaces in your
- Router-LSA.
-
- Method 2 has the following disadvantages:
-
- (1) You lose the bidirectionality test on the secondary
- interface.
-
- (2) When the primary interface fails, you need to promote the
- secondary interface to primary status.
-
-
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- RFC 2178 OSPF Version 2 July 1997
-
-
- G. Differences from RFC 1583
-
- This section documents the differences between this memo and RFC
- 1583. All differences are backward-compatible. Implementations of
- this memo and of RFC 1583 will interoperate.
-
- G.1 Enhancements to OSPF authentication
-
- An additional OSPF authentication type has been added: the
- Cryptographic authentication type. This has been defined so that any
- arbitrary "Keyed Message Digest" algorithm can be used for packet
- authentication. Operation using the MD5 algorithm is completely
- specified (see Appendix D).
-
- A number of other changes were also made to OSPF packet
- authentication, affecting the following Sections:
-
- o The authentication type is now specified per-interface,
- rather than per-area (Sections 6, 9, C.2 and C.3).
-
- o The OSPF packet header checksum is now considered part of
- the authentication procedure, and so has been moved out of the
- packet send and receive logic (Sections 8.1 and 8.2) and into the
- description of authentication types (Appendix D).
-
- o In Appendix D, sections detailing message generation and
- message verification have been added.
-
- o For the OSPF Cryptographic authentication type, a discussion
- of key management, including the requirement for simultaneous
- support of multiple keys, key lifetimes and smooth key
- transition, has been added to Appendix D.
-
- G.2 Addition of Point-to-MultiPoint interface
-
- This memo adds an additional method for running OSPF over non-
- broadcast networks: the Point-to-Multipoint network. To implement
- this addition, the language of RFC 1583 has been altered slightly.
- References to "multi-access" networks have been deleted. The term
- "non-broadcast networks" is now used to describe networks which can
- connect many routers, but which do not natively support
- broadcast/multicast (such as a public Frame relay network). Over
- non-broadcast networks, there are two options for running OSPF:
- modelling them as "NBMA networks" or as "Point-to-MultiPoint
- networks". NBMA networks require full mesh connectivity between
- routers; when employing NBMA networks in the presence of partial mesh
- connectivity, multiple NBMA networks must be configured, as described
- in [Ref15]. In contrast, Point-to-Multipoint networks have been
-
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-
- designed to work simply and naturally when faced with partial mesh
- connectivity.
-
- The addition of Point-to-MultiPoint networks has impacted the text in
- many places, which are briefly summarized below:
-
- o Section 2 describing the OSPF link-state database has been
- split into additional subsections, with one of the subsections
- (Section 2.1.1) describing the differing map representations of
- the two non-broadcast network options. This subsection also
- contrasts the NBMA network and Point- to-MultiPoint network
- options, and describes the situations when one is preferable to
- the other.
-
- o In contrast to NBMA networks, Point-to-MultiPoint networks
- have the following properties. Adjacencies are established
- between all neighboring routers (Sections 4, 7.1, 7.5, 9.5 and
- 10.4). There is no Designated Router or Backup Designated Router
- for a Point-to-MultiPoint network (Sections 7.3 and 7.4). No
- network-LSA is originated for Point-to-MultiPoint networks
- (Sections 12.4.2 and A.4.3). Router Priority is not configured
- for Point-to-MultiPoint interfaces, nor for neighbors on Point-
- to-MultiPoint networks (Sections C.3 and C.6).
-
- o The Interface FSM for a Point-to-MultiPoint interface is
- identical to that used for point-to-point interfaces. Two states
- are possible: "Down" and "Point-to-Point" (Section 9.3).
-
- o When originating a router-LSA, and Point-to-MultiPoint
- interface is reported as a collection of "point-to-point links"
- to all of the interface's adjacent neighbors, together with a
- single stub link advertising the interface's IP address with a
- cost of 0 (Section 12.4.1.4).
-
- o When flooding out a non-broadcast interface (when either in
- NBMA or Point-to-MultiPoint mode) the Link State Update or Link
- State Acknowledgment packet must be replicated in order to be
- sent to each of the interface's neighbors (see Sections 13.3 and
- 13.5).
-
- G.3 Support for overlapping area ranges
-
- RFC 1583 requires that all networks falling into a given area range
- actually belong to a single area. This memo relaxes that restriction.
- This is useful in the following example. Suppose that [10.0.0.0,
- 255.0.0.0] is carved up into subnets. Most of these subnets are
- assigned to a single OSPF area (call it Area X), while a few subnets
- are assigned to other areas. In order to get this configuration to
-
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-
-
- work with RFC 1583, you must not summarize the subnets of Area X with
- the single range [10.0.0.0, 255.0.0.0], because then the subnets of
- 10.0.0.0 belonging to other areas would become unreachable. However,
- with this memo you can summarize the subnets in Area X, provided that
- the subnets belonging to other areas are not summarized.
-
- Implementation details for this change can be found in Sections 11.1
- and 16.2.
-
- G.4 A modification to the flooding algorithm
-
- The OSPF flooding algorithm has been modified as follows. When a Link
- State Update Packet is received that contains an LSA instance which
- is actually less recent than the the router's current database copy,
- the router will now in most cases respond by flooding back its
- database copy. This is in contrast to the RFC 1583 behavior, which
- was to simply throw the received LSA away.
-
- Detailed description of the change can be found in Step 8 of Section
- 13.
-
- This change improves MaxAge processing. There are times when MaxAge
- LSAs stay in a router's database for extended intervals: 1) when they
- are stuck in a retransmission queue on a slow link or 2) when a
- router is not properly flushing them from its database, due to
- software bugs. The prolonged existence of these MaxAge LSAs can
- inhibit the flooding of new instances of the LSA. New instances
- typically start with LS sequence number equal to
- InitialSequenceNumber, and are treated as less recent (and hence were
- discarded according to RFC 1583) by routers still holding MaxAge
- instances. However, with the above change to flooding, a router
- holding a MaxAge instance will flood back the MaxAge instance. When
- this flood reaches the LSA's originator, it will then pick the next
- highest LS sequence number and reflood, overwriting the MaxAge
- instance.
-
- G.5 Introduction of the MinLSArrival constant
-
- OSPF limits the frequency that new instances of any particular LSA
- can be accepted during flooding. This is extra protection, just in
- case a neighboring router is violating the mandated limit on LSA
- (re)originations (namely, one per LSA in any MinLSInterval).
-
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- In RFC 1583, the frequency at which new LSA instances were accepted
- was also set equal to once every MinLSInterval seconds. However, in
- some circumstances this led to unwanted link state retransmissions,
- even when the LSA originator was obeying the MinLSInterval limit on
- originations. This was due to either 1) choice of clock granularity
- in some OSPF implementations or 2) differing clock speed in
- neighboring routers.
-
- To alleviate this problem, the frequency at which new LSA instances
- are accepted during flooding has now been increased to once every
- MinLSArrival seconds, whose value is set to 1. This change is
- reflected in Steps 5a and 5d of Section 13, and in Appendix B.
-
- G.6 Optionally advertising point-to-point links as subnets
-
- When describing a point-to-point interface in its router-LSA, a
- router may now advertise a stub link to the point-to-point network's
- subnet. This is specified as an alternative to the RFC 1583 behavior,
- which is to advertise a stub link to the neighbor's IP address. See
- Sections 12.4.1 and 12.4.1.1 for details.
-
- G.7 Advertising same external route from multiple areas
-
- This document fixes routing loops which can occur in RFC 1583 when
- the same external destination is advertised by AS boundary routers in
- separate areas. There are two manifestations of this problem. The
- first, discovered by Dennis Ferguson, occurs when an aggregated
- forwarding address is in use. In this case, the desirability of the
- forwarding address can change for the worse as a packet crosses an
- area aggregation boundary on the way to the forwarding address, which
- in turn can cause the preference of AS-external-LSAs to change,
- resulting in a routing loop.
-
- The second manifestation was discovered by Richard Woundy. It is
- caused by an incomplete application of OSPF's preference of intra-
- area routes over inter-area routes: paths to any given
- ASBR/forwarding address are selected first based on intra-area
- preference, while the comparison between separate ASBRs/forwarding
- addresses is driven only by cost, ignoring intra-area preference. His
- example is replicated in Figure 19. Both router A3 and router B3 are
- originating an AS-external-LSA for 10.0.0.0/8, with the same type 2
- metric. Router A1 selects B1 as its next hop towards 10.0.0.0/8,
- based on shorter cost to ASBR B3 (via B1->B2->B3). However, the
- shorter route to B3 is not available to B1, due to B1's preference
- for the (higher cost) intra-area route to B3 through Area A. This
- leads B1 to select A1 as its next hop to 10.0.0.0/8, resulting in a
- routing loop.
-
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-
- The following two changes have been made to prevent these routing
- loops:
-
- o When originating a type 3 summary-LSA for a configured area
- address range, the cost of the summary-LSA is now set to the
- maximum cost of the range's component networks (instead of the
- previous algorithm which set the cost to the minimum component
- cost). This change affects Sections 3.5 and 12.4.3, Figures 7
- and 8, and Tables 6 and 13.
-
- o The preference rules for choosing among multiple AS-
- external-LSAs have been changed. Where previously cost was the
- only determining factor, now the preference is driven first by
- type of path (intra-area or inter-area, through non-backbone area
- or through backbone) to the ASBR/forwarding address, using cost
- only to break ties. This change affects Sections 16.4 and 16.4.1.
-
- After implementing this change, the example in Figure 19 is modified
- as follows. Router A1 now chooses A3 as the next
-
- 10.0.0.0/8
- ----------
- |
- +----+
- | XX |
- +----+
- RIP / \ RIP
- --------------------- --------------------
- ! !
- ! !
- +----+ +----+ 1 +----+......+----+....
- | A3 |------| A1 |---------------| B1 |------| B3 | .
- +----+ 6 +----+ +----+ 8 +----+ .
- 1| . / .
- OSPF backbone | . / .
- +----+ 2 / .
- | B2 |------- Area A.
- +----+................
-
- Figure 19: Example routing loop when the
- same external route is advertised from multiple
- areas
-
- hop to 10.0.0.0/8, while B1 chooses B3 as next hop. The reason for
- both choices is that ASBRs/forwarding addresses are now chosen based
- first on intra-area preference, and then by cost.
-
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-
- Unfortunately, this change is not backward compatible. While the
- change prevents routing loops when all routers run the new preference
- rules, it can actually create routing loops when some routers are
- running the new preference rules and other routers implement RFC
- 1583. For this reason, a new configuration parameter has been added:
- RFC1583Compatibility. Only when RFC1583Compatibility is set to
- "disabled" will the new preference rules take effect. See Appendix C
- for more details.
-
- G.8 Retransmission of initial Database Description packets
-
- This memo allows retransmission of initial Database Description
- packets, without resetting the state of the adjacency. In some
- environments, retransmission of the initial Database Description
- packet may be unavoidable. For example, the link delay incurred by a
- satellite link may exceed the value configured for an interface's
- RxmtInterval. In RFC 1583 such an environment prevents a full
- adjacency from ever forming.
-
- In this memo, changes have been made in the reception of Database
- Description packets so that retransmitted initial Database
- Description packets are treated identically to any other
- retransmitted Database Description packets. See Section 10.6 for
- details.
-
- G.9 Detecting interface MTU mismatches
-
- When two neighboring routers have a different interface MTU for their
- common network segment, serious problems can ensue: large packets are
- prevented from being successfully transferred from one router to the
- other, impairing OSPF's flooding algorithm and possibly creating
- "black holes" for user data traffic.
-
- This memo provides a fix for the interface MTU mismatch problem by
- advertising the interface MTU in Database Description packets. When a
- router receives a Database description packet advertising an MTU
- larger than the router can receive, the router drops the Database
- Description packet. This prevents an adjacency from forming, telling
- OSPF flooding and user data traffic to avoid the connection between
- the two routers. For more information, see Sections 10.6, 10.8, and
- A.3.3.
-
- G.10 Deleting the TOS routing option
-
- The TOS routing option has been deleted from OSPF. This action was
- required by the Internet standards process ([Ref24]), due to lack of
- implementation experience with OSPF's TOS routing. However, for
- backward compatibility the formats of OSPF's various LSAs remain
-
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-
- unchanged, maintaining the ability to specify TOS metrics in router-
- LSAs, summary-LSAs, ASBR-summary-LSAs, and AS-external-LSAs (see
- Sections 12.3, A.4.2, A.4.4, and A.4.5).
-
- To see OSPF's original TOS routing design, consult [Ref9].
-
- Security Considerations
-
- All OSPF protocol exchanges are authenticated. OSPF supports multiple
- types of authentication; the type of authentication in use can be
- configured on a per network segment basis. One of OSPF's
- authentication types, namely the Cryptographic authentication option,
- is believed to be secure against passive attacks and provide
- significant protection against active attacks. When using the
- Cryptographic authentication option, each router appends a "message
- digest" to its transmitted OSPF packets. Receivers then use the
- shared secret key and received digest to verify that each received
- OSPF packet is authentic.
-
- The quality of the security provided by the Cryptographic
- authentication option depends completely on the strength of the
- message digest algorithm (MD5 is currently the only message digest
- algorithm specified), the strength of the key being used, and the
- correct implementation of the security mechanism in all communicating
- OSPF implementations. It also requires that all parties maintain the
- secrecy of the shared secret key.
-
- None of the OSPF authentication types provide confidentiality. Nor do
- they protect against traffic analysis. Key management is also not
- addressed by this memo.
-
- For more information, see Sections 8.1, 8.2, and Appendix D.
-
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-
- Author's Address
-
- John Moy
- Cascade Communications Corp.
- 5 Carlisle Road
- Westford, MA 01886
-
- Phone: 508-952-1367
- Fax: 508-692-9214
- Email: jmoy@casc.com
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