Cisco Router IOS XR Manuale Utente Pagina 56

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Cisco IOS XR Training Page 56
© 2012 Jeffrey Fry FryGuy.Net
16. RIP
(yeah yeah, why would you want to
run this? Think PE-CE)
Ok, time for the next routing protocol RIP. Why would you use IOS XR for
RIP? Well, if you have a CE device that only has a few networks, RIP is a
perfect protocol. Keep in mind that IOS XR is code built for a Service
Provider network, so PE-CE relationships are what these routers are about.
Plus it is just good to know different options.
RP/0/7/CPU0:R1#conf t
Thu Mar 29 20:37:44.801 UTC
RP/0/7/CPU0:R1(config)#router rip
RP/0/7/CPU0:R1(config-rip)#int l0
RP/0/7/CPU0:R1(config-rip-if)#int g0/3/0/2
RP/0/7/CPU0:R1(config-rip-if)#^Z
Uncommitted changes found, commit them before exiting(yes/no/cancel)?
[cancel]:yes
Notice I did not do a COMMIT, but since the router knows I was making changes
it asked me.
RP/0/7/CPU0:R1#
Lets check our IP protocols:
RP/0/7/CPU0:R1#sh ip proto
Thu Mar 29 20:39:20.919 UTC
Routing Protocol RIP
1 VRFs (including default) configured, 1 active
6 routes, 3 paths have been allocated
Current OOM state is "Normal"
UDP socket descriptor is 42
VRF Active If-config If-active Routes Paths
Updates
default Active 2 2 6 3
30s
Now lets look at the RIP process:
RP/0/7/CPU0:R1#sh rip
Thu Mar 29 20:39:24.892 UTC
RIP config:
Active: Yes
Added to socket: Yes
Out-of-memory state: Normal
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