Routing

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Ask questions and share experiences about ACX Series, CTP Series, MX Series, PTX Series, SSR Series, JRR Series, and all things routing, including portfolios and protocols.
  • 1.  OSPFv3

    Posted 04-08-2016 06:23

    Hi , I am new to the j-community so I hope i post in the cprrect place 

     

     

     

    would you mind explaining to me how OSPFv3  " Link LSA " improve efficiency 

     

     

     

    I was a Cisco guy :'3 

     

    Many thanks in Advance 



  • 2.  RE: OSPFv3

     
    Posted 04-08-2016 07:13

    Hi iPexpert,

     

    Please check out the section 2.8 of RFC5340, especially point 6 and 7;

    https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5340

    This should answer your query.

     

     



  • 3.  RE: OSPFv3

    Posted 04-08-2016 09:33

    Hi , dearest , thanks for your responsive 

     

     

    do you mean  these section ? 

     

       6.  Manageability Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
       7.  IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
    

     



  • 4.  RE: OSPFv3
    Best Answer

    Posted 04-23-2016 19:28

    Additonal notes
    Protocol processing is done on a per link basis, not per subnet, which means you need only a single adjacency per link even if there are multiple IPv6 subnets on the link. This eliminates the requirement for matching subnet mask to form an adjacency.
    Link LSA—This LSA has local scope and does not extend beyond the link it is associated with. The purpose of a link LSA is to provide the router’s IPv6 link-local address to neighbors, inform other routers of the associated IPv6 prefixes available on the link, and provide information to the Networks. It enables the router to assert a collection of options bits in the network LSA to be originated for the link.