460
C
HAPTER
16: I
NTERNET
P
ROTOCOL
(IP)
ip rip
✓
3500
✓
9000
9400
3900
9300
addAdvertisement
For CoreBuilder 9000: Applies to Layer 3 switching modules only.
Adds an advertisement address to an IP RIP interface.
Valid Minimum Abbreviation
ip ri a
Important Considerations
■
The system uses the specified advertisement address to advertise
routes to other stations on the same network. It uses this address for
sending updates. (RIP-2 updates depend on the setting of RIP
compatibility mode.)
■
Advertisement addresses are handled differently based on RIP-1 and
RIP-2.
■
For the CoreBuilder 3500, each interface that you define initially
uses the default broadcast address (255.255.255.255) as the
advertisement address. With RIP-1 updates, the address that you
specify becomes the new RIP-1 advertisement address if you
change the broadcast address. If you subsequently use RIP-2
(configure the interface to send RIP-2 advertisements) and have the
RIP-1 compatibility mode disabled, the multicast address is used for
updates.
■
For the CoreBuilder 9000, each interface that you define initially
uses the directed broadcast address as the RIP advertisement
address (all
1
s in the host field).
■
You can specify up to 64 advertisement addresses in separate
iterations.
■
On the CoreBuilder 3500:
■
After you add an advertisement address, you cannot subsequently
change the broadcast address.
■
If you are using RIP-2 for the interface, you must enable RIP
compatibility mode if you want the system to use the
advertisement list instead of the multicast address for RIP updates.
See “ip rip compatibilityMode” earlier in this chapter for more
information.
■
To add an advertisement address on other platforms, you must remove
the directed broadcast address if you only want the address that you
added to be used for RIP advertisements.
Summary of Contents for CoreBuilder 9000
Page 18: ......
Page 26: ...26 ABOUT THIS GUIDE ...
Page 27: ...I GETTING STARTED Chapter 1 Administration Overview Chapter 2 Command Summary ...
Page 28: ......
Page 64: ...64 CHAPTER 2 COMMAND SUMMARY ...
Page 65: ...II SYSTEM LEVEL FUNCTIONS Chapter 3 System Environment Chapter 4 Module Environment ...
Page 66: ......
Page 148: ......
Page 202: ......
Page 248: ...248 CHAPTER 8 FIBER DISTRIBUTED DATA INTERFACE FDDI ...
Page 250: ......
Page 320: ...320 CHAPTER 11 TRUNKS ...
Page 368: ...368 CHAPTER 14 VIRTUAL LANS VLANS ...
Page 394: ......
Page 502: ...502 CHAPTER 17 VIRTUAL ROUTER REDUNDANCY VRRP ...
Page 604: ...604 CHAPTER 19 OPEN SHORTEST PATH FIRST OSPF ...
Page 660: ...660 CHAPTER 20 IPX ...
Page 687: ...VII TRAFFIC POLICY Chapter 22 Quality of Service QoS and RSVP ...
Page 688: ......
Page 744: ...744 CHAPTER 22 QUALITY OF SERVICE QOS AND RSVP ...
Page 745: ...VIII MONITORING Chapter 23 Event Log Chapter 24 Roving Analysis ...
Page 746: ......
Page 754: ...754 CHAPTER 23 EVENT LOG ...
Page 764: ...764 CHAPTER 24 ROVING ANALYSIS ...
Page 765: ...IX REFERENCE Appendix A Technical Support ...
Page 766: ......
Page 772: ...772 APPENDIX A TECHNICAL SUPPORT ...
Page 784: ......