1 / 105

Module 4 OSPF Overview and Configuration

Module 4 OSPF Overview and Configuration. Module Objectives. Define OSPF, features, advantages over RIP Describe OSPF LSA, format and Types Define LSDB, Initial synchronization, database exchange & reliable flooding

cais
Télécharger la présentation

Module 4 OSPF Overview and Configuration

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Module 4OSPF Overview and Configuration

  2. Module Objectives • Define OSPF, features, advantages over RIP • Describe OSPF LSA, format and Types • Define LSDB, Initial synchronization, database exchange & reliable flooding • Describe Routing Calculations, supported network type & Database Synchronization • Describe how to build OSPF Networks • Define the OSPF routing, areas, router types and virtual Links • Differentiate DR, BDR, Router Election • OSPF Configuration and Examples • Lab Exercises • Summary

  3. Define OSPF • Dynamic Routing Protocol • Link State Protocol • Employ a distributed database model • More efficient than RIP

  4. The OSPF Advantage • OSPF is an interior gateway protocol (IGP) that is more efficient than RIP. • Consumes fewer network resources • Highly scalable • Faster convergence • A more descriptive routing metric • Route load sharing • Greater security

  5. Link-state Protocol • Employ a distributed database model. • Each router advertises a description of its local environment • interfaces • costs • neighbor information • Uses a single synchronized database for collecting advertisements (LSDB) • Routing table is derived from this database • Utilize a shortest-path first algorithm • OSPF is a Link-state routing protocol

  6. Basic Features of OSPF • Hello Packets • Link State Advertisements (LSA) • Link State Database • Reliable Flooding • Shortest Path First Routing Calculations • Areas and Inter-area Routing

  7. OSPF Hello Packet & Neighbor Discover • OSPF Hello packets are sent out all of a router’s interfaces to advertise itself to neighbor routers • A router learns about its neighbors when it receives neighbor router’s Hello packet • Hello packets are sent out every 10 seconds by default • If subsequent Hello packet is not received within 40 seconds, neighbor relationship is terminated

  8. OSPF Hello Packets • Will only be recognized by routers attached to the same subnet with same subnet mask • Contains information on parameters for • Hello Interval and • Router Dead Interval • This information is used by neighbor routers to agree on the communication variables • This allows an occasional lost Hello packet not to be interpreted as a link down condition.

  9. OSPF Hello Packets (cont.) • In a broadcast environment, it contains the OSPF router IDs of all routers the sender has heard up to the point of transmission • This reduces overhead of sending multiple Hellos • Ensure that the OSPF link is bi-directional • NOTE: An OSPF router will not forward data packets over a unidirectional link.

  10. Link State Advertisement (LSA) • Each OSPF router is responsible for describing its local piece of the routing topology through the transmission of link-state advertisements. • Every thirty minutes a router will -- even in the absence of any change, retransmit this self-originating data in the event it may have been lost or corrupted in a neighbor router’s tables.

  11. OSPF LSA Format • All OSPF LSAs start with a 20-byte common header • This provides orderly updating and removal of LSAs and organization to the LSDB

  12. LSA Format - LS Age • Number of seconds since the LSA was originated normally 0 - 30 mins. • If LSA reaches 30 minutes, originating router will refresh the LSA by flooding a new instance. • If LSA reaches 1 hour, it is deleted from the database.

  13. LSA Format - LS Type • Classifies the LSA according to function • Type 1 • Type 2 • Type 3 • Type 4 • Type 5 • Type 7

  14. LSA Format - Link State ID • A unique identification • Used to describe a router in the OSPF routing domain • Depends on the LS Type • Type 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 7

  15. LSA Format - Advertising Router • The originating router’s OSPF router ID • In practice, this is one of the router’s IP address

  16. LSA Format - LS Sequence Number • A linear sequence number • Used to compare a new LSA with an old LSA • The LSA instance having the larger LS Sequence Number is considered to be more recent.

  17. LSA Format - LS Checksum • Used to detect data corruption. • Does not include LS Age field • Derived using Fletcher checksum algorithm

  18. LSA Types Type Number Description 1 Router-LSAs 2 Network-LSAs 3 Summary-LSAs (IP network) 4 Summary-LSAs (ASBR) 5 AS external-LSAs 7 NSSA external-LSAs

  19. LS Type 1 - Router-LSAs • Generated by each OSPF router • It describes the router’s set of active interfaces, its associated cost and any neighbor information • Link State ID is set to the router’s OSPF Router ID • Flooded throughout a single area only

  20. LS Type 2 - Network-LSAs • Generated by OSPF Designated Routers (DRs) • Describes a network segment - i.e., broadcast domain along with the IDs of all currently attached routers. • Link State ID field lists the IP interface address of the DR

  21. LS Type 3 - Summary-LSAs (IP Network) • This originate from Area Border Routers (ABRs) • Supports hierarchical routing through the use of OSPF areas • Link State ID field is an IP network number

  22. LS Type 4 - Summary-LSAs (ASBR) • This originate from Area Border Routers (ABRs) • Similar to LS Type 3 • Used when destination is an Autonomous System Boundary Router (ASBR) • The Link State ID is the AS boundary router’s OSPF Router ID

  23. LS Type 5 - AS-external-LSAs • Originated by AS boundary routers and describes destinations ex-ternal to the AS. • Link State ID field specify an IP network number

  24. LS Type 7 - NSSA external-LSAs • Allows the import of external routes that will not be advertised out of the NSSA • NSSA - Not So Stubby Area

  25. Router LSA Format - Link ID • Originating router’s link information follows the LSA header. • There are four Link IDs determined by Link Type. • Type 1 Neighboring router’s Router ID • Three of this Link ID are relevant in a broadcast network

  26. Router LSA Format - Link Data • For transit and Virtual Links • specifies the IP address of associated router interface. • For stub networks • Specifies the stub network mask

  27. Router LSA Format - Metric • The cost of using this router link. • A user-configurable value from 1 - 65,535 • The larger the metric, the less likely (more expensive) data will be routed over that particular link. • Connections to STUB networks are allowed to advertise a metric of zero.

  28. Link-State Database (LSDB) • The collection of all OSPF LSAs received • Each OSPF router has an identical LSDB • Gives complete description of the network: • routers • network segments • interconnectivity (how it is interconnected) • LSDBs are exchanged between neighboring routers soon after routers discover each other • Maintained through a procedure called reliable flooding

  29. LSDB Initial Synchronization • When two neighbors first start communicating, they must synchronize their databases before forwarding traffic over their shared link to prevent routing loops from occurring.

  30. OSPF-specified Database Exchange • Procedure used by the routers to synchronize their databases once the hello protocol determines a bi-directional connection between router neighbors. • During synchronization, the neighbor routers do three things: • Forward current LSA headers • Compares the header received to the LSDB • Request the full LSA for new or newer headers

  31. Example LSDB Initial Synchronization Switches A thru F are in a stable OSPF network and have fully synchronized databases OSPF is restarted on Switch F, forcing database synchronization with switch A.

  32. Example LSDB Initial Synchronization

  33. OSPF Database - Reliable Flooding • LSA Updates are periodically generated by a router wishing to update a self-originated LSA because: • The router’s local state may have changed • The router wants to delete one of its self-originated LSAs • Used to propagate LSA Updates throughout the routing domain

  34. Reliable Flooding - What Happens • A router will generate a Link-state Update packet containing one or more LSAs • Update is forwarded out all interfaces. • Neighbor router receives the Update and compares the LSAs with the LSDB • More recent LSAs are installed in LSDB • Acknowledgement is sent back to originating route • New Link-state Update containing the LSA is sent out all interfaces except receiving one.

  35. OSPF Routing Calculations • With router LSDBs synchronized for all routers in routing domain • The router will use Dijkstra’s Shortest Path First algorithm • This allows calculation of shortest paths to all destinations • Routing table is constructed from the calculations and includes • network destinations • associated costs

  36. OSPF Routing Calculations • Every link carries an associated cost.

  37. OSPF Routing Calculations

  38. OSPF Routing Calculations • Applying Dijkstra’s SPF algorithm, Switch C’s routing table would incorporate the highlighted links Note that Switch A will never talk directly to Switch B as long as the links thru Switch C remain stable.

  39. OSPF Routing Calculations • Note how changing a link cost affects the route calculation for the shortest path With this configuration, Switch C now has two paths of equal cost to communicate with Switch J. Communication with Switch B is no longer direct, but must routed thru Switch A.

  40. OSPF Network Types • Point-to-Point networks • Serial lines • Non-broadcast Multi-access (NBMA) networks • X.25, ATM • Point-to-Multipoint networks • Frame Relay • Broadcast networks

  41. OSPF Network Type - Broadcast Networks • A network with more than two attached devices • Has the ability to address a single physical message to all of the attached devices (broadcast)

  42. OSPF Network Type - Broadcast Networks • Only network type supported by Extreme switches • Other Network Types are for WAN use

  43. Broadcast Networks Terminology • DR - Designated Router • BDR - Backup DR • DR and BDR Election • Network LSAs

  44. Broadcast Networks - Designated Router • Every broadcast network has a Designated Router (DR) and a Backup Designated Router (BDR) • Each router on the network exchanges link state information only with the DR and BDR. • This information is used to maintain database synchronization between the DR and neighbor routers • This reduces the amount of traffic otherwise consumed by routing protocol traffic • Only a DR generates a LS Type 2 - Network-LSAs

  45. DR and BDR Election • First OSPF router on an IP subnet always becomes the DR • Second OSPF router always becomes BDR • If DR or BDR fail, the OSPF router with the highest Router Priority will replace the BDR • If two OSPF routers have same Router Priority, then the OSPF Router ID will break the tie • A Router Priority of 0 will prevent an OSPF router from ever being elected as DR or BDR

  46. Database Synchronization • An OSPF router will send its Link State Update (LSU) to the DR and BDR • The destination IP address for the LSU will be multicast address 224.0.0.6 (All DRouters). • The DR will then flood the update to all OSPF routers • The destination IP address for the LSU will be multicast address 224.0.0.5 (All OSPFRouters).

  47. Representing Broadcast Subnet in LSDB • If an OSPF router included all known routers on a common subnet in its router-LSA, there would be n*(n-1) links in the OSPF database. • By using a new LSA type, the Network-LSA, to represent the broadcast subnet, the number of links is reduced from n*(n-1) to n*2. • Each network LSA has a link to every router-LSA, and every router-LSA has a link to the broadcast subnet’s network-LSA. • DR maintains the network-LSA

  48. Type 2: Network LSAs • Created in order to reduce the number of links in each router’s resulting LSDB • Describes the subnet, all routers on that network DR identity

  49. Type 2: Network LSAs The network-LSA helps in database synchronization, since a router having a router-LSA with a link to the network-LSA and vice-versa is known to have a database synchronized with the Designated Router.

  50. Building OSPF Networks • Hierarchical Routing • OSPF Routing Hierarchy • OSPF Areas • OSPF Types of Routers • Virtual Links • CLI Commands for OSPF Configuration

More Related