Strange entries in OSPF LSADB

Ondrej Zajicek santiago at crfreenet.org
Fri Jun 27 12:51:04 CEST 2014


On Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 12:10:11PM +0400, 1 ????? wrote:
> bird> show ospf lsadb
> 
>  0001  10.0.0.0        10.0.0.0          174  8000011b    43b4
>  0003  10.47.255.255   10.0.0.0          237  80000001    809e
>  0003  10.48.0.0       10.0.0.0           68  80000001    74a9
>  0003  10.79.255.255   10.0.0.0           62  80000001    feff
>  0003  10.80.0.0       10.0.0.0           62  80000001    f20b
>  0003  10.111.255.255  10.0.0.0           56  80000001    7d61
>  0003  10.112.0.0      10.0.0.0           50  80000001    716c
>  0003  10.143.255.255  10.0.0.0           44  80000001    fbc2
>  0003  10.144.0.0      10.0.0.0           44  80000001    efcd
>  0003  10.175.255.255  10.0.0.0           38  80000001    7a24
>  0003  10.176.0.0      10.0.0.0           32  80000001    6e2f
>  0003  10.207.255.255  10.0.0.0           26  80000001    f885
>  0003  10.208.0.0      10.0.0.0           20  80000001    ec90
>  0003  10.239.255.255  10.0.0.0           20  80000001    77e6
>  0003  10.240.0.0      10.0.0.0           14  80000001    6bf1
>  
> Is it normal?

Yes, it is. LSA IDs could be any value from the network prefix and BIRD
assigns them in a way that prevents collisions in the case that
networks are nested.

-- 
Elen sila lumenn' omentielvo

Ondrej 'Santiago' Zajicek (email: santiago at crfreenet.org)
OpenPGP encrypted e-mails preferred (KeyID 0x11DEADC3, wwwkeys.pgp.net)
"To err is human -- to blame it on a computer is even more so."
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