DELL 9.8(0.0) 사용자 설명서

다운로드
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Parameters
route-export
Enter the keyword to leak or share routes between VRFs.
tag
Enter a tag (export route target) to expose routes to other 
VRFs. This tag acts as an identifier for exported routes. You 
can use this identifier while importing these routes into 
another non-default VRF.
route-map-
name
(Optional) Enter the name of the route-map to filter the 
exported routes.
You can leak global routes to be made available to VRFs. As 
the global RTM usually contains a large pool of routes, when 
the destination VRF imports global routes, these routes will 
be duplicated into the VRF's RTM. As a result, it is mandatory 
to use route-maps to filter out leaked routes while sharing 
global routes with VRFs.
Defaults
N/A
Command 
Modes
VRF MODE
CONFIGURATION
Command 
History
Version
Description
9.7(0.0)
Introduced on the S4810, S4820T, S5000, S6000, S6000–
ON, and Z9500.
Usage 
Information
You can use the ip route-export tag command without specifying the route-map 
attribute to export all the routes corresponding to a source VRF. This action 
exposes source VRF's routes to various other VRFs, which then import these routes 
using the ip route-import tag command. In Dell Networking OS, you can configure 
at most one route-export per VRF as only one set of routes can be exposed for 
leaking. However, you can configure multiple route-import targets because a VRF 
can accept routes from multiple VRFs.
You can expose a unique set of routes from the Source VRF for Leaking to other 
VRFs. When two VRFs leak or export routes, there is no option to discretely filter 
leaked routes from each source VRF. Meaning, you cannot import one set of routes 
from one VRF and another set of routes from another VRF.
Only Active routes are eligible for leaking. For example, if one VRF has two routes 
corresponding to BGP and OSPF, in which the BGP route is not active, the OSPF 
route takes precedence over BGP. Even though the Target VRF has specified 
filtering options to match BGP, the BGP route is not leaked as that route is not 
active in the Source VRF.
Related 
Commands
 – imports routes from another VRF.
1876
Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF)