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IP Routing Destination window
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Access Server Administrators’ Reference Guide 
16 • IP
Info (ipRouteInfo) 
A reference to MIB definitions specific to the particular routing protocol which is responsible for this route, as 
determined by the value specified in the route’s ipRouteProto value. If this information is not present, its value 
should be set to the OBJECT IDENTIFIER { 0 0 }, which is a syntactically valid object identifier, and any 
conformant implementation of ASN.1 and BER must be able to generate and recognize this value.
IP Routing Destination window
The 
IP Routing Destination
 window (see 
) shows next-hop routing information. Clicking on a Desti-
nation in the IP
 Routing Information
 window displays this window.
Figure 86. Routing Destination window
Route Destination (ipRouteDest)
The destination IP address of this route. An entry with a value of 0.0.0.0 is considered a default route. Multiple 
routes to a single destination can appear in the table, but access to such multiple entries is dependent on the 
table-access mechanisms defined by the network management protocol in use.
Mask (ipRouteMask)
Indicates the mask to be logical-ANDed with the destination address before being compared to the value in the 
ipRouteDest field. For those systems that do not support arbitrary subnet masks, an agent constructs the value 
of the ipRouteMask by determining whether the value of the corresponding ipRouteDest field belongs to a 
Class A, B, or C network, and then using the appropriate mask from Table 3 on page 200.
Interface (ipRouteIfIndex)
The index value which uniquely identifies the local interface through which the next hop of this route should 
be reached. The interface identified by a particular value of this index is the same interface as identified by the 
same value of ifIndex.
Protocol (ipRouteProto)
The routing mechanism via which this route was learned. Inclusion of values for gateway routing protocols is 
not intended to imply that hosts must support those protocols.
unknown(0)
local(1)—Added by the access server to support an interface. For example, adding a route for a new dial-in 
user.