- Configuring OSPF TTL Security Check and OSPF Graceful Shutdown
- Enabling OSPFv2 on an Interface Basis
- Configuring NSSA for OSPFv2
- Configuring NSSA for OSPFv3
- IPv6 Routing: OSPFv3 Authentication Support with IPsec
- OSPF Enhanced Traffic Statistics for OSPFv2 and OSPFv3
- OSPF SNMP ifIndex Value for Interface ID in Data Fields
- OSPF Mechanism to Exclude Connected IP Prefixes from LSA Advertisements
- OSPF Nonstop Routing
- OSPFv2 Local RIB
- IPv6 Routing: OSPFv3
- OSPFv3 Demand Circuit Ignore
- OSPFv3 Max-Metric Router LSA
- OSPFv3 MIB
- OSPFv3 VRF-Lite/PE-CE
- OSPFv3 Authentication Trailer
- OSPF ABR Type 3 LSA Filtering
- Graceful Shutdown Support for OSPFv3
OSPF Nonstop Routing
The OSPF Nonstop Routing feature allows a device with redundant Route Processors (RPs) to maintain its Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) state and adjacencies across planned and unplanned RP switchovers. The OSPF state is maintained by checkpointing the state information from OSPF on the active RP to the standby RP. After a switchover to the standby RP, OSPF uses the checkpointed information to continue operations without interruption.
- Finding Feature Information
- Restrictions for OSPF Nonstop Routing
- Information About OSPF Nonstop Routing
- How to Configure OSPF Nonstop Routing
- Configuration Examples for OSPF Nonstop Routing
- Additional References for OSPF Nonstop Routing
- Feature Information for OSPF Nonstop Routing
Finding Feature Information
Your software release may not support all the features documented in this module. For the latest caveats and feature information, see Bug Search Tool and the release notes for your platform and software release. To find information about the features documented in this module, and to see a list of the releases in which each feature is supported, see the feature information table at the end of this module.
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco Feature Navigator, go to www.cisco.com/go/cfn. An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Restrictions for OSPF Nonstop Routing
- OSPF Nonstop Routing (NSR) is available only for platforms with redundant RPs running Cisco IOS Release 15.1(2)S, 15.2(1)E, or later releases.
- OSPF NSR can significantly increase the memory used by OSPF during certain phases of its operation. CPU usage also can be increased. Before configuring OSPF NSR, you must be aware of the device memory capacity and estimate the likely memory requirements of OSPF NSR. For more information, see the section Configuring OSPF NSR. For devices in which memory and CPU are limited, consider using OSPF Nonstop Forwarding (NSF) instead. For more information, see RFC 3623, OSPF Graceful Restart.
- A switchover from the active to the standby RP can take several seconds (depending on the hardware platform), and during this time OSPF is unable to send Hello packets. As a result, configurations that use small OSPF dead intervals might not be able to maintain adjacencies across a switchover.
Information About OSPF Nonstop Routing
OSPF NSR Functionality
Although OSPF Nonstop Routing (NSR) serves a similar function to OSPF Nonstop Forwarding (NSF), it works differently. With NSF, OSPF on the newly active standby RP initially has no state information. OSPF uses extensions to the OSPF protocol to recover its state from neighboring OSPF devices. For the recovery to work, the neighbors must support the NSF protocol extensions and be willing to act as “helpers” to the device that is restarting. The neighbors must also continue forwarding data traffic to the device that is restarting while protocol state recovery takes place.
With NSR, by contrast, the device that performs the switchover preserves its state internally, and in most cases the neighbors are unaware of the switchover. Because assistance is not needed from neighboring devices, NSR can be used in situations where NSF cannot be used; for example, in networks where not all neighbors implement the NSF protocol extensions, or where network topology changes during the recovery making NSF unreliable, use NSR instead of NSF.
How to Configure OSPF Nonstop Routing
Configuring OSPF NSR
Ensure that Nonstop Routing (NSR) is supported on the device. The nsr command in router configuration mode is supported only on devices that support NSR.
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
router
ospf
process-id
4.
nsr
5.
end
6.
show
ip
ospf
[process-id]
nsr
[objects
|
statistics]
DETAILED STEPS
Troubleshooting Tips
OSPF NSR can increase the amount of memory used by the OSPF device process. To determine how much memory OSPF is currently using without NSR, you can use the show processes and show processes memory commands:
Device# show processes|include OSPF 276 Mwe 133BE14 1900 1792 1060 8904/12000 0 OSPF-1 Router 296 Mwe 133A824 10 971 10 8640/12000 0 OSPF-1 Hello
Process 276 is the OSPF device process that is to be checked. Use the show processes memory command to display its current memory use:
Device# show processes memory 276 Process ID: 276 Process Name: OSPF-1 Router Total Memory Held: 4454800 bytes
In the above example, OSPF is using 4,454,800 bytes, or approximately 4.5 megabytes (MB). Because OSPF NSR can consume double this memory for brief periods, ensure that the device has at least 5 MB of free memory before enabling OSPF NSR.
Configuration Examples for OSPF Nonstop Routing
Example: Configuring OSPF NSR
The following example shows how to configure OSPF NSR:
Device> enable Device# configure terminal Device(config)# router ospf 1 Device(config-router)# nsr Device(config-router)# end
Example: Verifying OSPF NSR
The following is sample output from the show ip ospf nsr command. The output displays that OSPF NSR is configured and OSPF on the standby RP is fully synchronized and ready to continue operation if the active RP fails or if a manual switchover is performed.
Device# show ip ospf 1 nsr Standby RP Operating in duplex mode Redundancy state: STANDBY HOT Peer redundancy state: ACTIVE ISSU negotiation complete ISSU versions compatible Routing Process "ospf 1" with ID 10.1.1.100 NSR configured Checkpoint message sequence number: 3290 Standby synchronization state: synchronized Bulk sync operations: 1 Last sync start time: 15:22:48.971 UTC Fri Jan 14 2011 Last sync finish time: 15:22:48.971 UTC Fri Jan 14 2011 Last sync lost time: - Last sync reset time: - LSA Count: 2, Checksum Sum 0x00008AB4
The following is sample output from the show ip ospf nsr statistics command. The output displays the current global and per OSPF instance state of NSR processing along with other statistics.
Device# show ip ospf nsr statistics Pending checkpoint requests (current/max): 0/109 Pending checkpoint messages (current/max): 0/109 Routing Process "ospf 1" with ID 10.1.1.100 Pending checkpoint requests (current/max): 0/109 Pending checkpoint messages (current/max): 0/109 Time spent scheduling bulk syncs (max): 0 ms Time spent in checkpoint loop (average/max): 1/9 ms Checkpoint loop interruptions: 0
Additional References for OSPF Nonstop Routing
Related Documents
Related Topic |
Document Title |
---|---|
Cisco IOS commands |
|
OSPF commands |
|
Configuring IETF NSF or Cisco NSF |
“Configuring NSF-OSPF” module in the Cisco IOS High Availability Configuration Guide |
Standard and RFCs
Standard/RFC |
Title |
---|---|
RFC 2328 |
OSPF Version 2 |
RFC 3623 |
Graceful OSPF Restart |
Technical Assistance
Description |
Link |
---|---|
The Cisco Support and Documentation website provides online resources to download documentation, software, and tools. Use these resources to install and configure the software and to troubleshoot and resolve technical issues with Cisco products and technologies. Access to most tools on the Cisco Support and Documentation website requires a Cisco.com user ID and password. |
Feature Information for OSPF Nonstop Routing
The following table provides release information about the feature or features described in this module. This table lists only the software release that introduced support for a given feature in a given software release train. Unless noted otherwise, subsequent releases of that software release train also support that feature.
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco Feature Navigator, go to www.cisco.com/go/cfn. An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Feature Name |
Releases |
Feature Information |
---|---|---|
OSPF NSR |
15.2(1)E |
The OSPF Nonstop Routing feature allows a device with redundant Route Processors to maintain its OSPF state and adjacencies across planned and unplanned RP switchovers. In Cisco IOS 15.2(1)E, support was added for the Cisco Catalyst 4000 Series Switches. In Cisco IOS Release 15.2(1)E, the following commands were introduced: clear ip ospf nsr, debug ip ospf ha, debug ip ospf nsr. |