Concept Guide
The following example shows that sessions are created for static routes for the nondefault VRFs.
Dell(conf)#do show bfd vrf vrf2 neighbors
* - Active session role
Ad Dn - Admin Down
B - BGP
C - CLI
I - ISIS
O - OSPF
O3 - OSPFv3
R - Static Route (RTM)
M - MPLS
V - VRRP
VT - Vxlan Tunnel
LocalAddr RemoteAddr Interface State Rx-int Tx-int Mult VRF Clients
* 13::1 13::2 Gi 1/1 Up 200 200 3 2 R
* 23::1 23::2 Vl 300 Up 200 200 3 2 R
* 33::1 33::2 Vl 301 Up 200 200 3 2 R
Changing IPv6 Static Route Session Parameters
BFD sessions are congured with default intervals and a default role.
The parameters you can congure are: Desired TX Interval, Required Min RX Interval, Detection Multiplier, and system role. These
parameters are congured for all static routes. If you change a parameter, the change aects all sessions for static routes.
To change parameters for static route sessions, use the following command .
• Change parameters for all static route sessions.
CONFIGURATION mode
ipv6 route bfd [vrf vrf-name][prefix-list prefix-list-name] interval milliseconds min_rx
milliseconds multiplier value role [active | passive]
To view session parameters, use the show bfd neighbors detail command, as shown in the examples in Displaying BFD for BGP
Information
Congure BFD for OSPF
When you use BFD with OSPF, the OSPF protocol registers with the BFD manager. BFD sessions are established with all neighboring
interfaces participating in OSPF. If a neighboring interface fails, the BFD agent noties the BFD manager, which in turn noties the OSPF
protocol that a link state change has occurred.
Conguring BFD for OSPF is a two-step process:
1 Enable BFD globally.
2 Establish sessions with OSPF neighbors.
Related Conguration Tasks
• Changing OSPF Session Parameters
• Disabling BFD for OSPF
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Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD)