Administrator Guide

Establishing Sessions for Static Routes for Nondefault VRF
You can also create nondefault VRFs and establish sessions for all neighbors that are the next hop of a static route.
To establish a BFD session for nondefault VRFs, use the following command.
Establish BFD sessions for all neighbors that are the next hop of a static route.
CONFIGURATION mode
ip route bfd vrf vrf-name [prefix-list prefix-list-name] [interval interval min_rx min_rx
multiplier value role {active | passive}]
Example Conguration and Verication
The following example contains static routes for both default and nondefault VRFs.
Dell#sh run | grep bfd
bfd enable
ip route bfd prefix-list p4_le
ip route bfd vrf vrf1
ip route bfd vrf vrf2
ip route bfd vrf vrf1 prefix-list p4_le
The following example shows that sessions are created for static routes for the default VRF.
Dell#show bfd 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 Clients
* 11.1.1.1 11.1.1.2 Gi 1/1 Up 200 200 3 R
* 21.1.1.1 21.1.1.2 Vl 100 Up 200 200 3 R
* 31.1.1.1 31.1.1.2 Vl 101 Up 200 200 3 R
The following example shows that sessions are created for static routes for the nondefault VRFs.
Establishing Static Route Sessions on Specic Neighbors
You can selectively enable BFD sessions on specic neighbors based on a destination prex-list.
When you establish a BFD session using the ip route bfd command, all the next-hop neighbors in the static route become part of the
BFD session. Starting with Dell EMC Networking OS release 9.11.0.0, you can enable BFD sessions on specic next-hop neighbors. You can
specify the next-hop neighbors to be part of a BFD session by including them in a prex-list.
Prex lists are used in route maps and route ltering operations. You can use prex lists as an alternative to existing access lists (ACLs). A
prex is a portion of the IP address. Prex lists constitute any number of bits in an IP address starting from the far left bit of the far left
octet. By specifying the exactly number of bits in an IP address that belong to a prex list, the prex list can be used to aggregate
addresses and perform some functions; for example, redistribution.
Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD)
147