Users Guide

Table Of Contents
Version Description
9.7(0.0) Introduced on the S6000-ON.
8.3.12.0 Introduced on the S4810.
8.4.1.0 Introduced.
Usage
Information
Use this command to create an object that tracks the routing state of an IPv6 Layer 3 interface:
The status of the IPv6 interface is UP only if the Layer 2 status of the interface is UP and the
interface has a valid IP address.
The Layer 3 status of an IPv6 interface goes DOWN when its Layer 2 status goes down (for a Layer 3
VLAN, all VLAN ports must be down) or the IP address is removed from the routing table.
Related
Commands
show track ipv6 route display information about tracked IPv6 routes, including configuration, current
state, and clients which track the route.
track interface ip routing configure object tracking on the routing status of an IPv4 Layer 3
interface.
track ipv6 route metric threshold
Configure object tracking on the threshold of an IPv4 route metric.
Syntax
track object-id ipv6 route ipv6-address/prefix-len metric threshold
To return to the default setting, use the no track object-id command.
Parameters
object-id
Enter the ID number of the tracked object. The range is 1 to 500.
ipv6-address/
prefix-len
Enter an IPv6 address in X:X:X:X::X format. The valid IPv6 prefix lengths are
from /0 to / 128.
Defaults None
Command Modes CONFIGURATION
Command
History
This guide is platform-specific. For command information about other platforms, see the relevant Dell
EMC Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.
Version Description
9.10(0.1) Introduced on the S6010-ON and S4048T-ON.
9.10(0.0) Introduced on the S3148.
9.10(0.0) Introduced on the S6100-ON.
9.8(2.0) Introduced on the S3100 series.
9.8(1.0) Introduced on the Z9100-ON.
9.8(0.0P5) Introduced on the S4048-ON.
9.8(0.0P2) Introduced on the S3048-ON.
9.7(0.0) Introduced on the S6000-ON.
8.3.12.0 Introduced on the S4810.
8.4.1.0 Introduced.
Usage
Information
Use this command to create an object that tracks the UP and/or DOWN threshold of an IPv6 route
metric. In order for a routes metric to be tracked, the route must appear as an entry in the routing table.
A tracked IPv6 route is considered to match an entry in the routing table only if the exact IPv6
address and prefix length match a table entry. For example, when configured as a tracked route,
3333:100:200:300:400::/80 does not match routing table entry 3333:100:200:300::/64. If no route-table
entry has the exact IPv6 address and prefix length, the status of the tracked route is considered to be
DOWN.
1022 Object Tracking