F3726, F3211, F3174, R5135, R3816-HP Firewalls and UTM Devices Appendix Protocol Reference-6PW100

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Figure 4 Area based OSPF network partition
Backbone area and virtual links
Each AS has a backbone area that distributes routing information between non-backbone areas. Routing
information between non-backbone areas must be forwarded by the backbone area. OSPF requires the
following:
All non-backbone areas must maintain connectivity to the backbone area.
The backbone area must maintain connectivity within itself.
In practice, the requirements might not be satisfied due to lack of physical links. OSPF virtual links can
resolve this issue.
A virtual link is established between two ABRs through a non-backbone area. It must be configured on
both ABRs to take effect. The non-backbone area is called a transit area.
In Figure 5, A
rea 2 has no direct physical link to the backbone area 0. You can configure a virtual link
between the two ABRs to connect Area 2 to the backbone area.
Figure 5 Virtual link application 1
Virtual links can also be used to provide redundant links. If the backbone area cannot maintain internal
connectivity due to the failure of a physical link, you can configure a virtual link to replace the failed
physical link, as shown in Figure 6.