R3721-F3210-F3171-HP High-End Firewalls Network Management Configuration Guide-6PW101

Table Of Contents
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NOTE:
You need not use the peer ip-address command when the nei
g
hbor is directly connected; otherwise the
neighbor may receive both the unicast and multicast (or broadcast) of the same routing information.
If a specified neighbor is not directly connected, you need to disable source address check on incomin
g
updates.
Configuring RIP-to-MIB binding
This task allows you to enable a specific RIP process to receive SNMP requests.
To bind RIP to MIB:
Ste
p
Command
Remarks
1. Enter system view.
system-view N/A
2. Bind RIP to MIB. rip mib-binding process-id
Optional.
By default, MIB is bound to RIP
process 1.
Configuring the RIP packet sending rate
RIP periodically sends routing information in RIP packets to RIP neighbors.
Sending large numbers of RIP packets at the same time may affect device performance and consume
large network bandwidth. To solve this problem, you can specify the maximum number of RIP packets
that can be sent at the specified interval.
To configure the RIP packet sending rate:
Ste
p
Command
Remarks
1. Enter system view. system-view N/A
2. Enable a RIP process and
enter RIP view.
rip [ process-id ] [ vpn-instance
vpn-instance-name ]
N/A
3. Configure the maximum
number of RIP packets that
can be sent at the specified
interval.
output-delay time count count
Optional.
By default, an interface sends up to
three RIP packets every 20
milliseconds.
Configuring BFD for RIP
NOTE:
For more information about BFD, see
High Availability Configuration Guide
.
BFD for RIP provides the following link detection modes:
Single-hop detection in BFD echo packet mode for a directly connected neighbor. In this mode, a
BFD session is established only when the neighbor has route information to send.
Bidirectional detection in BFD control packet mode for an indirectly connected neighbor. In this
mode, a BFD session is established only when both ends have routes to send and BFD is enabled
on the receiving interface.