Adjacency diagram, Cheers Jon Expand Post Like LikedUnlike
Adjacency diagram, Expand Post LikeLikedUnlike Reply Josh Kingsbury Edited by Admin February 16, 2020 at 3:09 AM Jan 31, 2023 · Specifically, it demonstrates the difference between the terms "OSPF neighbor relationship" and "without forming an adjacency"(although those terms are less than ideal when describing OSPF neighbors). Why does it need to form adjacency? Like LikedUnlike Reply MIKEY_MIKEY_MIKE 3 years ago I always thought the term was protocol dependant. Two OSPF routers can form adjacency over different OSPF Process ID's. Jan 31, 2023 · Specifically, it demonstrates the difference between the terms "OSPF neighbor relationship" and "without forming an adjacency"(although those terms are less than ideal when describing OSPF neighbors). You can run multiple OSPF processes on a router, using the Process ID as a distinguisher. In addition to the FIB, CEF uses adjacency tables to prepend Layer 2 addressing information. Neighbourship was for OSPF. The adjacency table maintains Layer 2 next-hop addresses for all FIB entries. Each router via its interface connect to networks/subnets. You can have two backbone areas on the same router, or same areas on the router, but each belonging to different processes.
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