Sorry if someone has already mentioned this, I may not have seen it.
For eigrp, you can use (I believe this is right) 'show ip eigrp topology
all-links', or something to that effect.
And I believe that unless you have some other routes overriding your static
routes, 'show ip route static' would suffice for displaying all of those.
Then again, without a router in front of me, I can't verify these for
accuracy.
> Kevin,
> Yes, the candidate routes sound like what I'm after. I expect you're
right
> about needing a separate command for each routing protocol. I have a
> feeling that I may be asking for something that doesn't exist, at least
not
> for all protocols.
>
> I've already dug around the 'show ip ospf database' commands, and I can't
> find one that actually shows the internal ospf routing table, but heaven
> knows there are enough combinations that I could have missed plenty.
'show
> ip ospf database' by itself just shows a list of LSAs, which while useful
> is not what I'm after in this case.
> 'show ip ospf border-routers' shows the router entries in the route
table,
> which is a start - but is there a way of seeing the network entries?
>
> And another nasty one - how about static routes (short of 'show run', of
> course)?
>
> JMcL
>
>
> ---------------------- Forwarded by Jenny Mcleod/NSO/CSDA on 27/11/2000
> 03:53 pm ---------------------------
>
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] on 27/11/2000 12:06:51 pm
>
>
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
> Subject: Re: IP routing tables
>
>
>
> it sounds like you'd be interested in all the candidate routes a given
> routing protocol would generate (whether periodically or as a reaction to
> external influences).
>
> i'm still new at this, but it seems like the closest you would come
> (without getting deeply lost within their branch of the shared SMI
> structure) is a set of commands such as
>
> show ip ospf database
>
> show ip eigrp topology
>
> show ip rip database
>
> (i can't tell if the differences in terminology between proprietary &
> non-proprietary specifications are meaningful or significant)
>
> i'm not sure if the same applies for EGPs . . .
>
>
>
>
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]@groupstudy.com on 11/26/2000 07:07:21 PM
>
> Please respond to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> cc: (bcc: Kevin Cullimore)
> Subject: IP routing tables
>
>
> Hi all,
> Does anyone know if there is an IOS command that will show the routing
> table for (or contributed by) a particular routing protocol, when there
are
> multiple routing protocols running?
> In other words, a command to show what the IP routing table would look
like
> if there was only a single routing protocol.
>
> I am aware of 'show ip route [protocol]', but that appears to give a
subset
> of the actual routing table. For example, 'show ip route ospf' simply
> chops all the non-ospf routes out of the output of 'show ip route'. I'd
> like a command that shows what ospf (or eigrp or whatever) routes exist,
> even the ones that are not actually used because they are, for example,
> over-ridden by a static route for the same destination.
>
> If anyone can work out what I'm trying to ask, congratulations, because I
> don't think I've expressed it very well. If anyone knows an answer, even
> better :-)
>
> JMcL
>
>
> _________________________________
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