We're seeing an AD of 2 on some routes on our Nexus 7k. I can't find anything (Google) to indicate where this value is coming from. Also unable to find out what "am" mean (adjacency module?). Does anyone have an explanation for this one? * via 192.168.21.49, Vlan13, [2/0], 00:44:52, am* Thanks -- Colby Glass Network Engineer http://blog.alwaysthenetwork.com
in x/y, x= preference, y= metric am= adjacency module, *= best unicast route a better place to have asked this would be c-nsp hth -ck On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 7:21 PM, Colby Glass <colbycciestudy@gmail.com>wrote:
We're seeing an AD of 2 on some routes on our Nexus 7k. I can't find anything (Google) to indicate where this value is coming from. Also unable to find out what "am" mean (adjacency module?). Does anyone have an explanation for this one?
* via 192.168.21.49, Vlan13, [2/0], 00:44:52, am*
Thanks
-- Colby Glass Network Engineer http://blog.alwaysthenetwork.com
system: version 4.2(2a) I've read that am = adjacency module or adjacency manager. The words mean less to me than why I seem to be learning this route from a phantom module/manager/interface with no visible explanation. I can try on c-nsp as well. Thought NANOG might be a better choice. Colby On Sat, Oct 30, 2010 at 12:04 AM, christian koch <ck@sandcastl.es> wrote:
in x/y, x= preference, y= metric
am= adjacency module, *= best unicast route
a better place to have asked this would be c-nsp
hth
-ck
On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 7:21 PM, Colby Glass <colbycciestudy@gmail.com>wrote:
We're seeing an AD of 2 on some routes on our Nexus 7k. I can't find anything (Google) to indicate where this value is coming from. Also unable to find out what "am" mean (adjacency module?). Does anyone have an explanation for this one?
* via 192.168.21.49, Vlan13, [2/0], 00:44:52, am*
Thanks
-- Colby Glass Network Engineer http://blog.alwaysthenetwork.com
-- Colby Glass Network Engineer http://blog.alwaysthenetwork.com
participants (2)
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christian koch
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Colby Glass