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Host routes for load balancing, Ospf features not supported in this release – Nortel Networks WEB OS 212777 User Manual

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Web OS 10.0 Application Guide

82

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Chapter 4: OSPF

212777-A, February 2002

Host Routes for Load Balancing

Web OS 10.0 implementation of OSPF includes host routes. Host routes are used for advertis-
ing network device IP addresses to external networks, accomplishing the following goals:

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Server Load Balancing (SLB) within OSPF

Host routes advertise virtual server IP addresses to external networks. This allows stan-
dard SLB between the Web switch and the server pools in an OSPF environment. For
more information on SLB, see

Chapter 6, “Server Load Balancing

and your Web OS 10.0

Command Reference.

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ABR Load Sharing

As a second form of load balancing, host routes can be used for dividing OSPF traffic
among multiple ABRs. To accomplish this, each Web switch provides identical services
but advertises a host route for a different virtual server IP address to the external network.
If each virtual server IP address serves a different and equal portion of the external world,
incoming traffic from the upstream router should be split evenly among ABRs.

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ABR Failover

Complementing ABR load sharing, identical host routes can be configured on each ABR.
These host routes can be given different costs so that a different ABR is selected as the
preferred route for each virtual server and the others are available as backups for failover
purposes.

If redundant routes via multiple routing processes (such as OSPF, RIP, BGP, or static routes)
exist on your network, the Web switch defaults to the OSPF-derived route.

For a configuration example, see

“Example 4: Host Routes” on page 92

.

OSPF Features Not Supported in This Release

The following OSPF features are not supported in this release:

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Redistributing routes into OSPF (Web OS 10.0 does not allow your switch to emulate an
ASBR)

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Summarizing external routes

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Filtering OSPF routes

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Configuring equal cost route load balancing

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Using OSPF to forward multicast routes

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Configuring OSPF on non-broadcast multi-access networks (such as frame relay, X.25,
and ATM)