Ip rip route filter table, Snrtipriproutefiltertable, Snrtipriproutefilterid – Brocade Unified IP MIB Reference (Supporting FastIron Release 07.5.00) User Manual
Page 570: Snrtipriproutefilteraction, Snrtipriproutefilteripaddr, Snrtipriproutefiltersubnetmask, Snrtipriproutefilterrowstatus, Ip rip neighbor filter table, Object mus

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Unified IP MIB Reference
53-1002549-02
IP RIP route filter table
IP RIP route filter table
The IP RIP route filter table defines the IP network numbers the router will learn from RIP. The
numbers are stored in the router’s IP routing table. Once RIP filters are defined, you can assign
them to individual interfaces.
NOTE
The IP RIP route filter MIBs are not supported on the Brocade NetIron MLX, Brocade MLXe router,
Brocade NetIron XMR, Brocade NetIron CES, and Brocade NetIron CER series devices.
IP RIP neighbor filter table
The IP RIP neighbor filter table specifies the routers from which a router will receive RIP routes. By
default, RIP routes will be learned from all neighbors.
Name, OID, and syntax
Access
Description
snRtIpRipRouteFilterTable
brcdIp.1.2.3.4
None
The IP RIP route filter table.
snRtIpRipRouteFilterId
brcdIp.1.2.3.4.1.1
Syntax: Integer
Read-only
Shows the filter ID to identify a filter entry. There can be up to
64 entries in this table.
snRtIpRipRouteFilterAction
brcdIp.1.2.3.4.1.2
Syntax: Integer
Read-write
Indicates what action to take if the IP RIP packet matches this
filter:
•
deny(0)
•
permit(1)
snRtIpRipRouteFilterIpAddr
brcdIp.1.2.3.4.1.3
Syntax: IpAddress
Read-write
Indicates the route IP address that needs to be matched by
any IP address in a RIP packet. A value of 0.0.0.0 means that
any IP address in any RIP packets will be matched.
snRtIpRipRouteFilterSubnetMask
brcdIp.1.2.3.4.1.4
Syntax: IpAddress
Read-write
is 0, this value is ignored, and
all IP RIP packets will be matched. Otherwise, this mask is
applied to the IP RIP packet and then compared to
to determine a match.
snRtIpRipRouteFilterRowStatus
brcdIp.1.2.3.4.1.5
Syntax: Integer
Read-write
Controls the management of the table rows. The following
values can be written:
•
delete(3) – Deletes the row.
•
create(4) – Creates a new row.
•
modify(5) – Modifies an existing row.
If the row exists, then a SET with a value of create(4) returns a
"bad value" error. Deleted rows are removed from the table
immediately.
The following values can be returned on reads:
•
noSuch(0) – No such row.
•
invalid(1) – Row is inoperative.
•
valid(2) – Row exists and is valid.