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Re: Originating LSAs during OSPF graceful restart



Hi Acee,

Thanks for the reply.

Are you saying that the restarting router should not summarize
self-originated lsas (I mean pre-restart self originated lsas) during
database exchange with a neighbor? If so, why is this required? I don't find
any statement in RFC3623 which implies this? 

Also, you said if a neighbor doesn't have a pre-restart lsa, the restarting
router will send it. If there was an adjacency before restart with this
neighbor, isn't the restarting router supposed to quit restart mode? 

thanks
ramesh

-----Original Message-----
From: Acee Lindem [mailto:acee at CISCO.COM]
Sent: Saturday, February 04, 2006 2:34 AM
To: OSPF at PEACH.EASE.LSOFT.COM
Subject: Re: Originating LSAs during OSPF graceful restart


Hi Ramesh,

Ramesh Kandula wrote:

>Hi All,
>
>Should the restarting routing summarize it's own lsas (self-originated) 
>during adjaceny establishment? This can happen in the following scenario.
>
>Suppose there are 3 OSPF routers on a broadcast network and the DR 
>restarts. When it establishes adjacency with the first neighbor, it will 
>get its own lsas from it. Now while forming adjaceny with the second 
>neighbor, should it summarize it's own lsas?
>  
>
No.

>If yes, then the neighbor will request for them and the restarting router 
>will send these lsas. So does the RFC 3623 mean that the restarting router 
>should not originate "newer" instances of lsas of type 1,5 or 7? 
>  
>
If the neighbor doesn't already have them (and normally it will), the 
restarting router will send its
pre-restart LSAs. Don't confuse origination with sending an LSA during 
the database exchange
process.

Hope this helps,
Acee

>Thanks in advance
>ramesh
>
>  
>