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Monthly Archive for February, 2009

Week in Review – 2009/02/16 – 2009/02/22

Published
by
Deon Botha
on February 23, 2009
in Asides and Off-Topic
. 0 Comments

I’m sitting before work starts and thinking that maybe I should devote monday mornings to a “review session” of sort for the previous work week. This should provide me with a indicator where and what went wrong in my studies and where I need to change. It might also help me to identify where I am going wrong and what happened that lead to slow and “zero” progress. This may also help others to avoid some of the problems I am having.

Last week was my first week back into the books after changing jobs and I dare say professions, twice, in a short space of time. This was a delayed start because I forgot my study material at home the previous week. What I could have done to prevent this was probably made a note to pack the book when I got home or sign up to safari books (negating the use of a hardcopy boook altogether). In local currency the safari online option is just a little pricey to me but I will probably get there eventually when I hit the CCIE material.

The week itself was a disaster of note. I made good progress with the first post after revision of previous work done (catching up and revision) but the speed and pace slowed after that initial post when things began also picking up at work. I’m probably another couple of days away from making my next post barring hitches and problems coming up (work commitments, work, problems where I am staying and the need for sleep).

My evenings haven’t been going as planned with late night trips for food and staying late at work making work “after” activities almost useless because it would go in and straight out when I am that tired.

To try and work around all of the above, I am thinking I will physically plan study time when I know I don’t have something to do either early in the morning when I am still fresh and able to take in information or staying later after work when I can sit at a desk and do proper work.

My weekend didnt exactly happen as Saturday was booked for training with The Peer group. This messed up my weekend totally as I feel like I didnt complete anything useful this weekend other than do my chores and shopping on sunday and back to work today. (zero studying and reading happened).

I suppose life just sometimes happens and going with the flow is part of this process of achieving what I set out to do.

Lets see if this happens starting today.

Open Shortest Path First – OSPF Fundamentals – DR and BDR

Published
by
Deon Botha
on February 18, 2009
in BDR, BSCI, BSCI Notes, Certification, Cisco Systems, Concepts and Constructs, DR, OSPF and VLAN
. 9 Comments

When routers are connected to the same broadcast segment (I.O.W. several routers are in the same VLAN, on the same switch you getting the idea). One router is assigned the duty to maintain adjacencies with all other routers on the segment. This is the designated router (DR) and the DR  router is selected using information in the Hello messages. For redundancy purposes a backup designated router (BDR) is also elected (There is a reason for this, read on).

DRs are created on multi-access links because the number of adjacencies grows at a quadratic rate. For a network of n routers, the number of adjacencies required would be:

ospf adjacency

Two (2) routers require the following adjacencies:

ospf adjacency 2

Four (4) routers require the following adjacencies:

ospf adjacency 4

Ten (10) Routers require the following adjacencies:

ospf adjacency 45

Maintaining a OSPF segment consumes more bandwidth and requires more processing resources (CPU and memory) as more routers are added onto a OSPF network (Due to keeping the tables updated and probability of changes occuring more frequently etc).

The DR and maintaining relationships

The purpose of a DR is to be the “one router” (sounds like the matrix) to which all other routers are adjacent (the router that has all the routes on the network). Using a DR reduces the number of adjacencies that consume bandwidth and processing to n – 1 (Larger networks will however still require more processing even if you are using a DR). With a DR the adjacencies scale more effectively and efficiently with the network (as one can see in the below figure and table).

To show this in a graphic way one can see how this “adjacency” relationship works without a DR, with a DR, and with a DR and BDR with a small example network using 5 routers.

OSPF Adjacenies

Taking this a step further and plotting out the exponential growth requirements of OSPF adjacencies the table below shows the number of adjacencies needed for 1 – 10 routers (imagine the CPU and Memory requirements, not to mention the bandwidth consumption). Plan accordingly when implementing OSPF (at this point you generally use OSPF because you have a non-homogenous network environment and need the open standard because of this fact, I dont really see a point otherwise cause its such a resource hog and mission to setup).

OSPF Adjacency with DR

The job of the DR

The role of the DR is to receive updates and distribute these updates to each segment router, making sure that each router acknowledges receipt and has a synchronized copy of the Link-State Database (LSDB).

Routers advertise changes to the “AllDRs” multicast address of 224.0.0.6 where the DR then advertise the Link-State advertisements (LSAs) using the “AllSPF” multicast address 224.0.0.5 where each router then ack receipt.

The BDR listens passively to this exchange and maintains a relationship with all the routers.

If the DR stops producing hellos, the BDR promotes itself and assumes the role of DR.

NB. DRs and BDRs are only useful on multi-access links because they reduce adjacencies. The concept of a DR is not used nor usefull on point-to-point links because there can only be one adjacency.

DRs are still however elected on Point-to-Point Ethernet links (most common type of links in networking these days) which is a rather pointless and resource waste/hog (as a DR is not really needed) which is why you will find that many design guides recommend changing Ethernet links to Point-to-Point mode to stop this from happening.

If a DR fails, the BDR is pomoted. The BDR is elected on the basis of highest OSPF priority, ties in OSPF priority are broken in favour of the highest IP ADDRESS.

The default priority is 1 and a priority of 0 (zero) prevents a router from being elected to the DR or BDR role.

Priority can be set from 0-255 (manually) to change the priority from default from the interface,

Router(config-if)#ip ospf priority number

DRs  are inherently seen as stable entities  once elected into the position, even if a Router joins a network with a “greater” priority the DR will not change.

OSPF Segment with Priorities

To give an example of this an OSPF Segment with 5 Routers ( A – E, with different priorities 0 – 3). Taking what has been discussed previously A would be the DR, B the BDR, and E would never be elected. However this neglects the following set of circumstances:

Imagine the following sequence of events in this small segment,

  1. Router C starts first.
    1. Router C sends out Hellos and waits the dead time for a response from other routers.
    2. Receiving no Response, Router C conducts an Election and becomes the BDR.
    3. As there is no DR on this network, Router C then promotes itself to DR.
  2. Router E starts (priority= 0)
    1. Router E will not become the BDR due to its priority setting
  3. Router B starts and becomes the BDR.
  4. Router A starts
  5. Router D starts

In the above scenario the startup sequence of the routers caused the election of the DR and BDR (namely Router C is DR and Router B is BDR) which is not what would have been expected. This is because designated routers do not preempt, the elected DR/BDR serves in its role until reboot/failure (DR and BDR are stable entities on the network once elected).

In this network as it stands now If Router C restarts, Router B promotes itself to DR and Router A is elected BDR while C is down. If Router B goes down, Router A promotes itself and elects Router C or Router D (whichever has the highest IP Address). Finally when the BDR is rebooted, Router B wins the election for BDR.

NOTE: In addition to rebooting, clearing the OSPS process using the the command clear ip ospf process * on the DR will force the DR and BDR election.

Notes and Notices: This is a part of my personal BSCI notes and research to assist myself in learning and understanding the concepts and theory for the BSCI exam. I learn by making notes reading and writing things down and wish to file them where I can’t lose them. These notes are not to be seen, judged or mistaken for replacements to Cisco recognized and authorized training which I personally support and attend and suggest you undertake if you are going for the BSCI Certification.

Update February 5th 2009

Published
by
Deon Botha
on February 5, 2009
in Asides and Off-Topic
. 3 Comments

Hello To anyone that still might visit my little webdom,

I’ve finally sorted out my new job, it’s been a roller coaster of note. This is not exactly what I had planned when starting out with this job in November with many things going totally up the creek and my stress levels going totally off the charts. The company I find myself in has nothing remotely to do with Cisco (which sucks) but with the market globally as it and the multitude of Cisco prospects streaming in at that time (read absolutely none) I was between a rock and a hard place with choices on advancing my career and personal development to get where I want to be in the future.

On a side note this makes me wonder whether the abundance of “Cisco” brain drain / skill shortage seminars / webinars / talks and press releases aren’t total BS and Cisco isn’t just trying to artificially stimulate their own ecosystem with the perception of a lack of skill (something to think about).

Short history, I started this job in November 2008 and I find myself now in a totally different department and job role as the one I started out in. This has a fair few positive and negative point, the main positive result is that I now have the time and energy to pick up my Cisco Books again and start posting updates and keep going with my Cisco studies, I really want to advance my Cisco Creds to the point where I want the with a CCIE or three in the furture (I’m a sucker for punishment).

I’m heading back “home” (I work and have lodgings in Johannesburg while I stay and all my stuff is  in Pretoria) tomorrow and plan on packing my  Cisco books to start the Long Road to Cisco again (note to self I really need to find a “place” in Johannesburg once I get my permanent contract).

Regards,

Deon


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