Remarks
1. Enter system view.
system-view N/A
2. Enter interface view.
interface interface-type
interface-number
N/A
3. Specify the interval for
sending hello packets.
isis timer hello seconds [ level-1 |
level-2 ]
The default setting is 10 seconds.
The interval between hello packets
sent by the DIS is 1/3 the hello
interval set with the isis timer hello
command.
4. Specify the interval for
sending CSNP packets on the
DIS of a broadcast network.
isis timer csnp seconds [ level-1 |
level-2 ]
The default setting is 10 seconds.
Specifying the IS-IS hello multiplier
If a neighbor does not receive any hello packets from the router within the advertised hold time, it
considers the router down and recalculates the routes. The hold time is the hello multiplier multiplied by
the hello interval.
On a broadcast link, Level-1 and Level-2 hello packets are advertised separately. You must set a hello
multiplier for each level.
On a P2P link, Level-1 and Level-2 hello packets are advertised in P2P hello packets. You do not need to
specify Level-1 or Level-2.
To specify the IS-IS hello multiplier:
Ste
Remarks
1. Enter system view.
system-view N/A
2. Enter interface view.
interface interface-type
interface-number
N/A
3. Specify the number of hello packets a
neighbor must miss before it declares
that the router is down.
isis timer holding-multiplier value
[ level-1 | level-2 ]
The default setting is
3.
Configuring a DIS priority for an interface
On a broadcast network, IS-IS must elect a router as the DIS at a routing level. You can specify a DIS
priority at a level for an interface. The greater the interface's priority, the more likely it becomes the DIS.
If multiple routers in the broadcast network have the same highest DIS priority, the router with the highest
MAC address becomes the DIS.
To configure a DIS priority for an interface: