Users Guide
Version Description
9.10(0.1) Introduced on the S6010-ON and S4048T-ON.
9.10(0.0) Introduced on the S6100–ON.
9.8(1.0) Introduced on the Z9100–ON.
9.8(0.0P5) Introduced on the S4048-ON.
9.8(0.0P2) Introduced on the S3048-ON.
9.8(0.0) Introduced on the S4810, S4820T, S5000, S6000, S6000–ON,
and Z9500.
Usage Information To make the HTTP clients VRF-aware, use the ip http vrf command. The HTTP
client uses the VRF name that you specify to reach the HTTP server. If you do not
specify a VRF name, the HTTP client uses the default VRF.
ip route-export
Enables route leaking between VRFs. This command exports or shares IPv4 routes corresponding to one VRF
with other nondefault VRFs.
Syntax
ip route-export tag [route-map-name]
Parameters
route-export Enter the keywords route-export to leak or share routes
between VRFs.
tag Enter a tag (export route target) to expose routes to other VRFs.
This tag acts as an identifier for exported routes. Use this
identifier while importing these routes into another nondefault
VRF.
route-map-name (Optional) Enter the name of the route-map to filter the
exported routes.
You can leak global routes to VRFs. As the global RTM usually
contains a large pool of routes, when the destination VRF
imports global routes, these routes are duplicated into the VRF's
RTM. It is mandatory to use route-maps to filter out leaked
routes while sharing global routes with VRFs.
Command Modes
• VRP mode
• CONFIGURATION mode
Command History
This guide is platform-specific. For command information about other platforms, see
the relevant Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.
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