Date created: Wednesday, January 12, 2022 1:00:45 PM. Last modified: Thursday, February 24, 2022 11:53:20 AM
Route-Domain Troubleshooting
Running Commands within a Routing Domain
One can see in the following example device config a route-domain with ID 20, and under that RD the load-balancer has an interface configred with ip 10.244.148.1:
net route-domain Common/lab-rd {
description "LAB Route Domain"
id 20
routing-protocol {
BFD
BGP
}
vlans {
lab/lab-server-vlan3
lab/lab-server-vlan1
lab/lab-server-vlan2
lab/lab-slb-fw
}
}
...
net self lab/10.244.148.1/23 {
address 10.244.148.1%20/23
allow-service {
icmp:any
}
floating enabled
partition lab
traffic-group Common/traffic-group-1
unit 1
vlan lab/lab-server-vlan2
}
One can also list routing-domains and their ID on the CLI:
username@(ls100-is)(cfg-sync In Sync)(Active)(/Common)(tmos)# list auth partition
auth partition Common {
description "Repository for system objects and shared objects."
}
auth partition lab {
default-route-domain 20
description "LAB Route Domain"
}
auth partition so {
default-route-domain 30
description "SO Partition"
}
auth partition su {
default-route-domain 10
description "SU Partition"
}
If one wants to issue commands on the CLI inside a routing domain one can use the Zebos CLI.
In order to run a traceroute from this RD, one must use Zebos which is initiated using the "imish" command from "tmsh" (the traffic manager shell), and specify the route-domain ID:
username@(ls101-is)(cfg-sync In Sync)(Standby)(/Common)(tmos)# imish -r 20 ls101-is[20]>enable ls101-is[20]#traceroute ip 10.10.10.10
^ This traceroute will now come from 10.244.148.1
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