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  • only in /netgear-WNDR4500v2-V1.0.0.60_1.0.38/ap/gpl/iproute2/doc/

Lines Matching refs:table

115 \item \verb|route| --- routing table entry
837 Neighbour entries are organized into tables. The IPv4 neighbour table
838 is known by another name --- the ARP table.
1010 may remove the entry from the neighbour table.
1054 of rounds made to flush the neighbour table. If the option is given
1070 \section{{\tt ip route} --- routing table management}
1131 in this sequence. Instead, the routing table in the kernel is kept
1137 the route in the routing table.
1171 in this table is terminated pretending that no route was found.
1173 table. The packets are dropped and the ICMP message {\em net unreachable\/}
1191 routes are inserted into the \verb|main| table (ID 254) and the kernel only uses
1192 this table when calculating routes.
1194 Actually, one other table always exists, which is invisible but
1195 even more important. It is the \verb|local| table (ID 255). This table
1197 this table automatically and the administrator usually need not modify it
1202 In this case, the table identifier effectively becomes
1241 \item \verb|table TABLEID|
1243 --- the table to add this route to.
1246 \verb|ip| assumes the \verb|main| table, with the exception of
1248 put into the \verb|local| table by default.
1441 Key values (\verb|to|, \verb|tos|, \verb|preference| and \verb|table|)
1480 than \verb|PREFIX|. F.e.\ \verb|root 0/0| selects the entire routing table.
1486 are present, \verb|ip| assumes \verb|root 0/0| i.e.\ it lists the entire table.
1494 \item \verb|table TABLEID|
1496 --- show the routes from this table(s). The default setting is to show
1497 \verb|table| \verb|main|. \verb|TABLEID| may either be the ID of a real table
1504 IPv6 has a single table. However, splitting it into \verb|main|, \verb|local|
1512 Actually, it is equivalent to \verb|table cache|.
1679 dumps all the IP main routing table but \verb|flush| prints the helper page.
1685 of rounds made to flush the routing table. If the option is given
1690 gatewayed routes from the main table (f.e.\ after a routing daemon crash).
1910 To solve this task, the conventional destination based routing table, ordered
1947 when a second level routing table contains a single default route.
1956 table \verb|local| (ID 255).
1957 The \verb|local| table is a special routing table containing
1964 table \verb|main| (ID 254).
1965 The \verb|main| table is the normal routing table containing all non-policy
1970 table \verb|default| (ID 253).
1971 The \verb|default| table is empty. It is reserved for some
1978 several rules may refer to one routing table and some routing tables
1980 referring to a table, the table is not used, but it still exists
1986 table. NAT and masquerading rules have an attribute to select new IP
1997 in the routing table referenced by the rule.
2067 \item \verb|table TABLEID|
2069 --- the routing table identifier to lookup if the rule selector matches.
2073 --- Realms to select if the rule matched and the routing table lookup
2097 according to routing table \verb|inr.ruhep|:
2099 ip ru add from 192.203.80.0/24 table inr.ruhep prio 220
2103 and route it according to table \#1 (actually, it is \verb|inr.ruhep|):
2105 ip ru add from 193.233.7.83 nat 192.203.80.144 table 1 prio 320
2144 The keyword \verb|lookup| is followed by a routing table identifier,
2885 and 192.203.80/24. Also, if the \verb|inr.ruhep| table does not