Class ospf:Inst (CONCRETE)

Class ID:2666
Class Label: OSPF Instance
Encrypted: false - Exportable: false - Persistent: true - Configurable: false - Subject to Quota: Disabled
Write Access: [NON CONFIGURABLE]
Read Access: [access-protocol-l3, admin, fabric-protocol-l3, tenant-ext-protocol-l3, tenant-protocol-l3]
Creatable/Deletable: no (see Container Mos for details)
Semantic Scope: Fabric
Semantic Scope Evaluation Rule: Parent
Monitoring Policy Source: Parent
Monitoring Flags : [ IsObservable: true, HasStats: false, HasFaults: true, HasHealth: true, HasEventRules: true ]

The per OSPF instance information.

Naming Rules
RN FORMAT: inst-{name}

    [1] PREFIX=inst- PROPERTY = name




DN FORMAT: 

[0] topology/pod-{id}/node-{id}/sys/ospf/inst-{name}

[1] sys/ospf/inst-{name}

                


Diagram

Super Mo: ospf:AInst,
Container Mos: ospf:Entity (deletable:no),
Contained Mos: ospf:Dom,


Containers Hierarchies
[V] top:Root  This class represents the root element in the object hierarchy. All managed objects in the system are descendants of the Root element.
 ├
[V] fabric:Topology The root for IFC topology.
 
 ├
[V] fabric:Pod A pod.
 
 
 ├
[V] fabric:Node The root node for the APIC.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] top:System The APIC uses a policy model to combine data into a health score. Health scores can be aggregated for a variety of areas such as for the infrastructure, applications, or services. The category health score is calculated using a Lp -Norm formula. The health score penalty equals 100 minus the health score. The health score penalty represents the overall health score penalties of a set of MOs that belong to a given category and are children or direc...
 
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:Entity The OSPF control plane entity information.
 
 
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:Inst The per OSPF instance information.
[V] top:Root  This class represents the root element in the object hierarchy. All managed objects in the system are descendants of the Root element.
 ├
[V] top:System The APIC uses a policy model to combine data into a health score. Health scores can be aggregated for a variety of areas such as for the infrastructure, applications, or services. The category health score is calculated using a Lp -Norm formula. The health score penalty equals 100 minus the health score. The health score penalty represents the overall health score penalties of a set of MOs that belong to a given category and are children or direc...
 
 ├
[V] ospf:Entity The OSPF control plane entity information.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:Inst The per OSPF instance information.


Contained Hierarchy
[V] ospf:Inst The per OSPF instance information.
 ├
[V] fault:Counts An immutable object that provides the number of critical, major, minor, and warning faults raised on its parent object and its subtree.
 ├
[V] fault:Inst Contains detailed information of a fault. This object is attached as a child of the object on which the fault condition occurred. One instance object is created for each fault condition of the parent object. A fault instance object is identified by a fault code.
 ├
[V] health:Inst A base class for a health score instance.(Switch only)
 ├
[V] ospf:Dom The per OSPF domain (vrf) information.
 
 ├
[V] fault:Counts An immutable object that provides the number of critical, major, minor, and warning faults raised on its parent object and its subtree.
 
 ├
[V] fault:Inst Contains detailed information of a fault. This object is attached as a child of the object on which the fault condition occurred. One instance object is created for each fault condition of the parent object. A fault instance object is identified by a fault code.
 
 ├
[V] health:Inst A base class for a health score instance.(Switch only)
 
 ├
[V] ospf:Area The OSPF information that operates at an interface level.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:AreaStats The OSPF area-related statistics.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:Db The OSPF database information.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:LsaRec The LSA records information.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:Route The OSPF route information is used to establish OSPF sessions between peers.
 
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:McNexthop The OSPF Multicast Nexthop information.
 
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:UcNexthop The Unicast Nexthop information.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:DefRtLeakP The default route leak policy information.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:InterAreaRtSum The inter-area route summarization. This is configured on ABRs, summarizing routes between areas in the autonomous system.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:LsaLeakCtrlP  Lsa Leak Control concrete class.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:LsaLeakP The link-state advertisement (LSA) leak policy.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:RtExtDefToOspfArea 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:Db The OSPF database information.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:LsaRec The LSA records information.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:Route The OSPF route information is used to establish OSPF sessions between peers.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:McNexthop The OSPF Multicast Nexthop information.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:UcNexthop The Unicast Nexthop information.
 
 ├
[V] ospf:DefRtLeakP The default route leak policy information.
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 ├
[V] ospf:DomStats The OSPF domain-related statistics.
 
 ├
[V] ospf:ExtRtSum An external route summarization is specific to external routes that are injected into OSPF using route leak. Configure external route summarization on ASBRs that are leaking routes into OSPF.
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 ├
[V] ospf:Gr The OSPF domain related statistics.
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 ├
[V] ospf:If The OSPF information that is operated at an interface level.
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Counts An immutable object that provides the number of critical, major, minor, and warning faults raised on its parent object and its subtree.
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Inst Contains detailed information of a fault. This object is attached as a child of the object on which the fault condition occurred. One instance object is created for each fault condition of the parent object. A fault instance object is identified by a fault code.
 
 
 ├
[V] health:Inst A base class for a health score instance.(Switch only)
 
 
 ├
[V] nw:RtPathToIf A target relation to the interface information.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:AdjEp An adjacency endpoint contains information regarding dynamically learned endpoints.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Counts An immutable object that provides the number of critical, major, minor, and warning faults raised on its parent object and its subtree.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Inst Contains detailed information of a fault. This object is attached as a child of the object on which the fault condition occurred. One instance object is created for each fault condition of the parent object. A fault instance object is identified by a fault code.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] health:Inst A base class for a health score instance.(Switch only)
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:AdjStats The OSPF neighbor-related statistics.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:GrSt OSPF graceful restart operational information.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:AuthP The OSPF authentication policy information.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:Db The OSPF database information.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:LsaRec The LSA records information.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:Route The OSPF route information is used to establish OSPF sessions between peers.
 
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:McNexthop The OSPF Multicast Nexthop information.
 
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:UcNexthop The Unicast Nexthop information.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:IfStats The OSPF interface related statistics.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:RtIfDefToOspfIf A target relation to the OSPF information that is operated at an interface level.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:TrafficStats The OSPF domain traffic statistics.
 
 ├
[V] ospf:InterLeakP Inter protocol route leak policy defines the distribution of routes from other protocols to OSPF.
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 ├
[V] ospf:LeakCtrlP The leak controls that determine the number of routes leaked.
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 ├
[V] ospf:LsaCtrl The LSA-related frequency control information.
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 ├
[V] ospf:MaxLsaP The maximum link-state advertisement (database overflow) feature.
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Counts An immutable object that provides the number of critical, major, minor, and warning faults raised on its parent object and its subtree.
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Inst Contains detailed information of a fault. This object is attached as a child of the object on which the fault condition occurred. One instance object is created for each fault condition of the parent object. A fault instance object is identified by a fault code.
 
 
 ├
[V] health:Inst A base class for a health score instance.(Switch only)
 
 ├
[V] ospf:Overload  This object holds ospf overload config
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:OverloadEntry  This object holds ospf overload entries
 
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 ├
[V] ospf:RibLeakP 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:SpfComp The SPF computation frequency controls information.
 
 
 ├
[V] fault:Delegate Exposes internal faults to the user. A fault delegate object can be defined on IFC (for example, for an endpoint group) and when the fault is raised (for example, under an endpoint policy on a switch), a fault delegate object is created on IFC under the specified object. A fault delegate object follows the lifecycle of the original fault instance object, being created, modified, or deleted based on the changes of the original fault.
 
 ├
[V] ospf:TrafficStats The OSPF domain traffic statistics.


Inheritance
[V] nw:Item Ignore.
 ├
[V] nw:Conn A connection abstraction.
 
 ├
[V] nw:GEp A group endpoint abstraction.
 
 
 ├
[V] nw:CpInst A control plane instance abstraction. This object represents an instance of the protocol. For example, the protocol instance of OSPF or ISIS.
 
 
 
 ├
[V] nw:ProtInst A protocol instance abstraction.
 
 
 
 
 ├
[V] l3:ProtInst A layer 3 protocol instance abstraction.
 
 
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:AInst An abstraction of an OSPF instance.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 ├
[V] ospf:Inst The per OSPF instance information.


Events
                ospf:Inst:ospf_Inst_operErr
ospf:Inst:ospf_Inst_adminStChange


Faults
                ospf:Inst:instMemAlertCritical
ospf:Inst:UnsupportedConfigErr


Fsms
                


Properties Summary
Defined in: ospf:Inst
reference:BinRef monPolDn  (ospf:Inst:monPolDn)
           The object that represents the OSPF instance monitoring policy information.
naming:Name
          string:Basic
name  (ospf:Inst:name)
           Overrides:nw:CpInst:name | nw:Conn:name
           The OSPF instance name.
Defined in: ospf:AInst
nw:MemAlertLevel
          scalar:Enum8
memAlert  (ospf:AInst:memAlert)
           Memory alert level.
Defined in: nw:CpInst
nw:AdminSt
          scalar:Enum8
adminSt  (nw:CpInst:adminSt)
           The administrative state of the object or policy.
nw:InstCtrl
          scalar:Bitmask64
ctrl  (nw:CpInst:ctrl)
           The control state.
nw:OperErrQual
          scalar:Bitmask64
operErr  (nw:CpInst:operErr)
          
Defined in: mo:TopProps
mo:ModificationChildAction
          scalar:Bitmask32
childAction  (mo:TopProps:childAction)
           Delete or ignore. For internal use only.
reference:BinRef dn  (mo:TopProps:dn)
           A tag or metadata is a non-hierarchical keyword or term assigned to the fabric module.
reference:BinRN rn  (mo:TopProps:rn)
           Identifies an object from its siblings within the context of its parent object. The distinguished name contains a sequence of relative names.
mo:ModificationStatus
          scalar:Bitmask32
status  (mo:TopProps:status)
           The upgrade status. This property is for internal use only.
Defined in: mo:Resolvable
mo:Owner
          scalar:Enum8
lcOwn  (mo:Resolvable:lcOwn)
           A value that indicates how this object was created. For internal use only.
Defined in: mo:Modifiable
mo:TStamp
          scalar:Date
modTs  (mo:Modifiable:modTs)
           The time when this object was last modified.
Properties Detail

adminSt

Type: nw:AdminSt
Primitive Type: scalar:Enum8

Units: null
Encrypted: false
Access: implicit
Category: TopLevelRegular
    Comments:
The administrative state of the object or policy.
Constants
enabled 1 Enabled Enabled
disabled 2 Disabled Disabled
DEFAULT enabled(1) Enabled Enabled





childAction

Type: mo:ModificationChildAction
Primitive Type: scalar:Bitmask32

Units: null
Encrypted: false
Access: implicit
Category: TopLevelChildAction
    Comments:
Delete or ignore. For internal use only.
Constants
deleteAll 16384u deleteAll NO COMMENTS
ignore 4096u ignore NO COMMENTS
deleteNonPresent 8192u deleteNonPresent NO COMMENTS
DEFAULT 0 --- This type is used to





ctrl

Type: nw:InstCtrl
Primitive Type: scalar:Bitmask64

Units: null
Encrypted: false
Access: implicit
Category: TopLevelRegular
    Comments:
The control state.
Constants
stateful-ha 1ull stateful-ha Enable stateful HA
DEFAULT 0 --- Instance controls





dn

Type: reference:BinRef

Units: null
Encrypted: false
Access: implicit
Category: TopLevelDn
    Comments:
A tag or metadata is a non-hierarchical keyword or term assigned to the fabric module.



lcOwn

Type: mo:Owner
Primitive Type: scalar:Enum8

Units: null
Encrypted: false
Access: implicit
Category: TopLevelRegular
    Comments:
A value that indicates how this object was created. For internal use only.
Constants
local 0 Local NO COMMENTS
policy 1 Policy NO COMMENTS
replica 2 Replica NO COMMENTS
resolveOnBehalf 3 ResolvedOnBehalf NO COMMENTS
implicit 4 Implicit NO COMMENTS
DEFAULT local(0) Local NO COMMENTS





memAlert

Type: nw:MemAlertLevel
Primitive Type: scalar:Enum8

Units: null
Encrypted: false
Access: oper
Category: TopLevelRegular
    Comments:
Memory alert level.
Constants
normal 0 Normal Normal
minor 1 Minor Minor
major 2 Major Major
critical 3 Critical Criticial
DEFAULT normal(0) Normal Normal





modTs

Type: mo:TStamp
Primitive Type: scalar:Date

Units: null
Encrypted: false
Access: implicit
Category: TopLevelRegular
    Comments:
The time when this object was last modified.
Constants
never 0ull never NO COMMENTS
DEFAULT never(0ull) never NO COMMENTS





monPolDn

Type: reference:BinRef

Units: null
Encrypted: false
Access: implicit
Category: TopLevelRegular
    Comments:
The object that represents the OSPF instance monitoring policy information.



name

Type: naming:Name
Primitive Type: string:Basic

Overrides:nw:CpInst:name  |  nw:Conn:name
Units: null Encrypted: false Naming Property -- [NAMING RULES] Access: naming Category: TopLevelRegular
    Comments:
The OSPF instance name.



operErr

Type: nw:OperErrQual
Primitive Type: scalar:Bitmask64

Units: null
Encrypted: false
Access: oper
Category: TopLevelRegular
    Comments:
Constants
sock-err 16ull Socket error Socket errors
init-err 1ull Initialization error Initialization errors
mem-err 2ull Memory error Memory errors
proto-err 32ull Protocol error Protocol errors
ipc-err 4ull IPC error IPC errors
int-err 8ull Internal error Internal errors
DEFAULT 0 --- Operational error qualifier





rn

Type: reference:BinRN

Units: null
Encrypted: false
Access: implicit
Category: TopLevelRn
    Comments:
Identifies an object from its siblings within the context of its parent object. The distinguished name contains a sequence of relative names.



status

Type: mo:ModificationStatus
Primitive Type: scalar:Bitmask32

Units: null
Encrypted: false
Access: implicit
Category: TopLevelStatus
    Comments:
The upgrade status. This property is for internal use only.
Constants
created 2u created In a setter method: specifies that an object should be created. An error is returned if the object already exists.
In the return value of a setter method: indicates that an object has been created.
modified 4u modified In a setter method: specifies that an object should be modified
In the return value of a setter method: indicates that an object has been modified.
deleted 8u deleted In a setter method: specifies that an object should be deleted.
In the return value of a setter method: indicates that an object has been deleted.
DEFAULT 0 --- This type controls the life cycle of objects passed in the XML API.

When used in a setter method (such as configConfMo), the ModificationStatus specifies whether an object should be created, modified, deleted or removed.
In the return value of a setter method, the ModificationStatus indicates the actual operation that was performed. For example, the ModificationStatus is set to "created" if the object was created. The ModificationStatus is not set if the object was neither created, modified, deleted or removed.

When invoking a setter method, the ModificationStatus is optional:
If a setter method such as configConfMo is invoked and the ModificationStatus is not set, the system automatically determines if the object should be created or modified.