Class rtctrl:InterleakPolDef (CONCRETE)

Class ID:7805
Class Label: Interleak Policies
Encrypted: false - Exportable: false - Persistent: true - Configurable: false - Subject to Quota: Disabled - Abstraction Layer: Resolved Model - APIC NX Processing: Disabled
Write Access: [NON CONFIGURABLE]
Read Access: [admin, tenant-ext-connectivity-l3]
Creatable/Deletable: yes (see Container Mos for details)
Semantic Scope: EPG
Semantic Scope Evaluation Rule: Parent
Monitoring Policy Source: Parent
Monitoring Flags : [ IsObservable: false, HasStats: false, HasFaults: false, HasHealth: false, HasEventRules: false ]

Protocol Interleak Policy Container

Naming Rules
RN FORMAT: interleak

    [1] PREFIX=interleak


DN FORMAT: 

        Too Many Containers: 178
                


Containers Hierarchies
Too Many containers: 178


Contained Hierarchy
[V] rtctrl:InterleakPolDef  Protocol Interleak Policy Container
 ├
[V] rtctrl:SubjDef The subject definition.
 
 ├
[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] l3ext:Cons The Layer 3 outside consumer.
 
 ├
[V] rtctrl:AttrDef An attribute definition.
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:SetASPathDef 
 
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:SetASPathASNDef 
 
 
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:SetAddCommDef 
 
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:SetCommDef The set community definition.
 
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:SetDampDef 
 
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:SetNhDef The set next hop definition.
 
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:SetOspfFwdAddrDef The set OSPF forward address definition.
 
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:SetOspfNssaDef The set OSPF-NSSA definition.
 
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:SetPrefDef The set preference definition.
 
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:SetRtMetricDef The set route metric definition.
 
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:SetRtMetricTypeDef The definition for a set action rule based on a metric type.
 
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:SetTagDef The set tag definition.
 
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:SetWeightDef 
 
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:MatchCommRegexTermDef  Match Rule Based Route Regular Expression Community Definition
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:MatchCommTermDef  Match Community Term Definition
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:MatchCommFactorDef  Match Community Factor Definition
 
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:MatchRtDestDef The match route destination definition.
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:MatchRtNhDef The match route next hop definition.
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:MatchRtSrcDef The match route source definition.
 
 
 ├
[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] rtctrl:MatchRtTypeDef The match route type definition.
 
 
 ├
[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.


Inheritance
[V] rtctrl:InterleakPolDef  Protocol Interleak Policy Container


Events
                


Faults
                


Fsms
                


Properties Summary
Defined in: rtctrl:InterleakPolDef
reference:BinRef polDn  (rtctrl:InterleakPolDef:polDn)
           The distinguised name of the techsupport policy for this triggerable.
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.
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.
Properties Detail

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





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





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





polDn

Type: reference:BinRef

Units: null
Encrypted: false
Access: implicit
Category: TopLevelRegular
    Comments:
The distinguised name of the techsupport policy for this triggerable.



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.