Track IPv4 and IPv6 RoutesYou can create an object that tracks an IPv4 or IPv6 route entry in the routing table.Specify a tracked route by its IPv4 or IPv6 address and prefix-length. Optionally specify a tracked route by a virtual routing and forwarding(VRF) instance name if the route to be tracked is part of a VRF. The next-hop address is not part of the definition of the tracked object.A tracked route matches a route in the routing table only if the exact address and prefix length match an entry in the routing table. Forexample, when configured as a tracked route, 10.0.0.0/24 does not match the routing table entry 10.0.0.0/8. If no route-table entry has theexact address and prefix length, the tracked route is considered to be DOWN.In addition to the entry of a route in the routing table, you can configure how the status of a route is tracked in either the following ways:• By the reachability of the route's next-hop router.• By comparing the UP or DOWN threshold for a route’s metric with current entries in the route table.Track Route ReachabilityIf you configure the reachability of an IP route entry as a tracked object, the UP/DOWN state of the route is determined by the entry of thenext-hop address in the ARP cache.A tracked route is considered to be reachable if there is an address resolution protocol (ARP) cache entry for the route's next-hop address.If the next-hop address in the ARP cache ages out for a route tracked for its reachability, an attempt is made to regenerate the ARP cacheentry to see if the next-hop address appears before considering the route DOWN.Track a Metric ThresholdIf you configure a metric threshold to track a route, the UP/DOWN state of the tracked route is determined by the current metric for theroute entered in the routing table.To provide a common tracking interface for different clients, route metrics are scaled in the range from 0 to 255, where 0 is connected and255 is inaccessible. The scaled metric value communicated to a client always considers a lower value to have priority over a higher value.The resulting scaled value is compared against the threshold values to determine the state of a tracked route as follows:• If the scaled metric for a route entry is less than or equal to the UP threshold, the state of a route is UP.• If the scaled metric for a route is greater than or equal to the DOWN threshold or the route is not entered in the routing table, the stateof a route is DOWN.The UP and DOWN thresholds are user-configurable for each tracked route. The default UP threshold is 254; the default DOWN thresholdis 255. The notification of a change in the state of a tracked object is sent when a metric value crosses a configured threshold.The tracking process uses a protocol-specific resolution value to convert the actual metric in the routing table to a scaled metric in therange from 0 to 255. The resolution value is user-configurable and calculates the scaled metric by dividing a route's cost by the resolutionvalue set for the route type:• For intermediate system to intermediate system (ISIS), you can set the resolution in the range from 1 to 1000, where the default is 10.• For OSPF, you can set the resolution in the range from 1 to 1592, where the default is 1.• The resolution value used to map static routes is not configurable. By default, Dell Networking OS assigns a metric of 0 to static routes.• The resolution value used to map router information protocol (RIP) routes is not configurable. The RIP hop-count is automaticallymultiplied by 16 to scale it; a RIP metric of 16 (unreachable) scales to 256, which considers the route to be DOWN. For example, toconfigure object tracking for a RIP route to be considered UP only if the RIP hop count is less than or equal to 4, you would configurethe UP threshold to be 64 (4 x 16) and the DOWN threshold to be 65.Object Tracking 611