The show ip route vrf vrf_name
command shows the routes in the nondefault VRF. The output includes all PowerFlex Layer 3 networks. In this example, it also includes the Router IDs of the external switches, and the external Layer 3 network, 192.168.10.0. This route is used to external services such as DNS and NTP. The IPv6 addresses shown are automatically configured link-local addresses that are used as part of the unnumbered BGP feature for the external switch connections.
Leaf1A# show ip route vrf VrfTenant1
Codes: K - kernel route, C - connected, S - static, B - BGP, O - OSPF
> - selected route, * - FIB route, q - queued route, r - rejected route
Destination Gateway Dist/Metric
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
B>* 10.3.0.1/32 via fe80::3e2c:30ff:fe84:8302 Eth1/47 20/0
B>* 10.3.0.2/32 via fe80::3e2c:30ff:fe84:8482 Eth1/48 20/0
B>* 192.168.10.0/24 via fe80::3e2c:30ff:fe84:8302 Eth1/47 20/0
* via fe80::3e2c:30ff:fe84:8482 Eth1/48
B>* 192.168.10.254/32 via fe80::3e2c:30ff:fe84:8482 Eth1/48 20/0
C>* 192.168.105.0/24 Direct Vlan105 0/0
C>* 192.168.140.0/24 Direct Vlan140 0/0
C>* 192.168.150.0/24 Direct Vlan150 0/0
C>* 192.168.161.0/24 Direct Vlan161 0/0
C>* 192.168.162.0/24 Direct Vlan162 0/0
In multirack environments, after PowerFlex nodes are deployed, the Destination
column will also include the IP addresses of PowerFlex nodes on Layer 3 networks in other racks. The Gateway
column will show the remote VTEP IP address that is used to reach the node. The Interfaces
column will list the VRF tenant VLAN, 2001 in this example.