In the following example, output information about all current IPv6 RIP processes is displayed using the show ipv6 ripcommand:
Router> show ipv6 rip
RIP process "process1", port 521, multicast-group FF02::9, pid 62
Administrative distance is 120. Maximum paths is 1
Updates every 5 seconds, expire after 15
Holddown lasts 10 seconds, garbage collect after 30
Split horizon is on; poison reverse is off
Default routes are generated
Periodic updates 223, trigger updates 1
Interfaces:
Gigabitethernet0/0/0
Redistribution:
Redistributing protocol bgp 65001 route-map bgp-to-rip
In the following example, output information about a specified IPv6 RIP process database is displayed using the show ipv6 ripcommand with the name argument and the database keyword. In the following output for the IPv6 RIP process named process1, timer information is displayed, and route 2001:DB8::16/64 has a route tag set:
Router> show ipv6 rip process1 database
RIP process "process1", local RIB
2001:DB8::/64, metric 2
Gigabitethernet0/0/0/FE80::A8BB:CCFF:FE00:B00, expires in 13 secs
2001:DB8::/16, metric 2 tag 4, installed
Gigabitethernet0/0/0/FE80::A8BB:CCFF:FE00:B00, expires in 13 secs
2001:DB8:1::/16, metric 2 tag 4, installed
Gigabitethernet0/0/0/FE80::A8BB:CCFF:FE00:B00, expires in 13 secs
2001:DB8:2::/16, metric 2 tag 4, installed
Gigabitethernet0/0/0/FE80::A8BB:CCFF:FE00:B00, expires in 13 secs
::/0, metric 2, installed
Gigabitethernet0/0/0FE80::A8BB:CCFF:FE00:B00, expires in 13 secs
In the following example, output information for a specified IPv6 RIP process is displayed using the show ipv6 ripuser EXEC command with the name argument and the next-hops keyword:
Router> show ipv6 rip process1 next-hops
RIP process "process1", Next Hops
FE80::A8BB:CCFF:FE00:A00/Gigabitethernet0/0/0 [4 paths]