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IP-ROUTE(8)                          Linux                         IP-ROUTE(8)

NAME
       ip-route - routing table management

SYNOPSIS
       ip [ ip-OPTIONS ] route  { COMMAND | help }

       ip route { show | flush } SELECTOR

       ip route save SELECTOR

       ip route restore

       ip route get ROUTE_GET_FLAGS ADDRESS [ from ADDRESS iif STRING  ] [ oif
               STRING ] [ mark MARK ] [ tos TOS ] [ vrf NAME ] [ ipproto PRO-
               TOCOL ] [ sport NUMBER ] [ dport NUMBER ]

       ip route { add | del | change | append | replace } ROUTE

       SELECTOR := [ root PREFIX ] [ match PREFIX ] [ exact PREFIX ] [ table
               TABLE_ID ] [ vrf NAME ] [ proto RTPROTO ] [ type TYPE ] [ scope
               SCOPE ]

       ROUTE := NODE_SPEC [ INFO_SPEC ]

       NODE_SPEC := [ TYPE ] PREFIX [ tos TOS ] [ table TABLE_ID ] [ proto RT-
               PROTO ] [ scope SCOPE ] [ metric METRIC ] [ ttl-propagate { en-
               abled | disabled } ]

       INFO_SPEC := { NH | nhid ID } OPTIONS FLAGS [ nexthop NH ] ...

       NH := [ encap ENCAP ] [ via [ FAMILY ] ADDRESS ] [ dev STRING ] [
               weight NUMBER ] NHFLAGS

       FAMILY := [ inet | inet6 | mpls | bridge | link ]

       OPTIONS := FLAGS [ mtu NUMBER ] [ advmss NUMBER ] [ as [ to ] ADDRESS ]
               rtt TIME ] [ rttvar TIME ] [ reordering NUMBER ] [ window NUM-
               BER ] [ cwnd NUMBER ] [ ssthresh NUMBER ] [ realms REALM ] [
               rto_min TIME ] [ initcwnd NUMBER ] [ initrwnd NUMBER ] [ fea-
               tures FEATURES ] [ quickack BOOL ] [ congctl NAME ] [ pref PREF
               ] [ expires TIME ] [ fastopen_no_cookie BOOL ]

       TYPE := [ unicast | local | broadcast | multicast | throw | unreachable
               | prohibit | blackhole | nat ]

       TABLE_ID := [ local| main | default | all | NUMBER ]

       SCOPE := [ host | link | global | NUMBER ]

       NHFLAGS := [ onlink | pervasive ]

       RTPROTO := [ kernel | boot | static | NUMBER ]

       FEATURES := [ ecn | ]

       PREF := [ low | medium | high ]

       ENCAP := [ ENCAP_MPLS | ENCAP_IP | ENCAP_BPF | ENCAP_SEG6 | EN-
               CAP_SEG6LOCAL | ENCAP_IOAM6 ]

       ENCAP_MPLS := mpls [ LABEL ] [ ttl TTL ]

       ENCAP_IP := ip id TUNNEL_ID dst REMOTE_IP [ src SRC ] [ tos TOS ] [ ttl
               TTL ]

       ENCAP_BPF := bpf [ in PROG ] [ out PROG ] [ xmit PROG ] [ headroom SIZE
               ]

       ENCAP_SEG6 := seg6 mode [ encap | encap.red | inline | l2encap | l2en-
               cap.red ] segs SEGMENTS [ hmac KEYID ]

       ENCAP_SEG6LOCAL := seg6local action SEG6_ACTION [ SEG6_ACTION_PARAM ] [
               count ]

       ENCAP_IOAM6 := ioam6 [ freq K/N ] mode [ inline | encap | auto ] [
               tundst ADDRESS ] trace prealloc type IOAM6_TRACE_TYPE ns
               IOAM6_NAMESPACE size IOAM6_TRACE_SIZE

       ROUTE_GET_FLAGS :=  [ fibmatch  ]

DESCRIPTION
       ip route is used to manipulate entries in the kernel routing tables.

       Route types:

               unicast - the route entry describes real paths to the destina-
               tions covered by the route prefix.

               unreachable - these destinations are unreachable. Packets are
               discarded and the ICMP message host unreachable is generated.
               The local senders get an EHOSTUNREACH error.

               blackhole - these destinations are unreachable. Packets are
               discarded silently.  The local senders get an EINVAL error.

               prohibit - these destinations are unreachable. Packets are dis-
               carded and the ICMP message communication administratively pro-
               hibited is generated. The local senders get an EACCES error.

               local - the destinations are assigned to this host. The packets
               are looped back and delivered locally.

               broadcast - the destinations are broadcast addresses. The pack-
               ets are sent as link broadcasts.

               throw - a special control route used together with policy
               rules. If such a route is selected, lookup in this table is
               terminated pretending that no route was found. Without policy
               routing it is equivalent to the absence of the route in the
               routing table. The packets are dropped and the ICMP message net
               unreachable is generated. The local senders get an ENETUNREACH
               error.

               nat - a special NAT route. Destinations covered by the prefix
               are considered to be dummy (or external) addresses which re-
               quire translation to real (or internal) ones before forwarding.
               The addresses to translate to are selected with the attribute
               via.  Warning: Route NAT is no longer supported in Linux 2.6.

               anycast - not implemented the destinations are anycast ad-
               dresses assigned to this host. They are mainly equivalent to
               local with one difference: such addresses are invalid when used
               as the source address of any packet.

               multicast - a special type used for multicast routing. It is
               not present in normal routing tables.

       Route tables: Linux-2.x can pack routes into several routing tables
       identified by a number in the range from 1 to 2^32-1 or by name from
       the file /etc/iproute2/rt_tables By default all normal routes are in-
       serted into the main table (ID 254) and the kernel only uses this table
       when calculating routes.  Values (0, 253, 254, and 255) are reserved
       for built-in use.

       Actually, one other table always exists, which is invisible but even
       more important. It is the local table (ID 255). This table consists of
       routes for local and broadcast addresses. The kernel maintains this ta-
       ble automatically and the administrator usually need not modify it or
       even look at it.

       The multiple routing tables enter the game when policy routing is used.

       ip route add
              add new route

       ip route change
              change route

       ip route replace
              change or add new one

              to TYPE PREFIX (default)
                     the  destination prefix of the route. If TYPE is omitted,
                     ip assumes type unicast.  Other values of TYPE are listed
                     above.  PREFIX is an IP or IPv6 address  optionally  fol-
                     lowed  by a slash and the prefix length. If the length of
                     the prefix is missing,  ip  assumes  a  full-length  host
                     route.  There is also a special PREFIX default - which is
                     equivalent to IP 0/0 or to IPv6 ::/0.

              tos TOS

              dsfield TOS
                     the Type Of Service (TOS) key. This key has no associated
                     mask and the longest match is understood as: First,  com-
                     pare  the TOS of the route and of the packet. If they are
                     not equal, then the packet may still match a route with a
                     zero TOS.  TOS is either an 8 bit hexadecimal  number  or
                     an identifier from /etc/iproute2/rt_dsfield.

              metric NUMBER

              preference NUMBER
                     the  preference  value  of the route.  NUMBER is an arbi-
                     trary 32bit number, where routes with  lower  values  are
                     preferred.

              table TABLEID
                     the  table to add this route to.  TABLEID may be a number
                     or a string from the  file  /etc/iproute2/rt_tables.   If
                     this  parameter  is  omitted,  ip assumes the main table,
                     with the exception of local, broadcast  and  nat  routes,
                     which are put into the local table by default.

              vrf NAME
                     the  vrf  name to add this route to. Implicitly means the
                     table associated with the VRF.

              dev NAME
                     the output device name.

              via [ FAMILY ] ADDRESS
                     the address of the nexthop router, in the address  family
                     FAMILY.  Actually, the sense of this field depends on the
                     route  type.   For normal unicast routes it is either the
                     true next hop router or, if it  is  a  direct  route  in-
                     stalled  in BSD compatibility mode, it can be a local ad-
                     dress of the interface. For NAT routes it  is  the  first
                     address of the block of translated IP destinations.

              src ADDRESS
                     the source address to prefer when sending to the destina-
                     tions covered by the route prefix.

              realm REALMID
                     the  realm  to which this route is assigned.  REALMID may
                     be   a   number   or   a    string    from    the    file
                     /etc/iproute2/rt_realms.

              mtu MTU

              mtu lock MTU
                     the  MTU  along the path to the destination. If the modi-
                     fier lock is not used, the MTU may be updated by the ker-
                     nel due to Path MTU Discovery. If the  modifier  lock  is
                     used,  no  path  MTU discovery will be tried, all packets
                     will be sent without the DF bit in  IPv4  case  or  frag-
                     mented to MTU for IPv6.

              window NUMBER
                     the maximal window for TCP to advertise to these destina-
                     tions,  measured  in bytes. It limits maximal data bursts
                     that our TCP peers are allowed to send to us.

              rtt TIME
                     the initial RTT ('Round Trip Time') estimate. If no  suf-
                     fix is specified the units are raw values passed directly
                     to the routing code to maintain compatibility with previ-
                     ous releases.  Otherwise if a suffix of s, sec or secs is
                     used  to specify seconds and ms, msec or msecs to specify
                     milliseconds.

              rttvar TIME (Linux 2.3.15+ only)
                     the initial RTT variance estimate. Values  are  specified
                     as with rtt above.

              rto_min TIME (Linux 2.6.23+ only)
                     the minimum TCP Retransmission TimeOut to use when commu-
                     nicating  with  this destination. Values are specified as
                     with rtt above.

              ssthresh NUMBER (Linux 2.3.15+ only)
                     an estimate for the initial slow start threshold.

              cwnd NUMBER (Linux 2.3.15+ only)
                     the clamp for congestion window. It  is  ignored  if  the
                     lock flag is not used.

              initcwnd NUMBER (Linux 2.5.70+ only)
                     the  initial  congestion  window  size for connections to
                     this destination.  Actual window size is this value  mul-
                     tiplied  by  the  MSS (``Maximal Segment Size'') for same
                     connection. The default is zero, meaning to use the  val-
                     ues specified in RFC2414.

              initrwnd NUMBER (Linux 2.6.33+ only)
                     the  initial  receive window size for connections to this
                     destination.  Actual window size is this value multiplied
                     by the MSS of the connection.  The default value is zero,
                     meaning to use Slow Start value.

              features FEATURES (Linux3.18+only)
                     Enable or disable per-route features. Only available fea-
                     ture at this time is ecn to  enable  explicit  congestion
                     notification  when  initiating  connections  to the given
                     destination network.  When responding to a connection re-
                     quest from the given network, ecn will also be used  even
                     if the net.ipv4.tcp_ecn sysctl is set to 0.

              quickack BOOL (Linux 3.11+ only)
                     Enable  or disable quick ack for connections to this des-
                     tination.

              fastopen_no_cookie BOOL (Linux 4.15+ only)
                     Enable TCP Fastopen without a cookie for  connections  to
                     this destination.

              congctl NAME (Linux 3.20+ only)

              congctl lock NAME (Linux 3.20+ only)
                     Sets a specific TCP congestion control algorithm only for
                     a  given  destination.  If not specified, Linux keeps the
                     current global default TCP congestion control  algorithm,
                     or the one set from the application. If the modifier lock
                     is  not  used,  an application may nevertheless overwrite
                     the suggested congestion control algorithm for that  des-
                     tination.  If the modifier lock is used, then an applica-
                     tion is not allowed to overwrite the specified congestion
                     control algorithm for that destination, thus it  will  be
                     enforced/guaranteed to use the proposed algorithm.

              advmss NUMBER (Linux 2.3.15+ only)
                     the  MSS  ('Maximal  Segment Size') to advertise to these
                     destinations when establishing TCP connections. If it  is
                     not given, Linux uses a default value calculated from the
                     first  hop device MTU.  (If the path to these destination
                     is asymmetric, this guess may be wrong.)

              reordering NUMBER (Linux 2.3.15+ only)
                     Maximal reordering on the path to this  destination.   If
                     it  is  not  given,  Linux  uses  the value selected with
                     sysctl variable net/ipv4/tcp_reordering.

              nexthop NEXTHOP
                     the nexthop of a multipath route.  NEXTHOP is  a  complex
                     value  with its own syntax similar to the top level argu-
                     ment lists:

                             via [ FAMILY ] ADDRESS - is the nexthop router.

                             dev NAME - is the output device.

                             weight NUMBER - is a weight for this element of a
                             multipath route reflecting its relative bandwidth
                             or quality.

                     The internal buffer used in iproute2 limits  the  maximum
                     number  of  nexthops  that may be specified in one go. If
                     only ADDRESS is given, the current buffer size allows for
                     144 IPv6 nexthops and 253 IPv4 ones. For IPv4,  this  ef-
                     fectively  limits  the  number  of  nexthops possible per
                     route. With IPv6, further nexthops may be appended to the
                     same route via ip route append command.

              scope SCOPE_VAL
                     the scope of the destinations covered by the  route  pre-
                     fix.  SCOPE_VAL may be a number or a string from the file
                     /etc/iproute2/rt_scopes.   If  this parameter is omitted,
                     ip assumes scope global for all gatewayed unicast routes,
                     scope link for direct unicast and  broadcast  routes  and
                     scope host for local routes.

              protocol RTPROTO
                     the  routing  protocol identifier of this route.  RTPROTO
                     may  be  a   number   or   a   string   from   the   file
                     /etc/iproute2/rt_protos.   If  the routing protocol ID is
                     not given, ip assumes protocol boot (i.e. it assumes  the
                     route  was  added  by someone who doesn't understand what
                     they are doing). Several protocol values have a fixed in-
                     terpretation.  Namely:

                             redirect - the route was installed due to an ICMP
                             redirect.

                             kernel - the route was installed  by  the  kernel
                             during autoconfiguration.

                             boot  - the route was installed during the bootup
                             sequence.  If a routing daemon  starts,  it  will
                             purge all of them.

                             static  - the route was installed by the adminis-
                             trator to override dynamic routing. Routing  dae-
                             mon  will respect them and, probably, even adver-
                             tise them to its peers.

                             ra - the route was installed by Router  Discovery
                             protocol.

                     The  rest of the values are not reserved and the adminis-
                     trator is free to assign  (or  not  to  assign)  protocol
                     tags.

              onlink pretend  that  the  nexthop  is directly attached to this
                     link, even if it does not match any interface prefix.

              pref PREF
                     the IPv6 route preference.  PREF is a  string  specifying
                     the  route  preference  as  defined in RFC4191 for Router
                     Discovery messages. Namely:

                             low - the route has a lowest priority

                             medium - the route has a default priority

                             high - the route has a highest priority

              nhid ID
                     use nexthop object with given id  as  nexthop  specifica-
                     tion.

              encap ENCAPTYPE ENCAPHDR
                     attach tunnel encapsulation attributes to this route.

                     ENCAPTYPE is a string specifying the supported encapsula-
                     tion type. Namely:

                             mpls - encapsulation type MPLS

                             ip - IP encapsulation (Geneve, GRE, VXLAN, ...)

                             bpf - Execution of BPF program

                             seg6 - encapsulation type IPv6 Segment Routing

                             seg6local - local SRv6 segment processing

                             ioam6 - encapsulation type IPv6 IOAM

                             xfrm - encapsulation type XFRM

                     ENCAPHDR is a set of encapsulation attributes specific to
                     the ENCAPTYPE.

                             mpls
                               MPLSLABEL  - mpls label stack with labels sepa-
                               rated by /

                               ttl TTL - TTL to use for MPLS header  or  0  to
                               inherit from IP header

                             ip
                               id  TUNNEL_ID  dst  REMOTE_IP [ src SRC ] [ tos
                               TOS ] [ ttl TTL ] [ key ] [ csum ] [ seq ]

                             bpf
                               in PROG - BPF program to execute  for  incoming
                               packets

                               out  PROG - BPF program to execute for outgoing
                               packets

                               xmit PROG - BPF program to execute  for  trans-
                               mitted packets

                               headroom SIZE - Size of header BPF program will
                               attach (xmit)

                             seg6
                               mode  inline  - Directly insert Segment Routing
                               Header after IPv6 header

                               mode encap - Encapsulate  packet  in  an  outer
                               IPv6 header with SRH

                               mode encap.red - Encapsulate packet in an outer
                               IPv6  header with SRH applying the reduced seg-
                               ment list. When there is only one  segment  and
                               the HMAC is not present, the SRH is omitted.

                               mode  l2encap  -  Encapsulate  ingress L2 frame
                               within an outer IPv6 header and SRH

                               mode l2encap.red - Encapsulate ingress L2 frame
                               within an outer IPv6 header  and  SRH  applying
                               the  reduced  segment  list. When there is only
                               one segment and the HMAC is  not  present,  the
                               SRH is omitted.

                               SEGMENTS  -  List  of  comma-separated IPv6 ad-
                               dresses

                               KEYID - Numerical value in decimal  representa-
                               tion. See ip-sr(8).

                             seg6local
                               SEG6_ACTION  [  SEG6_ACTION_PARAM ] [ count ] -
                               Operation to perform on matching  packets.  The
                               optional  count  attribute  is  used to collect
                               statistics on the processing of actions.  Three
                               counters are implemented: 1) packets  correctly
                               processed;  2)  bytes  correctly  processed; 3)
                               packets that cause a  processing  error  (i.e.,
                               missing  SID List, wrong SID List, etc). To re-
                               trieve the counters related to  an  action  use
                               the -s flag in the show command.  The following
                               actions  are  currently  supported (Linux 4.14+
                               only).

                                 End [ flavors FLAVORS ] - Regular  SRv6  pro-
                                 cessing  as  intermediate  segment  endpoint.
                                 This action only accepts packets with a  non-
                                 zero  Segments  Left  value.  Other  matching
                                 packets are dropped. The presence of  flavors
                                 can  change  the regular processing of an End
                                 behavior according to the user-provided  Fla-
                                 vor operations and information carried in the
                                 packet.  See Flavors parameters section.

                                 End.X  nh6  NEXTHOP - Regular SRv6 processing
                                 as intermediate segment endpoint.   Addition-
                                 ally,  forward  processed  packets  to  given
                                 next-hop.  This action only  accepts  packets
                                 with  a  non-zero  Segments Left value. Other
                                 matching packets are dropped.

                                 End.DX6 nh6 NEXTHOP - Decapsulate inner  IPv6
                                 packet  and forward it to the specified next-
                                 hop. If the argument is set to ::,  then  the
                                 next-hop  is  selected according to the local
                                 selection rules.  This  action  only  accepts
                                 packets  with  either  a  zero  Segments Left
                                 value or no SRH at all,  and  an  inner  IPv6
                                 packet. Other matching packets are dropped.

                                 End.DT6 { table | vrftable } TABLEID - Decap-
                                 sulate  the  inner IPv6 packet and forward it
                                 according  to  the  specified  lookup  table.
                                 TABLEID  is  either a number or a string from
                                 the   file    /etc/iproute2/rt_tables.     If
                                 vrftable  is used, the argument must be a VRF
                                 device associated with the  table  id.  More-
                                 over, the VRF table associated with the table
                                 id  must  be  configured  with the VRF strict
                                 mode turned on (net.vrf.strict_mode=1).  This
                                 action  only  accepts  packets  with either a
                                 zero Segments Left value or no  SRH  at  all,
                                 and  an  inner  IPv6  packet.  Other matching
                                 packets are dropped.

                                 End.DT4 vrftable TABLEID  -  Decapsulate  the
                                 inner IPv4 packet and forward it according to
                                 the  specified  lookup table.  TABLEID is ei-
                                 ther a number  or  a  string  from  the  file
                                 /etc/iproute2/rt_tables.   The  argument must
                                 be a VRF device associated with the table id.
                                 Moreover, the VRF table associated  with  the
                                 table  id  must  be  configured  with the VRF
                                 strict         mode         turned         on
                                 (net.vrf.strict_mode=1). This action only ac-
                                 cepts  packets  with  either  a zero Segments
                                 Left value or no SRH at  all,  and  an  inner
                                 IPv4   packet.  Other  matching  packets  are
                                 dropped.

                                 End.DT46 vrftable TABLEID -  Decapsulate  the
                                 inner  IPv4 or IPv6 packet and forward it ac-
                                 cording  to  the  specified   lookup   table.
                                 TABLEID  is  either a number or a string from
                                 the file /etc/iproute2/rt_tables.  The  argu-
                                 ment must be a VRF device associated with the
                                 table id.  Moreover, the VRF table associated
                                 with the table id must be configured with the
                                 VRF      strict      mode      turned      on
                                 (net.vrf.strict_mode=1). This action only ac-
                                 cepts packets with  either  a  zero  Segments
                                 Left  value  or  no  SRH at all, and an inner
                                 IPv4 or IPv6 packet. Other  matching  packets
                                 are dropped.

                                 End.B6 srh segs SEGMENTS [ hmac KEYID ] - In-
                                 sert  the specified SRH immediately after the
                                 IPv6 header, update the  DA  with  the  first
                                 segment  of the newly inserted SRH, then for-
                                 ward the resulting packet. The  original  SRH
                                 is  not  modified.  This  action only accepts
                                 packets with a non-zero Segments Left  value.
                                 Other matching packets are dropped.

                                 End.B6.Encaps  srh segs SEGMENTS [ hmac KEYID
                                 ] - Regular SRv6 processing  as  intermediate
                                 segment  endpoint.  Additionally, encapsulate
                                 the matching  packet  within  an  outer  IPv6
                                 header  followed  by  the  specified SRH. The
                                 destination address of the outer IPv6  header
                                 is  set  to the first segment of the new SRH.
                                 The source address is set as described in ip-
                                 sr(8).

                                 Flavors parameters

                                 The flavors represent  additional  operations
                                 that can modify or extend a subset of the ex-
                                 isting behaviors.

                                   flavors OPERATION[,OPERATION] [ATTRIBUTES]

                                     OPERATION  :=  {  psp | usp | usd | next-
                                     csid }

                                     ATTRIBUTES := { KEY VALUE } [  ATTRIBUTES
                                     ]

                                     KEY := { lblen | nflen }

                                   psp  -  Penultimate  Segment Pop of the SRH
                                   (not yet supported in kernel)

                                   usp - Ultimate Segment Pop of the SRH  (not
                                   yet supported in kernel)

                                   usd  -  Ultimate Segment Decapsulation (not
                                   yet supported in kernel)

                                   next-csid - The NEXT-C-SID mechanism offers
                                   the possibility of  encoding  several  SRv6
                                   segments  within  a  single 128 bit SID ad-
                                   dress. The NEXT-C-SID flavor can be config-
                                   ured to support user-provided Locator-Block
                                   and Locator-Node Function lengths. If Loca-
                                   tor-Block  and/or   Locator-Node   Function
                                   lengths are not provided by the user during
                                   configuration  of  an SRv6 End behavior in-
                                   stance with NEXT-C-SID flavor, the  default
                                   value   is  32-bit  for  Locator-Block  and
                                   16-bit for Locator-Node Function.

                                   lblen VALUE  -  defines  the  Locator-Block
                                   length for NEXT-C-SID flavor.  The Locator-
                                   Block  length  must  be  greater than 0 and
                                   evenly divisible by 8. This  attribute  can
                                   be used only with NEXT-C-SID flavor.

                                   nflen  VALUE  -  defines  the  Locator-Node
                                   Function length for NEXT-C-SID flavors. The
                                   Locator-Node  Function   length   must   be
                                   greater  than  0 and evenly divisible by 8.
                                   This attribute can be used only with  NEXT-
                                   C-SID flavor.

                               ioam6
                                 freq  K/N  - Inject IOAM in K packets every N
                                 packets (default is 1/1).

                                 mode inline - Directly insert IOAM after IPv6
                                 header (default mode).

                                 mode encap - Encapsulate packet in  an  outer
                                 IPv6 header with IOAM.

                                 mode auto - Automatically use inline mode for
                                 local  packets  and encap mode for in-transit
                                 packets.

                                 tundst ADDRESS - IPv6 address of  the  tunnel
                                 destination (outer header), not used with in-
                                 line mode.

                                 type IOAM6_TRACE_TYPE - List of IOAM data re-
                                 quired  in  the  trace, represented by a bit-
                                 field (24 bits).

                                 ns IOAM6_NAMESPACE - Numerical value to  rep-
                                 resent an IOAM namespace. See ip-ioam(8).

                                 size  IOAM6_TRACE_SIZE  - Size, in octets, of
                                 the pre-allocated trace data block.

                               xfrm
                                 if_id IF_ID  [ link_dev LINK_DEV ]

              expires TIME (Linux 4.4+ only)
                     the route will be deleted after the expires  time.   Only
                     support IPv6 at present.

              ttl-propagate { enabled | disabled }
                     Control  whether  TTL should be propagated from any encap
                     into the un-encapsulated packet,  overriding  any  global
                     configuration. Only supported for MPLS at present.

       ip route delete
              delete route
              ip  route  del has the same arguments as ip route add, but their
              semantics are a bit different.

              Key values (to, tos, preference and table) select the  route  to
              delete.  If  optional  attributes  are present, ip verifies that
              they coincide with the attributes of the route to delete.  If no
              route with the given key and attributes was found, ip route  del
              fails.

       ip route show
              list routes
              the  command  displays the contents of the routing tables or the
              route(s) selected by some criteria.

              to SELECTOR (default)
                     only select routes from the given range of  destinations.
                     SELECTOR consists of an optional modifier (root, match or
                     exact)  and  a  prefix.   root PREFIX selects routes with
                     prefixes not shorter than PREFIX.  F.e.  root 0/0 selects
                     the entire routing table.  match  PREFIX  selects  routes
                     with  prefixes  not  longer  than  PREFIX.   F.e.   match
                     10.0/16 selects 10.0/16, 10/8 and 0/0, but  it  does  not
                     select  10.1/16 and 10.0.0/24.  And exact PREFIX (or just
                     PREFIX) selects routes with this exact prefix. If neither
                     of these options are present, ip assumes root 0/0 i.e. it
                     lists the entire table.

              tos TOS

              dsfield TOS
                     only select routes with the given TOS.

              table TABLEID
                     show the routes from this table(s). The  default  setting
                     is to show table main.  TABLEID may either be the ID of a
                     real table or one of the special values:

                             all - list all of the tables.

                             cache - dump the routing cache.

              vrf NAME
                     show  the  routes  for  the table associated with the vrf
                     name

              cloned

              cached list cloned routes i.e.  routes  which  were  dynamically
                     forked  from  other  routes  because some route attribute
                     (f.e. MTU) was updated.  Actually, it  is  equivalent  to
                     table cache.

              from SELECTOR
                     the  same  syntax  as for to, but it binds the source ad-
                     dress range rather than destinations.  Note that the from
                     option only works with cloned routes.

              protocol RTPROTO
                     only list routes of this protocol.

              scope SCOPE_VAL
                     only list routes with this scope.

              type TYPE
                     only list routes of this type.

              dev NAME
                     only list routes going via this device.

              via [ FAMILY ] PREFIX
                     only list routes going via the nexthop  routers  selected
                     by PREFIX.

              src PREFIX
                     only list routes with preferred source addresses selected
                     by PREFIX.

              realm REALMID

              realms FROMREALM/TOREALM
                     only list routes with these realms.

       ip route flush
              flush routing tables
              this command flushes routes selected by some criteria.

              The  arguments  have  the same syntax and semantics as the argu-
              ments of ip route show, but routing tables are  not  listed  but
              purged.  The  only  difference is the default action: show dumps
              all the IP main routing table but flush prints the helper page.

              With the -statistics option, the  command  becomes  verbose.  It
              prints out the number of deleted routes and the number of rounds
              made  to  flush the routing table. If the option is given twice,
              ip route flush also dumps all the deleted routes in  the  format
              described in the previous subsection.

       ip route get
              get a single route
              this command gets a single route to a destination and prints its
              contents exactly as the kernel sees it.

              fibmatch
                     Return  full  fib lookup matched route. Default is to re-
                     turn the resolved dst entry

              to ADDRESS (default)
                     the destination address.

              from ADDRESS
                     the source address.

              tos TOS

              dsfield TOS
                     the Type Of Service.

              iif NAME
                     the device from which this packet is expected to arrive.

              oif NAME
                     force the output device on  which  this  packet  will  be
                     routed.

              mark MARK
                     the firewall mark (fwmark)

              vrf NAME
                     force the vrf device on which this packet will be routed.

              ipproto PROTOCOL
                     ip protocol as seen by the route lookup

              sport NUMBER
                     source port as seen by the route lookup

              dport NUMBER
                     destination port as seen by the route lookup

              connected
                     if  no  source  address (option from) was given, relookup
                     the route with the source set to  the  preferred  address
                     received  from  the  first  lookup.  If policy routing is
                     used, it may be a different route.

              Note that this operation is not equivalent  to  ip  route  show.
              show  shows  existing routes.  get resolves them and creates new
              clones if necessary. Essentially, get is equivalent to sending a
              packet along this path.  If the iif argument is not  given,  the
              kernel  creates  a route to output packets towards the requested
              destination.  This is equivalent to pinging the destination with
              a subsequent ip route ls cache, however, no packets are actually
              sent. With the iif argument, the kernel pretends that  a  packet
              arrived  from  this interface and searches for a path to forward
              the packet.

       ip route save
              save routing table information to stdout
              This command behaves like ip route show except that  the  output
              is raw data suitable for passing to ip route restore.

       ip route restore
              restore routing table information from stdin
              This  command  expects to read a data stream as returned from ip
              route save.  It will attempt to restore the routing table infor-
              mation exactly as it was at the time of the save, so any  trans-
              lation  of  information  in  the stream (such as device indexes)
              must be done first. Any existing routes are left unchanged.  Any
              routes  specified  in  the data stream that already exist in the
              table will be ignored.

NOTES
       Starting with Linux kernel version 3.6, there is no routing  cache  for
       IPv4  anymore.  Hence ip route show cached will never print any entries
       on systems with this or newer kernel versions.

EXAMPLES
       ip ro
           Show all route entries in the kernel.

       ip route add default via 192.168.1.1 dev eth0
           Adds a default route (for all  addresses)  via  the  local  gateway
           192.168.1.1 that can be reached on device eth0.

       ip route add 10.1.1.0/30 encap mpls 200/300 via 10.1.1.1 dev eth0
           Adds  an  ipv4 route with mpls encapsulation attributes attached to
           it.

       ip  -6  route  add  2001:db8:1::/64  encap   seg6   mode   encap   segs
       2001:db8:42::1,2001:db8:ffff::2 dev eth0
           Adds  an  IPv6  route  with SRv6 encapsulation and two segments at-
           tached.

       ip  -6  route  add  2001:db8:1::/64  encap  seg6local  action  End.DT46
       vrftable 100 dev vrf100
           Adds  an IPv6 route with SRv6 decapsulation and forward with lookup
           in VRF table.

       ip -6 route add 2001:db8:1::/64  encap  seg6local  action  End  flavors
       next-csid dev eth0
           Adds an IPv6 route with SRv6 End behavior with next-csid flavor en-
           abled.

       ip  -6  route  add  2001:db8:1::/64  encap seg6local action End flavors
       next-csid lblen 48 nflen 16 dev eth0
           Adds an IPv6 route with SRv6 End behavior with next-csid flavor en-
           abled and user-provided  Locator-Block  and  Locator-Node  Function
           lengths.

       ip  -6 route add 2001:db8:1::/64 encap ioam6 freq 2/5 mode encap tundst
       2001:db8:42::1 trace prealloc type 0x800000 ns 1 size 12 dev eth0
           Adds an IPv6 route with an IOAM Pre-allocated  Trace  encapsulation
           (ip6ip6)  that only includes the hop limit and the node id, config-
           ured for the IOAM namespace 1 and a pre-allocated data block of  12
           octets (will be injected in 2 packets every 5 packets).

       ip route add 10.1.1.0/30 nhid 10
           Adds an ipv4 route using nexthop object with id 10.

SEE ALSO
       ip(8)

AUTHOR
       Original Manpage by Michail Litvak <mci@owl.openwall.com>

iproute2                          13 Dec 2012                      IP-ROUTE(8)

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