Network LSA for Beginners (The FAQ From An Interactive OSPF Simulation 2.2)

OSPF Network Design Solutions (2nd Edition)This is the FAQ from an interactive OSPF Simulation.
1. What is Network LSA?
Answer: It is also called Type-2 LSA. It describes attached routers in a subnet. It is created by DR.
2. What is Type-2 LSA structure?
Answer: There are 3 fields in this LSA:
Type: 2. This a Network LSA.
Link State ID: DR interface's IP address.
Attached routers: A list of router IDs of routers attached this subnet.
3. What is the flooding scope of Type-2 LSA?
Answer: Within an Area.
4. Why do we need Network LSA?
Answer: When a node on the subnet is down, its Router LSA links should be removed from other routers' LSDB. Type 2 LSA is a list of router ID (RID) attached to the subnet. Routers use a subnet's RID list to match its links and remove them from LSDB.
Consider this topology: R1, R2, R3, R4 are OSPF routers attached to subnet-1 192.168.1.0. R3, R4, R5, R6 are attached to a different subnet-2 192.168.2.0. R3, R4 have two RID lists for subnet-1 and subnet-2. Now R3's link connected to subnet-1 is down. R4 is able to remove R3's links on subnet-1, not R3's link fon subnet 2. Without Type 2 LSA, R4 will be confused.
This article is the FAQ of an interactive OSPF simulation: Network LSA. Its focus is on common, simple but important questions that are too abstract to grasp by reading text. Read it together with playing interactive simulation that is case-specific may help learners visualize concepts. See external links below.
External links for network simulation:
1. OSPF Simulation: Network LSA (This article): http://pre.visualland.net/view.php?cid=816&protocol=OSPF&title=2.2%20Network%20LSA
2. More network protocol simulation: http://pre.visualland.net/

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