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Prefix Trees

A prefix tree is a nonsequential collection of permit and deny conditions that apply to IP addresses. Like a prefix list, the prefix tree specifies a base IP address and a length, the number of bits applied to the base to determine the network prefix. The tested address is matched against the prefix. The prefix tree also enables route summarization.

However, the prefix tree does not match addresses one by one in sequence against the listed conditions. The router performs a binary search against the tree structure of the entries. If the tested address is less than a particular entry, it branches one way to another test pair; if it is greater than the entry, it branches the other way to another mutually exclusive test pair. The router stops testing conditions when it finds the best match. If no conditions match, the router rejects the address. An empty prefix tree results in an automatic permit of the tested address.

The prefix tree provides a faster search method and matches the test address more closely than either the access list or the prefix list.

Use the ip prefix-tree command to define an IP prefix tree. Use the prefix-tree keyword with the match ip address or match ip next-hop commands to add a clause to a route map. Use the match-set summary prefix-tree command to specify the prefix tree that summarizes routes for a particular route map.

Using a Prefix Tree

The following example creates a prefix tree that permits routes with a prefix length of 24 or larger in the 10.10.2.0/24 network:

host1(config)#ip prefix-tree xyz permit 10.10.2.0/24

clear ip prefix-tree

ip prefix-tree

match ip address

match ip next-hop

match-set summary prefix-tree


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