In Junos OS, traffic engineering extensions for OSPF, which are required for an LSP to use the OSPF link state database for path computations, are not enabled by default. They must be explicitly enabled in the OSPF configuration. Therefore, answer C is correct. Answer B is incorrect and contradicts C. The 'no-cspf' command would disable CSPF (Constrained Shortest Path First), which is used for path computations in MPLS traffic engineering, so it should not be used if you want the LSP to utilize OSPF's link state database for path computations. Therefore, answer A is incorrect. The 'policing' parameter is not relevant to enabling traffic engineering extensions in OSPF, so answer D is incorrect.
[References:, Juniper Networks documentation on OSPF and Traffic Engineering: Configuring OSPF Traffic Engineering, https://www.juniper.net/documentation/us/en/software/junos/ospf/topics/topic-map/configuring-ospf-support-for-traffic-engineering.html, , , , ]
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