IP router configuration
Configuring IP router command options
To provision services on a Nokia router, logical IP routing interfaces must be configured to associate attributes such as an IP address, port, or the system with the IP interface.
A special type of IP interface is the system interface. A system interface must have an IP address with a 32-bit subnet mask. The system interface is used as the router identifier by higher-level protocols such as OSPF and BGP, unless overwritten by an explicit router ID.
The following router features can be configured:
See the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, and VSR Triple Play Service Delivery Architecture Guide for information about DHCP and support as well as configuration examples for the 7750 SR and 7450 ESS.
Interfaces
Nokia routers use different types of interfaces for various functions. Interfaces must be configured with information such as the interface type (network and system) and address. A port is not associated with a system interface. An interface can be associated with the system (loopback address).
Network interface
A network interface (a logical IP routing interface) can be configured on one of the following entities:
physical or logical port
a SONET/SDH channel for the 7750 SR or 7450 ESS
Network domains
To determine which network ports (and, therefore, which network complexes) are eligible to transport traffic of individual SDPs, network-domain is provided. Network-domain information is then used for the sap-ingress queue allocation algorithm applied to VPLS SAPs. This algorithm is optimized in so that no sap-ingress queues are allocated if the specified port does not belong to the network-domain used in the specified VPLS. Also, sap-ingress queues are not allocated toward network ports (regardless of the network-domain membership) if the specified VPLS does not contain any SDPs.
SAP-ingress queue allocation considers the following:
SHG membership of individual SDPs
network-domain definition under SDP to restrict the topology in which the specified SDP can be set-up
The implementation supports four network-domains within any VPLS.
Network-domain configuration at the SDP level is ignored when the SDP is used for Epipe or Ipipe bindings.
Network-domain configurations are irrelevant for Layer 3 services (Layer 3 VPN and IES services). Network-domain configurations can be defined in the base routing context and associated only with network interfaces in this context. Network domains are not applicable to loopback and system interfaces.
The network-domain information is only used for ingress VPLS sap queue-allocation. It is not considered by routing during SDP setup. Therefore, if the specified SDP is routed through network interfaces that are not part of the configured network domain, the packets are still forwarded, but their QoS and queuing behavior is based on default settings. Also, the packet does not appear in SAP statistics.
There is always one network-domain with the reserved name default. The interfaces always belong to a default network-domain. It is possible to assign a specific interface to different user-defined network-domains. The loopback and system interfaces are also associated with the default network-domain at the creation. However, any attempt to associate those interfaces with any explicitly defined network-domain is blocked at the CLI level because there is no benefit for that association.
Any SDP can be assigned only to one network domain. If none is specified, the system assigns the default network-domain. This means that all SAPs in VPLS have queues reaching all fwd-complexes serving interfaces that belong to the same network-domains as the SDPs.
It is possible to assign or remove network-domain association of the interface/SDP without requiring deletion of the respective object.
System interface
The system interface is associated with a network entity (such as a specific router or switch), not a specific interface. The system interface is also referred to as the loopback address. The system interface is associated during the configuration of the following entities:
termination point of service tunnels
hops when configuring MPLS paths and LSPs
addresses on a target router for BGP and LDP peering
The system interface is used to preserve connectivity (when routing reconvergence is possible) when an interface fails or is removed. The system interface is used as the router identifier, and a system interface must have an IP address with a 32-bit subnet mask.
Unicast reverse path forwarding check
Unicast reverse path forwarding check (uRPF) helps to mitigate problems that are caused by the introduction of malformed or forged (spoofed) IP source addresses into a network by discarding IP packets that lack a verifiable IP source address. For example, a number of common types of denial-of-service (DoS) attacks, including smurf and tribe flood network (TFN), can take advantage of forged or rapidly changing source addresses to allow attackers to thwart efforts to locate or filter the attacks. For Internet service providers (ISPs) that provide public access, uRPF deflects such attacks by forwarding only packets with source addresses that are valid and consistent with the IP routing table. This action protects the network of the ISP, its customer, and the rest of the Internet.
uRPF is supported for both IPv4 and IPv6 on network and access. It is supported on any IP interface, including base router, IES, VPRN, and subscriber group interfaces.
In strict mode, uRPF checks whether the incoming packet has a source address that matches a prefix in the routing table, and whether the interface expects to receive a packet with this source address prefix.
In loose mode, uRPF checks whether the incoming packet has a source address that matches a prefix in the routing table; loose mode does not check whether the interface expects to receive a packet with a specific source address prefix.
Loose mode uRPF check is supported for ECMP, IGP shortcuts, and VPRN MP-BGP routes. Packets coming from a source that matches any ECMP, IGP shortcut, or VPRN MP-BGP route passes the uRPF check even when uRPF is set to strict mode on the incoming interface.
In the case of ECMP, this allows a packet received on an IP interface configured in strict uRPF mode to be forwarded if the source address of the packet matches an ECMP route, even if the IP interface is not a next-hop of the ECMP route or not a member of any ECMP routes. The strict-no-ecmp uRPF mode may be configured on any interface that is known to not be a next-hop of any ECMP route. When a packet is received on this interface, and the source address matches an ECMP route, the packet is dropped by uRPF.
If there is a default route, the following is included in the uRPF check:
A loose mode uRPF check always succeeds.
A strict mode uRPF check only succeeds if the source address matches any route (including the default route) where the next-hop is on the incoming interface for the packet.
Otherwise, the uRPF check fails.
If the source IP address matches a discard/blackhole route, the packet is treated as if it failed the uRPF check.
QoS policy propagation using BGP
This section describes QoS policy propagation using BGP (QPPB) as it applies to VPRN, IES, and router interfaces. see the ‟Internet Enhanced Service” section in the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7950 XRS, and VSR Layer 3 Services Guide: IES and VPRN and the ‟IP Router Configuration” section in the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7950 XRS, and VSR Router Configuration Guide.
QoS policy propagation using BGP (QPPB) is a feature that allows a route to be installed in the routing table with a forwarding-class and priority so that packets matching the route can receive the associated QoS. The forwarding-class and priority associated with a BGP route are set using BGP import route policies. This feature is called QPPB, even though the feature name refers to BGP specifically. On SR OS, QPPB is supported for BGP (IPv4, IPv6, VPN-IPv4, VPN-IPv6), RIP, and static routes.
SAP ingress and network QoS policies can achieve the same result as QPPB (for example, by assigning a packet arriving on an IP interface to a specific forwarding-class and priority/profile, based on the source address or destination address of the packet). However, the effort involved in creating the QoS policies, keeping them up-to-date, and applying them across many nodes is much greater than with QPPB. In a typical application of QPPB, a BGP route is advertised with a BGP community attribute that conveys a specific QoS. Routers that receive the advertisement accept the route into their routing table and set the forwarding-class and priority of the route from the community attribute.
QPPB applications
There are two typical applications of QPPB:
-
coordination of QoS policies between different administrative domains
-
traffic differentiation within a single domain, based on route characteristics
Inter-AS coordination of QoS policies
The user of an administrative domain ‟A” can use QPPB to signal to a peer administrative domain ‟B” that traffic sent to specific prefixes advertised by domain A should receive a specific QoS treatment in domain B. For example, an ASBR of domain A can advertise a prefix to domain B and include a BGP community attribute with the route. The community value implies a specific QoS treatment, as agreed by the two domains (in their peering agreement or service level agreement, for example). When the ASBR and other routers in domain B accept and install the route for that prefix into their routing table, they apply a QoS policy on selected interfaces that classifies traffic toward that prefix into the QoS class implied by the BGP community value.
QPPB may also be used to request that traffic sourced from specific networks receive appropriate QoS handling in downstream nodes that may span different administrative domains. This can be achieved by advertising the source prefix with a BGP community, as described. However, in this case, other approaches are equally valid, such as marking the DSCP or other CoS fields based on the source IP address, so that downstream domains can act based on a common understanding of the QoS treatment implied by different DSCP values.
In the preceding examples, coordination of QoS policies using QPPB could be between a business customer and their IP VPN service provider, or between one service provider and another.
Traffic differentiation based on route characteristics
A network user may need to provide differentiated service to specific traffic flows within its network, and these traffic flows can be identified with known routes. For example, the user of an ISP network may need to give priority to traffic originating in a specific ASN (the ASN of a content provider offering over-the-top services to the ISP’s customers), following a specific AS_PATH, or destined for a specific next-hop (remaining on-net vs. off-net).
Use of QPPB to differentiate traffic in an ISP network shows an example of an ISP that has an agreement with the content provider managing AS300 to provide traffic sourced and terminating within AS300 with differentiated service appropriate to the content being transported. In this example, ASBR1 and ASBR2 mark the DSCP of packets terminating and sourced, respectively, in AS300 so that other nodes within the ISP’s network do not need to rely on QPPB to determine the correct forwarding-class to use for the traffic. The DSCP or other CoS markings could be left unchanged in the ISP’s network and QPPB used on every node.
QPPB
There are two main aspects of the QPPB feature:
The ability to associate a forwarding-class and priority with specific routes in the routing table.
The ability to classify an IP packet arriving on a specific IP interface to the forwarding-class and priority associated with the route that best matches the packet.
Associating an FC and priority with a route
This feature uses the fc command in the route-policy hierarchy to set the forwarding class and, optionally, the priority associated with routes accepted by a route-policy entry.
The following example shows the fc command in the route policy configuration.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure policy-options]
A:admin@node-2# info
community "gold" {
member "300:100" { }
}
policy-statement "qppb_policy" {
entry 10 {
from {
community {
name "gold"
}
protocol {
name [bgp]
}
}
action {
action-type accept
forwarding-class {
fc h1
priority high
}
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router>policy-options# info
----------------------------------------------
community gold members 300:100
policy-statement qppb_policy
entry 10
from
protocol bgp
community gold
exit
action accept
fc h1 priority high
exit
exit
exit
The fc command is supported with all existing from and to match conditions in a route policy entry, with any action other than reject, and with next-entry, next-policy, and accept actions. If a next-entry or next-policy action results in multiple matching entries, then the last entry with a QPPB action determines the forwarding class and priority.
A route policy that includes the fc command in one or more entries can be used in any import or export policy, but the fc command has no effect except in the following contexts:
-
MD-CLI
-
VRF import policies
configure service vprn bgp-evpn mpls vrf-import configure service vprn bgp-ipvpn mpls vrf-import configure service vprn bgp-ipvpn srv6 vrf-import configure service vprn mvpn vrf-import
-
BGP import policies:
configure router bgp import configure router bgp group import configure router bgp neighbor import configure service vprn bgp import configure service vprn bgp group import configure service vprn bgp neighbor import
-
RIP import policies
configure router rip import-policy configure router rip group import-policy configure router rip group neighbor import-policy configure service vprn rip import-policy configure service vprn rip group import-policy configure service vprn rip group neighbor import-policy
-
-
classic CLI
-
VRF import policies
configure service vprn bgp-evpn mpls vrf-import configure service vprn bgp-ipvpn mpls vrf-import configure service vprn bgp-ipvpn srv6 vrf-import configure service vprn mvpn vrf-import
-
BGP import policies
configure router bgp import configure router bgp group import configure router bgp group neighbor import configure service vprn bgp import configure service vprn bgp group import configure service vprn bgp group neighbor import
-
RIP import policies
configure router rip import configure router rip group import configure router rip group neighbor import configure service vprn rip import configure service vprn rip group import configure service vprn rip group neighbor import
-
As shown, QPPB route policies support routes learned from RIP and BGP neighbors of a VPRN, as well as for routes learned from RIP and BGP neighbors of the base/global routing instance.
QPPB is supported for BGP routes belonging to any of the following address families:
-
IPv4 (AFI=1, SAFI=1)
-
IPv6 (AFI=2, SAFI=1)
-
VPN-IPv4 (AFI=1, SAFI=128)
-
VPN-IPv6 (AFI=2, SAFI=128)
A VPN-IP route may match both a VRF import policy entry and a BGP import policy entry (if vpn-apply-import is configured in the base router BGP instance). In this case, the VRF import policy is applied first, then the BGP import policy, so the QPPB QoS is based on the BGP import policy entry.
-
MD-CLI
configure router static-routes route next-hop qos configure service vprn static-routes route next-hop qos configure router static-routes route indirect qos configure service vprn static-routes route indirect qos
-
classic CLI
configure router static-route-entry next-hop configure service vprn static-route-entry next-hop configure router static-route-entry indirect configure service vprn static-route-entry indirect
Priority is optional when specifying the forwarding class of a static route, but when configured it can only be deleted and returned to unspecified by deleting the entire static route.
Displaying QoS information associated with routes
Use the commands in the following contexts to show the forwarding class and priority associated with the displayed routes.
show router route-table
show router fib
show router bgp routes
show router rip database
show router static-route
Use the following command to show an additional line per route entry that displays the forwarding class and priority of the route. When the qos command option is specified, the output includes an additional line per route entry that displays the forwarding class and priority of the route. If a route has no forwarding class and priority information, the third line is blank.
show router route-table 10.1.5.0/24 qos
The following example shows the output of this command.
===============================================================================
Route Table (Router: Base)
===============================================================================
Dest Prefix Type Proto Age Pref
Next Hop[Interface Name] Metric
QoS
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
10.1.5.0/24 Remote BGP 15h32m52s 0
PE1_to_PE2 0
h1, high
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No. of Routes: 1
===============================================================================
Enabling QPPB on an IP interface
To enable QoS classification of ingress IP packets on an interface based on the QoS information associated with the routes that best match the packets, configure the qos-route-lookup command in the IP interface. The qos-route-lookup command has command options to indicate whether the QoS result is based on lookup of the source or destination IP address in every packet. There are separate qos-route-lookup commands for the IPv4 and IPv6 packets on an interface, which allows QPPB to be enabled for IPv4 only, IPv6 only, or both IPv4 and IPv6. Currently, QPPB based on a source IP address is not supported for IPv6 packets or for ingress subscriber management traffic on a group interface.
The qos-route-lookup command is supported on the following types of IP interfaces:
-
base router network interfaces
configure router interface
-
VPRN SAP and spoke SDP interfaces
configure service vprn interface
-
VPRN group-interfaces
configure service vprn subscriber-interface group-interface
-
IES SAP and spoke SDP interfaces
configure service ies interface
-
IES group interfaces
configure service ies subscriber-interface group-interface
When the qos-route-lookup command with the destination command option is applied to an IP interface and the destination address of an incoming IP packet matches a route with QoS information, the packet is classified to the FC and priority associated with that route. The command overrides the FC and priority/profile determined from the SAP ingress or network QoS policy associated with the IP interface. If the destination address of the incoming packet matches a route with no QoS information, the FC and priority of the packet remain as determined by the SAP ingress or network QoS policy.
When the qos-route-lookup command with the source command option is applied to an IP interface and the source address of an incoming IP packet matches a route with QoS information, the packet is classified to the FC and priority associated with that route. The command overrides the FC and priority/profile determined from the SAP ingress or network QoS policy associated with the IP interface. If the source address of the incoming packet matches a route with no QoS information, the FC and priority of the packet remain as determined by the SAP ingress or network QoS policy.
When the qos-route-lookup command is configured with the source-and-dest option (only available on systems with FP4 or a later generation FP datapath), the FC and priority of incoming packets is based on the lookup of the destination IP address, as long as the route matching the destination address has QPPB information. Otherwise, the FC and priority of incoming packets is based on the lookup of the source IP address, as long as the route matching the source address has QPPB information. If neither the destination nor the source lookups find a route with QPPB information, the FC and priority of the packet remain as determined by the SAP ingress or network QoS policy.
configure service vprn network-interface
QPPB based on a source IP address is not supported for ingress subscriber management traffic on a group interface.
QPPB when next-hops are resolved by QPPB routes
In some cases (IP VPN inter-AS model C, Carrier Supporting Carrier, indirect static routes, and so on), an IPv4 or IPv6 packet may arrive on a QPPB-enabled interface and match a route A1 whose next-hop N1 is resolved by a route A2 with next-hop N2. Similarly, N2 is resolved by a route A3 with next-hop N3, and so on. The QPPB result is based only on the forwarding-class and priority of route A1. If A1 does not have a forwarding-class and priority association, the QoS classification is not based on QPPB, even if routes A2, A3, and so on, have forwarding-class and priority associations.
QPPB and multiple paths to a destination
When ECMP is enabled, some routes may have multiple equal-cost next-hops in the forwarding table. When an IP packet matches such a route, the next-hop selection is typically based on a hash algorithm that tries to load balance traffic across all the next-hops while keeping all packets of a flow on the same path. The QPPB configuration model described in Associating an FC and priority with a route allows different QoS information to be associated with the different ECMP next-hops of a route. The forwarding-class and priority of a packet matching an ECMP route is based on the next-hop used to forward the packet.
When Edge PIC [1] is enabled, some BGP routes may have a backup next-hop in the forwarding table, as well as the one or more primary next-hops representing the equal-cost best paths allowed by the ECMP/multipath configuration. When an IP packet matches such a route, a reachable primary next-hop is selected (based on the hash result) but if all the primary next-hops are unreachable, the backup next-hop is used. The QPPB configuration model described in Associating an FC and priority with a route allows the forwarding-class and priority associated with the backup path to be different from the QoS characteristics of the equal-cost best paths. The forwarding class and priority of a packet forwarded on the backup path is based on the FC and priority of the backup route.
QPPB and policy-based routing
When an IPv4 or IPv6 packet with destination address arrives on an interface with both QPPB and policy-based-routing enabled:
There is no QPPB classification if the IP filter action redirects the packet to a directly connected interface, even if the destination address is matched by a route with a forwarding-class and priority.
QPPB classification is based on the forwarding-class and priority of the route matching IP address Y if the IP filter action redirects the packet to the indirect next-hop IP address Y, even if the destination address is matched by a route with a forwarding-class and priority.
QPPB and GRT lookup
Source-address based QPPB is not supported on any SAP or spoke SDP interface of a VPRN configured with the grt-lookup command.
QPPB interaction with SAP ingress QoS policy
When QPPB is enabled on a SAP IP interface, the forwarding class of a packet may change from fc1 (the original FC determined by the SAP ingress QoS policy) to fc2, the new FC determined by QPPB. In the ingress data path, SAP ingress QoS policies are applied in the first P chip and route lookup/QPPB occurs in the second P chip. This has the following implications:
-
Ingress remarking (based on profile state) is always based on the original FC (fc1) and sub-class (if defined).
-
The profile state of a SAP ingress packet that matches a QPPB route depends on the configuration of fc2 only. If the de-1-out-profile flag is enabled in fc2, and fc2 is not mapped to a priority mode queue, the packet is marked out of profile if its DE bit = 1. If the profile state of fc2 is explicitly configured (in or out) and fc2 is not mapped to a priority mode queue, the packet is assigned this profile state. In both cases, there is no consideration of whether fc1 was mapped to a priority mode queue.
-
The priority of a SAP ingress packet that matches a QPPB route depends on several factors. If the de-1-out-profile flag is enabled in fc2 and the DE bit is set in the packet, priority is low regardless of the QPPB priority or fc2 mapping to profile mode queue, priority mode queue, or policer. If fc2 is associated with a profile mode queue, the packet priority is based on the explicitly configured profile state of fc2 (in profile = high, out profile = low, undefined = high), regardless of the QPPB priority or fc1 configuration. If fc2 is associated with a priority mode queue or policer, the packet priority is based on QPPB (unless DE=1). If no priority information is associated with the route, the packet priority is based on the configuration of fc1. If fc1 mapped to a priority mode queue, the priority is based on DSCP/IP prec/802.1p. If fc1 mapped to a profile mode queue, the priority is based on the profile state of fc1.
QPPB interactions with SAP ingress QoS summarizes these interactions.
Original FC object mapping | New FC object mapping | Profile | Priority (drop preference) | DE=1 override | In/out of profile marking |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Profile mode queue |
Profile mode queue |
From new base FC unless overridden by DE=1 |
From QPPB, unless packet is marked in or out of profile in which case follows profile Default: high priority |
From new base FC |
From original FC and sub-class |
Priority mode queue |
Priority mode queue |
Ignored |
If DE=1 override then low otherwise from QPPB, if no DEI or QPPB overrides then from original dot1p/exp/DSCP mapping or policy default |
From new base FC |
From original FC and sub-class |
Policer |
Policer |
From new base FC unless overridden by DE=1 |
If DE=1 override then low otherwise from QPPB, if no DEI or QPPB overrides then from original dot1p/exp/DSCP mapping or policy default |
From new base FC |
From original FC and sub-class |
Priority mode queue |
Policer |
From new base FC unless overridden by DE=1 |
If DE=1 override then low otherwise from QPPB, if no DEI or QPPB overrides then from original dot1p/exp/DSCP mapping or policy default |
From new base FC |
From original FC and sub-class |
Policer |
Priority mode queue |
Ignored |
If DE=1 override then low otherwise from QPPB, if no DEI or QPPB overrides then from original dot1p/exp/DSCP mapping or policy default |
From new base FC |
From original FC and sub-class |
Profile mode queue |
Priority mode queue |
Ignored |
If DE=1 override then low otherwise from QPPB, if no DEI or QPPB overrides then follows original FC’s profile mode rules |
From new base FC |
From original FC and sub-class |
Priority mode queue |
Profile mode queue |
From new base FC unless overridden by DE=1 |
From QPPB, unless packet is marked in or out of profile in which case follows profile Default: high priority |
From new base FC |
From original FC and sub-class |
Profile mode queue |
Policer |
From new base FC unless overridden by DE=1 |
If DE=1 override then low otherwise from QPPB, if no DEI or QPPB overrides then follows original FC’s profile mode rules |
From new base FC |
From original FC and sub-class |
Policer |
Profile mode queue |
From new base FC unless overridden by DE=1 |
From QPPB, unless packet is marked in or out of profile in which case follows profile Default: high priority |
From new base FC |
From original FC and sub-class |
Configuring link delay
The delay represents the unidirectional link delay from the local router to the remote router (that is, the forward-path latency). The interface delay is a link property and is typically calculated as the combination of speed of light versus fiber length versus fiber composition. Typically, these delay components are not subject to sudden change in a network. If a change occurs, it may be caused by fiber cuts (such as light out), or Layer 1 reroute events.
If delay is configured for all links in the network, the attribute can be used as a feasible metric for SR flex-algo applications.
The static delay represents a forward-path metric, in microseconds, between two routers. It is not possible to configure a delay on a loopback or system interface; the delay IGP extension TLVs (specified in RFC 8570) are not defined for stub links. The delay is encoded in IGP application-specific attributes (for example, for IS-IS, see draft-ietf-isis-te-app-14.txt). The delay can be configured upon other interface links.
The default setting is no delay, which means that IGP (for example, IS-IS) does not add a link delay metric TLV. The lack of this TLV in flex-algo causes the link with the no delay TLV setting to be pruned from the topology.
The following example shows the configuration of link delay.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
interface interface-name {
if-attribute {
delay {
static microseconds
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
#--------------------------------------------------
echo "IP Configuration"
#--------------------------------------------------
interface "interface-name"
if-attribute
delay
static microseconds
exit
exit
no shutdown
exit
The static delay can be configured within the range 1 to 16777214 microseconds.
Router ID
The router ID, a 32-bit number, uniquely identifies the router within an autonomous system (AS) (see Autonomous systems). In protocols such as OSPF, routing information is exchanged between areas—groups of networks that share routing information. It can be set to be the same as the loopback address. The router ID is used by both OSPF and BGP routing protocols in the routing table manager instance.
There are several ways to obtain the router ID. On each router, the router ID can be obtained in the following ways.
-
Define the router ID. Use the following command to define the value that becomes the router ID.
configure router
Configure the system interface with an IP address. If the router ID is not manually configured in the configure router context, the system interface acts as the router ID. Use the following command to configure the system interface with an IP address.
configure router interface
If neither the system interface nor router ID are implicitly specified, the router ID is inherited from the last four bytes of the MAC address.
The router can be obtained from the protocol level; for example, BGP.
Autonomous systems
Networks can be grouped into areas. An area is a collection of network segments within an autonomous system (AS) that have been administratively assigned to the same group. An area’s topology is concealed from the rest of the AS, which results in a significant reduction in routing traffic.
Routing in the AS takes place on two levels, depending on whether the source and destination of a packet reside in the same area (intra-area routing) or different areas (inter-area routing). In intra-area routing, the packet is routed solely on information obtained within the area; no routing information obtained from outside the area can be used. This protects intra-area routing from the injection of bad routing information.
Routers that belong to more than one area are called area border routers. All routers in an AS do not have an identical topological database. An area border router has a separate topological database for each area it is connected to. Two routers, which are not area border routers, belonging to the same area, have identical area topological databases.
Autonomous systems share routing information, such as routes to each destination and information about the route or AS path, with other ASes using BGP. Routing tables contain lists of next hops, reachable addresses, and associated path cost metrics to each router. BGP uses the information and path attributes to compile a network topology.
Confederations
Configuring confederations is optional and should only be implemented to reduce the interior border gateway protocol (IBGP) mesh inside an AS. An AS can be logically divided into smaller groupings called sub-confederations and then assigned a confederation ID (similar to an autonomous system number). Each sub-confederation has fully meshed IBGP and connections to other ASs outside of the confederation.
The sub-confederations have EBGP-type peers to other sub-confederations within the confederation. They exchange routing information as if they were using IBGP. Command options such as next hop, metric, and local preference are preserved. The confederation appears and behaves like a single AS.
Confederations have the following characteristics:
A large AS can be sub-divided into sub-confederations.
Routing within each sub-confederation is accomplished via IBGP.
EBGP is used to communicate between sub-confederations.
BGP speakers within a sub-confederation must be fully meshed.
Each sub-confederation (member) of the confederation has a different AS number. The AS numbers used are typically in the private AS range of 64512 to 65535.
To migrate from a non-confederation configuration to a confederation configuration requires a major topology change and configuration modifications on each participating router. Setting BGP policies to select an optimal path through a confederation requires other BGP modifications.
There are no default confederations. Router confederations must be explicitly created. Confederation configuration shows an example of a confederation configuration.
Proxy ARP
Proxy ARP is the technique in which a router answers ARP requests intended for another node. The router appears to be present on the same network as the ‟real” node that is the target of the ARP and takes responsibility for routing packets to the ‟real” destination. Proxy ARP can help nodes on a subnet reach remote subnets without configuring routing or a default gateway.
Typical routers only support proxy ARP for directly attached networks; the router is targeted to support proxy ARP for all known networks in the routing instance where the virtual interface proxy ARP is configured.
To support DSLAM and other edge-like environments, proxy ARP supports policies that allow the provider to configure prefix lists that determine for which target networks proxy ARP is attempted and prefix lists that determine for which source hosts proxy ARP is attempted.
Also, the proxy ARP implementation supports the ability to respond for other hosts within the local subnet domain. This is needed in environments such as DSL where multiple hosts are in the same subnet but cannot reach each other directly.
Static ARP is used when a Nokia router needs to know about a device on an interface that cannot or does not respond to ARP requests. The configuration can state that, if it has a packet with a specific IP address, to send it to the corresponding ARP address. Use proxy ARP so the router responds to ARP requests on behalf of another device.
Exporting an inactive BGP route from a VPRN
Use the following command to provide an IP VPN command option that allows the best BGP route learned by a VPRN to be exported as a VPN-IP route even when that BGP route is inactive because of the presence of a more preferred BGP-VPN route from another PE.
configure service vprn export-inactive-bgp
This ‟best-external” type of route advertisement is useful in active or standby multi-homing scenarios because it can ensure that all PEs have knowledge of the backup path provided by the standby PE.
DHCP relay
See the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, and VSR Triple Play Service Delivery Architecture Guide for information about DHCP relay and support, as well as configuration examples.
Internet protocol versions
The -SR OS implements IP routing functionality, providing support for IP version 4 (IPv4) and IP version 6 (IPv6). IP version 6 (RFC 1883, Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6)) is a version of the Internet Protocol designed as a successor to IP version 4 (IPv4) (RFC-791, Internet Protocol). The changes from IPv4 to IPv6 affect the following categories:
expanded addressing capabilities
IPv6 increases the IP address size from 32 bits (IPv4) to 128 bits, to support more levels of addressing hierarchy, a much greater number of addressable nodes, and simpler auto-configuration of addresses. The scalability of multicast routing is improved by adding a scope field to multicast addresses. Also, a type of address called an anycast address is defined that is used to send a packet to any one of a group of nodes.
header format simplification
Some IPv4 header fields have been dropped or made optional to reduce the common-case processing cost of packet handling and to limit the bandwidth cost of the IPv6 header.
improved support for extensions and options
Changes in the way IP header options are encoded allows for more efficient forwarding, less stringent limits on the length of options, and greater flexibility for introducing options in the future.
flow labeling capability
The capability to enable the labeling of packets belonging to traffic flows for which the sender requests special handling, such as non-default quality of service or ‟real-time” service was added in IPv6.
authentication and privacy capabilities
Extensions to support authentication, data integrity, and (optional) data confidentiality are specified for IPv6.
Field | Description |
---|---|
Version |
4-bit Internet Protocol version number = 6 |
Prio. |
4-bit priority value |
Flow Label |
24-bit flow label |
Payload Length |
16-bit unsigned integer; the length of payload, for example, the rest of the packet following the IPv6 header, in octets; if the value is zero, the payload length is carried in a jumbo payload hop-by-hop option |
Next Header |
8-bit selector; identifies the type of header immediately following the IPv6 header; this field uses the same values as the IPv4 protocol field |
Hop Limit |
8-bit unsigned integer; decremented by 1 by each node that forwards the packet; the packet is discarded if the hop limit is decremented to zero |
Source Address |
128-bit address of the originator of the packet. |
Destination Address |
128-bit address of the intended recipient of the packet (possibly not the ultimate recipient if a routing header is present) |
IPv6 address format
IPv6 uses a 128-bit address, as opposed to the IPv4 32-bit address. Unlike IPv4 addresses, which use the dotted-decimal format, with each octet assigned a decimal value from 0 to 255, IPv6 addresses use the colon-hexadecimal format X:X:X:X:X:X:X:X, where each X is a 16-bit section of the 128-bit address. For example:
2001:0db8:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000
Leading zeros must be omitted from each block in the address. A series of zeros can be replaced with a double colon. For example:
2001:db8::
The double colon can only be used one time in an address.
The IPv6 prefix is the part of the IPv6 address that represents the network identifier, which appears at the beginning of the address. The IPv6 prefix length, which begins with a forward slash (/), shows how many bits of the address make up the network identifier. For example, the address 2001:db8:8086:6502::1/64 means that the first 64 bits of the address represent the network identifier; the remaining 64 bits represent the node identifier.
IPv6 addresses and prefixes are displayed according to RFC 5952, A Recommendation for IPv6 Address Text Representation.
IPv6 applications
Examples of the IPv6 applications supported by the SR OS include:
IPv6 Internet exchange peering
IPv6 Internet exchange shows an IPv6 Internet exchange where multiple ISPs peer over native IPv6
IPv6 transit services
IPv6 transit services shows IPv6 transit services provided by an ISP.
IPv6 services to enterprise customers and home users
IPv6 services to enterprise customers and home users shows IPv6 services to enterprise and home broadband users.
-
IPv6 over IPv4 relay services
IPv6 over IPv4 tunnels are one of many IPv6 transition methods to support IPv6 in an environment where not only IPv4 exists but native IPv6 networks depend on IPv4 for greater IPv6 connectivity. Nokia routers support dynamic IPv6 over IPv4 tunneling. The IPv4 source and destination address are taken from configuration, the source address is the IPv4 system address and the IPv4 destination is the next hop from the configured IPv6 over IPv4 tunnel.
IPv6 over IPv4 is an automatic tunnel method that gives a prefix to the attached IPv6 network. IPv6 over IPv4 tunnels shows IPv6 over IPv4 tunneling to transition from IPv4 to IPv6.
DNS
The DNS client is extended to use IPv6 as transport and to handle the IPv6 address in the DNS AAA resource record from an IPv4 or IPv6 DNS server. An assigned name can be used instead of an IPv6 address because IPv6 addresses are more difficult to remember than IPv4 addresses.
DNS resolution using a VPRN
When using a management VPRN, to allow DNS resolution via VPRN, as an example, DNS for all packets—routed through the Global Routing Table or the VPRN—the user must enable a redirect VPRN configuration under the base DNS server.
Use the following command to enable the redirect VPRN configuration.
configure router dns redirect-vprn service
When the redirect-vprn configuration is enabled, all packets have their URLs resolved through the configured redirect-vprn service. Only a single redirect-vprn configuration is supported.
As a prerequisite for the DNS resolution through the VPRN, the VPRN DNS server must be configured with at least a primary-dns IP address (IPv4 or IPv6). If the VPRN DNS server is not configured, all packet resolution fails, even if the BOF DNS server is configured, because the redirect-vprn configuration forces all packets through the redirect-vprn service for resolution.
The redirect-vprn command is not available at bootup, because the configuration is not loaded yet. Until the redirect-vprn command is executed, all DNS resolution is possible only through the BOF DNS configuration. The redirect-vprn configuration becomes active at runtime, after the configuration file is loaded and the redirect-vprn command is executed.
If the redirect-vprn command is not configured, DNS resolution occurs as follows:
-
The global routing packets use the BOF DNS server.
-
The VPRN packets use the configured VPRN DNS server. If the VPRN DNS server is not configured, the resolution occurs through the BOF DNS server.
For information about management VPRNs, see Node Management Using VPRN in the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7950 XRS, and VSR Layer 3 Services Guide: IES and VPRN.
Secure Neighbor Discovery
Secure Neighbor Discovery (SeND) in conjunction with Cryptographically Generated Addresses (CGAs) allows users to secure IPv6 neighbor discovery between nodes on a common Layer 2 network segment.
When SeND is enabled on an interface, CGAs must be enabled and static GUA/LLA IPv6 addressing is not supported. In this case, the router generates a CGA from the configured prefix (GUA, LLA) and use that address for all communication. The router validates NS/ND messages from other nodes on the network segment, and only install them in the neighbor cache if they pass validation.
Several potential use-cases for SeND exist to secure the network from deliberate or accidental tampering during neighbor discovery, SeND can prevent hijacking of in-use IPv6 addressing or man-in-the-middle attacks, but also to validate whether a node is permitted to participate in neighbor discovery, or validate which routers are permitted to act as default gateways.
SeND affects the following areas of neighbor discovery:
Neighbor solicitation (solicited-node multicast address; target address)
Neighbor advertisement (solicited; unsolicited)
Router solicitation
Router advertisement
Redirect messages
When SeND is enabled on a node, basic neighbor discovery messaging is changed as shown in Neighbor discovery with and without SeND. In the example, PE-A needs to find the MAC address of PE-B.
PE-A sends an NS message to the solicited node multicast address for PE-B's address with the CGA option, RSA signature option, timestamp option, and nonce option.
PE-B processes the NS message and, because it is configured for SeND operation, processes the NS. PE-B validates the source address of the packet to ensure it is a valid CGA, then validate the cryptographic signature embedded in the NS message.
PE-B generates an NA message, which is sent back to PE-A with the solicited bit, router bit set. The source address is that of PE-B, while the destination address is that of PE-A from the NS message. The timestamp is generated from PE-B, while the nonce is copied from PE-A's NS message.
PE-A receives the NA and completes similar checks as PE-B did.
If all steps process correctly, both nodes install each other’s addresses into their neighbor cache database.
SeND persistent CGAs
Persistent CGAs is a feature of SeND.
Previously, all generated CGAs on SeND-enabled interfaces remained unchanged after a CPM switchover, but after a reboot from a saved configuration file, all CGAs were regenerated.
To keep the same CGAs after a reboot from a saved configuration file:
Save the RSA key pair used for SeND.
Save the modifiers used during the CGA generation.
To make the CGAs persistent:
Import an online or offline generated RSA key pair for SeND.
Ensure that the CompactFlash (CF) files containing an RSA key pair that is used for SeND, are synchronized to the standby CPM by making use of the HA infrastructure used for certificates.
Ensure that the configuration file is saved when one or more CGAs are generated.
Persistent RSA key pair
The RSA key pair is stored in a file on the CF.
Generate an RSA key pair
In the classic CLI, use the following command to generate an RSA key pair.
admin certificate gen-keypair type rsa size
The following example shows the generation of an RSA key pair. This generates a Distinguished Encoding Rules (DER) formatted file.
classic CLI
*A:node-2# admin certificate gen-keypair cf1:\myDir\myRsaKeyPair type rsa size 1024
Import an online or offline generated RSA key pair
In the classic CLI, use the following command to import a generated RSA key pair.
admin certificate secure-nd-import
The following example shows the import of a generated RSA key pair.
classic CLI
*A:node-2# admin certificate secure-nd-import input cf1:\myDir\myRsaKeyPair output format der
Take the following into consideration when you configure the RSA key pairs:
-
Because SeND only uses RSA key pairs, the command is refused if the imported key type is not RSA.
-
Because SeND only supports key size 1024, the command is refused if the imported key size is not 1024.
-
The password has to be specified when an offline generated file in pkcs12 format has to be imported.
-
See the "RSA key pair rollover mechanism" section that follows for more information about key-rollover.
-
In the classic CLI, use the following command to create the file cfx:\system-pki\secureNdKey (fixed directory and filename) and save the imported key in that file in encrypted per format same.
admin certificate import
-
The RSA key pair is uploaded in the memory of SeND.
RSA key pair rollover mechanism
In the classic CLI, use the following command (described in the Import an online or offline generated RSA key pair section) to trigger a key rollover.
admin certificate secure-nd-import
The following example shows the triggering of a key rollover.
classic CLI
*A:node-2# admin certificate secure-nd-import cf1:\myDir\myOtherRsaKeyPair format der key-
rollover
Take the following into consideration when you use the rollover mechanism:
-
If CGAs exist that are generated based on an autogenerated or previously imported RSA key pair and the key-rollover keyword is not specified, the secure-nd-import command is refused.
-
If a secure-nd-import with key-rollover is requested while a previous key rollover is still being handled, the new command is refused.
-
If the secure-nd-import command is accepted, the imported RSA key pair is written to the file cfx:\system-pki\secureNdKey and loaded to SeND. Existing CGAs, if any, are regenerated.
-
While handling a key rollover, SeND keeps track of which interface uses which RSA key pair. Temporarily, SeND can have two RSA key pairs in use. At all times, only the latest RSA key pair is stored in the file cfx:\system-pki\secureNdKey. When the rollover is finished, the RSA key pair that is no longer referred to, is deleted from SeND’s memory.
Autogeneration of RSA key pair
The first time an interface becomes SeND enabled, SeND needs an RSA key pair to generate or check a modifier and to generate a CGA.
If the user did not import an RSA key pair for SeND, an autogenerated RSA key pair are used as a fallback.
The autogenerated RSA key pair is synchronized to the standby CPM, but is not written to the CF. Therefore, all CGAs generated via an autogenerated RSA key pair are not persistent. A warning is raised whenever a non-persistent CGA is generated.
In the classic CLI, the admin certificate secure-nd-import command without the key-rollover keyword is refused if CGAs exist that made use of the autogenerated RSA key pair. Specifying the key-rollover keyword results in regeneration of the CGAs.
See the section Making non-persistent CGAs persistent for more information about the procedure to make non-persistent CGAs persistent.
HA
For the synchronization of the RSA key pair file in cfx:\system-pki\ used by SeND, use the following commands for manual and automatic certificate synchronization:
- MD-CLIUse the following command to manually synchronize:
admin redundancy synchronize certificate
Use the following command to automatically synchronize:configure redundancy cert-sync
- classic CLIUse the following command to manually synchronize:
admin redundancy synchronize cert
Use the following command to automatically synchronize:configure redundancy cert-sync
SeND also synchronizes the RSA key pair to the standby CPM.
Persistent CGA modifier
The modifier used during the CGA generation is saved in the configuration file. The CGA itself is not stored.
Based on the stored modifier and RSA key pair, the same CGA can be regenerated.
The modifier is needed to be sent out in ND messages.
By storing the modifier in the configuration file, the user can also configure an offline generated modifier (possibly with a security parameter > 1).
Configure a SeND interface without modifiers (classic CLI)
A:node-2>config>router# info
#--------------------------------------------------
"IP Configuration"
#--------------------------------------------------
interface "itf1"
address 10.10.10.1/24
port 1/1/1
ipv6
secure-nd
no shutdown
A modifier is generated based on the actual RSA key pair (that is, imported or autogenerated). The offline modifier is used to generate a link-local CGA. The modifier is used to generate the global CGA.
exit
address 2000:1::/64
The modifier is saved in the interface configuration file.
Configure a SeND interface with modifiers (classic CLI)
*A:node-2>config>router# info
...
#--------------------------------------------------
echo "IP Configuration"
#--------------------------------------------------
interface "itf2"
address 10.10.10.2/24
port 1/1/2
ipv6
secure-nd
link-local-modifier 0xABCD
...
The offline modifier is used to generate the link-local CGA.
no shutdown
exit
address 3000:1::/64 modifier
A modifier is generated based on the actual RSA key pair. The modifier is used to generate the global CGA.
The modifier is stored in the interface configuration file.
Stored modifier (classic CLI)
address 3000:2::/64 modifier 0xABCD
The same offline generated modifier as the preceding link-local address is used for the generation of a global address.
Modifier for generation of a global address (classic CLI)
address 3000:3::/64 modifier 0xABCD
Another offline generated modifier (*) is used for the generation of a global address.
For an offline generated modifier, a check is performed to see if it is generated with the actual RSA key pair and the security parameter applicable for the interface. If this check fails, the command is refused, unless the command is triggered in the context of an exec of a config file. In that case, the modifier is replaced by a new one that is generated based on the actual RSA key pair.
Making non-persistent CGAs persistent
CGAs can be non-persistent because:
-
The user forgot to configure an RSA key pair for SeND, therefore, the CGAs were generated based on an auto-generated RSA key pair.
-
The user forgot to synchronize an RSA key pair file to the stand-by CPM and a switchover happens.
-
The CGAs were generated by a software version not having persistent CGAs (such as, ISSU).
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The system was booted from a configuration file generated by a software version not having persistent CGAs.
Key rollover
You can import a new RSA key pair for SeND with the key-rollover keyword. This results in the regeneration of all CGAs on all interfaces.
Exporting the SeND RSA key pair
Another method that does not result in the regeneration of the CGAs is to export the RSA key pair that is currently in use by SeND to the system-pki directory via an admin command.
In the classic CLI, use the following command to export the RSA key pair in use by SeND to the system-pki directory.
admin certificate secure-nd-import
This command writes the RSA key pair to the file cfx:\system-pki\secureNdKey in encrypted der format.
Booting from a saved configuration file
Configuration saved by a software version with persistent CGAs
The file cfx:\system-pki\secureNdKey should exist. This file is automatically uploaded by SeND during initialization.
The configuration file should contain a modifier for each address on a SeND enabled interface.
Modifiers in the configuration file are checked against the current RSA key pair. If the check fails, a new modifier and CGA is generated, and a warning is raised that a new CGA is generated.
If a modifier is missing from the configuration file for an IPv6 /64 prefix on a SeND enabled interface, a new modifier and CGA is generated based on the active RSA key pair.
Configuration saved by a software version having non-persistent CGAs
The file cfx:\system-pki\secureNdKey does not exist nor does the configuration file contain a modifier for any of the IPv6 /64 prefixes on secure-nd enabled interfaces.
New CGAs have to be generated (from the CLI context). Follow one of the procedures described in section Making non-persistent CGAs persistent to make the non-persistent CGA's persistent.
IPv6 provider edge over MPLS (6PE)
6PE allows IPv6 domains to communicate with each other over an IPv4 MPLS core network. Because forwarding is based on MPLS labels, backbone infrastructure upgrades and core router re-configuration is not required in this architecture. 6PE is a cost-effective solution for IPv6 deployment.
6PE control plane support
The 6PE MP-BGP routers support:
IPv4 and IPv6 dual-stack
MP-BGP to exchange IPv6 reachability information:
The 6PE routers exchange IPv6 reachability information using MP-BGP (AFI 2, SAFI 4).
An IPv4 address of the 6PE router is encoded as an IPv4-mapped IPv6 address in the BGP next-hop field. This is usually the IPv4 system address.
The 6PE router binds MPLS labels to the IPv6 prefixes it advertises. SR OS routers advertise the IPv6 explicit null (value 2) in advertised 6PE routes but accept any arbitrary label from peers.
-
The most preferred tunnel to the BGP next-hop allowed by the 6PE resolution filter is used to tunnel the traffic to the remote 6PE router. Use the following command to configure the 6PE resolution filter.
configure router bgp next-hop-resolution labeled-routes transport-tunnel family resolution-filter
6PE data plane support
The ingress 6PE router can push two or more MPLS labels to send the packets to the egress 6PE router. The top labels are associated with resolving the transport tunnels. The bottom label is advertised in MP-BGP by the remote 6PE router. Typically, the IPv6 explicit null (value 2) label is used, but any arbitrary value can be received when the remote 6PE router is not an SR OS router.
The egress 6PE router pops the top transport labels. When the IPv6 explicit null label is exposed, the egress 6PE router knows that an IPv6 packet is encapsulated. It pops the IPv6 explicit null label and performs an IPv6 route lookup to find the next hop for the IPv6 packet.
Static route resolution using tunnels
Use the commands in the following context to forward packets of a static route to an indirect next-hop over a tunnel programmed in TTM:
-
MD-CLI
configure router static-routes route indirect tunnel-next-hop
In the MD-CLI, if the tunnel-next-hop context is configured and resolution is set to none, the binding to the tunnel is removed and resolution resumes in RTM to IP next-hops.
-
classic CLI
configure router static-route-entry indirect tunnel-next-hop
In the classic CLI, if the tunnel-next-hop context is configured and resolution is set to disabled, the binding to the tunnel is removed and resolution resumes in RTM to IP next-hops.
If the resolution is set to any, any supported tunnel type in the static route context is selected following TTM preference.
The following tunnel types are supported in a static route context: LDP, RSVP-TE, Segment Routing (SR) Shortest Path, and Segment Routing Traffic Engineering (SR-TE):
-
LDP
The ldp command option instructs the code to search for an LDP LSP with a FEC prefix corresponding to the address of the indirect next-hop. Both LDP IPv4 FEC and LDP IPv6 FEC can be used as the tunnel next-hop. However, only an indirect next-hop of the same family (IPv4 or IPv6) as the prefix of the route can use an LDP FEC as the tunnel next-hop. In other words, an IPv4 (IPv6) prefix can only be resolved to an LDP IPv4 (IPv6) FEC.
-
RSVP-TE
The rsvp-te command option instructs the code to search for the set of lowest metric RSVP-TE LSPs to the address of the indirect next-hop. The LSP metric is provided by MPLS in the tunnel table. The static route treats a set of RSVP-TE LSPs with the same lowest metric as an ECMP set.
The user has the option of configuring a list of RSVP-TE LSP names to be used exclusively instead of searching in the tunnel table. In that case, all LSPs must have the same LSP metric in order for the static route to use them as an ECMP set. Otherwise, only the LSPs with the lowest common metric value are selected.
A P2P auto-lsp that is instantiated via an LSP template can be selected in TTM when resolution is set to any. However, it is not recommended to configure an auto-lsp name explicitly under the rsvp-te node as the auto-generated name can change if the node reboots, which blackholes the traffic of the static route.
-
SR shortest path
When the sr-isis or sr-ospf command options are enabled, an SR tunnel to the indirect next-hop is selected in the TTM from the lowest preference IS-IS or OSPF instance, and if many instances have the same lowest preference, it is selected from the lowest numbered IS-IS or OSPF instance. Both SR-ISIS IPv4 and SR-ISIS IPv6 tunnels can be used as tunnel next-hops. However, only an indirect next-hop of the same family (IPv4 or IPv6) as the prefix of the route can use an SR-ISIS tunnel as a tunnel next-hop. In other words, an IPv4 (IPv6) prefix can only be resolved to a SR-ISIS IPv4 (IPv6).
-
SR-TE
The sr-te command option instructs the code to search for the set of lowest metric SR-TE LSPs to the address of the indirect next-hop. The LSP metric is provided by MPLS in the tunnel table. The static route treats a set of SR-TE LSPs with the same lowest metric as an ECMP set.
The user has the option of configuring a list of SR-TE LSP names to be used exclusively instead of searching in the tunnel table. In that case, all LSPs must have the same LSP metric in order for the static route to use them as an ECMP set. Otherwise, only the LSPs with the lowest common metric value are selected.
Realize that the resolution filter, under static-route entry, does not validate the provided lsp-name type of the LSP against the requested filter context protocol type.
If one or more explicit tunnel types are specified using the resolution-filter command option, only these tunnel types are selected again following the TTM preference.
The user must set resolution to filter to activate the list of tunnel-types configured under resolution-filter.
If disallow-igp is enabled, the static route is not activated using IP next-hops in RTM if no tunnel next-hops are found in TTM.
Static route ECMP support
The following is the ECMP behavior of a static route:
-
ECMP is supported when resolving in RTM multiple static routes of the same prefix with multiple user-entered indirect IP next-hops. The system picks as many direct next-hops as available in RTM beginning from the first indirect next-hop and up to the value of the ecmp command option in the system.
-
ECMP is also supported when resolving in TTM a static route to a single indirect next-hop using a LDP tunnel when LDP has multiple direct next-hops.
-
ECMP is supported when resolving in TTM a static route to a single indirect next-hop using a RSVP-TE tunnel type when there is more than one RSVP LSP with the same lowest metric to the indirect next-hop.
-
ECMP is supported when resolving in TTM a static route to a single indirect next-hop using a list of user-configured RSVP-TE LSP names when these LSPs have the same metric to the indirect next-hop.
-
ECMP is supported when resolving in TTM multiple static routes of the same prefix with multiple user-entered indirect next-hops, each binding to a tunnel type. The system picks as many tunnel next-hops as available in TTM beginning from the first indirect next-hop and up to the value of the ecmp command option in the system. The spraying of flow packets is performed over the entire set of resolved next-hops that correspond to the selected indirect next-hops.
-
ECMP is supported when resolving concurrently in RTM and TTM multiple static routes of the same prefix with multiple user-entered indirect tunnel next-hops. There is no support for mixing IP and tunnel next-hops for the same prefix using different indirect next-hops. Tunnel next-hops are preferred over IP next-hops.
Static route using flexible algorithms tunnels
When configuring a static route toward an indirect next hop, the path selection based upon the constraints of a particular Flex-Algorithm should be considered. In such a use case, it is necessary to steer traffic into a corresponding flexible algorithm segment routing tunnel. This can be achieved with the tunnel-next-hop flex-algo command. This uses the specified flexible algorithm to construct a tunnel toward the indirect static-route next-hop.
The use of this command assumes that the router is participating in the flexible algorithm. This command instructs the router to lookup the indirect next-hop using flexible algorithm tunnels. The static route is not activated if a flexible algorithm-aware tunnel does not exist in the indirect next-hop.
When a router receives an IP packet, the static-route entry may steer toward the indirect next-hop using a flexible algorithm-aware SR tunnel, provided that such a tunnel exists. If the tunnel does not exist, the route is not active and the received IP packet is dropped, as long as no longest prefix match (LPM) route exists.
When the flex-algo command is configured, the resolution filter can only use matching flexible algorithm-aware SR tunnels created by flex-algo aware routing protocols (for example, SR IS-IS). If such an entry does not exist in the tunnel-table, the static-route entry does not become active.
Use the commands in the following context to configure static routes using flexible algorithms:
-
MD-CLI
configure router static-routes route indirect tunnel-next-hop flex-algo
-
classic CLI
configure router static-route-entry indirect tunnel-next-hop
Weighted load balancing over MPLS LSP
The weighted load-balanced, or weighted-ecmp, feature sprays packets of IGP, BGP, and static route prefixes, resolved to a set of ECMP tunnel next hops, proportionally to the weights configured for each MPLS LSP in the ECMP set.
Weighted load balancing is supported in the following forwarding contexts:
-
IGP prefix resolved to IGP shortcuts in RTM (igp-shortcut or advertise-tunnel-link enabled in the IGP instance)
-
BGP prefix with the BGP next hop resolved to IGP shortcuts in RTM
-
Static route prefix resolved to an indirect next hop, which is resolved to a set of equal-metric MPLS LSPs in TTM. The user can allow automatic selection or specify the names of the equal-metric MPLS LSPs in TTM to be used in the ECMP set.
-
Static route prefix resolved to an indirect next hop, which is resolved to IGP shortcuts in RTM
-
BGP prefix with a BGP next hop resolved to a static route, which resolves to a set of tunnel next hops toward an indirect next hop in RTM or TTM
-
BGP prefix resolving to another BGP prefix, whose next hop is resolved to a set of ECMP tunnel next hops with a static route in RTM or TTM or to IGP shortcuts in RTM
-
IPv4 BGP-labeled unicast routes whose next hop resolves to a set of tunnels in TTM
-
BGP-labeled IPv6 packets (6PE) resolving in TTM
This feature does not modify the route calculation: the same set of ECMP next hops is computed for a prefix. The feature also does not change the hash routine; only the spraying of the flows over the tunnel next hops is modified to reflect the normalized weight of each tunnel next hop.
Static route implementation supports ECMP over a set of equal-cost MPLS LSPs. The user can allow automatic selection or specify the names of the equal-metric MPLS LSPs in TTM to be used in the ECMP set. For more information, see Static route resolution using tunnels.
Weighted load balancing can be applied whether a route resolves directly over an ECMP set of RSVP or SR-TE LSPs with a configured load balancing weight, or where resolution occurs via a BGP tunnel which in turn uses an ECMP set of RSVP or SR-TE LSPs with a configured load balancing weight.
Weighted load balancing IGP, BGP, and static route prefix packets over IGP shortcut
Feature configuration
The user must have the IGP shortcut or forwarding adjacency feature enabled in one or more IGP instances. Use the commands in the following contexts to configure the IGP shortcut or forwarding adjacency features:
-
IS-IS
configure router isis igp-shortcut configure router isis advertise-tunnel-link
-
OSPF
configure router ospf igp-shortcut configure router ospf advertise-tunnel-link
Use the following command to disable specific MPLS LSPs from being used in IGP shortcut or forwarding adjacency:
-
MD-CLI
configure router mpls lsp igp-shortcut admin-state disable
-
classic CLI
configure router mpls lsp no igp-shortcut
Use the following command to enable the weighted load balancing feature.
configure router weighted-ecmp
When this command is enabled, packets of IGP, BGP, and static route prefixes resolved to a set of ECMP tunnel next-hops are sprayed proportionally to the weights configured for each MPLS LSP in the ECMP set.
Use the following command to configure a weight for each LSP.
configure router mpls lsp load-balancing-weight weight
Use the following command to configure the weight for an auto-LSP signaled via an LSP template.
configure router mpls lsp-template load-balancing-weight weight
There is no default weight value for an LSP. If any LSP in the ECMP set of a prefix does not have a weight configured, the regular ECMP spraying for the prefix is performed. The user-entered weight is normalized to the closest integer value that represents the number of entries in the ingress prefix hash table assigned to the LSP for the purpose of spraying packets of all prefixes resolved to this LSP. The higher the normalized weight, the more entries are assigned to the LSP, and the more packets are sent to this LSP.
Feature behavior
This section describes the behavior of the weighted load-balancing feature for IGP, BGP, and static route prefixes resolved in RTM to IGP shortcuts.
When an IGP, BGP, or a static route prefix is resolved in RTM to a set of ECMP tunnel next-hops of type RSVP-TE, and the router level weighted-ecmp command option is enabled, the ingress hash table for the next-hop selection is populated with a number of tunnel next-hop entries for each LSP equal to the normalized LSP weight value. All prefixes resolving to the same set of ECMP tunnel next-hops use the same table.
This feature performs the following:
-
MPLS populates the user-configured LSP weight in TTM. When the weighted-ecmp global command is enabled, and any LSP in the ECMP set of a prefix does not have a weight configured, the regular ECMP spraying for the prefix is performed.
-
IGP computes the normalized weight for each prefix tunnel next-hop. The minimum value of the normalized weight is 1 and the maximum is 64. IGP updates the route in RTM with the set of tunnel next-hops and normalized weights. RTM downloads the information to IOM for inclusion in the FIB.
-
The normalized weights of route tunnel next-hops are updated in the following cases:
-
When the main SPF is run following a trigger, for example, network failure, and updates a route with a modified set of tunnel next-hops. This triggers a route re-download to the IOM and all users of RTM are notified.
-
The user adds or changes the weight of one or more LSPs. In this case, RTM performs a route download to IOM, but other users of RTM are not notified because the route resolution did not change.
-
-
The weighted load balancing feature is only applied to a prefix when all the tunnel next-hops in the ECMP set have the same endpoint. If an IGP prefix resolves in RTM to a set of ECMP tunnel next-hops that do not terminate on the same endpoint, the regular ECMP spraying is performed. If BGP performs BGP ECMP to a set of BGP ECMP next-hops for a prefix (weighted-bgp-ecmp-prd), regular ECMP spraying is performed toward a BGP next-hop if the subset of its tunnel next-hops does not terminate on the same endpoint.
-
Regular ECMP spraying is also applied if a prefix is resolved in RTM to an ECMP set that consists of a mix of IP and tunnel next-hops.
-
This feature is not supported in the following contexts:
-
Packets of BGP prefix with the BGP next-hop resolved in TTM to RSVP LSP (BGP shortcut).
-
CPM generated packets, including OAM packets, which are looked-up in RTM and which are forwarded over tunnel next-hops. These are forwarded using either regular ECMP or by selecting one next-hop from the set.
-
ECMP considerations
The weight assigned to an LSP affects only the forwarding decision, not the routing decision. It does not change the selection of the set of ECMP tunnel next-hops of a prefix when more next-hops exist than the value of the router ecmp command option. This selection continues to follow the algorithm used in the IGP shortcut feature.
After the set of tunnel next-hops is selected, the LSP weight is used to modulate the amount of packets forwarded over each next-hop.
Weighted load balancing static route packets over MPLS LSP
Feature configuration
The configuration of the resolution of a static route prefix to set of MPLS LSPs is described in Static route resolution using tunnels which also provides the selection rules among multiple LSP types: RSVP-TE, SR-TE, LDP, SR-ISIS, and SR-OSPF. A static route of a prefix can only be resolved to a set of tunnel next-hops of the same type though, for each indirect next-hop.
To perform ECMP over a set of configured MPLS LSPs, the user must enter two or more LSP names to be used as tunnel next-hops. If automatic selection is performed, ECMP is performed if two or more MPLS LSPs are in TTM to the indirect next-hop of the static route. However, all LSPs must have the same LSP metric; otherwise, only the tunnel next-hops with the same lowest metric are activated for the static route.
Use the following command to force the metric of an LSP to a constant value.
configure router mpls lsp metric
If the user enters, for the same static route, more LSP names with the same LSP metric than the value of the router level ecmp command option, only the first configured LSPs equal to the ecmp value are selected. The remaining tunnel next-hops for the route are not activated. When automatic MPLS LSP selection is performed in TTM, the lowest tunnel ID is used as a tie-breaker among the same lowest metric LSPs.
To perform weighted load-balancing over the set of MPLS LSPs, either when the LSP names are provided or when auto-selection in TTM is performed, the user must also enable the weighted ECMP globally like for static, IGP, and BGP prefixes resolving to IGP shortcuts.
Use the following command to enable weighted ECMP globally.
configure router weighted-ecmp
Feature behavior
The behavior of this feature in terms of RTM and IOM is exactly the same as in the case of BGP, IGP, and static route prefixes resolving to IGP shortcuts. See Feature behavior for more information. In this case, the static route module computes the normalized weight for each prefix tunnel next-hop of the static route indirect next-hop. The minimum value of the normalized weight is 1 and the maximum is 64. The static route module updates the route in RTM with the set of tunnel next-hops and normalized weights. RTM downloads the information to IOM for inclusion in the FIB.
If any LSP in the ECMP set of a prefix static route does not have a weight configured, the regular ECMP spraying for the prefix is performed.
ECMP is also supported when resolving in TTM the same static route with multiple user-entered indirect next-hops, each binding to the same or different tunnel types. The system picks as many tunnel next-hops as available in RTM, beginning from the first indirect next-hop and up to the value of the ecmp command option in the system. In this case, the weighted load-balancing is applied directly using the weights of the selected set of tunnel next-hops. If any LSP in the ECMP set of a prefix static route does not have a weight configured, or if any of the indirect next-hops binds to an LDP LSP, the regular ECMP spraying for the prefix is performed.
If the same prefix is resolved via both a static route and an IGP shortcut route, the RTM default protocol preference installs the static route only. Therefore, the set of ECMP tunnel next-hops and the weighted load balancing behavior are determined by the static route configuration and not by the IGP shortcut configuration.
Weighted load balancing for 6PE and BGP IPv4-labeled unicast routes
Use the following command to control the ECMP-like spraying for BGP-labeled IPv6 packets (6PE) and BGP-labeled IPv4 unicast routes resolving to tunnels in TTM, where the maximum number of ECMP router represents the maximum number of RSVP and SR-TE tunnels in the set representing equal-cost paths to the BGP next hop.
configure router ecmp
Use the following command to configure weighted ECMP behavior, where the load-balancing weight of the tunnel is considered in the packet spraying behavior.
configure router bgp next-hop-resolution weighted-ecmp
Weighted ECMP is disabled by default.
Strict weighted load-balancing
Strict weighted load-balancing is enabled by configuring weighted-ecmp strict in global routing mode. The strict enforcement for a load balancing weight is valid for both a BASE router instance and for a VPRN instance.
With strict enforcement, a weight must be configured on each interface within a wECMP interface bundle before the interface is taken into wECMP operation.
Without weighted-ecmp strict enforcement enabled, and if one or more interfaces within a wECMP interface bundle does not have a load-balancing-weight weight configured, then the wECMP load-balancing falls back to classic ECMP operation and equally sprays data-plane traffic across the available interfaces.
A special case of weighted-ecmp strict is when none of the available paths or next-hops have a load-balancing-weight value associated. Then, the load-balancing falls back to the classic ECMP.
weighted-ecmp strict is enabled in the router global context for IS-IS, OSPF, and OSPFv3. Other routing technologies follow classic weighted-ecmp operation.
Class-based forwarding of IPv4/IPv6 prefix over IGP IPv4 shortcut
This feature enables class-based forwarding (CBF) over IGP shortcuts. When the class-forwarding command is enabled, the following types of packets are forwarded based on their forwarding class:
packets of BGP prefixes
packets that are CPM-originated for the IPv4, IPv6, or both IPv4 and IPv6 families that have been enabled over IGP shortcuts using the igp-shortcut context in one or more IGP instances
The SR OS CBF implementation supports spraying of packets over a maximum of six forwarding sets of ECMP LSPs. The user must define a class-forwarding policy object in MPLS to configure the mapping of FCs to the forwarding sets. Then, the user assigns the CBF policy name and set ID to each MPLS LSP that is used in IGP shortcuts.
When a BGP IPv4 or IPv6 prefix is resolved, the FC of the packet, is used to look up the forwarding set ID. Then, a modulo operation is performed on the tunnel next-hops of this set ID only, to spray packets of this FC. The data path concurrently implements, CBF and ECMP within the tunnels of each set ID.
CPM-originated packets on the router, including control plane and OAM packets, are forwarded over a single LSP from the set of LSPs that the packet's FC is mapped to, as per the CBF configuration.
Feature configuration
Use the following command to configure CBF over IGP shortcuts.
configure router mpls class-forwarding-policy
All FCs are mapped to set 1 as soon as the policy is created. The user can make changes to the mapping of FCs as required. An FC, which is not added to the class-forwarding policy, is therefore always mapped to set 1. At most, an FC can be mapped to a single forwarding set. One or more FCs can map to the same set. Use the following command to configure the FC to a set other than set 1.
configure router class-forwarding-policy fc forwarding-set
The user can indicate the initial default set by including the default-set command option. Use the following command to configure the default-set command option.
configure router mpls class-forwarding-policy default-set
The default forwarding set is used to forward packets of any FC in cases where all LSPs of the forwarding set the FC maps to become operationally down. The router uses the user-configured default set as the initial default set. Otherwise, the router elects the lowest numbered set as the default forwarding set in a class-forwarding policy. When the last LSP in a default forwarding set goes into an operationally down state, the router designates the next lowest-numbered set as the new default forwarding set.
A mapping to a class-forwarding policy and set is added to the existing CBF configuration of an RSVP-TE or SR-TE LSP or to an LSP template. Use the following commands to perform this mapping function.
configure router mpls lsp class-forwarding forwarding-set policy set
configure router mpls lsp-template class-forwarding forwarding-set policy set
An MPLS LSP can map only to a single class-forwarding policy and forwarding set. Multiple LSPs can map to the same policy and set. If they form an ECMP set, from the IGP shortcut perspective, packets of the FCs mapped to this set are sprayed over these LSPs based on a modulo operation of the output of the hash routine on the packet's headers and the number of LSPs in the set.
Feature behavior
When a BGP IPv4 or IPv6 prefix is resolved to a BGP next-hop, consisting of up to 64 resolved next-hops (LSPs and IP links), the default behavior of the data path is to spray the packets over the entire ECMP set using a modulo operation of the number of resolved next-hops in the ECMP set and the output of the hash on the packet header fields.
Both the CBF feature in LDP-over-IGPv4 shortcuts and this CBF feature over IGP IPv4 shortcuts make use of the CBF class-forwarding policy. IGP always passes the CBF information populated by MPLS for each LSP used as a tunnel next-hop by an IGP prefix. The new CBF information is checked for consistency. If more than a single class-forwarding policy exists in the tunnel next-hops of a IGP prefix, IGP removes the new CBF information from all the corresponding tunnels and the behavior is as if there were no CBF info.
Use the following command to enable the CBF feature.
configure router class-forwarding
When the CBF feature is enabled, each application (BGP, CPM), when looking up a prefix in RTM, finds up to 64 IP and tunnel next-hops. This lookup is split in two subsets:
-
Subset 1— tunnel next-hops with new CBF information (FCs mapped to this LSP, default LSP (true/false), CBF Policy ID>0, Set ID>0). This information is usable by both LDP and other applications.
-
Subset 2— tunnel-next-hops with no CBF information and IP next-hops. Usable by all applications, except that LDP uses tunnel next-hops only.
The BGP application performs a lookup in RTM for a prefix matching each BGP next-hop of a prefix. The BGP application selects tunnels belonging to the class-forwarding sets in Subset 1 and for each BGP next-hop of a prefix. The remaining tunnels, with no CBF configuration and the IP next-hops, are still programmed to IOM. However, BGP and the data path uses them only when all the class-forwarding sets are not available as described in the information that follows.
SR OS implements a hierarchical ECMP architecture for BGP prefixes in the data path. The first level is the ECMP at the BGP next-hop level. The second level is ECMP at the resolved next-hop (IP or tunnel next-hop) level. The CBF feature is independently applied to the set of resolved tunnel next-hops of each BGP next-hop of a prefix. The user must make sure that the sets of LSPs that are used as IGP shortcuts to reach each of the BGP next-hops have the appropriate FC mappings.
The following procedures are enforced in the CBF feature:
-
The tunnels in the full next-hop ECMP set, with set size greater or equal to 1 and less than or equal to 64, can use MPLS LSPs that terminate on multiple endpoints (BGP next-hop itself or otherwise) to reach the next-hop of a BGP prefix. The existing ECMP tunnel and IP next-hop selection behavior, when resolving a prefix over IGP shortcuts, continues to be used.
-
If no LSP among the full ECMP set of a BGP next-hop has a class-forwarding policy configuration assigned, then the set is considered inconsistent from a CBF perspective. No CBF-related information is programmed in IOM and regular ECMP spraying over the full set occurs.
-
If only a single class-forwarding policy is referenced by one or more LSPs in the full ECMP set of a BGP next-hop, the full set is considered consistent from a CBF perspective, and the class-forwarding policy is used to spray packets of each FC over the LSPs within each forwarding set. As a result of this processing, only the LSPs that have been selected for forwarding traffic are programmed in IOM with CBF information. The remaining LSPs and IP next-hops of the BGP next-hop, are also programmed in IOM but without any CBF information associated and, therefore, is not used for CBF.
-
If multiple class-forwarding policies are referenced by LSPs in the full ECMP set of a BGP next-hop, the set is considered inconsistent from a CBF perspective. No CBF related information is programmed in IOM and regular ECMP spraying over the full set occurs.
The following describes the fallback behavior in data path of the CBF feature:
-
An FC, for which all LSPs in the forwarding set are operationally down, has its packets forwarded over the default forwarding set. The default forwarding set is either the initial default forwarding set configured by the user or the lowest numbered set in the class-forwarding policy that has one or more LSPs in the operationally UP state. If the initial or subsequently elected default forwarding set has all its LSPs operationally down, the next lower numbered forwarding set, which has at least one LSP in the operationally up state, is elected as the default forwarding set.
-
If all LSPs of all forwarding sets become operationally down, the router resumes regular ECMP spraying on the remaining LSPs and IP next-hops in the full ECMP set.
-
Whenever the first LSP in a forwarding set becomes operationally UP, the router triggers the re-election of the default set and selects this set as the new default set, if it is the initial default set, otherwise, it selects lowest numbered set.
Feature limitations
The following are the limitations of the CBF feature.
CBF applies to packets of IPv4 and IPv6 BGP prefixes only. CBF does not apply to IGP prefixes and static route prefixes resolved over IGP IPv4 shortcuts. The latter are forwarded using regular ECMP over the entire set of up to 64 tunnel next-hops.
CPM originated packets on the router, including the control plane and OAM packets, are forwarded over a single LSP from the set of LSPs the packet's FC is mapped to, as per the CBF configuration. The CPM, however, only maintains a maximum of 64 next-hops for a specified destination prefix. Therefore, if there are multiple BGP next-hops for a prefix, CPM selects 64 tunnel next-hops by cycling over the BGP next-hops in ascending order. Then, the first LSP in the first set ID that the FC of the packet maps to is selected to forward the packet.
Furthermore, the CBF information consistency check, the CBF default set determination, and the CBF set failover procedures are applied to this set of 64 tunnel next-hops.
The user can configure the SGT-QoS feature to change the DSCP and FC of CPM-originated packets of a specific control plane protocol to select an LSP from a different set ID. This configuration allows, for instance, the forwarding of BGP Keep-Alive packets over an LSP of the same set ID as that of the data plane packets of the BGP prefixes destined for the same BGP next-hop.
-
Weighted ECMP, at the transport tunnel level of BGP prefixes over IGP shortcuts, and the CBF feature on a per-BGP next-hop basis are mutually exclusive. Specifically, if the user enables both weighted ECMP and CBF, weighted ECMP applies as long as all the LSPs used as tunnel next-hops to reach the BGP next-hop of a prefix have a user-configured weight. Otherwise, the CBF feature applies as per the procedures described in Feature behavior.
Use the following commands to configure weighted ECMP and class-forwarding respectively.
configure router weighted-ecmp configure router class-forwarding
Data path support
When a packet of a BGP IPv4 or IPv6 prefix is received, the data path uses the FC that the packet was classified into to look up the forwarding set ID. The data path then performs a modulo operation on the tunnel next-hops of this set ID, to select the one next-hop for forwarding the packet. Therefore, packets matching an FC are only sprayed over the ECMP tunnel-next-hops of the set ID this FC maps to.
Both the BGP or CPM application and IOM use the same algorithm for failover and default class-forwarding set determination, as described in Feature behavior and illustrated in Example configuration and default CBF set election.
If MPLS deletes an LSP from a specified set ID, the IOM handles failover within the same set ID. The IOM reprograms the data path to spray packets of the impacted FCs over the remaining tunnel next-hops of the set ID.
Similarly, the IOM handles failover between class-forwarding sets when MPLS deletes the last LSP in a set ID. The IOM reprograms the data path to spray packets of the impacted FCs over the tunnel next-hops of the failover set ID. In both cases, the failover does not make use of the uniform failover procedure; however, if an LSP activated its FRR backup path, it remains in the set ID and continues to forward traffic of the mapped FCs.
Finally, BGP updates the set IDs, used to reach a BGP next-hop, any time IGP updates the information in the RTM.
Example configuration and default CBF set election
Assume the following user configuration:
-
The FC mapping to the sets and the default forwarding set election are illustrated in Default forwarding set election.
-
All sets and RSVP-TE LSPs outside of the three class-forwarding sets are up initially.
-
Set 1 is elected as the default class-forwarding set (because the user did not configure an initial default set).
-
If All LSPs in Set 1 go operationally down, Set 2 is elected as the default class-forwarding set.
-
If Set 2 subsequently goes down, Set 3 is elected as the default class-forwarding set.
-
If Set 3 subsequently goes down, then packets of BGP prefixes are ECMP sprayed over the remaining non-CBF RSVP-TE LSPs.
-
If Set 2 comes back up, then Set 2 is elected as the default class-forwarding set.
The following example shows class-forwarding as true, which enables the CBF feature for BGP and CPM traffic. IGP shortcut is enabled in this IS-IS instance with both families IPv4 and IPv6 resolving to RSVP-TE LSPs. Four LSPs exist in set 1, set 2, and set 3. The final LSP configuration has no CBF options for a total of 64 LSPs to BB1.
Class-based forwarding of IPv4 and IPv6 prefixes over IGP IPv4 shortcut (MD-CLI)
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
class-forwarding true
interface "system" {
ipv4 {
primary {
address 192.0.2.194
prefix-length 32
}
}
ipv6 {
address 3ffe::a14:194 {
prefix-length 128
}
}
}
interface "toSim199" {
port 1/1/1
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.202.5.194
prefix-length 24
}
secondary 10.101.0.194 {
prefix-length 32
}
}
ipv6 {
address 2001:db8:a0b:12f0::1 {
prefix-length 64
}
}
}
interface "toSim213" {
port 1/1/2
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.202.4.194
prefix-length 24
}
}
}
interface "toSim219" {
port 1/1/3
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.202.8.194
prefix-length 24
}
}
}
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
...
isis 0 {
igp-shortcut {
tunnel-next-hop {
family ipv4 {
resolution filter
resolution-filter {
rsvp true
}
}
family ipv6 {
resolution filter
resolution-filter {
rsvp true
}
}
}
}
}
[ex:/configure router "Base" mpls]
A:admin@node-2# info
cspf-on-loose-hop true
interface "system" {
}
interface "toSim199" {
}
interface "toSim213" {
admin-group ["olive"]
}
interface "toSim219" {
}
class-forwarding-policy "cbf1" {
fc be {
forwarding-set 1
}
fc l2 {
forwarding-set 1
}
fc af {
forwarding-set 2
}
fc l1 {
forwarding-set 2
}
fc h2 {
forwarding-set 2
}
fc ef {
forwarding-set 3
}
fc h1 {
forwarding-set 3
}
fc nc {
forwarding-set 3
}
}
path "empty" {
}
lsp "RSVP-TE_LSP-BB1-SET1" {
type p2p-rsvp
to 192.1.2.194
class-forwarding {
forwarding-set {
policy "cbf1"
set 1
}
}
primary "empty" {
}
}
lsp "RSVP-TE_LSP-BB1-SET2" {
type p2p-rsvp
to 192.1.2.194
class-forwarding {
forwarding-set {
policy "cbf1"
set 2
}
}
primary "empty" {
}
}
lsp "RSVP-TE_LSP-BB1-SET3" {
type p2p-rsvp
to 192.1.2.194
class-forwarding {
forwarding-set {
policy "cbf1"
set 3
}
}
primary "empty" {
}
}
lsp "RSVP-TE_LSP-B1[1..52]" {
type p2p-rsvp
to 192.1.2.194
primary "empty" {
}
}
Class-based forwarding of IPv4 and IPv6 prefixes over IGP IPv4 shortcut (classic CLI)
A:node-2>config>router# info
#--------------------------------------------------
echo "IP Configuration"
#--------------------------------------------------
interface "system"
address 192.0.2.194/32
ipv6
address 3ffe::a14:194/128
exit
exit
interface "toSim199"
address 10.202.5.194/24
secondary 10.101.0.194/32
port 1/1/1
ipv6
address 2001:db8:a0b:12f0::1/64
exit
exit
interface "toSim213"
address 10.202.4.194/24
port 1/1/2
exit
interface "toSim219"
address 10.202.8.194/24
port 1/1/3
exit
class-forwarding
// Enables CBF feature for BGP and CPM traffic
A:node-2>config>router>isis# info
----------------------------------------------
igp-shortcut
// Enables IGP shortcut in this ISIS instance with both families IPv4 and IPv6
resolving to RSVP-TE LSPs
tunnel-next-hop
family ipv4
resolution filter
resolution-filter
rsvp
exit
exit
family ipv6
resolution filter
resolution-filter
rsvp
exit
exit
exit
exit
----------------------------------------------
A:node-2>config>router>mpls# info
----------------------------------------------
class-forwarding-policy cbf1
fc be forwarding-set 1
fc l2 forwarding-set 1
fc af forwarding-set 2
fc l1 forwarding-set 2
fc h2 forwarding-set 2
fc ef forwarding-set 3
fc h1 forwarding-set 3
fc nc forwarding-set 3
cspf-on-loose-hop
exit
interface "system"
exit
interface "toSim199"
exit
interface "toSim213"
admin-group "olive"
exit
interface "toSim219"
exit
path "empty"
exit
lsp "RSVP-TE_LSP-BB1-SET1[1..4]" // Four LSPs in Set1
to 192.0.2.194/32
cspf
class-forwarding
forwarding-set policy ‟cbf1” set 1
exit
primary "empty"
exit
exit
lsp "RSVP-TE_LSP-BB1-SET2[1..4]" // Four LSPs in Set2
to 192.0.2.194/32
cspf
class-forwarding
forwarding-set policy ‟cbf1” set 2
exit
primary "empty"
exit
exit
lsp "RSVP-TE_LSP-BB1-SET3[1..4]" // Four LSPs in Set3
to 192.0.2.194/32
cspf
class-forwarding
forwarding-set policy ‟cbf1” set 3
exit
primary "empty"
exit
exit
lsp "RSVP-TE_LSP-BB1[1..52]" //
Other LSP configuration with no CBF options for a total of 64 LSPs to BB1
to 192.0.2.194/32
cspf
primary "empty"
exit
exit
----------------------------------------------
Aggregate next hop
This feature adds the ability to configure an indirect next-hop for aggregate routes. The indirect next-hop specifies where packets are forwarded if they match the aggregate route, but is not a more-specific route in the IP forwarding table.
Invalidate next-hop based on ARP/neighbor cache state
This feature invalidates next-hop entries for static routes when the next-hop is no longer reachable on directly connected interfaces. This invalidation is based on ARP and Neighbor Cache state information.
When a next-hop is detected as no longer reachable because of ARP/neighbor cache expiry, the route’s next-hop is set as unreachable to prevent the SR from sending continuous ARPs/neighbor solicitations triggered by traffic destined for the static route prefix. When the next-hop is detected as reachable via ARP or neighbor advertisements, the state of the next-hop is set back to valid.
Invalidate next-hop based on IPv4 ARP
This feature invalidates a static route based on the reachability of the next-hop in the ARP cache when the validate-next-hop command is enabled for an IPv4 static route. Use the commands in the following contexts to enable the validate-next-hop feature for an IPv4 static route:
-
MD-CLI
configure router static-routes route next-hop configure service vprn static-routes route next-hop
-
classic CLI
configure router static-route-entry next-hop configure service vprn static-route-entry next-hop
In this case, when the ARP entry for the next-hop is INVALID or not populated, the static route must remain invalid/inactive. When an ARP entry for the next-hop is populated based on a gratuitous ARP received or periodic traffic destined for it and the usual ARP who-has procedure, the static route becomes valid/active and is installed.
Invalidate next-hop based on neighbor cache state
This feature invalidates a static route based on the reachability of the next-hop in the neighbor cache when the validate-next-hop command is enabled for an IPv6 static route.
Use the commands in the following contexts to enable validate-next-hop for an IPv4 static route:
-
MD-CLI
configure router static-routes route next-hop configure service vprn static-routes route next-hop
-
classic CLI
configure router static-route-entry next-hop configure service vprn static-route-entry next-hop
In this case, when the Neighbor Cache entry for next-hop is INVALID or not populated, the static route must remain invalid/inactive. When an NC entry for next-hop is populated based on a neighbor advertisement received, or periodic traffic destined for it and the usual NS/NA procedure, the static route becomes valid/active and is installed.
IP interface strip-label behavior
The strip-label feature causes arriving MPLS encapsulated traffic to be stripped of all MPLS labels (up to five) before processing the packet through Policy Based Routing (PBR) filters. Use the following command to configure strip-label.
configure router interface strip-label
If the packets do not have an IP header immediately following the MPLS label stack after the strip, they are discarded. Only MPLS encapsulated IP, IGP shortcuts, and VPRN over MPLS packets are processed. However, IPv4 and IPv6 packets that arrive without any labels are supported on an interface with strip label enabled.
The strip-label command operates in promiscuous mode. The router does not filter on the destination MAC address of the Ethernet frames. In some network designs, multiple ports may be tapped and combined into an interface toward the router. Promiscuous mode allows all of these flows to be processed without requiring the destination MAC address to be updated to match the router address.
To associate an interface that is configured with the strip-label command with a port, the port must be configured as single-fiber.
Packets subject to the strip-label action and mirrored (using mirrors or Lawful Intercept) contain the original MPLS labels (and other Layer 2 encapsulation) in the mirrored copy of the packet, as they appeared on the wire when the mirror-dest type is the default type “ether”. If the mirror-dest type is “ip-only”, the mirrored copy of the packet does not contain the original Layer 2 encapsulation or the stripped MPLS labels.
This command is supported on:
- optical ports for the 7750 SR and 7450 ESS
- null/dot1q encaps
- network ports
- IPv4
- IPv6
LDP shortcut for IGP route resolution
This feature enables you to forward user IP packets and specified control IP packets using LDP shortcuts over all network interfaces in the system that participate in the IS-IS and OSPF routing protocols. The default is to disable the LDP shortcut across all interfaces in the system.
Use the following commands to use LDP shortcuts for IGP route resolution:
-
MD-CLI
configure router ldp ldp-shortcut ipv4 configure router ldp ldp-shortcut ipv6
-
classic CLI
configure router ldp-shortcut [ipv4][ipv6]
IGP route resolution
When LDP shortcut is enabled, LDP populates the RTM with next-hop entries corresponding to all prefixes for which it activated an LDP FEC. For an activated prefix, two route entries are populated in RTM. One corresponds to the LDP shortcut next-hop and has an owner of LDP. The other one is the regular IP next-hop. The LDP shortcut next-hop always has preference over the regular IP next-hop for forwarding user packets and specified control packets over a specific outgoing interface to the route next-hop.
The prior activation of the FEC by LDP is done by performing an exact match with an IGP route prefix in RTM. It can also be done by performing a longest prefix match with an IGP route in RTM if the aggregate-prefix-match command option is enabled globally in LDP.
The LDP next-hop entry is not exported to the LDP control plane or to any other control plane protocols except OSPF, IS-IS, and an OAM control plane specified in Handling of control packets.
This feature is not restricted to /32 IPv4 prefixes or /128 IPv6 FEC prefixes. However, only /32 IPv4 and /128 IPv6 FEC prefixes are populated in the tunnel table for use as a tunnel by services.
All user and specified control packets for which the longest prefix match in RTM yields the FEC prefix are forwarded over the LDP LSP. The following is an example of the resolution process.
Assume that the egress LER advertised a FEC for some /24 prefix using the fec-originate command. At the ingress LER, LDP resolves the FEC by checking in RTM that an exact match exists for this prefix. After the LDP activates the FEC, it programs the NHLFE in the egress data path and the LDP tunnel information in the ingress data path tunnel table.
Next, LDP provides the shortcut route to RTM, which associates it with the same /24 prefix. There are two entries for this /24 prefix: the LDP shortcut next-hop and the regular IP next-hop. The latter was used by LDP to validate and activate the FEC. RTM then resolves all user prefixes that succeed a longest prefix match against the /24 route entry to use the LDP LSP.
Now assume that the aggregate-prefix-match was enabled and that LDP found a /16 prefix in RTM to activate the FEC for the /24 FEC prefix. In this case, RTM adds a new, more-specific route entry of /24 and has the next-hop as the LDP LSP. However, RTM does not have a specific /24 IP route entry. RTM then resolves all user prefixes that succeed a longest prefix match against the /24 route entry to use the LDP LSP. All other prefixes that succeed a longest prefix match against the /16 route entry uses the IP next-hop. LDP shortcut also works when using RIP for routing.
LDP-IGP synchronization
See the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7950 XRS, and VSR MPLS Guide for information about LDP-IGP synchronization.
LDP shortcut forwarding plane
After the LDP activates an FEC for a prefix and programs RTM, it also programs the ingress tunnel table in IOM or online cards with the LDP tunnel information.
When an IPv4 packet is received on an ingress network interface, a subscriber IES interface, or a regular IES interface, the lookup of the packet by the ingress IOM or line card results in the packet being sent labeled with the label stack corresponding to the NHLFE of the LDP LSP when the preferred RTM entry corresponds to an LDP shortcut.
If the preferred RTM entry corresponds to an IP next-hop, the IPv4 packet is forwarded unlabeled.
The switching from the LDP shortcut next-hop to the regular IP next-hop when the LDP FEC becomes unavailable depends on whether the next-hop is still available. If it is (for example, the LDP FEC was withdrawn because of LDP control plane issues) the switchover should be faster. If the next-hop determination requires IGP to re-converge, this takes longer. However, no target is set.
The switching from a regular IP next-hop to an LDP shortcut next-hop usually occurs only when both are available. However, the programming of the NHLFE by LDP and the programming of the LDP tunnel information in the ingress IOM or line cards tunnel table are asynchronous. If the tunnel table is configured first, it is possible that traffic is black-holed for some time.
ECMP considerations
When ECMP is enabled and multiple equal-cost next-hops exist for the IGP route, the ingress IOM or line card sprays the packets for this route based on the hashing routine currently supported for IPv4 packets.
When the preferred RTM entry corresponds to an LDP shortcut route, spraying is performed across the multiple next-hops for the LDP FEC. The FEC next-hops can either be direct link LDP neighbors or T-LDP neighbors reachable over RSVP LSPs, in the case of LDP-over-RSVP, but not both. This is as per ECMP for LDP.
When the preferred RTM entry corresponds to a regular IP route, spraying is performed across regular IP next-hops for the prefix.
Spraying across regular IP next-hops and LDP-shortcut next-hops concurrently is not supported.
Handling of control packets
All control plane packets do not see the LDP shortcut route entry in RTM with the exception of the following control packets, which are forwarded over an LDP shortcut when enabled:
A locally generated or in transit ICMP ping and trace route of an IGP route. The transit message appears as a user packet to the ingress LER node.
A locally generated response to a received ICMP ping or trace route message.
All other control plane packets that require an RTM lookup and knowledge of which destination is reachable over the LDP shortcut continues to be forwarded over the IP next-hop route in RTM.
Handling of multicast packets
Multicast packets cannot be forwarded or received from an LDP LSP. This is because there is no support for the configuration of such an LSP as a tunnel interface in PIM. Only an RSVP P2MP LSP is currently allowed.
If a multicast packet is received over the physical interface, the uRPF check does not resolve to the LDP shortcut because the LDP shortcut route in RTM is not made available to multicast application.
Interaction with BGP route resolution to an LDP FEC
There is no interaction between an LDP shortcut for BGP next-hop resolution and the LDP shortcut for IGP route resolution. BGP continues to resolve a BGP next-hop to an LDP shortcut if the user enabled the following command option in BGP. The following example shows the configuration to enable the resolution of a BGP next-hop to an LDP shortcut.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base" bgp next-hop-resolution shortcut-tunnel]
A:admin@node-2# info
family ipv4 {
resolution-filter {
ldp true
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router>bgp>next-hop-res>shortcut-tunn# info
----------------------------------------------
family ipv4
resolution-filter
ldp
exit
exit
----------------------------------------------
Interaction with static route resolution to an LDP FEC
A static route continues to be resolved by searching an LDP LSP whose FEC prefix matches the specified indirect next-hop for the route. In contrast, the LDP shortcut for IGP route resolution uses the LDP LSP as a route. The most specific route for a prefix is selected and, if both a static and IGP routes exist, the RTM route type preference is used to select one.
LDP control plane
For the LDP shortcut to be usable, SR OS must originate a <FEC, label> binding for each IGP route it learns of even if it did not receive a binding from the next-hop for that route. The router must assume that it is an egress LER for the FEC until the route disappears from the routing table or the next-hop advertises a binding for the FEC prefix. In the latter case, SR OS becomes a transit LSR for the FEC.
SR OS originates a <FEC, label> binding for its system interface address only by default. The only way to originate a binding for local interfaces and routes that are not local to the system is by using the fec-originate capability.
Use the fec-originate command to generate bindings for all non-local routes for which this node acts as an egress LER for the corresponding LDP FEC. Specifically, this feature must support the FEC origination of IGP learned routes and subscriber/host routes statically configured or dynamically learned over subscriber IES interfaces.
An LDP LSP used as a shortcut by IPv4 packets may also be tunneled using the LDP-over-RSVP feature.
Weighted load-balancing over interface next-hops
When the weighted-ecmp command is configured in the base router context or a VPRN, any IPv4 or IPv6 static, IS-IS, or OSPF route associated with the routing instance can be programmed into the data path to use weighted load-balancing across the interface next-hops of the route.
Use the following commands to configure weighted ECMP in the base router context or in a VPRN.
configure router weighted-ecmp
configure service vprn weighted-ecmp
In order for weighted ECMP to be supported across the interface next-hops of an IS-IS or OSPF route the following conditions must be met.
-
All of the calculated ECMP next-hops must be interface next-hops.
-
All of the calculated ECMP next-hop interfaces must have a non-zero load-balancing-weight value configured in the following context. Use the commands in the following context to configure a non-zero load-balancing-weight value.
configure router isis interface
By default, IS-IS or OSPF interfaces have a zero weight (no load-balancing-weight); non-zero values must be configured explicitly. Values cannot be auto-derived.
In order for weighted ECMP to be supported across the interface next-hops of a static route the following conditions must be met.
-
All of the configured ECMP next-hops must be direct next-hops (resolved to an interface). The ECMP next-hops are the next-hops with the lowest preference that also have the lowest metric.
-
All of the configured ECMP next-hop interfaces must have a non-zero load-balancing-weight value configured in the following context. Use the commands in the following context to configure a non-zero load-balancing-weight value:
-
MD-CLI
configure router static-routes route next-hop
-
classic CLI
configure router static-route-entry next-hop
By default, static route next-hops have a zero weight (no load-balancing-weight); non-zero values must be configured explicitly. Values cannot be auto-derived. The ECMP next-hops are the next-hops with the lowest preference that also have the lowest metric.
-
The load-balancing-weight commands in the IS-IS or OSPF and static route configuration trees accept a value between 0 and 4294967295.
If an IPv4 or IPv6 BGP route has a BGP next-hop resolved by a static, IS-IS, or OSPF ECMP route and ibgp-multipath is configured under BGP, traffic forwarded to the BGP next-hop is sprayed according to the load-balancing-weights of the interface next-hops.
IP FRR for static route entry
IP Fast ReRoute (FRR) is supported when the backup-next-hop command is configured for a static route entry. IP FRR support uses 1+1 protection by using a single backup next-hop address when the single primary next-hop fails. Only 1+1 protection is supported during backup without ECMP capability. Next-hop forwarding information for the backup next-hop address from the IP Routing Table Manager (RTM) is used to install a pre-resolved IP or tunneled fast reroute backup path to the backup next-hop. The configured backup next-hop IP address can be directly or indirectly connected through an IGP, a BGP, or a tunnel. The backup next-hop must be of the same IP address family as the primary next-hop (for example, an IPv4 primary next-hop can be protected using an IPv4 backup next-hop).
IP FRR for static route is supported in the base router and service VPRN contexts.
If the primary next-hop of the static route entry fails and the IP FRR backup next-hop is activated, then the backup tag is applied to the static route and the configured preference and metric for the primary hop is inherited. If the primary next-hop is activated again, then make-before-break functionality is used to avoid any packet loss.
The following example shows the IP FRR configuration.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
static-routes {
route 10.10.0.0/16 route-type unicast {
tag 20
backup-tag 100
next-hop "101.1.1.1" {
preference 100
backup-next-hop {
address 50.1.1.2
}
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
#--------------------------------------------------
"Static Route Configuration"
#--------------------------------------------------
static-route-entry 10.10.0.0/16
tag 20
backup-tag 100
next-hop 101.1.1.1
preference 100
backup-next-hop
address 50.1.1.2
exit
exit
exit
The logic behavior applied to the associated tag of the static route entry is summarized in the following table.
Primary NH | Backup NH | StaticRoute State | StaticRoute Tag |
---|---|---|---|
UP |
UP |
UP |
201 |
UP |
DOWN |
UP |
201 |
DOWN |
UP |
UP |
1001 |
DOWN |
DOWN |
DOWN |
— |
IGP export policies can use the tag and the backup-tag as match criteria when exporting a static route entry using route policies. The export policies may introduce unique export properties for each tag (for example, resulting in different IGP metrics) and may make an exported route more or less desirable when the primary next-hop fails and the backup next-hop is activated.
The following limitations apply in the IP FRR for static route entries.
-
Only the primary next-hop has IP FRR support. The backup next-hop has no IP FRR support if it suddenly becomes unreachable.
-
If multiple next-hops are configured with a backup for a static route entry, then IP FRR is activated if there is only one remaining primary next-hop active. If multiple primary next-hops can be activated, then the static route entry uses ECMP and the backup next-hop IP FRR functionality is not used.
-
If the primary next-hop fails and the backup next-hop is used as the primary hop, then the backup next-hop uses the configured backup tag (or 0, if not configured) and inherits the configured preference and metric of the primary next-hop (or the default values, if not configured).
-
The backup inherits the preference and the metric of the primary next-hop, however, it does not support any of the features configured on the primary next-hop (for example, BFD, CPE check, LDP sync, and so on) even when the backup becomes the active next-hop.
-
If the primary next-hop of a static route entry, configured with a backup next-hop, is held down because hold-down is configured on static routes, the backup next-hop is also held down and is not used for traffic, even in cases where the backup-next-hop can be activated.
-
The following tunnel types are supported:
-
OSPF or ISIS shortcuts using RSVP-TE and SR-TE
-
BGP VPN-v4/v6 or BGP shortcut routes over LDP, RSVP, SR-ISIS, SR-OSPF, LDPoRSVP, SR-TE, GREv4, SR policy, MPLS forward policy, and RIB API
-
backup-next-hop recursion through indirect next-hop static-route-entry with resolution filter for LDP, RSVP, LDPoRSVP, SR-TE, SR-ISIS, SR-OSPF, SR policy, MPLS forward policy, or RIB API
-
-
LDP-FRR using a static-route is not mutually supported in combination with static-route backup-next-hop for the same static route.
-
Any other backup-next-hop types are considered as non-supported. For example:
-
Locally aggregated BGP routes
-
BGP routes when the BGP next-hop is recursively resolved through another BGP route
-
6over4 tunnel
-
GREv6 tunnel
-
OSPF or IS-IS shortcuts using LDP, SR-ISIS, SR-OSPF, and LDPoRSVP (generic IGP shortcut limitation not only for backup-next-hop)
-
OSPF or IS-IS shortcuts over SR policy, MPLS forward policy, and RIB API (generic IGP shortcut limitation not only for backup-next-hop)
-
BGP-LU over LDP, RSVP, LDPoRSVP, SR-TE, SR-OSPF, SR-ISIS, SR policy, MPLS forward policy and RIB API
-
4PE
-
6PE
-
IP-over-GRE and MPLS-over-GRE termination on a user-configured subnet
This feature enables the termination of MPLS-over-GRE and IP-over-GRE packets on destination IP addresses from a user-configured subnet. SR OS supports processing received GRE encapsulated packets concurrently when the destination address in the outer IPv4 header matches the system interface address (exact match) and when it matches an address on the user-configured GRE termination subnet (longest prefix match).
RFC 2890 specifies the following format for the GRE header:
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|C| |K|S| Reserved0 | Ver | Protocol Type |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Checksum (optional) | Reserved1 (Optional) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Key (optional) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Sequence Number (Optional) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
All the fields of the GRE encapsulation in RFC 2890 are optional except for the base header (first 4 bytes). The C, K, and S flags are used to indicate if the header includes the optional fields of Checksum (plus Reserved field), Key, and Sequence Number. SR OS can process packets received with the base 4-byte header or with the 8-byte header which includes the Key field. In other words, packets with the flags set to {C=0, K=0/1, S=0}. Any other GRE header setting results in the packet being dropped.
When originating a GRE encapsulated packet, SR OS supports the following header formats:
The 4-byte base header {C=0, K=0, S=0} in the IP-over-GRE feature using a Port Cross Connect (PXC) port (see GRE tunnel overview).
The 4-byte base header {C=0, K=0, S=0} in the IP-over-GRE feature using the Multiservice Integrated Service Adapter.
See Section 4.1, IP Tunnel Overview, of the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, and VSR Multiservice ISA and ESA Guide.
The 4-byte base header {C=0, K=0, S=0} in the MPLS-over-GRE tunnel and SDP.
See 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7950 XRS, and VSR Layer 2 Services and EVPN Guide, the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7950 XRS, and VSR Layer 3 Services Guide: IES and VPRN, and the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7950 XRS, and VSR Services Overview Guide.
The 8-byte header which includes the Key field {C=0, K=1, S=0} in the filter-based GRE tunneling feature (see Configuring filter-based GRE tunneling).
Feature configuration
The user defines a subnet for the termination of GRE packets by applying the gre-termination command to a numbered network IP interface, including a loopback interface. Use the following command to configure GRE termination.
configure router interface gre-termination
The following rules apply to termination of IP-over-GRE and MPLS-over-GRE on a user-defined subnet.
The termination of MPLS-over-GRE on the system interface address can be performed concurrently and extends to terminating IP-over-GRE packets as well.
A single GRE termination subnet is permitted per router. If the user attempts to configure another subnet on another interface, the command is rejected.
The GRE termination subnet length can be of maximum size of /16.
The subnet of the primary IPv4 address of the numbered loopback interface or the numbered network IP interface is used as the GRE termination subnet.
When the GRE termination subnet is enabled on a numbered network IP interface, the packet can be received from the interface itself and any other network IP interface as long as the target IPv4 termination subnet is reachable.
The feature can terminate packets with the base 4-byte header {C=0, K=0, S=0} or with the 8-byte header which includes the Key field {C=0, K=1, S=0}. Any other GRE header setting results in the packet being dropped.
For routers in the network to forward MPLS-over-GRE or IP-over-GRE packets to this router, the prefix of the GRE subnet must be advertised in IGP or BGP. This is performed by adding the interface to IGP or BGP. Alternatively, a static route is added to the other routers.
-
The GRE termination subnet is not supported with the following interface types. If these interface types are configured, the configuration of the gre-termination command option is rejected:
-
unnumbered network IP interface
-
IES interface
-
VPRN interface
-
CSC VPRN interface
-
The configuration of the gre-termination command option is also rejected when applied to the system interface, as the system interface supports the termination of MPLS-over-GRE packet on its /32 subnet with no explicit configuration.
This feature introduces full support of LER and LSR roles for the packet after the GRE encapsulation is removed, regardless if the GRE termination was on the system interface address or the GRE termination subnet.
In an LSR role, this feature sprays the decapsulated packets over LAG and ECMP links by attempting a hash on the SA/DA and Layer 4 ports of the inner IP header if the payload below the label stack is IPv4 or IPv6. Otherwise, a hash is performed on the SA/DA of the outer IPv4 header of the GRE encapsulation.
MPLS-over-GRE and IP-over-GRE termination function
When a GRE packet is received over any network IP interface, the router checks if destination address matches the system interface address (exact match) or the GRE termination subnet (Longest Prefix Match). The router then processes the packet according to the following criteria:
If a match exists and the GRE Protocol Type field indicates an MPLS payload, continue processing the MPLS label stack as normal. This includes:
Pop one or more labels and forward to CPM if a MPLS exception exists (TTL expiry, RA label, 127/8 destination address in underlying IP packet).
Pop one or more labels and look up the packet in the FIB or in a local service context. The router operates as an egress LER.
Pop one or more labels and swap a label out to the outgoing interface with NHLFE encapsulation pushed on the packet. The router operates as an LSR.
When the incoming label is swapped to an implicit-null label, the user is able to remark the DSCP field of the exposed IPv4 or IPv6 packet on egress of the data path.
If a match exists and the GRE Protocol Type field indicates an IPv4 or an IPv6 payload, continue processing in the pipeline as an IP packet and forward out based on FIB lookup.
If a match exists and the GRE Protocol Type field indicates a Bridged Ethernet payload, drop the packet. To enable the feature to terminate the Bridged Ethernet payload, ensure that the termination subnet for that feature does not overlap with the GRE termination subnet of MPLS-over-GRE and IP-over-GRE termination.
If a match exists and the GRE protocol Type field is set to any other payload value, drop the packet.
If a match exists and the packet is not dropped, the application of ACL filter on the incoming interface matches against the inner (payload) header of the received GRE-encapsulated packet.
If a match does not exist, continue processing in the pipeline as an IPv4 packet. In this case, the application of ACL filter on the incoming interface matches against the outer IPv4 header of the received GRE-encapsulated packet.
This feature supports GRE/IPv4 encapsulation when the payload is MPLS, IPv4, or IPv6.
All MPLS egress LER and LSR features associated with the processed label are supported.
Outgoing packet Ethertype setting and TTL handling in MPLS-over-GRE termination
The router sets the Ethertype field value of the outgoing packet according to the following criteria.
If the swapped label is not the Bottom-of-Stack label, Ethertype is set to MPLS value.
If the swapped label is the Bottom-of-Stack label and the outgoing label is not implicit-null, Ethertype is set to MPLS value.
If the swapped label is the Bottom-of-Stack label and the outgoing label is implicit-null, Ethertype is set to IPv4 or IPv6 value when the first nibble of the exposed IP packet is 4 or 6 respectively. If the first nibble value is neither 4 nor 6, the packet is dropped.
The router sets the TTL of the outgoing packet as per the behavior of a PHP LSR:
The TTL of a forwarded IP packet is set to MIN (MPLS_TTL-1, IP_TTL), where MPLS_TTL refers to the TTL in the outermost label in the popped stack and IP_TTL refers to the TTL in the exposed IP header.
The TTL of a forwarded MPLS packet is set to MIN(MPLS_TTL-1, INNER_MPLS_TTL), where MPLS_TTL refers to the TTL in the outermost label in the popped stack and INNER_MPLS_TTL refers to the TTL in the exposed label.
Ethertype setting and TTL handling in IP-over-GRE termination
The router sets the Ethertype field value of the outgoing packet to IPv4 or IPv6 value when the GRE protocol field value in the incoming packet is IPv4 or IPv6 respectively.
The router checks and decrements the TTL field of the inner IPv4 or IPv6 header and ignores the TTL of the outer IPv4 header.
LER and LSR hashing support
When the router removes the GRE encapsulation, pops one or more labels including the Bottom-of-Stack (BoS) label, it acts as a LER. The exposed packet are forwarded in the global routing table or in a service context. The LAG/ECMP hashing of the packet when forwarded follow the procedures of that specific forwarding context. see ‟Traffic Load Balancing Options” in the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7950 XRS, and VSR Interface Configuration Guide.
When the router removes the GRE encapsulation, pops one or more labels and then swaps a label, it acts as an LSR. The LSR hashing for packets of a MPLS-over-GRE SDP or tunnel terminating on the GRE subnet follows a new procedure which is enabled automatically and overrides the LSR hashing command option enabled on the incoming network IP interface. Use the following command to configure the LSR hashing command option.
configure router interface load-balancing lsr-load-balancing
For more details, see LSR Hashing of MPLS-over-GRE Encapsulated Packet in section Changing Default Per Flow Hashing Inputs of the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7950 XRS, and VSR Interface Configuration Guide.
GRE tunnel overview
This section describes the GRE tunneling feature supported through the use of a Port Cross Connect (PXC) port. In this application, the PXC port functions as a resource module for the system, providing the necessary resources for the GRE encapsulation function. The GRE encapsulation function described here is similar to the GRE tunnel functionality supported through the use of the MS-ISA. In this use case, the MS-ISA is not required.
GRE deployment using a PXC port example shows an example of a GRE deployment supported inside a 7750 SR router using the PXC element.
In GRE deployment using a PXC port example, the public network is typically an unsecured network, such as public Internet, over which packets belonging to the private network in the diagram cannot be transmitted natively. Inside the 7750 SR, a public service instance (IES or VPRN) connects to the public network, and a private service instance (typically a VPRN) connects to the private network.
For GRE tunnels using PXC ports, the public and private services must be two different services, and the PXC is the connection between the two services. Traffic from the public network may require authentication and encryption inside an IPsec tunnel to reach the private network. In this way, the authenticity, confidentiality, and integrity of private network access can be enforced. If authentication and confidentiality are not required, then access to the private network may be provided through GRE or IP-IP tunnels.
Traffic flows through PXC-based tunnels in the following ways:
In the upstream direction (public to private), the encapsulated traffic is forwarded to a public tunnel interface if the destination address matches the local or gateway address of a GRE tunnel. As the traffic passes through the PXC port, the tunnel header is removed, the payload IP packet is delivered to the private service, and from there, the traffic is forwarded again based on the destination address of the payload IP packet.
In the downstream direction (private to public), unencapsulated traffic belonging to the private service is forwarded into the tunnel by matching a route with the GRE tunnel as next-hop. The route can be configured statically, learned by running OSPF on the private tunnel interface or by running BGP over the tunnel. After clear traffic is forwarded to the PXC port, it is encapsulated in the GRE header and passed to the public service, and from there, the traffic is forwarded again based on the destination address of the GRE header.
Example GRE tunnel configurations
The following example shows the configuration of a public interface.
Public interface configuration (MD-CLI)
[ex:/configure service ies "100"]
A:admin@node-2# info
admin-state enable
customer "1"
interface "int-gre-tunnel-public" {
sap pxc-1.b:100 {
description "Public Tunnel PXC SAP"
}
ipv4 {
primary {
address 192.110.1.1
prefix-length 30
}
}
}
Public interface configuration (classic CLI)
A:node-2>config>service# info
----------------------------------------------
ies 100 name "100" customer 1 create
no shutdown
interface "int-gre-tunnel-public" create
address 192.110.1.1/30
sap pxc-1.b:100 create //Public interface
description "Public Tunnel PXC SAP"
exit
exit
no shutdown
----------------------------------------------
The following example shows the configuration of a private interface.
Private interface configuration (MD-CLI)
[ex:/configure service]
A:admin@node-2# info
customer "200" {
}
vprn "200" {
customer "200"
bgp-ipvpn {
mpls {
admin-state enable
route-distinguisher "64496:1"
vrf-target {
community "target:64496:1"
}
}
}
interface "int-gre-tunnel-private" {
tunnel true
ip-mtu 1476
ipv4 {
addresses {
address 10.1.1.1 {
prefix-length 30
}
}
}
sap pxc.1.a:200 {
ip-tunnel "gre-tunnel-1" {
admin-state enable
delivery-service "100"
remote-ip-address 192.120.1.1
backup-remote-ip-address 192.120.1.2
local-ip-address 192.110.1.2
gre-header {
admin-state enable
key {
admin-state enable
send 123
receive 123
}
}
}
}
}
static-routes {
route 172.16.1.1/24 route-type unicast {
next-hop "10.1.1.2" {
}
}
}
}
Private interface configuration (classic CLI)
A:node-2>config>service# info
----------------------------------------------
customer 200 name "200" create
exit
vprn 200 name "200" customer 200 create
no shutdown
interface "int-gre-tunnel-private" tunnel create
address 10.1.1.1/30
ip-mtu 1476
sap pxc.1.a:200 create
ip-tunnel "gre-tunnel-1" create
gre-header send-key 123 receive-key 123
source 192.110.1.2
remote-ip 192.120.1.1
backup-remote-ip 192.120.1.2
delivery-service name "100"
no shutdown
exit
exit
exit
static-route-entry 172.16.1.1/24
next-hop 10.1.1.2
no shutdown
exit
exit
bgp-ipvpn
mpls
route-distinguisher 64496:1
vrf-target target:64496:1
no shutdown
exit
exit
exit
----------------------------------------------
Router interface encryption with NGE
NGE nodes support Layer 3 encryption on router interfaces for IPv4 traffic. NGE is not supported on dual-stack IPv4/IPv6 or IPv6-only interfaces. See the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7950 XRS, and VSR Services Overview Guide for more information about platforms that support NGE.
NGE is enabled on a router interface by configuring the group-encryption command on the router interface. The interface is considered part of the NGE domain, and any received packets that are NGE-encrypted are decrypted if the key group is configured on the node. To encrypt packets egressing the interface, the outbound key group must be configured on the interface. All IP packets, such as self-generated traffic or packets forwarded from router interfaces that are not inside the NGE domain, are encrypted when egressing the interface. There are some exceptions to this general behavior, as described in the sections that follow; for example, GRE-MPLS and MPLSoUDP packets are not encrypted when router interface encryption is enabled.
The outbound and inbound key groups configured on the router interface determine which keys are used to encrypt and decrypt traffic. See the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7950 XRS, and VSR Services Overview Guide for more information about configuring key groups.
To perform encryption, router interface encryption reuses the IPsec transport mode packet format as shown in Router Interface Encryption Packet Format (IPsec Transport Mode).
The protocol field in the IP header of an NGE packet is always set to ‟ESP”. Within an NGE domain, the SPI that is included in the ESP header is always an SPI for the key group configured on the router interface. Other fields in the IP header, such as the source and destination addresses, are not altered by NGE router interface encryption. Packets are routed through the NGE domain and decrypted when the packet leaves the NGE domain.
The group keys used on an NGE-enabled router interface provide encryption of broadcast and multicast packets within the GRT. For example, OSPF uses a broadcast address to establish adjacencies, which can be encrypted by NGE without the need to establish point-to-point encryption tunnels. Similarly, multicast packets are also encrypted without point-to-point encryption tunnels.
NGE domains
An NGE domain is a group of nodes and router interfaces forming a network that uses a single key group to create a security domain. NGE domains are created when router interface encryption is enabled on router interfaces that need to participate in the NGE domain. The NSP NFM-P assists users in managing the nodes and interfaces that participate in the NGE domain. See the NSP NFM-P User Guide for more information.
NGE Domain Transit shows various traffic types crossing an NGE domain.
In NGE Domain Transit, nodes A, B, C, and D have router interfaces configured with router interface encryption enabled. Traffic is encrypted when entering the NGE domain using the key group configured on the router interface and is decrypted when exiting the NGE domain. Traffic may traverse multiple hops before exiting the NGE domain, yet decryption only occurs on the final node when the traffic exits the NGE domain.
Various traffic types are supported and encrypted when entering the NGE domain, as illustrated by the following items on node A in NGE Domain Transit:
Item 1: Self-generated packets
These packets, which include all types of control plane and management packets such as OSPF, BGP, LDP, SNMPv3, SSH, ICMP, RSVP-TE, and 1588, are encrypted.
Item 2: User Layer 3 and VXLAN packets
Any Layer 3 user packets that are routed into the NGE domain from an interface outside the NGE domain are encrypted. Any VXLAN packets that are routed into the NGE domain from this NGE node are encrypted.
Item 3: IPsec packets
IPsec packets are NGE-encrypted when entering the NGE domain to ensure that the IPsec packets’ security association information does not conflict with the NGE domain.
GRE-MPLS- or MPLSoUDP-based service traffic consists of Layer 3 packets, and router interface NGE is not applied to these types of packets. Instead, service-level NGE is used for encryption to avoid double-encrypting these packets and impacting throughput and latencies. The two types of GRE-MPLS or MPLSoUDP packets that can enter the NGE domain are illustrated by items 4 and 5 in NGE Domain Transit.
Item 4: GRE-MPLS and MPLSoUDP packets (SDP or VPRN) with service-level NGE enabled
These encrypted packets use the key group that is configured on the service. The services key group may be different from the key group configured on the router interface where the GRE-MPLS or MPLSoUDP packet enters the NGE domain.
Item 5: GRE-MPLS and MPLSoUDP packets (SDP or VPRN) with NGE disabled
These packets are not encrypted and can traverse the NGE domain in clear text. If these packets require encryption, SDP or VPRN encryption must be enabled.
Creating an NGE domain from the NSP NFM-P requires the user to determine the type of NGE domain being managed. This indicates whether NGE gateway nodes are required to manage the NGE domain, and other operational considerations. The two types of NGE domains are:
Private IP/MPLS network NGE domain
One type of NGE domain is a private IP/MPLS network, as shown in Private IP/MPLS network NGE domain.
In a private IP/MPLS network NGE domain, all interfaces are owned by the user and there is no intermediary service provider needed to interconnect nodes. Each interface is a point-to-point private link between private nodes. When a new node is added to this type of NGE domain (node D in Private IP/MPLS network NGE domain), the links that connect node D to the existing nodes in the NGE domain (nodes A, B, and C) must be enabled with NGE router interface encryption. Links from the new node to the existing nodes are enabled one at a time. The NSP NFM-P provides tools that simplify adding nodes to the NGE domain and enabling NGE on their associated interfaces. In this type of NGE domain, each interface is a direct link between two nodes and is not used to communicate with multiple nodes over a broadcast medium offered by an intermediary network. Also, there are no NGE gateway nodes required between the NSP NFM-P and new nodes entering the NGE domain.
Private over intermediary network NGE domain
The other type of NGE domain is a private IP/MPLS network that traverses an intermediary network NGE domain; the intermediary network is used to interconnect nodes in the NGE domain using a multipoint-to-multipoint service. The intermediary network is typically a service provider network that provides a private IP VPN service or a private VPLS service used to interconnect a private network that does not mimic point-to-point links as described in the Private IP/MPLS network NGE domain section.
This type of NGE domain is shown in Private over intermediary network NGE domain.
Private over intermediary network NGE domains have nodes with links that connect to a service provider network where a single link can communicate with multiple nodes over a Layer 3 service such as a VPRN. In Private over intermediary network NGE domain, node A has NGE enabled on its interface with the service provider and uses that single interface to communicate with nodes B and C, and eventually with node D when node D has been added to the NGE domain. This type of NGE domain requires the recognition of NGE gateway nodes that allow the NSP NFM-P to reach new nodes that enter the domain. Node C is designated as a gateway node.
When node D is added to the NGE domain, it must first have the NGE domain key group downloaded to it from the NSP NFM-P. The NSP NFM-P creates an NGE exception ACL on the gateway node, C, to allow communication with node D using SNMPv3 and SSH through the NGE domain. After the key group is downloaded, the NSP NFM-P enables router interface encryption on node D’s interface with the service provider and node D is now able to participate in the NGE domain. The NSP NFM-P automatically removes the IP exception ACL from node C when node D enters the NGE domain.
See Router interface NGE domain concepts for more information.
Router interface NGE domain concepts
An NGE domain is a group of nodes whose router interfaces in the base routing context (GRT) are enabled for router interface NGE. An interface without router interface NGE enabled is considered to be outside the NGE domain. NGE domains use only one key group when the domain is created; however, two key groups may be active at when if some links within the NGE domain are in transition from one key group to the other.
Inside and outside NGE domains illustrates the NGE domain concept. Inside and outside NGE domains configuration scenarios describes the three configuration scenarios inside the NGE domain.
Key |
Description |
---|---|
1 |
NGE enabled, no inbound/outbound key group Outbound packets are sent without encrypting; inbound packets can be NGE-encrypted or clear text |
2 |
Outbound key group, no inbound key group Outbound packets are encrypted using the interface key group if not already encrypted; inbound packets can be NGE-encrypted or clear text |
3 |
Inbound and outbound key group Outbound packets are encrypted using the interface key group if not already encrypted; inbound packets must be encrypted using the interface key group keys |
4 |
Outside the NGE domain, the interface is not configured for NGE; any ESP packets are IPsec packets |
A router interface is considered to be inside the NGE domain when it has been configured with group-encryption on the interface. When group-encryption is configured on the interface, the router can receive unencrypted packets or NGE-encrypted packets from any configured key group on the router, but any other type of IPsec-formatted packet is not allowed. If an IPsec-formatted packet is received on an interface that has group-encryption enabled, it does not pass NGE authentication and is dropped. Therefore, IPsec packets cannot exist within the NGE domain without first being converted to NGE packets. This conversion requirement delineates the boundary of the NGE domain and other IPsec services.
When NGE router interface encryption is enabled and only an outbound key group is configured, the interface can receive unencrypted packets or NGE-encrypted packets from any configured key group on the router. All outbound packets are encrypted using the outbound key group if the packet was not already encrypted further upstream in the network.
When NGE router interface encryption has been configured with both an inbound and outbound key group, only NGE packets encrypted with the key group security association can be sent and received over the interface.
When there is no NGE router interface encryption, the interface is considered outside the NGE domain where NGE is not applied.
See the ‟NGE Packet Overhead and MTU Considerations” section in the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7950 XRS, and VSR Services Overview Guide for MTU information related to enabling NGE on a router interface.
GRE-MPLS and MPLSoUDP packets inside the NGE domain
NGE router interface encryption is never applied to GRE-MPLS or MPLSoUDP packets, for example:
GRE with the GRE protocol ID set to MPLS Unicast (0x8847) or Multicast (0x8848)
UDP packets with destination port = 6635)
GRE-MPLS and MPLSoUDP packets that enter the NGE domain or transit the NGE domain are forwarded as is.
Because these GRE-MPLS and MPLSoUDP packets provide transport for MPLS-based services, they already use the NGE services-based encryption techniques for MPLS, such as SDP or VPRN-based encryption. To avoid double encryption, the packets are left in cleartext when entering an NGE domain or crossing intermediate nodes in the NGE domain, and are forwarded as needed when exiting an NGE domain.
EVPN-VXLAN tunnels and services
NGE router interface encryption does not differentiate between EVPN-VXLAN tunnels and other L3 traffic, and therefore encrypts all EVPN-VXLAN traffic that egresses the node.
For received encrypted EVPN-VXLAN packets, if the VXLAN tunnel terminates on the node (that is, the destination IP is for a VTEP on this node), then the NGE packet is decrypted and the EVPN-VXLAN traffic is processed as if NGE encryption never took place.
Router encryption exceptions using ACLs
In some cases, Layer 3 packets may need to cross the NGE domain in clear text, such as when an NGE-enabled router needs to peer with a non-NGE-capable router to exchange routing information. This can be accomplished by using a router interface NGE exception filter applied on the router interface for the required direction, inbound or outbound.
Router interface NGE exception filter example shows the use of a router interface NGE exception filter.
The inbound or outbound exception filter is used to allow specific packet flows through the NGE domain in clear text, where there is an explicit inbound and outbound key group configured on the interface. The behavior of the exception filter for each router interface configuration is as follows:
NGE enabled, no inbound or outbound key group
In this scenario, the router does not encrypt outbound traffic, and so the outbound exception filter is not applied. The router can still receive inbound NGE packets, so the exception filter is applied to inbound packets. If the filter detects a match, clear text packets can be received and forwarded by the router.
Outbound key group, no inbound key group
The outbound exception filter is applied to outbound traffic, and packets that match the filter are not encrypted on egress. The router can receive inbound NGE packets without an inbound key group set and applies the exception filter to inbound packets. If the filter detects a match, clear text packets can be received and forwarded by the router.
Inbound and outbound key group
The inbound and outbound exception filters are applied, and any packets that match are passed in clear text.
IPsec packets crossing an NGE domain
IPsec packets can cross the NGE domain because they are still considered Layer 3 packets. To avoid confusion between the security association used in an IPsec packet and the one used in a router interface NGE packet, the router always applies NGE to any IPsec packet that traverses the NGE domain.
IPsec packets that originate from a router within the NGE domain are not allowed to enter the NGE domain. The only exception to this restriction is OSPFv3 packets.
IPsec packets transiting an NGE domain shows how IPsec packets can transit an NGE domain.
An IPsec packet enters the router from outside the NGE domain. When the router determines that the egress interface to route the packet is inside an NGE domain, it selects an NGE router interface with one of the following configurations.
NGE enabled with no inbound or outbound key group configured
This link cannot forward the IPsec packet without adding the NGE ESP, but because nothing is configured for the outbound key group, the packet must be dropped.
NGE enabled with outbound key group configured and no inbound key group configured — the packet originates outside the NGE domain, so the router adds an ESP header over the existing ESP and encrypts the payload using the NGE domain keys for the configured outbound key group.
NGE enabled with both inbound and outbound key groups configured — the packet originates outside the NGE domain, so the router adds an ESP header over the existing ESP and encrypts the payload using the NGE domain keys for the configured outbound key group.
OSPFv3 IPsec support also uses IPsec transport mode packets. These packets originate from the CPM, which is considered outside the NGE domain; however, the above rules for encapsulating the packets with an NGE ESP apply and allow these packets to successfully transit the NGE domain.
Multicast packets traversing the NGE domain
Multicast packets that traverse an NGE domain can be categorized into two main scenarios:
Scenario 1
Multicast packets that ingress the router on an interface that is outside the NGE domain. These packets can egress a variety of interfaces that are either inside or outside the NGE domain.
Scenario 2
Multicast packets that ingress the router on an interface that is inside the NGE domain. These packets can egress a variety of interfaces that are either inside or outside the NGE domain. This scenario has two cases:
Scenario 2a
The ingress multicast packet is not yet NGE-encrypted.
Scenario 2b
The ingress multicast packet is NGE-encrypted.
Processing multicast packets shows these scenarios.
Multicast packets received from outside the NGE domain (Scenario 1) are processed similarly to multicast packets received from inside the NGE domain (Scenarios 2a and 2b).
The processing rule is that multicast packets are always forwarded as clear text over the fabric. This means that for Scenario 2b, when a multicast packet is received on an encryption-capable interface and is NGE-encrypted, the packet is always decrypted first so that it can be processed in the same way as packets in Scenarios 1 and 2a.
On egress, the following scenarios apply:
Egressing an interface outside the NGE domain
Packets are processed in the same way as any multicast packets forwarded out a non-NGE interface.
Egressing an NGE router interface and no inbound or outbound key group is configured
The router forwards these packets out from the egress interface without encrypting them because there is no outbound key group configured. This behavior also applies to unicast packets in the same scenario.
egressing an NGE router interface with the outbound key group configured — the router encrypts the multicast packet using the SPI keys of the outgoing SA configured in the key group. This behavior also applies to unicast packets in the same scenario.
Assigning key groups to router interfaces
Assigning key groups to router interfaces involves the following three steps:
Step1 is required so that the router can initialize and differentiate the interface for NGE traffic before accepting or sending NGE packets. This assigns the interface to an NGE domain.
Assigning key groups to a router interface in steps 2 and 3 is similar to assigning key groups to SDPs or VPRN-based services. An outbound key group cannot be configured for a router interface without first enabling the group-encryption command.
When group-encryption is enabled and no inbound key group is configured, the router accepts NGE Layer 3 packets that were encrypted using keys from any security association configured in any key group on the system. If the packet specifies a security association that is not configured in any key group on the node, the packet is dropped.
The outbound key group references the key group to use when traffic egresses the router on the router interface. The inbound key group is used to make sure ingress traffic is using the correct key group on the router interface. If ingress traffic is not using the correct key group, the router counts these packets as errors.
-
Enable NGE with the group-encryption command.
-
Configure the outbound key group.
-
Configure the inbound key group.
NGE and BFD support
When NGE is enabled on a router interface, BFD packets that originate from the network processor on the adapter card or from the system are encrypted in the same way as BFD packets that are generated by the CPM.
NGE and ACL interactions
When NGE is enabled on a router interface, the ACL function is applied as follows:
on ingress
Normal ACLs are applied to traffic received on the interface that could be either NGE-encrypted or clear text. For NGE-encrypted packets, this implies that only the source, destination, and IP options are available to filter on ingress, as the protocol is ESP, and the packet is encrypted. If an IP exception ACL is also configured on the interface, the IP exception ACL is applied first to allow any clear text packets to ingress as needed. After the IP exception ACL is applied and if another filter or ACL is configured on the interface, the other filter processes the remaining packet stream (NGE-encrypted and IP exception ACL packets), and other ACL functions such as PBR or Layer 4 information filtering could be applied to any clear text packets that passed the exception ACL.
on egress
ACLs are applied to packets before they are NGE-encrypted as per normal operation without NGE enabled.
Router interface NGE and ICMP interactions over the NGE domain
Typically, ICMP works as expected over an NGE domain when all routers participating in the NGE domain are NGE-capable; this includes running an NGE domain over a private IP/MPLS network. When an ICMP message is required, the NGE packet is decrypted first, and the original packet is restored to create a detailed ICMP message using the original packet’s header information.
When the NGE domain crosses a Layer 3 service provider, or crosses over routers that are not NGE-aware, it is not possible to create a detailed ICMP message using the original packet’s information, as the NGE packet protocol is always set to ESP. Furthermore, the NGE router that receives these ICMP messages drops them because the messages are not NGE-encrypted.
The combination of dropping ICMP messages at the NGE border node and the missing unencrypted packet details in the ICMP information can cause problems with diagnosing network issues.
To help with diagnosing network issues, additional statistics are available on the interface to show whether ICMP messages are being returned from a foreign node. The following statistics are included in the group encryption NGE statistics for an interface:
Group Enc Rx ICMP DestUnRch Pkts
Group Enc Rx ICMP TimeExc Pkts
Group Enc Rx ICMP Other Pkts
These statistics are used when clear text ICMP messages are received on an NGE router interface. The Invalid ESP statistics are not used in this situation even though the packet does not have a correct NGE ESP header. If there is no ingress exception ACL configured on the interface to allow the ICMP messages to be forwarded, the messages are counted and dropped.
If more information is required for these ICMP messages, such as source or destination address information, a second ICMP filter can be configured on the interface to allow logging of the ICMP messages. If the original packet information is also required, an egress exception ACL can be configured with the respective source or destination address information, or other criteria, to allow the original packet to enter the NGE domain in clear text and determine which flows are causing the ICMP failures.
1588v2 encryption with NGE
If a router interface is enabled for encryption and Layer 3 1588v2 packets are sent, they are encrypted using NGE. This means that if port timestamping is enabled on a router interface with NGE, the port timestamp is applied to the Layer 3 1588v2 packet using software-based timestamping instead of hardware-based timestamping, and consequently, timing accuracy may degrade. The exact level of timing or synchronization degradation is dependent on many factors, and testing is recommended to measure any impact.
If there is a need to support Layer 3 1588v2 with better accuracy for frequency or better time using port timestamping, an NGE exception ACL is required to keep the Layer 3 1588v2 packets in clear text. The exception ACL must enable UDP packets with destination port 319 to be sent in clear text.
Process overview
The following items are components to provision for basic router command options:
interface
A logical IP routing interface. When created, attributes like an IP address, port, link aggregation group, or the system can be associated with the IP interface.
address
The address associates the device’s system name with the IP system address. An IP address must be assigned to each IP interface.
system interface
This creates an association between the logical IP interface and the system (loopback) address. The system interface address is the circuitless address (loopback) and is used by default as the router ID for protocols such as OSPF and BGP.
router ID
(Optional) The router ID specifies the router's IP address.
autonomous system
(Optional) An autonomous system (AS) is a collection of networks that are subdivided into smaller, more manageable areas.
confederation
(Optional) This option creates confederation-autonomous systems within an AS to reduce the number of IBGP sessions required within an AS.
Configuration notes
The following information describes router configuration requirements:
A system interface and associated IP address must be specified.
Boot options file (BOF) options must be configured before configuring router command options.
Confederations can be configured before protocol connections (such as BGP) and peering command options are configured.
IPv6 interfaces and associated routing protocols may only be configured on the following systems:
7950 XRS systems
7750 SR chassis systems
7750 SR-a chassis systems
7750 SR-e chassis systems
7450 ESS systems with IPv6 functionality
Configuring an IP router with CLI
This section provides information to configure an IP router using CLI.
Router configuration overview
In a Nokia router, an interface is a logical named entity. An interface is created by specifying an interface name under the configure router context. This is the global router configuration context where objects like static routes are defined. An IP interface name can be up to 32 alphanumeric characters, must start with a letter, and is case-sensitive; for example, the interface name ‟1.1.1.1” is not allowed, but ‟int-1.1.1.1” is allowed.
If the interface name already exists, the router changes the context to maintain that IP interface. If the interface name already exists within another service ID or is an IP interface defined within the configure router commands, an error occurs, and the context does not change to that IP interface.
To create an interface, the following basic configuration tasks must be performed:
-
Assign a name to the interface.
-
Associate an IP address with the interface.
-
Associate the interface with a network interface or the system interface.
-
Configure appropriate routing protocols.
A system interface and network interface must be configured.
System interface
The system interface is associated with a network entity (such as a specific Nokia router), not a specific interface. The system interface is also referred to as the loopback address. The system interface is associated during the configuration of the following entities:
termination point of service tunnels
hops when configuring MPLS paths and LSPs
addresses on a target router for BGP and LDP peering
The system interface is used to preserve connectivity (when routing reconvergence is possible) when an interface fails or is removed. The system interface is used as the router identifier. A system interface must have an IP address with a 32-bit subnet mask.
Network interface
A network interface can be configured on one of the following entities:
physical or logical port
SONET/SDH channel
For the 7950 XRS, a network interface can be configured on either a physical port or Ethernet LAG interface.
Basic configuration
See each specific chapter for specific routing protocol information and command syntax to configure protocols such as IS-IS and BGP.
The most basic router configuration must have the following:
-
system name
-
system address
The following example shows the 7750 SR and 7450 ESS router configuration.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
autonomous-system 100
router-id 10.10.10.103
confederation {
confed-as-num 1000
members 100 { }
members 200 { }
members 300 { }
}
...
interface "system" {
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.10.10.103
prefix-length 32
}
}
}
interface "to-104" {
port 1/1/1
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.0.0.103
prefix-length 24
}
}
}
...
isis 0 {
loopfree-alternate {
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config# info
. . .
#------------------------------------------
# Router Configuration
#------------------------------------------
router
interface "system"
address 10.10.10.103/32
exit
interface "to-104"
address 10.0.0.103/24
port 1/1/1
exit
exit
autonomous-system 100
confederation 1000 members 100 200 300
router-id 10.10.10.103
...
exit
isis
exit
...
#------------------------------------------
Common configuration tasks
The following sections describe basic system tasks.
Configuring a system name
Use the system command to configure a name for the device. The name is used in the prompt string. Only one system name can be configured. If multiple system names are configured, the last one configured overwrites the previous entry.
If special characters are included in the system name string, such as spaces, #, or ?, the entire string must be enclosed in double quotes.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure system]
A:admin@node-2# info
name "node-2"
location "Mt.View, CA, NE corner of FERG 1 Building"
coordinates "37.390, -122.05500 degrees lat."
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>system# info
#------------------------------------------
# System Configuration
#------------------------------------------
name "node-2"
location "Mt.View, CA, NE corner of FERG 1 Building"
coordinates "37.390, -122.05500 degrees lat."
Configuring interfaces
The following command sequences create a system and a logical IP interface. The system interface assigns an IP address to the interface, then associates the IP interface with a physical port. The logical interface can associate attributes like an IP address or port.
The system interface cannot be deleted.
Configuring a system interface
Use the following command to configure a system interface.
configure router interface
Configuring a network interface
Use the commands in the following context to configure a network interface.
configure router interface
The following example shows network interface configuration information.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
...
interface "system" {
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.10.0.4/32
prefix-length 32
}
}
}
interface "to-ALA-2" {
port 1/1/1
egress {
filter {
ip "10"
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
#------------------------------------------
# IP Configuration
#------------------------------------------
interface "system"
address 10.10.0.4/32
exit
interface "to-ALA-2"
address 10.10.24.4/24
port 1/1/1
egress
filter ip 10
exit
exit
...
#------------------------------------------
Use the following command to enable CPU protection.
configure router interface cpu-protection
Use the commands in the following context to configure CPU protection policies.
configure system security cpu-protection
For more information, see the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7950 XRS, and VSR System Management Guide.
Assigning a key group to a router interface
The following example shows key group configuration for a router interface.
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
----------------------------------------------
...
interface demo
group-encryption
encryption-keygroup 6 direction inbound
encryption-keygroup 6 direction outbound
exit
no shutdown
exit
exit
...
----------------------------------------------
Configuring IPv6
IPv6 interfaces and associated routing protocols may only be configured on the following systems:
-
7950 XRS systems
-
7750 SR chassis systems
-
7750 SR-a chassis systems
-
7750 SR-e chassis systems
-
7450 ESS chassis with IPv6 functionality
Default configuration when IPv6 is enabled on an interface (MD-CLI)
[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "demo"]
A:admin@node-2# info
admin-state enable
port 1/2/37
ipv6 {
icmp6 {
packet-too-big {
number 100
seconds 10
}
param-problem {
number 100
seconds 10
}
redirects {
number 100
seconds 10
}
time-exceeded {
number 100
seconds 10
}
unreachables {
number 100
seconds 10
}
}
}
Default configuration when IPv6 is enabled on an interface (classic CLI)
A:node-2>config>router>if# info
----------------------------------------------
port 1/2/37
ipv6
exit
no shutdown
A:node-2>config>router>if>ipv6# info detail
----------------------------------------------
icmp6
packet-too-big 100 10
param-problem 100 10
redirects 100 10
time-exceeded 100 10
unreachables 100 10
exit
Use the commands in the following context to configure IPv6 on a router interface that you want to configure differently from the default configuration.
configure router interface ipv6 icmp6
Configuration of IPv6 on a router interface (MD-CLI)
[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "demo"]
A:admin@node-2# info
port 1/2/3
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.11.10.1
prefix-length 24
}
}
ipv6 {
address 2001:db8::1 {
prefix-length 24
}
}
Configuration of IPv6 on a router interface (classic CLI)
A:node-2>config>router>if# info
----------------------------------------------
address 10.11.10.1/24
port 1/2/37
ipv6
address 2001:db8::1/24
exit
----------------------------------------------
Configuring IPv6 over IPv4
The following sections provide several examples of the features that must be configured (tunnel ingress and egress node) to implement IPv6 over IPv4 relay services for the 7750 SR OS.
Tunnel ingress node
The following example shows the configuration of the interface through which the IPv6 over IPv4 traffic leaves the node. This must be configured on a network interface.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
...
static-routes {
route 3ffe::c8c8:c802/128 route-type unicast {
indirect 10.200.200.2 {
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
...
#--------------------------------------------------
echo "Static Route Configuration"
#--------------------------------------------------
static-route-entry 3ffe::c8c8:c802/128
indirect 10.200.200.2
shutdown
tunnel-next-hop
resolution disabled
exit
exit
exit
----------------------------------------------
The following example shows the configuration of the network interface.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
interface "ip-1.1.1.1" {
port 1/1/1
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.1.1.1
prefix-length 30
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
----------------------------------------------
...
interface "ip-1.1.1.1"
address 10.1.1.1/30
port 1/1/1
exit
...
----------------------------------------------
Both the IPv4 and IPv6 system addresses must be configured. The following example shows the configuration of interface information.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
...
interface "system" {
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.0.113.1
prefix-length 32
}
}
ipv6 {
address 3ffe::c8c8:c801 {
prefix-length 128
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
----------------------------------------------
...
interface "system"
address 10.0.113.1/32
ipv6
address 3ffe::c8c8:c801/128
exit
exit
...
----------------------------------------------
Learning the tunnel endpoint IPv4 system address
The following example shows the OSPF configuration to learn the IPv4 system address of the tunnel endpoint.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
ospf 0 {
area 0.0.0.0 {
interface "ip-1.1.1.1" {
}
interface "system" {
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
----------------------------------------------
...
ospf
area 0.0.0.0
interface "system"
exit
interface "ip-1.1.1.1"
exit
exit
exit
----------------------------------------------
Configuring an IPv4 BGP peer
The following example shows the configuration of an IPv4 BGP peer with (IPv4 and) IPv6 protocol families.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
bgp {
router-id 203.0.113.1
}
export {
policy ["ospf3"]
}
group "main" {
type internal
family {
ipv4 true
ipv6 true
}
}
neighbor "203.0.113.2" {
group "main"
peer-as 1
local-as {
as-number 1
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
----------------------------------------------
...
bgp
export "ospf3"
router-id 203.0.113.1
group "main"
family ipv4 ipv6
type internal
neighbor 203.0.113.2
local-as 1
peer-as 1
exit
exit
exit
...
----------------------------------------------
IPv6 over IPv4 tunnel configuration example
The IPv6 address is the next-hop as it is received through BGP. The IPv4 address is the system address of the tunnel's endpoint.
See Configuring an IPv4 BGP peer for an example that shows the configuration of a policy to export IPv6 routes into BGP.
The following example shows an IPv6 over IPv4 tunnel configuration.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure policy-options]
A:admin@node-2# info
policy-statement "ospf3" {
description "Plcy Stmnt For 'From ospf3 To bgp'"
entry 10 {
description "Entry From Protocol ospf3 To bgp"
from {
protocol {
name [ospf3]
}
}
to {
protocol {
name [bgp]
}
}
action {
action-type accept
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
----------------------------------------------
...
policy-options
policy-statement "ospf3"
description "Plcy Stmnt For 'From ospf3 To bgp'"
entry 10
description "Entry From Protocol ospf3 To bgp"
from
protocol ospf3
exit
to
protocol bgp
exit
action accept
exit
exit
exit
exit
...
----------------------------------------------
Tunnel egress node
The following example shows the configuration of the interface through which the IPv6 over IPv4 traffic leaves the node. It must be configured on a network interface. Both the IPv4 and IPv6 system addresses must be configured.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
...
static-routes {
route 3ffe::c8c8:c801/128 route-type unicast {
indirect 10.0.113.1 {
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
#--------------------------------------------------
"Static Route Configuration"
#--------------------------------------------------
static-route-entry 3ffe::c8c8:c801/128
indirect 10.0.113.1
...
exit
exit
exit
The following example shows the network interface configuration with both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses configured.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
interface "ip-1.1.1.2" {
port 1/1/1
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.1.1.2
prefix-length 30
}
}
}
interface "system" {
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.0.113.2
prefix-length 32
}
}
ipv6 {
address 3ffe::c8c8:c802 {
prefix-length 128
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
----------------------------------------------
...
interface "ip-1.1.1.2"
address 10.1.1.2/30
port 1/1/1
exit
interface "system"
address 10.0.113.2/32
ipv6
address 3ffe::c8c8:c802/128
exit
exit
----------------------------------------------
Learning the tunnel endpoint IPv4 system address
The following example shows the configuration of the OSPF configuration to learn the IPv4 system address of the tunnel endpoint.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
...
ospf 0 {
area 0.0.0.0 {
interface "ip-1.1.1.2" {
}
interface "system" {
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
----------------------------------------------
...
ospf
area 0.0.0.0
interface "system"
exit
interface "ip-1.1.1.2"
exit
exit
exit
----------------------------------------------
Configuring an IPv4 BGP peer
The following example shows the configuration an IPv4 BGP peer with (IPv4 and) IPv6 protocol families.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
...
bgp {
router-id 203.0.113.2
export {
policy ["ospf3"]
}
group "main" {
type internal
family {
ipv4 true
ipv6 true
}
}
neighbor "203.0.113.1" {
group "main"
peer-as 1
local-as {
as-number 1
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2config>router# info
----------------------------------------------
...
bgp
export "ospf3"
router-id 203.0.113.2
group "main"
family ipv4 ipv6
type internal
neighbor 203.0.113.1
local-as 1
peer-as 1
exit
exit
exit
...
----------------------------------------------
IPv6 over IPv4 tunnel configuration example
The IPv6 address is the next-hop as it is received through BGP. The IPv4 address is the system address of the tunnel's endpoint.
See Configuring an IPv4 BGP peer for an example of the configuration of a policy to export IPv6 routes into BGP.
The following example shows an IPv6 over IPv4 tunnel configuration.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure policy-options]
A:admin@node-2# info
policy-statement "ospf3" {
description "Plcy Stmnt For 'From ospf3 To bgp'"
entry 10 {
description "Entry From Protocol ospf3 To bgp"
from {
protocol {
name [ospf3]
}
}
to {
protocol {
name [bgp]
}
}
action {
action-type accept
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
----------------------------------------------
...
policy-options
policy-statement "ospf3"
description "Plcy Stmnt For 'From ospf3 To bgp'"
entry 10
description "Entry From Protocol ospf3 To bgp"
from
protocol ospf3
exit
to
protocol bgp
exit
action accept
exit
exit
exit
exit
----------------------------------------------
Router advertisement
To configure the router to originate router advertisement messages on an interface, the interface must be configured under the router-advertisement context and be enabled. All other router advertisement configuration command options are optional.
Use the commands in the following contexts to configure router advertisement:
-
MD-CLI
configure router ipv6 router-advertisement configure service vprn ipv6 router-advertisement
-
classic CLI
configure router router-advertisement configure service vprn router-advertisement
The following example shows a router advertisement configuration.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
...
ipv6 {
router-advertisement {
interface "n1" {
admin-state enable
use-virtual-mac true
prefix 2001:db8:2::/64 {
}
prefix 2001:db8:3::/64 {
autonomous true
on-link true
preferred-lifetime 604800
valid-lifetime 2592000
}
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router>router-advert# info
----------------------------------------------
interface "n1"
prefix 2001:db8:3::/64
exit
use-virtual-mac
no shutdown
exit
----------------------------------------------
*A:node-2>config>router>router-advert# interface n1
*A:node-2>config>router>router-advert>if# prefix 2001:db8:3::/64
A:node-2>config>router>router-advert>if>prefix# info
----------------------------------------------
autonomous
on-link
preferred-lifetime 604800
valid-lifetime 2592000
----------------------------------------------
Configuring IPv6
The following example shows the default configuration when IPv6 is enabled on the interface.
Default IPv6 configuration (MD-CLI)
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
interface "test" {
port 1/3/37
ipv6 {
}
}
[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "test" ipv6]
A:admin@node-2# info detail
...
icmp6 {
packet-too-big {
admin-state enable
number 100
seconds 10
}
param-problem {
admin-state enable
number 100
seconds 10
}
redirects {
admin-state enable
number 100
seconds 10
}
time-exceeded {
admin-state enable
number 100
seconds 10
}
unreachables {
admin-state enable
number 100
seconds 10
}
}
Default IPv6 configuration (classic CLI)
A:node-2>config>router# info
----------------------------------------------
#--------------------------------------------------
"IP Configuration"
#--------------------------------------------------
interface "test"
port 1/3/37
ipv6
exit
no shutdown
exit
A:node-2>config>router>if>ipv6$ info detail
----------------------------------------------
icmp6
packet-too-big 100 10
param-problem 100 10
redirects 100 10
time-exceeded 100 10
unreachables 100 10
exit
The following example shows an IPv6 configuration.
IPv6 configuration (MD-CLI)
[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "test"]
A:admin@node-2# info
port 1/3/37
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.11.10.1
prefix-length 24
}
}
ipv6 {
address 2001:db8::1 {
prefix-length 24
}
}
IPv6 configuration (classic CLI)
A:node-2>config>router>if# info
----------------------------------------------
address 10.11.10.1/24
port 1/3/37
ipv6
address 2001:db8::1/24
exit
----------------------------------------------
IPv6 over IPv4 tunnel configuration example
The IPv6 address is the next-hop as it is received through BGP. The IPv4 address is the system address of the tunnel's endpoint.
Use the commands in the following context to export IPv6 routes into BGP.
configure router bgp export
The following example shows an IPv6 over IPv4 tunnel configuration.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure policy-options]
A:admin@node-2# info
policy-statement "ospf3" {
description "Plcy Stmnt For 'From ospf3 To bgp'"
entry 10 {
description "Entry From Protocol ospf3 To bgp"
from {
protocol {
name [ospf3]
}
}
to {
protocol {
name [bgp]
}
}
action {
action-type accept
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
----------------------------------------------
...
policy-options
policy-statement "ospf3"
description "Plcy Stmnt For 'From ospf3 To bgp'"
entry 10
description "Entry From Protocol ospf3 To bgp"
from
protocol ospf3
exit
to
protocol bgp
exit
action accept
exit
exit
exit
exit
----------------------------------------------
Configuring proxy ARP
To configure proxy ARP, you can configure:
A prefix list. Use the commands in the following context to configure a prefix list:
-
MD-CLI
configure policy-options prefix-list
-
classic CLI
configure router policy-options prefix-list
-
A route policy statement and apply the specified prefix list. Use the commands in the following context to configure a route policy statement and apply the specified prefix list:
-
MD-CLI
configure policy-options policy-statement
-
classic CLI
configure router policy-options policy-statement
-
In the policy statement entry to context, specify the host source address(es) for which ARP requests can or cannot be forwarded to non-local networks, depending on the specified action.
-
In the policy statement entry from context, specify network prefixes that ARP requests to be forwarded or not forwarded depending on the action if a match is found. For more information about route policies, see the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7950 XRS, and VSR Unicast Routing Protocols Guide.
-
-
-
Apply the policy statement to the proxy ARP configuration. Use the commands in the following context to apply the policy statement to the proxy ARP configuration.
configure router interface
Prefix list and policy statement configuration (MD-CLI)
[ex:/configure]
A:admin@node-2# info
policy-options {
prefix-list "prefixlist1" {
prefix 10.20.30.0/24 type through {
through-length 32
}
}
policy-statement "ProxyARPpolicy" {
entry 10 {
from {
prefix-list ["prefixlist1"]
}
to {
prefix-list ["prefixlist2"]
}
action {
action-type reject
}
}
default-action {
action-type accept
}
}
}
Prefix list and policy statement configuration (classic CLI)
A:node-2>config>router>policy-options# info
----------------------------------------------
prefix-list "prefixlist1"
prefix 10.20.30.0/24 through 32
exit
prefix-list "prefixlist2"
prefix 10.10.10.0/24 through 32
exit
...
policy-statement "ProxyARPpolicy"
entry 10
from
prefix-list "prefixlist1"
exit
to
prefix-list "prefixlist2"
exit
action reject
exit
default-action accept
exit
exit
...
----------------------------------------------
The following example shows a proxy ARP configuration.
Proxy ARP configuration (MD-CLI)
[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "iparptest"]
A:admin@node-2# info
ipv4 {
primary {
address 192.0.2.59
prefix-length 24
}
neighbor-discovery {
local-proxy-arp true
proxy-arp-policy ["ProxyARPpolicy"]
}
}
Proxy ARP configuration (classic CLI)
A:node-2>config>router>if# info
----------------------------------------------
address 192.0.2.59/24
local-proxy-arp
proxy-arp-policy "ProxyARPpolicy"
exit
----------------------------------------------
Deriving the router ID
The router ID defaults to the address specified in the system interface command. If the system interface is not configured with an IP address, the router ID inherits the last four bytes of the MAC address.
Use the commands in the following context to configure the router ID manually.
configure router
Use the commands in the following context, on the BGP protocol level, to define a BGP router ID.
configure router bgp router-id
If a new router ID is configured, protocols are not automatically restarted with the new router ID. The next time a protocol is initialized, the new router ID is used. An interim period of time can occur when different protocols use different router IDs. To force the new router ID, issue the shutdown and no shutdown commands for each protocol that uses the router ID, or restart the entire router.
It is possible to configure SR OS to operate with an IPv6 only BOF and no IPv4 system interface address. When configured in this manner, the user must explicitly define IPv4 router IDs for protocols such as OSPF and BGP because there is no mechanism to derive the router ID from an IPv6 system interface address.
The following example shows a router ID configuration.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
router-id 10.10.0.4
interface "system" {
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.10.0.4
prefix-length 32
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2config>router# info
#------------------------------------------
# IP Configuration
#------------------------------------------
interface "system"
address 10.10.0.4/32
exit
. . .
router-id 10.10.0.4
#------------------------------------------
Configuring a confederation
Configuring a confederation is optional. The AS and confederation topology design should be carefully planned. Autonomous system (AS), confederation, and BGP connection and peering must be explicitly created on each participating router. Identify AS numbers, confederation numbers, and members participating in the confederation.
See the BGP section for CLI syntax and command descriptions.
The following example shows the configuration of the confederation topology in Confederation configuration.
Confederations can be preconfigured before configuring BGP connections and peering.
Each confederation can have up to 15 members.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
autonomous-system 100
router-id 10.10.10.103
confederation {
confed-as-num 2002
members 200 { }
members 300 { }
members 400 { }
}
interface "system" {
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.10.10.103
prefix-length 32
}
}
}
interface "to-104" {
port 1/1/1
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.0.0.103
prefix-length 24
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
#------------------------------------------
# IP Configuration
#------------------------------------------
interface "system"
address 10.10.10.103/32
exit
interface "to-104"
address 10.0.0.103/24
port 1/1/1
exit
autonomous-system 100
confederation 2002 members 200 300 400
router-id 10.10.10.103
#------------------------------------------
Configuring an autonomous system
Configuring an autonomous system is optional. The following example shows the configuration of an autonomous system.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
autonomous-system 100
router-id 10.10.10.103
interface "system" {
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.10.10.103
prefix-length 32
}
}
}
interface "to-104" {
port 1/1/1
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.0.0.103
prefix-length 24
}
}
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
#------------------------------------------
# IP Configuration
#------------------------------------------
interface "system"
address 10.10.10.103/32
exit
interface "to-104"
address 10.0.0.103/24
port 1/1/1
exit
exit
autonomous-system 100
router-id 10.10.10.103
#------------------------------------------
Configuring overload state on a single SFM
When a router has fewer than the full set of SFMs functioning, the forwarding capacity can be reduced. Some scenarios include:
-
fewer than the maximum number of SFMs installed in the system
-
one or more SFMs have failed
-
the system is in the ISSU process and the SFM is co-located on the CPM
An overload condition can be set for IS-IS and OSPF to enable the router to still participate in exchanging routing information, but route all traffic away from it when insufficient SFMs are active. Use the following commands to configure this overload condition:
-
MD-CLI
configure router sfm-overload holdoff-time configure service vprn sfm-overload holdoff-time tools perform redundancy forced-single-sfm-overload
-
classic CLI
configure router single-sfm-overload holdoff-time configure service vprn single-sfm-overload holdoff-time tools perform redundancy forced-single-sfm-overload
These cause an overload state in the IGP to trigger the traffic reroute by setting the overload bit in IS-IS or setting the metric to maximum in OSPF. When PIM uses IS-IS or OSPF to find out the upstream router, a next-hop change in the IS-IS or OSPF causes PIM to join the new path and prune the old path, which effectively also reroutes the multicast traffic downstream as well as the unicast traffic.
When the problem is resolved, and the required compliment of SFMs become active in the router, the overload condition is cleared, which causes the traffic to be routed back to the router.
The conditions to set overload are:
-
7750 SR-12/SR-7 and 7450 ESS-12/ESS-7 platforms: protocol sets overload if one of the SF/CPMs fails
-
7750 SR-12e and 7950 XRS platforms: protocol sets overload if two SFMs fail (two SFMs belonging to different SFM pairs on the XRS-40)
Service management tasks
This section describes IP router service management tasks.
Changing the system name
The system command sets the name of the device and is used in the prompt string. Only one system name can be configured. If multiple system names are configured, the last one configured overwrites the previous entry.
Use the following command to change the system name.
configure system name
The following example shows the system name change.
MD-CLI
[ex:/configure system]
A:admin@node-2# info
name "node-2"
location "Mt.View, CA, NE corner of FERB 1 Building"
coordinates "37.390, -122.05500 degrees lat."
management-interface {
configuration-mode mixed
}
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>system# info
#--------------------------------------------------
echo "System Configuration"
#--------------------------------------------------
name "node-2"
location "Mt.View, CA, NE corner of FERB 1 Building"
coordinates "37.390, -122.05500 degrees lat."
management-interface
configuration-mode mixed
exit
...
#--------------------------------------------------
Modifying an interface configuration
This section provides examples of commands to use to modify the router interface configuration.
Modifying IP address information (MD-CLI)
*[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# interface "to-sr1"
*[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "to-sr1"]
A:admin@node-2# admin-state disable
*[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "to-sr1"]
A:admin@node-2# ipv4
*[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "to-sr1" ipv4]
A:admin@node-2# primary
*[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "to-sr1" ipv4 primary]
A:admin@node-2# delete address
*[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "to-sr1" ipv4 primary]
A:admin@node-2# address 10.0.0.25
*[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "to-sr1" ipv4 primary]
A:admin@node-2# prefix-length 24
*[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "to-sr1" ipv4 primary]
A:admin@node-2# exit
*[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "to-sr1" ipv4]
A:admin@node-2# exit
*[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "to-sr1"]
A:admin@node-2# admin-state enable
Modifying the port information (MD-CLI)
*[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# interface "to-sr1"
*[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "to-sr1"]
A:admin@node-2# admin-state disable
*[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "to-sr1"]
A:admin@node-2# delete port
*[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "to-sr1"]
A:admin@node-2# port 1/1/2
*[ex:/configure router "Base" interface "to-sr1"]
A:admin@node-2# admin-state enable
Modified output (MD-CLI)
[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# info
interface "system" {
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.10.10.103
prefix-length 32
}
}
}
interface "to-sr1" {
admin-state enable
port 1/1/2
ipv4 {
primary {
address 10.0.0.25
prefix-length 24
}
}
}
Modifying IP address information (classic CLI)
*A:node-2>config>router# interface ‟to-sr1”
*A:node-2>config>router>if# shutdown
*A:node-2>config>router>if# no address
*A:node-2>config>router>if# address 10.0.0.25/24
*A:node-2>config>router>if# no shutdown
Modifying the port information (classic CLI)
*A:node-2>config>router# interface ‟to-sr1”
*A:node-2>config>router>if# shutdown
*A:node-2>config>router>if# no port
*A:node-2>config>router>if# port 1/1/2
*A:node-2>config>router>if# no shutdown
Modified output (classic CLI)
A:node-2>config>router# info
#------------------------------------------
# IP Configuration
#------------------------------------------
interface "system"
address 10.0.0.103/32
exit
interface "to-sr1"
address 10.0.0.25/24
port 1/1/2
exit
router-id 10.10.0.3
#------------------------------------------
Removing a key group from a router interface
The following example shows the commands to remove a key group from a router interface.
classic CLI
*A:node-2>config>router# interface demo
*A:node-2>config>router>if# group-encryption
*A:node-2>config>router>if>group-encryp# no encryption-keygroup 6 direction inbound
*A:node-2>config>router>if>group-encryp# no encryption-keygroup 6 direction outbound
The following example shows that the key group configuration has been removed from a router interface.
classic CLI
A:node-2>config>router# info
----------------------------------------------
...
interface demo
group-encryption
exit
no shutdown
exit
exit
...
----------------------------------------------
Changing the key group for a router interface
Use the following commands to change the key group on a router interface. The following example shows the inbound and outbound key groups being changed from key group 6 to key group 8.
classic CLI
*A:node-2>config>router# interface demo
*A:node-2>config>router>if# group-encryption
*A:node-2>config>router>if>group-encryp# no encryption-keygroup 6 direction inbound
*A:node-2>config>router>if>group-encryp# encryption-keygroup 8 direction outbound
*A:node-2>config>router>if>group-encryp# encryption-keygroup 8 direction inbound
The following example shows that the key group configuration has been changed for the router interface.
classic CLI
A:node-2config>router# info
----------------------------------------------
...
interface demo
group-encryption
encryption-keygroup 8 direction inbound
encryption-keygroup 8 direction outbound
exit
no shutdown
exit
exit
...
----------------------------------------------
Deleting a logical IP interface
The following example shows how to delete a logical IP interface. Consider the following before you attempt to delete a logical IP interface:
-
Before an IP interface can be deleted, it must first be administratively disabled.
-
After the interface is administratively disabled, it can be deleted.
MD-CLI
In MD-CLI, the delete command used with the interface command removes the entry.
*[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# interface "test-interface"
*[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# admin-state disable
*[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# exit
*[ex:/configure router "Base"]
A:admin@node-2# delete interface "test-interface"
classic CLI
In classic CLI, the no form of the interface command typically removes the entry, but all entity associations must be shut down or deleted before an interface can be deleted.
*A:node-2>config>router# interface "test-interface"
*A:node-2>config>router>if$ shutdown
*A:node-2>config>router>if$ exit
*A:node-2>config>router# no interface "test-interface"