- Table of Contents
-
- 05-Layer 3 - IP Services Command Reference
- 00-Preface
- 01-ARP commands
- 02-IP addressing commands
- 03-DHCP commands
- 04-DNS commands
- 05-IP forwarding basics commands
- 06-Fast forwarding commands
- 07-Adjacency table commands
- 08-IRDP commands
- 09-IP performance optimization commands
- 10-UDP Helper commands
- 11-IPv6 basics commands
- 12-DHCPv6 commands
- 13-IPv6 fast forwarding commands
- 14-Tunneling commands
- 15-GRE commands
- Related Documents
-
Title | Size | Download |
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14-Tunneling commands | 95.04 KB |
Tunneling commands
bandwidth
Use bandwidth to set the expected bandwidth for an interface.
Use undo bandwidth to restore the default.
Syntax
bandwidth bandwidth-value
undo bandwidth
Default
The expected bandwidth is 64 kbps.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
bandwidth-value: Specifies the expected bandwidth in the range of 1 to 400000000 kbps.
Usage guidelines
The expected bandwidth for an interface affects the link costs in OSPF, OSPFv3, and IS-IS. For more information, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.
Examples
# Set the expected bandwidth of Tunnel 1 to 100 kbps.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1
[Sysname-Tunnel1] bandwidth 100
default
Use default to restore the default settings for a tunnel interface.
Syntax
default
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Usage guidelines
The default command might interrupt ongoing network services. Make sure you are fully aware of the impacts of this command when you use it on a live network.
This command might fail to restore the default settings for some commands for reasons such as command dependencies or system restrictions. Use the display this command in interface view to identify these commands. Use their undo forms or follow the command reference to restore their default settings. If your restoration attempt still fails, follow the error message instructions to resolve the problem.
Examples
# Restore the default settings of interface tunnel 1.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1
[Sysname-Tunnel1] default
description
Use description to configure a description for a tunnel interface.
Use undo description to restore the default.
Syntax
description text
undo description
Default
The description for a tunnel interface is Tunnelnumber Interface, for example, Tunnel1 Interface.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
text: Specifies a description, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 255 characters.
Usage guidelines
Configure descriptions for interfaces for identification and management purposes.
You can use the display interface command to display the configured interface descriptions.
Examples
# Configure the description for interface Tunnel 1 as tunnel1.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1
[Sysname-Tunnel1] description tunnel1
display interface tunnel
destination
Use destination to specify the destination address for a tunnel interface.
Use undo destination to remove the configured tunnel destination address.
Syntax
destination { ip-address | ipv6-address }
undo destination
Default
No tunnel destination address is configured.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
ip-address: Specifies the tunnel destination IPv4 address.
ipv6-address: Specifies the tunnel destination IPv6 address.
Usage guidelines
For a manual tunnel interface, you must configure the destination address. For an automatic tunnel interface, you do not need to configure the destination address.
The tunnel destination address must be the address of the receiving interface on the tunnel peer. It is used as the destination address of tunneled packets.
The destination address of the local tunnel interface must be the source address of the peer tunnel interface, and vice versa.
Examples
# VLAN-interface 100 on Sysname 1 uses the IP address 193.101.1.1 and VLAN-interface 100 on Sysname 2 uses the IP address 192.100.1.1. Configure the source address 193.101.1.1 and destination address 192.100.1.1 for the tunnel interface on Sysname 1.
<Sysname1> system-view
[Sysname1] interface tunnel 1 mode ipv6-ipv4
[Sysname1-Tunnel1] source 193.101.1.1
[Sysname1-Tunnel1] destination 192.100.1.1
# Configure the source address 192.100.1.1 and destination address 193.101.1.1 for the tunnel interface on Sysname 2.
<Sysname2> system-view
[Sysname2] interface tunnel 1 mode ipv6-ipv4
[Sysname2-Tunnel1] source 192.100.1.1
[Sysname2-Tunnel1] destination 193.101.1.1
· display interface tunnel
· interface tunnel
· source
display interface tunnel
Use display interface tunnel to display information about tunnel interfaces, including the source address, destination address, and tunnel mode.
Syntax
display interface [ tunnel [ number ] ] [ brief [ description | down ] ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
number: Specifies the number of a tunnel interface.
brief: Displays brief interface information. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays detailed interface information.
description: Displays complete interface descriptions. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays only the first 27 characters of interface descriptions.
down: Displays information about interfaces in the physical state of DOWN and the causes. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays information about interfaces in all states.
Usage guidelines
If you do not specify the tunnel keyword, this command displays information about all interfaces on the device.
If you specify the tunnel keyword without the number argument, this command displays information about all existing tunnel interfaces.
Examples
# Display detailed information about interface Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> display interface tunnel 1
Current state: UP
Line protocol state: UP
Description: Tunnel1 Interface
Bandwidth: 64kbps
Maximum Transmit Unit: 1476
Internet Address is 10.1.2.1/24 Primary
Tunnel source 2002::1:1 (Vlan-interface10), destination 2001::2:1
Tunnel keepalive enabled, Period(50 s), Retries(3)
Tunnel TOS 0xC8, Tunnel TTL 255
Tunnel protocol/transport GRE/IPv6
GRE key disabled
Checksumming of GRE packets disabled
Last clearing of counters: Never
Last 300 seconds input rate: 0 bytes/sec, 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec
Last 300 seconds output rate: 0 bytes/sec, 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec
Input: 0 packets, 0 bytes, 0 drops
Output: 0 packets, 0 bytes, 0 drops
Table 1 Command output
Field |
Description |
Tunnel1 |
Information about the tunnel interface Tunnel1. |
Current state |
State of the tunnel interface: · Administratively DOWN—The interface has been shut down by using the shutdown command. · DOWN—The interface is administratively up but its physical state is down. · DOWN (Tunnel-Bundle administratively down)—The tunnel bundle interface to which the interface belongs has been shut down by using the shutdown command. · UP—Both the administrative and physical states of the interface are up. |
Line protocol state |
Link layer protocol state of the tunnel interface. The value is determined by parameter negotiation on the link layer. · UP—The protocol state of the interface is up. · UP (spoofing)—The link protocol state of the interface is up, but the link is temporarily set up on demand or does not exist. This attribute is available for null interfaces and loopback interfaces. · DOWN—The protocol state of the interface is down. |
Description |
Description for the tunnel interface. |
Bandwidth |
Expected bandwidth for the tunnel interface. |
Maximum Transmit Unit |
MTU of the tunnel interface. |
Internet Address |
IP address of the tunnel interface. If no IP address is assigned to the interface, this field displays Internet protocol processing: disabled, and the tunnel interface cannot process packets. Primary indicates that it is the primary IP address of the interface. |
Tunnel source |
Source address of the tunnel. If a source interface is specified for the tunnel interface, this field also displays the source interface in parentheses. |
destination |
Destination address of the tunnel. |
Tunnel keepalive enabled, Period(50 s), Retries(3) |
Keepalive is enabled to detect the state of the tunnel interface. In this example, keepalive packets are sent every 50 seconds, and the maximum sending times are three. This field is applicable only to GRE and EVI tunnels. |
Tunnel TOS |
ToS of tunneled packets. |
Tunnel TTL |
TTL of tunneled packets. |
Tunnel protocol/transport |
Tunnel mode and transport protocol: · CR_LSP—MPLS TE tunnel mode. · GRE/IP—GRE/IPv4 tunnel mode. · GRE/IPv6—GRE/IPv6 tunnel mode. · GRE_EVI/IP—GRE-encapsulated IPv4 EVI tunnel mode. · IP/IP—IPv4 over IPv4 tunnel mode. · IPv6—IPv6 tunnel mode. · IPv6/IP—IPv6 over IPv4 manual tunnel mode. · IPv6/IP 6to4—IPv6 over IPv4 6to4 tunnel mode. · IPv6/IP ISATAP—IPv6 over IPv4 ISATAP tunnel mode. · UDP_VXLAN/IP—UDP-encapsulated IPv4 VXLAN tunnel mode. |
GRE key disabled |
No GRE tunnel interface key is configured. |
Checksumming of GRE packets disabled |
The GRE packet checksum feature is disabled. |
Last clearing of counters |
Last time when counters were cleared. |
Last 300 seconds input: 0 bytes/sec, 0 packets/sec |
Average input rate in the last 300 seconds. |
Last 300 seconds input rate: 0 bytes/sec, 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec |
Average output rate in the last 300 seconds. |
# Display brief information about interface Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> display interface tunnel 1 brief
Brief information on interface(s) under route mode:
Link: ADM - administratively down; Stby - standby
Protocol: (s) - spoofing
Interface Link Protocol Main IP Description
Tun1 UP UP 1.1.1.1 aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
# Display brief information about interface Tunnel 1, including the complete interface description.
<Sysname> display interface tunnel 1 brief description
Brief information on interface(s) under route mode:
Link: ADM - administratively down; Stby - standby
Protocol: (s) - spoofing
Interface Link Protocol Main IP Description
Tun1 UP UP 1.1.1.1 aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
# Display information about interfaces in DOWN state and the causes.
<Sysname> display interface tunnel brief down
Brief information on interface(s) under route mode:
Link: ADM - administratively down; Stby - standby
Interface Link Cause
Tun0 DOWN Not connected
Tun1 DOWN Not connected
Table 2 Command output
Field |
Description |
Brief information on interface(s) under route mode |
Brief information about Layer 3 interfaces. |
Link: ADM - administratively down; Stby - standby |
Link status: · ADM—The interface has been administratively shut down. To bring it up, use the undo shutdown command. · Stby—The interface is a backup interface. To show the primary interface, use the display interface-backup state command. |
Protocol: (s) - spoofing |
(s) indicates that the data link layer protocol state is UP, but the link is temporarily set up on demand or does not exist. This attribute is available for null interfaces and loopback interfaces. |
Interface |
Abbreviated interface name. |
Link |
Physical link state of the interface: · UP—The link is physically up. · DOWN—The link is physically down. · ADM—The link has been administratively shut down. To bring it up, use the undo shutdown command. · Stby—The interface is a backup interface. |
Protocol |
Data link layer protocol state of the interface: · UP—The data link protocol state of the interface is up. · DOWN—The data link protocol state of the interface is down. · UP(s)—The data link protocol state of the interface is up, but the link is temporarily set up on demand or does not exist. This attribute is available for null interfaces and loopback interfaces. |
Main IP |
Primary IP address of the interface. |
Description |
Description for the interface. |
Cause |
Causes for the physical state of DOWN: · Administratively—The link has been shut down by using the shutdown command. To bring it up, use the undo shutdown command. · Not connected—The tunnel is not established. · DOWN (Tunnel-Bundle administratively down)—The tunnel bundle interface to which the tunnel interface belongs has been shut down by using the shutdown command. |
Related commands
· destination
· interface tunnel
· source
interface tunnel
Use interface tunnel to create a tunnel interface, specify the tunnel mode, and enter tunnel interface view.
Use undo interface tunnel to delete a tunnel interface.
Syntax
interface tunnel number [ mode { evi | gre [ ipv6 ] | ipv4-ipv4 | ipv6 | ipv6-ipv4 [ 6to4 | isatap ] | mpls-te | vxlan } ]
undo interface tunnel number
Default
No tunnel interface is created on the device.
Views
System view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
number: Specifies the tunnel interface number in the range of 1 to 511.
mode evi: Specifies the IPv4 EVI tunnel mode.
mode gre: Specifies the GRE/IPv4 tunnel mode.
mode gre ipv6: Specifies the GRE/IPv6 tunnel mode.
mode ipv4-ipv4: Specifies the IPv4 over IPv4 tunnel mode.
mode ipv6: Specifies the IPv6 tunnel mode. Set this mode for IPv4 over IPv6 manual and IPv6 over IPv6 tunnels.
mode ipv6-ipv4: Specifies the IPv6 over IPv4 manual tunnel mode.
mode ipv6-ipv4 6to4: Specifies the 6to4 tunnel mode.
mode ipv6-ipv4 isatap: Specifies the ISATAP tunnel mode.
mode mpls-te: Specifies the MPLS TE tunnel mode.
mode vxlan: Specifies the VXLAN tunnel mode.
Usage guidelines
To create a new tunnel interface, you must specify the tunnel mode in this command. To enter the view of an existing tunnel interface, you do not need to specify the tunnel mode.
A tunnel interface number is locally significant. The tunnel interfaces on the two ends of a tunnel can use the same or different interface numbers.
Examples
# Create the GRE/IPv4 tunnel interface Tunnel 1 and enter tunnel interface view.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1 mode gre
[Sysname-Tunnel1]
Related commands
· destination
· display interface tunnel
· source
mtu
Use mtu to set the MTU on a tunnel interface.
Use undo mtu to restore the default.
Syntax
mtu size
undo mtu
Default
If the tunnel interface has never been up, the tunnel interface MTU is 1500 bytes.
If the tunnel interface is up, its MTU is identical to the outgoing interface's MTU minus the length of the tunnel headers. The outgoing interface is automatically obtained through routing table lookup based on the tunnel destination address.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
size: Specifies the MTU in the range of 100 to 64000 bytes.
Usage guidelines
After you configure an MTU for a tunnel interface, the configured MTU applies regardless of the tunnel interface status (up/down) and the outgoing interface MTU.
To avoid fragmentation after tunnel encapsulation, set the tunnel interface MTU no greater than the value of the outgoing interface MTU minus the length of the tunnel headers.
Examples
# Set the MTU on interface Tunnel 1 to 10000 bytes.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1
[Sysname-Tunnel1] mtu 10000
Related commands
display interface tunnel
reset counters interface
Use reset counters interface to clear interface statistics.
Syntax
reset counters interface [ tunnel [ number ] ]
Views
User view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
tunnel: Specifies a tunnel interface.
number: Specifies the tunnel interface number. The tunnel interface must have been created.
Usage guidelines
Use this command to clear old statistics so you can observe new traffic statistics on a tunnel interface.
· If you do not specify any parameters, this command clears statistics for all interfaces.
· If you specify only the tunnel keyword, this command clears statistics for all tunnel interfaces.
· If you specify both the tunnel keyword and the number argument, this command clears statistics for the specified tunnel interface.
Examples
# Clear statistics for interface Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> reset counters interface tunnel 1
display interface tunnel
service
Use service to specify an IRF member device for forwarding the traffic on a tunnel interface.
Use undo service to restore the default.
Syntax
service slot slot-number
undo service slot
Default
No IRF member device is specified for the tunnel interface.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
slot slot-number: Specifies an IRF member device by its member ID.
Usage guidelines
If no IRF member device is specified for forwarding the traffic on the tunnel interface, the traffic is processed on the IRF member devices that receive the traffic.
Some features, such as IPsec anti-replay, require that traffic for the same tunnel interface be processed on the same IRF member device. If such a feature is configured, you must use this command to specify an IRF member device for forwarding the traffic on a tunnel interface.
If the specified IRF member device is unavailable, traffic on the tunnel interface cannot be forwarded even if the tunnel interface is up. When the IRF member device becomes available, traffic forwarding resumes on the IRF member device.
Examples
# Specify IRF member device 2 to forward traffic for interface Tunnel 200.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 200
[Sysname-Tunnel200] service slot 2
shutdown
Use shutdown to shut down a tunnel interface.
Use undo shutdown to bring up a tunnel interface.
Syntax
shutdown
undo shutdown
Default
The tunnel interface is up.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Usage guidelines
This command disconnects all links set up on the interface. Make sure you fully understand the impact of the command on your network.
Examples
# Shut down interface Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1
[Sysname-Tunnel1] shutdown
Related commands
display interface tunnel
source
Use source to specify the source address or source interface for a tunnel interface.
Use undo source to restore the default.
Syntax
source { ip-address | ipv6-address | interface-type interface-number }
undo source
Default
No source address or source interface is specified for the tunnel interface.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
ip-address: Specifies the tunnel source IPv4 address.
ipv6-address: Specifies the tunnel source IPv6 address.
Usage guidelines
The specified source address or the address of the specified source interface is used as the source address of tunneled packets. To display the configured tunnel source address, use the display interface tunnel command.
The source address of the local tunnel interface must be the destination address of the peer tunnel interface, and vice versa.
If you execute this command multiple times, the most recent configuration takes effect.
Examples
# Specify VLAN-interface 10 as the source interface of interface Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1 mode gre
[Sysname-Tunnel1] source vlan-interface 10
# Specify 192.100.1.1 as the source address of interface Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1 mode gre
[Sysname-Tunnel1] source 192.100.1.1
· destination
· display interface tunnel
· interface tunnel
tunnel dfbit enable
Use tunnel dfbit enable to set the Don't Fragment (DF) bit for tunneled packets.
Use undo tunnel dfbit enable to restore the default.
Syntax
tunnel dfbit enable
undo tunnel dfbit enable
Default
The DF bit is not set for tunneled packets.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Usage guidelines
To avoid fragmentation and delay, set the DF bit for tunneled packets. Make sure the path MTU is larger than tunneled packets. Otherwise, do not set the DF bit to avoid discarding tunneled packets larger than the path MTU.
This command is supported on a GRE/IPv4 tunnel interface, an IPv4 over IPv4 tunnel interface, an IPv6 over IPv4 manual tunnel interface, a 6to4 tunnel interface, or an ISATAP tunnel interface.
Examples
# Set the DF bit for tunneled packets on interface Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1 mode gre
[Sysname-Tunnel1] tunnel dfbit enable
tunnel discard ipv4-compatible-packet
Use tunnel discard ipv4-compatible-packet to enable dropping IPv6 packets that use IPv4-compatible IPv6 addresses.
Use undo tunnel discard ipv4-compatible-packet to restore the default.
Syntax
tunnel discard ipv4-compatible-packet
undo tunnel discard ipv4-compatible-packet
Default
IPv6 packets that use IPv4-compatible IPv6 addresses are not dropped.
Views
System view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Usage guidelines
This command enables the device to check the source and destination IPv6 addresses of the de-encapsulated IPv6 packets from a tunnel. If a packet uses an IPv4-compatible IPv6 address as the source or destination address, the device discards the packet.
Examples
# Enable dropping IPv6 packets that use IPv4-compatible IPv6 addresses.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] tunnel discard ipv4-compatible-packet
tunnel tos
Use tunnel tos to set the ToS of tunneled packets.
Use undo tunnel tos to restore the default.
Syntax
tunnel tos tos-value
undo tunnel tos
Default
The ToS of tunneled packets is the same as the ToS of the original packets.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
tos-value: Specifies the ToS of tunneled packets, in the range of 0 to 255.
Usage guidelines
After you configure this command, all the tunneled packets of different services sent on the tunnel interface will use the same configured ToS. For more information about ToS, see ACL and QoS Configuration Guide.
This command is not supported on a VXLAN tunnel interface, an IPv4 EVI tunnel interface, and an MPLS TE tunnel interface.
Examples
# Set the ToS of tunneled packets on interface Tunnel 1 to 20.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1 mode gre
[Sysname-Tunnel1] tunnel tos 20
Related commands
display interface tunnel
tunnel ttl
Use tunnel ttl to set the Time to Live (TTL) of tunneled packets.
Use undo tunnel ttl to restore the default.
Syntax
tunnel ttl ttl-value
undo tunnel ttl
Default
The TTL of tunneled packets is 255.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
ttl-value: Specifies the TTL of tunneled packets, in the range of 1 to 255.
Usage guidelines
The TTL determines the maximum number of hops that the tunneled packets can pass. When the TTL expires, the tunneled packets are discarded to avoid loops.
This command is not supported on a VXLAN tunnel interface, an IPv4 EVI tunnel interface, and an MPLS TE tunnel interface.
Examples
# Set the TTL of tunneled packets to 100 on interface Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1 mode gre
[Sysname-Tunnel1] tunnel ttl 100
Related commands
display interface tunnel