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Title | Size | Download |
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01-EVI commands | 190.75 KB |
display evi isis graceful-restart status
display evi neighbor-discovery client member
display evi neighbor-discovery client statistics
display evi neighbor-discovery client summary
display evi neighbor-discovery server member
display evi neighbor-discovery server statistics
display evi neighbor-discovery server summary
evi isis timer holding-multiplier
evi neighbor-discovery authentication
evi neighbor-discovery client enable
evi neighbor-discovery client register-interval
evi neighbor-discovery server enable
evi selective-flooding mac-address
EVI commands
display evi arp-suppression
Use display evi arp-suppression to display ARP flood suppression entries.
Syntax
display evi arp-suppression interface tunnel interface-number [ vlan vlan-id ] [ slot slot-number ] [ count ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
interface tunnel interface-number: Specifies an EVI tunnel interface by its number.
vlan vlan-id: Specifies a VLAN ID in the range of 1 to 4094. If you do not specify a VLAN, this command displays entries for all VLANs.
slot slot-number: Specifies an IRF member device by its member ID or specifies a PEX by its virtual slot number. If you do not specify a member device or PEX, this command displays entries on the master device.
count: Displays the number of ARP flood suppression entries that match the command.
Examples
# Display ARP flood suppression entries on Tunnel 101.
<Sysname> display evi arp-suppression interface tunnel 101
IP Address MAC Address VLAN ID Interface Aging Status
1.1.1.2 000f-e201-0101 1 EVI-link1 14 Valid
1.1.1.3 000f-e201-0202 1 EVI-link1 18 Invalid
1.1.1.4 000f-e201-0203 1 EVI-link1 10 Collision
# Display the total number of ARP flood suppression entries on Tunnel 101.
<Sysname> display evi arp-suppression interface tunnel 101 count
Total entries: 3
Table 1 Command output
Field |
Description |
Interface |
EVI-Link interface where the entry has been learned. |
Aging |
Remaining lifetime (in minutes) of the EVI ARP flood suppression entry. When the timer expires, the entry is deleted. |
Status |
Entry status: · Valid—The edge device can use this entry to reply to ARP requests. · Invalid—No update packet has been received for this entry in the last 15 minutes. If the Invalid state lasts 10 minutes, the entry is deleted. An invalid entry cannot be used. · Collision—An ARP reply is received for the IP address in this entry, but the sender MAC address in the reply is different from the MAC address in this entry. This entry cannot be used and is removed 1 minute later after its state changes to Collision. |
display evi isis brief
Use display evi isis brief to display brief information about EVI IS-IS processes.
Syntax
display evi isis brief [ process-id ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
process-id: Specifies an EVI IS-IS process ID in the range of 0 to 65535. If you do not specify a process, this command displays brief information about all EVI IS-IS processes.
Examples
# Display brief information about an EVI IS-IS process.
<Sysname> display evi isis brief
Site ID: 1
Isolation Count: 0
Process ID: 1
Network-entity: 00.0000.fc00.2500.00
LSP-length receive: 1400
LSP-length originate: 1400
Timers:
LSP-max-age: 1200s
LSP-refresh: 900s
Table 2 Command output
Field |
Description |
Site ID |
Local site ID. |
Isolation Count |
Number of remote sites that have isolated the device because of site ID conflicts. · If the isolation count is 0, there is no conflict. The device can send hello packets. · If the isolation count is not 0, there are conflicts. The device cannot send hello packets. You must reconfigure the site ID. |
Network-entity |
Network entity name of the EVI IS-IS process. |
LSP-length receive |
Maximum length of incoming LSPs. |
LSP-length originate |
Maximum length of LSPs that the EVI IS-IS process can generate. |
Timers |
· LSP-max-age—Maximum lifetime for the LSPs generated by the EVI IS-IS process. · LSP-refresh—Interval at which the EVI IS-IS process sends LSPs to refresh remote LSDBs. |
display evi isis graceful-restart status
Use display evi isis graceful-restart status to display the GR state of EVI IS-IS processes.
Syntax
display evi isis graceful-restart status [ process-id ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
process-id: Specifies an EVI IS-IS process ID in the range of 0 to 65535. If you do not specify a process, this command displays the GR state of all EVI IS-IS processes.
Examples
# Display the GR state of all EVI IS-IS processes.
<Sysname> display evi isis graceful-restart status
Process ID: 1
Restart status: RESTARTING
Restart phase: LSDB synchronization
Restart interval: 300s
T3 remaining time: 65531s
Total number of interfaces: 1
Number of waiting LSPs: 0
T2 remaining time: 56s
Interface: EVI-Link0
T1 remaining time: 2
RA received: N
CSNP received: N
T1 expired number: 3
Table 3 Command output
Field |
Description |
Restart status |
Graceful Restart state: · COMPLETE—Restart has been completed. · STARTING—EVI IS-IS process begins to restart. · RESTARTING—EVI IS-IS process is restarting. · UNKNOWN—Unknown state. |
Restart phase |
Restart phase: · Initialization—EVI IS-IS process is initializing. · LSDB synchronization—Peer EVI IS-IS processes are synchronizing LSDBs. · MAC receiving—EVI IS-IS process is receiving reported local MAC addresses. · LSP stable—EVI IS-IS process is generating LSPs. · LSP generation—EVI IS-IS process is refreshing and flooding LSPs to adjacent EVI neighbors. · Finish—Graceful Restart is complete. · Unknown—Unknown phase. |
T3 remaining time |
The remaining time (in seconds) of the T3 timer. The GR process fails if it is not complete before this timer expires. |
T2 remaining time |
The remaining time (in seconds) of the T2 timer. The T2 timer sets the LSDB synchronization interval. |
T1 remaining time |
The remaining time (in seconds) of the T1 timer. The T1 timer sets the interval for the restarting device to retransmit hello messages with the RR bit set (restart request messages). |
display evi isis local-mac
Use display evi isis local-mac to display local MAC reachability information maintained by EVI IS-IS.
Syntax
display evi isis local-mac { dynamic | static } [ interface tunnel interface-number [ vlan vlan-id ] [ filtered | passed ] [ count ] ]
display evi isis local-mac nonadvertised [ interface tunnel interface-number [ vlan vlan-id ] [ count ] ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
dynamic: Displays the dynamic MAC addresses for the local site.
nonadvertised: Displays the MAC addresses that cannot be advertised to remote sites, including blackhole MAC addresses, multiport unicast MAC addresses, multicast MAC addresses, and MAC addresses that have been configured by using the evi selective-flooding mac-address command.
static: Displays the static MAC addresses for the local site.
interface tunnel interface-number: Specifies an EVI tunnel interface by its number. If you do not specify an EVI tunnel interface, this command displays local MAC reachability information that EVI IS-IS maintains for each EVI tunnel interface.
vlan vlan-id: Specifies a VLAN ID in the range of 1 to 4094. If you do not specify a VLAN, this command displays local MAC reachability information for all VLANs.
filtered: Specifies the local MAC addresses that are filtered by a routing policy. These MAC addresses cannot be advertised to remote sites.
passed: Specifies the local MAC addresses that are not filtered by a routing policy. These MAC addresses can be advertised to remote sites.
count: Displays the number of MAC addresses that match the command.
Examples
# Display local dynamic MAC reachability information for all EVI tunnel interfaces.
<Sysname> display evi isis local-mac dynamic
Process ID: 0
Tunnel interface: Tunnel1
VLAN ID: 100
MAC address: 00aa-00bb-00cc
MAC address: 00aa-00cc-00bb (Filtered)
MAC address: 00cc-00aa-00bb
VLAN ID: 50
MAC address: 00bb-00aa-00cc
MAC address: 00bb-00cc-00aa
# Display advertisable local dynamic MAC addresses on the EVI tunnel interface Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> display evi isis local-mac dynamic interface tunnel 1 passed
Process ID: 0
Tunnel interface: Tunnel1
VLAN ID: 100
MAC address: 00aa-00bb-00cc
MAC address: 00cc-00aa-00bb
VLAN ID: 50
MAC address: 00bb-00aa-00cc
MAC address: 00bb-00cc-00aa
# Display local non-advertisable MAC reachability information for all EVI tunnel interfaces.
<Sysname> display evi isis local-mac nonadvertised
MAC Flags: F-Flooding, B-Blackhole, P-Multiport, M-Multicast
Process ID: 3
Tunnel interface: Tunnel3
VLAN ID: 111
MAC address: 0005-0005-0005
Flags: F
# Display local static MAC reachability information for all EVI tunnel interfaces.
<Sysname> display evi isis local-mac static
Process ID: 0
Tunnel interface: Tunnel1
VLAN ID: 100
MAC address: 00aa-00bb-00cc
MAC address: 00aa-00cc-00bb (Filtered)
MAC address: 00cc-00aa-00bb
VLAN ID: 50
MAC address: 00bb-00aa-00cc
MAC address: 00bb-00cc-00aa
# Display the local static MAC addresses that are filtered by the routing policy on Tunnel 1. These MAC addresses cannot be advertised.
<Sysname> display evi isis local-mac static interface tunnel 1 filtered
Process ID: 0
Tunnel interface: Tunnel1
VLAN ID: 100
MAC address: 00aa-00cc-00bb (Filtered)
VLAN ID: 50
# Display the number of local dynamic MAC addresses on Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> display evi isis local-mac dynamic interface tunnel 1 count
5 MAC addresses found.
# Display the number of advertisable local dynamic MAC addresses on Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> display evi isis local-mac dynamic interface tunnel 1 passed count
4 MAC addresses found.
# Display the number of local static MAC addresses that are filtered by the routing policy on Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> display evi isis local-mac static interface tunnel 1 filtered count
1 MAC addresses found.
Table 4 Command output
Field |
Description |
Process ID |
EVI IS-IS process ID. The ID of an EVI IS-IS process is always the same as the EVI tunnel interface where the EVI IS-IS process is running. |
Tunnel interface |
EVI tunnel interface where the EVI IS-IS process is running. |
VLAN ID |
Active extended VLAN on the EVI tunnel interface. |
MAC address |
MAC addresses in the VLAN. |
(Filtered) |
The MAC address is filtered by a routing policy. It cannot be advertised to remote sites. |
Flags |
Flag of a local non-advertisable MAC address: · F—MAC address that has been configured with the evi selective-flooding mac-address command. · B—Blackhole MAC address. · P—Multiport unicast MAC address. · M—Multicast MAC address. |
display evi isis lsdb
Use display evi isis lsdb to display the LSDBs of EVI IS-IS processes.
Syntax
display evi isis lsdb [ local | lsp-id lspid | verbose ] * [ process-id ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
local: Displays locally generated LSPs.
lsp-id lspid: Specifies an LSP identifier in the SYSID.Pseudonode ID-fragment num format. The SYSID argument represents the originating node or pseudo node. The Pseudonode ID argument is separated by a dot from SYSID and by a hyphen from fragment num.
verbose: Displays detailed information about LSPs in the LSDB. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays LSP summaries.
process-id: Specifies an EVI IS-IS process ID in the range of 0 to 65535. If you do not specify a process, this command displays LSP information for all EVI IS-IS processes.
Examples
# Display LSP summaries for all EVI IS-IS processes.
<Sysname> display evi isis lsdb
Link state database information for EVI-ISIS(0)
LSP ID Seq num Checksum Holdtime Length Overload
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
0011.2200.0001.00-00* 0x000000f3 0xd95e 45 47 0
0011.2200.0101.00-00 0x00000017 0xbb6f 1139 85 0
0011.2200.0101.02-00 0x00000002 0x7973 805 54 0
Flags: *-Self LSP, +-Self LSP(Extended)
# Display detailed LSP information for all EVI IS-IS processes.
<Sysname> display evi isis lsdb verbose
Link state database information for EVI-ISIS(1)
LSP ID: 3822.d69e.ee00.00-00*
Sequence number: 0x00000001
Checksum: 0xe0b5
Holdtime: 820s
Length: 47
Overload: 0
Source: 3822.d69e.ee00.00
Neighbour
ID: 3ce5.a600.7600.02, Cost: 16777214
LSP ID: 3ce5.a600.7600.00-00
Sequence number: 0x00000007
Checksum: 0xc98a
Holdtime: 1163s
Length: 72
Overload: 0
Source: 3ce5.a600.7600.00
Neighbour
ID: 3ce5.a600.7600.02, Cost: 16777214
MAC addresses:
VLAN ID: 10 Confidence: 1
3822-d69e-ef68
d485-64aa-7f23
3408-0499-b44c
LSP ID: 3ce5.a600.7600.02-00
Sequence number: 0x00000001
Checksum: 0xe16d
Holdtime: 819s
Length: 54
Overload: 0
Source: 3ce5.a600.7600.02
Neighbour
ID: 3822.d69e.ee00.00, Cost: 0
ID: 3ce5.a600.7600.00, Cost: 0
Flags: *-Self LSP, +-Self LSP(Extended)
Table 5 Command output
Field |
Description |
LSP ID |
LSP ID: · An asterisk mark (*) suffix indicates that the LSP segment is generated by the default EVI IS-IS system on the local device. · A plus sign (+) suffix indicates that the LSP segment is generated by an EVI IS-IS virtual system on the local device. · IDs of remote LSPs do not have a suffix. |
Holdtime |
LSP lifetime in seconds, which counts down over time. |
Overload |
Overload bit flag in the LSP: · 1—The bit is set. · 0—The bit is not set. |
Source |
System ID of the LSP generating device. |
Neighbour |
Neighbors of the LSP generating device. |
ID |
System ID of the neighbor. |
Cost |
Cost of the link between the LSP generating device and its neighbor. |
MAC address |
MAC addresses that can be reached through the LSP generating device. |
VLAN ID |
VLAN in which the MAC addresses are learned. |
Confidence |
LSP credibility. |
display evi isis peer
Use display evi isis peer to display EVI IS-IS neighbor information.
Syntax
display evi isis peer [ process-id ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
process-id: Specifies an EVI IS-IS process ID in the range of 0 to 65535. If you do not specify a process, this command displays neighbor information for all EVI IS-IS processes.
Examples
# Display neighbor information for EVI IS-IS process 0.
<Sysname> display evi isis peer 0
Process ID: 1
System ID: 5cdd.70bd.6ceb
Link interface: EVI-Link0
Circuit ID: 5cdd.70bd.6ceb.04
State: Up
Site ID: 0
Hold time: 7s
Neighbour DED priority: 64
Uptime: 01:01:14
Process ID: 1
System ID: 5cdd.70bd.6cf4
Link interface: EVI-Link1
Circuit ID: 5cdd.70bd.6cf4.04
State: Up
Site ID: 0
Hold time: 7s
Neighbour DED priority: 64
Uptime: 01:01:14
Process ID: 1
System ID: 5cdd.70bd.6ce2
Link interface: EVI-Link64
Table 6 Command output
Field |
Description |
System ID |
System ID of the EVI neighbor. |
Link interface |
· Tunnel—Local tunnel interface. · EVI-link—Local EVI-Link interface. |
Circuit ID |
Link ID. |
State |
Adjacency state: · Init—Neighbor state is initializing. · Up—Adjacency has been set up. · Down—Adjacency is lost. |
Site ID |
Site ID of the EVI neighbor. (Conflict) indicates that the site ID of the neighbor conflicts with the local site ID. A site ID conflict occurs if the edge devices at different sites use the same site ID. |
Hold time |
Adjacency hold timer in seconds, which counts down over time. If no hello packet has been received from the neighbor before this timer expires, the device removes the adjacency with the neighbor. If a hello packet is received, the hold timer restarts. |
Neighbour DED Priority |
DED priority of the neighbor. The edge device with higher DED priority is more likely to be elected as the DED on an EVI link. |
Uptime |
The amount of time that the adjacency with the neighbor has lasted. This field uses the hours:minutes:seconds format. |
display evi isis remote-mac
Use display evi isis remote-mac to display remote MAC reachability information maintained by EVI IS-IS.
Syntax
display evi isis remote-mac [ interface tunnel interface-number [ vlan vlan-id ] [ count ] ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
interface tunnel interface-number: Specifies an EVI tunnel interface by its number. If you do not specify an EVI tunnel interface, this command displays remote MAC reachability information that EVI IS-IS maintains for each EVI tunnel interface.
vlan vlan-id: Specifies a VLAN ID in the range of 1 to 4094. If you do not specify a VLAN, this command displays remote MAC reachability information for all VLANs.
count: Displays the number of remote MAC addresses that match the command.
Examples
# Display remote MAC reachability information that EVI IS-IS has for all EVI tunnel interfaces.
<Sysname> display evi isis remote-mac
Process ID: 1
Tunnel interface: Tunnel1
VLAN ID: 106
MAC address: 0000-0014-1414
Interface: EVI-Link1
Flags: 0x2
VLAN ID: 109
MAC address: 0000-0014-1414
Interface: EVI-Link1
Flags: 0x2
VLAN ID: 110
MAC address: 0000-0014-1414
Interface: EVI-Link1
Flags: 0x2
VLAN ID: 112
MAC address: 0000-0014-1414
Interface: EVI-Link1
Flags: 0x2
VLAN ID: 124
MAC address: 0000-0014-1414
Interface: EVI-Link1
Flags: 0x2
VLAN ID: 130
# Display the number of remote MAC addresses that EVI IS-IS has on Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> display evi isis remote-mac interface tunnel 1 count
3 mac address(es) found.
Table 7 Command output
Field |
Description |
Process ID |
EVI IS-IS process ID. The ID of an EVI IS-IS process is always the same as the EVI tunnel interface where the EVI IS-IS process is running. |
Tunnel interface |
EVI tunnel interface where the EVI IS-IS process is running. |
VLAN ID |
Active extended VLAN on the EVI tunnel interface. |
MAC address |
MAC addresses in the VLAN. |
Interface |
EVI link index. |
Flags |
Remote MAC address flag: · 0x1—The remote MAC address conflicts with a local dynamic MAC address. · 0x2—The remote MAC address has been added to the MAC address table in the data plane. · 0x4—The remote MAC address conflicts with a local static MAC address or a MAC address that has been configured for selective flood. |
display evi isis tunnel
Use display evi isis tunnel to display EVI IS-IS settings on EVI tunnel interfaces.
Syntax
display evi isis tunnel [ tunnel-number ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
tunnel-number: Specifies an EVI tunnel interface by its number. If you do not specify an EVI tunnel interface, this command displays EVI IS-IS settings on all EVI tunnel interfaces.
Examples
# Display EVI IS-IS settings on Tunnel 101.
<Sysname> display evi isis tunnel 101
Tunnel101
MTU: 1400
DED: Yes
DED priority: 64
Hello timer: 10s
Hello multiplier: 3
CSNP timer: 10s
LSP timer: 100ms
LSP transmit-throttle count: 5
AEF: No
EVI-Link0 DED: No
LAV:
1,50,100
Table 8 Command output
Field |
Description |
MTU |
Link MTU of the tunnel. |
DED |
DED election result: · Yes—The device is a DED in the EVI network. · No—The device is not a DED in the EVI network. |
DED priority |
DED priority of the device on the EVI tunnel interface. |
Hello timer |
Interval (in seconds) at which EVI IS-IS sends hello packets to maintain the adjacencies with its neighbors. |
Hello multiplier |
Multiplier for calculating the EVI IS-IS adjacency hold time. |
CSNP timer |
Interval at which the edge device sends CSNP packets to advertise LSP summaries for LSDB synchronization. This timer takes effect only if the edge device is a DED. |
LSP timer |
Minimum LSP transmit interval in milliseconds. The device must wait for this timer to expire before sending LSPs. Together with the maximum number of LSPs setting, this timer reduces the impact of LSP traffic on EVI network performance. |
LSP transmit-throttle count |
Maximum number of LSPs that can be sent at each interval. |
AEF |
Qualification of the device to be an appointed edge forwarder for extended VLANs at a multihomed site: · No. · Yes. The current software version does not support multihoming. This field displays No. |
EVI-link |
EVI virtual link. |
LAV |
Active VLANs on the EVI tunnel interface. The interface extends only active VLANs to remote sites. |
display evi link
Use display evi link to display information about EVI links on an EVI tunnel.
Syntax
display evi link interface tunnel interface-number
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
interface tunnel interface-number: Specifies an EVI tunnel interface by its number.
Examples
# Display information about EVI links on Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> display evi link interface tunnel 1
Interface Status Source Destination
EVI-Link0 UP 1.1.1.1 1.1.2.1
EVI-Link1 UP 1.1.1.1 1.1.3.1
Table 9 Command output
Field |
Description |
Interface |
EVI-Link interface name. |
Status |
EVI link status: UP or DOWN. |
Source |
Local address of the EVI link. All the EVI links use the source address of the EVI tunnel. |
Destination |
Remote address of the EVI link. |
display evi mac-address
Use display evi mac-address to display remote MAC address entries.
Syntax
display evi mac-address interface tunnel interface-number [ vlan vlan-id ] [ slot slot-number ] [ count ]
display evi mac-address interface tunnel interface-number mac-address mac-address vlan vlan-id [ slot slot-number ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
interface tunnel interface-number: Specifies an EVI tunnel interface by its number.
mac-address mac-address: Specifies a remote MAC address.
vlan vlan-id: Specifies a VLAN ID in the range of 1 to 4094. If you do not specify a VLAN, this command displays entries for all VLANs.
slot slot-number: Specifies an IRF member device by its member ID or specifies a PEX by its virtual slot number. If you do not specify a member device or PEX, this command displays entries on the master device.
count: Displays the number of remote MAC address entries that match the command.
Examples
# Display remote MAC address entries on Tunnel 101.
<Sysname> display evi mac-address interface tunnel 101
MAC Address VLAN ID Port
000f-e201-0101 1 EVI-link1
000f-e202-0101 2 EVI-link1, EVI-link2
# Display the total number of remote MAC address entries on Tunnel 101.
<Sysname> display evi mac-address interface tunnel 101 count
Total entries: 2
Table 10 Command output
Field |
Description |
MAC Address |
Remote MAC address. |
VLAN ID |
VLAN that has the remote MAC address. |
Port |
Outgoing EVI-Link interface for reaching the MAC address. N/A indicates that the EVI-Link interface where the MAC address was learned has been removed. |
display evi neighbor-discovery client member
Use display evi neighbor-discovery client member to display information about EVI neighbors that ENDCs have learned.
Syntax
display evi neighbor-discovery client member [ interface tunnel interface-number | [ local local-ip | remote client-ip | server server-ip ] [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
interface tunnel interface-number: Specifies an EVI tunnel interface by its number.
local local-ip: Specifies all EVI tunnel interfaces that use the IP address specified by the local-ip argument.
remote client-ip: Specifies the IPv4 address of an EVI neighbor.
server server-ip: Specifies the IPv4 address of an ENDS.
vpn-instance vpn-instance-name: Specifies a VPN instance by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters. This option is reserved for future use.
Usage guidelines
Each EVI neighbor entry includes a neighbor's IP address, bridge MAC address, entry creation time, aging time, and EVI link status.
If you do not specify any parameters, this command displays IPv4 neighbor entries that all local ENDCs have learned.
Examples
# Display IPv4 neighbor entries that all local ENDCs have learned.
<Sysname> display evi neighbor-discovery client member
Interface: Tunnel1 Network ID: 1 Vpn-instance: [No Vrf]
Local Address: 1.1.1.1
Server Address: 4.4.4.4
Neighbor System ID Created Time Expire Status
2.2.2.2 5cdd-70bd-6ce2 2014/09/05 15:45:30 70 Up
3.3.3.3 5cdd-70bd-6ceb 2014/09/05 15:45:14 70 Up
4.4.4.4 5cdd-70bd-6cf4 2014/09/05 15:45:14 70 Up
Interface: Tunnel2 Network ID: 2 Vpn-instance: [No Vrf]
Local Address: 1.1.1.1
Server Address: 4.4.4.4
Neighbor System ID Created Time Expire Status
2.2.2.2 5cdd-70bd-6ce2 2014/09/05 15:45:30 70 Up
3.3.3.3 5cdd-70bd-6ceb 2014/09/05 15:45:14 70 Up
4.4.4.4 5cdd-70bd-6cf4 2014/09/05 15:45:14 70 Up
Interface: Tunnel3 Network ID: 3 Vpn-instance: [No Vrf]
Local Address: 1.1.1.1
Server Address: 4.4.4.4
Neighbor System ID Created Time Expire Status
2.2.2.2 5cdd-70bd-6ce2 2014/09/05 15:45:30 70 Up
3.3.3.3 5cdd-70bd-6ceb 2014/09/05 15:45:14 70 Up
4.4.4.4 5cdd-70bd-6cf4 2014/09/05 15:45:14 70 Up
Interface: Tunnel4 Network ID: 4 Vpn-instance: [No Vrf]
Local Address: 1.1.1.1
Server Address: 4.4.4.4
Neighbor System ID Created Time Expire Status
2.2.2.2 5cdd-70bd-6ce2 2014/09/05 15:45:30 70 Up
3.3.3.3 5cdd-70bd-6ceb 2014/09/05 15:45:14 70 Up
4.4.4.4 5cdd-70bd-6cf4 2014/09/05 15:45:14 70 Up
Interface: Tunnel5 Network ID: 5 Vpn-instance: [No Vrf]
Local Address: 1.1.1.1
Server Address: 4.4.4.4
Neighbor System ID Created Time Expire Status
2.2.2.2 5cdd-70bd-6ce2 2014/09/05 15:45:30 70 Up
3.3.3.3 5cdd-70bd-6ceb 2014/09/05 15:45:14 70 Up
4.4.4.4 5cdd-70bd-6cf4 2014/09/05 15:45:14 70 Up
Interface: Tunnel6 Network ID: 6 Vpn-instance: [No Vrf]
Local Address: 1.1.1.1
Server Address: 4.4.4.4
Neighbor System ID Created Time Expire Status
2.2.2.2 5cdd-70bd-6ce2 2014/09/05 15:45:30 70 Up
3.3.3.3 5cdd-70bd-6ceb 2014/09/05 15:45:14 70 Up
Table 11 Command output
Field |
Description |
Interface |
Name of an ENDC-enabled EVI tunnel interface. |
Network ID |
EVI network ID. |
Vpn-instance |
VPN instance associated with the EVI tunnel. This field is reserved for future use. |
Local Address |
Source IP address of the EVI tunnel. |
Server Address |
IP address of the ENDS. This field displays NA if the ENDS is unknown. |
Neighbor |
IP address of the neighbor learned from the ENDS. |
System ID |
Bridge MAC address of the neighbor. This field displays NA if the bridge MAC address is unknown. |
Created Time |
Time when the neighbor entry was created. |
Expire |
Remaining lifetime (in seconds) of the neighbor entry. |
Status |
EVI link status: · Up—The EVI link is up. · Down—The EVI link is down. · NA—No EVI link has been set up with the neighbor. |
display evi neighbor-discovery client statistics
Use display evi neighbor-discovery client statistics to display ENDP packet statistics for an ENDC-enabled EVI tunnel interface.
Syntax
display evi neighbor-discovery client statistics interface tunnel interface-number
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
interface tunnel interface-number: Specifies an EVI tunnel interface by its number.
Examples
# Display ENDP packet statistics for ENDCs on IPv4 tunnel interface Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> display evi neighbor-discovery client statistics interface tunnel 1
Server Address: 10.0.0.1 Vpn-instance: [No Vrf]
Received packets:
Reply: 170 Error: 1
Sent packets:
Register: 170 Purge: 0
Server Address: 10.0.0.2 Vpn-instance: [No Vrf]
Received packets:
Reply: 99 Error: 1
Sent packets:
Register: 100 Purge: 0
Table 12 Command output
Field |
Description |
Server Address |
IP address of the ENDS. |
Vpn-instance |
VPN instance associated with the EVI tunnel. This field is reserved for future use. |
Received packets |
Packets received by the ENDC: · Reply—Registration replies received from the ENDS. · Error—ENDP error packets. |
Sent packets |
Packets sent by the ENDC: · Register—Registration packets sent to the ENDS. · Purge—Deregistration packets sent to the ENDS. |
display evi neighbor-discovery client summary
Use display evi neighbor-discovery client summary to display ENDC settings and connectivity to ENDSs.
Syntax
display evi neighbor-discovery client summary
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Examples
# Display ENDC settings and connectivity to IPv4 ENDSs.
<Sysname> display evi neighbor-discovery client summary
Status: I-Init E-Establish P-Probe
Interface Local Address Server Address Network ID Reg Auth Status VPN Instance
Tunnel1 10.1.1.1 10.1.1.1 1 15 disabled E [No Vrf]
Tunnel2 10.1.1.1 10.1.1.1 2 15 disabled E [No Vrf]
Table 13 Command output
Field |
Description |
Interface |
Name of an ENDC-enabled EVI tunnel interface. |
Local Address |
Source IP address of the EVI tunnel. This field displays NA if no source IP address has been assigned to the EVI tunnel. |
Server Address |
IP address of the ENDS. |
Network ID |
This field displays NA if no network ID has been configured. |
Reg |
Registration update interval. The ENDC updates its registration with the ENDS at this interval. |
Auth |
ENDP authentication status: · enabled. · disabled. |
Status |
Status of the connection between the ENDC and the ENDS: · I—The connection is initializing. · E—The connection has been set up. · P—The ENDC is probing for the ENDS to set up a connection. |
Vpn-instance |
VPN instance associated with the EVI tunnel. |
Related commands
· evi neighbor-discovery authentication
· evi neighbor-discovery client enable
· evi neighbor-discovery client register-interval
display evi neighbor-discovery server member
Use display evi neighbor-discovery server member to display information about EVI neighbors that have registered with an ENDS on the device.
Syntax
display evi neighbor-discovery server member [ interface tunnel interface-number | [ local local-ip | remote client-ip ] [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
interface tunnel interface-number: Specifies an EVI tunnel interface by its number.
local local-ip: Specifies the IPv4 address of an ENDS on the device.
remote client-ip: Specifies the IPv4 address of an EVI neighbor.
vpn-instance vpn-instance-name: Specifies a VPN instance by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters. This option is reserved for future use.
Usage guidelines
This command takes effect only if a minimum of one ENDS is configured on the device.
Each neighbor entry includes a neighbor's IP address, bridge MAC address, entry creation time, and aging time.
If you do not specify any parameters, this command displays all IPv4 EVI neighbors that have registered with each ENDS on the device.
Examples
# Display IPv4 EVI neighbor entries of all ENDSs on the device.
<Sysname> display evi neighbor-discovery server member
Interface: Tunnel1 Network ID: 2 Vpn-instance: [No Vrf]
IP Address: 11.0.1.2
Client Address System ID Expire Created Time
11.0.1.3 000F-0001-0011 19 2014/09/05 00:19:31
11.0.1.4 000F-0001-0012 30 2014/09/05 02:00:43
11.0.1.5 000F-0001-0013 20 2014/09/05 01:02:13
Interface: Tunnel2 Network ID: 3 Vpn-instance: [No Vrf]
IP Address: 12.0.0.1
Client Address System ID Expire Created Time
12.0.0.2 000F-0002-0001 30 2014/09/05 03:20:43
12.0.0.3 000F-0002-0002 37 2014/09/05 03:27:46
Table 14 Command output
Field |
Description |
Interface |
Name of an ENDS-enabled EVI tunnel interface. |
Network ID |
EVI network ID. |
Vpn-instance |
VPN instance associated with the EVI tunnel. This field is reserved for future use. |
IP Address |
Source IP address of the EVI tunnel. |
Client Address |
IP address of the neighbor. |
System ID |
Bridge MAC address of the neighbor. |
Expire |
Remaining lifetime of the neighbor entry. |
Created Time |
Time when the neighbor entry was created. |
display evi neighbor-discovery server statistics
Use display evi neighbor-discovery server statistics to display ENDP packet statistics for an ENDS-enabled EVI tunnel interface.
Syntax
display evi neighbor-discovery server statistics interface tunnel interface-number
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
interface tunnel interface-number: Specifies an EVI tunnel interface by its number.
Examples
# Display ENDP packet statistics on the ENDS-enabled IPv4 EVI tunnel interface Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> display evi neighbor-discovery server statistics interface tunnel 1
Received packets:
Register: 170 Purge: 13
Sent packets:
Reply: 170 Error: 1
Table 15 Command output
Field |
Description |
Received packets |
Packets received by the ENDS: · Register—Registration requests received from ENDCs. · Purge—Deregistration packets received from ENDCs. |
Sent packets |
Packets sent by the ENDS: · Reply—Registration replies sent to ENDCs. · Error—ENDP error packets. |
display evi neighbor-discovery server summary
Use display evi neighbor-discovery server summary to display ENDS information.
Syntax
display evi neighbor-discovery server summary
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Usage guidelines
ENDS information includes ENDP authentication status (enabled or disabled) and the total number of ENDCs that have registered with each ENDS.
Examples
# Display IPv4 ENDS information.
<Sysname> display evi neighbor-discovery server summary
Interface Local Address Network ID Auth Members Vpn-instance
Tunnel1 10.1.1.1 1 disabled 2 [No Vrf]
Tunnel2 10.1.1.1 2 disabled 2 [No Vrf]
Table 16 Command output
Field |
Description |
Interface |
Name of an ENDS-enabled EVI tunnel interface. |
Local Address |
Source IP address of the EVI tunnel. This field displays NA if no source IP address has been assigned to the EVI tunnel. |
Network ID |
This field displays NA if no network ID has been configured. |
Auth |
ENDP authentication status: · enabled. · disabled. |
Members |
Total number of ENDCs that have registered with the ENDS. |
Vpn-instance |
VPN instance associated with the EVI tunnel. |
Related commands
· evi neighbor-discovery authentication
· evi neighbor-discovery server enable
display interface evi-link
Use display interface evi-link to display EVI-Link interface information.
Syntax
display interface [ evi-link [ interface-number ] ] [ brief [ description | down ] ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
evi-link [ interface-number ]: Specifies EVI-Link interfaces. If you specify an EVI-Link interface number, this command displays information about the specified interface. If you specify only the evi-link keyword, this command displays information about all EVI-Link interfaces. If you do not specify the evi-link [ interface-number ] option, this command displays information about all interfaces.
brief: Displays brief interface information. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays detailed interface information.
description: Displays the complete interface description. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays only the first 27 characters of the interface description string.
down: Displays interfaces that are physically down as well as the down reason. If you do not specify this keyword, the command does not filter output by physical interface state.
Usage guidelines
The command output includes the PVID, link type, tunnel source address, tunnel destination address, and EVI network ID.
Examples
# Display detailed information about EVI-Link 0.
<Sysname> display interface evi-link 0
EVI-Link0
Current state: UP
Bandwidth: 1000000kbps
Description: EVI-Link0 Interface
PVID: 1
Port link-type: trunk
VLAN Passing: 101-130
VLAN permitted: 101-130
Trunk port encapsulation: IEEE 802.1q
This evi-link belongs to Tunnel1
Source 1.1.1.1, Destination 1.1.2.1
Network ID 1
Table 17 Command output
Field |
Description |
Current state |
EVI-Link interface state: · DOWN—Physical state of the interface is down. · UP—Physical state of the interface is up. |
Description |
Interface description. |
PVID |
Port VLAN ID of the interface. |
Port link-type: trunk |
Interface link type, fixed at trunk. |
VLAN Passing |
VLANs that have been created and allowed to pass through the interface. For EVI-Link interfaces, this field always displays none. |
VLAN permitted |
VLANs to which the interface has been assigned. They do not necessarily have been created. For EVI interfaces, this field always displays none. |
Trunk port encapsulation |
Link layer protocol of the interface. |
This evi-link belongs to Tunnel1 |
EVI tunnel that conveys the EVI link. |
Source |
Local tunnel address of the EVI link. |
Destination |
Remote tunnel address of the EVI link. |
Network ID |
EVI network ID of the EVI link. This network ID is configurable on the EVI tunnel interface. |
# Display brief information about EVI-Link 0.
<Sysname> display interface evi-link 0 brief
Brief information on interface(s) under bridge mode:
Link: ADM - administratively down; Stby - standby
Speed or Duplex: (a)/A - auto; H - half; F - full
Type: A - access; T - trunk; H - hybrid
Interface Link Speed Duplex Type PVID Description
ELNK0 UP -- -- T 1
# Display physically down EVI-Link interfaces and the down reason.
<Sysname> display interface evi-link brief down
Brief information on interface(s) under bridge mode:
Link: ADM - administratively down; Stby - standby
Interface Link Cause
ELNK0 DOWN Not connected
Table 18 Command output
Field |
Description |
Brief information on interface(s) under bridge mode |
Brief information about the physical Layer 2 interface for the EVI-Link interface. |
Interface |
Interface name abbreviation. |
Link |
Physical state of the interface: · UP—Physical state of the interface is up. · DOWN—Physical state of the interface is down. · ADM—The interface has been administratively shut down. To bring it up, use the undo shutdown command. · Stby—The interface is in standby state. |
Speed |
Interface rate in bps. |
Duplex |
Duplex mode of the interface: · A—Autonegotiation mode. The duplex mode depends on the result of the negotiation with the remote end. · F—Full duplex. · F(a)—The result of the autonegotiation is full duplex. · H—Half duplex. · H(a)—The result of the autonegotiation is half duplex. |
Type |
Link type: · A—Access. · T—Trunk. · H—Hybrid. |
PVID |
Port VLAN ID of the interface. |
Description |
Interface description set with the description command. If you execute the display interface brief command without the description keyword, this field displays up to 27 characters. If you execute the display interface brief command with the description keyword, this field displays the complete interface description. |
Cause |
Down reasons: · Administratively—The physical link has been shut down with the shutdown command. To bring it up, use the undo shutdown command. · Not connected—No physical link is present, for example, because no cable is connected to the port or because the cable is damaged. |
evi arp-suppression enable
Use evi arp-suppression enable to enable EVI ARP flood suppression.
Use undo evi arp-suppression enable to restore the default.
Syntax
evi arp-suppression enable
undo evi arp-suppression enable
Default
EVI ARP flood suppression is disabled.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Usage guidelines
Use ARP flood suppression to reduce ARP request broadcasts on the EVI network.
This feature snoops ARP replies on an EVI tunnel interface to populate the ARP flood suppression table with remote MAC addresses. If an ARP request has a matching entry, the edge device replies to the request on behalf of the remote-site host. If no match is found, the edge device floods the request to the EVI network.
You must enable or disable EVI ARP flood suppression on all EVI tunnel interfaces on the device.
Examples
# Enable EVI ARP flood suppression on the EVI tunnel interface Tunnel 101.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 101 mode evi
[Sysname-tunnel 101] evi arp-suppression enable
Related commands
· display evi arp-suppression
· reset evi arp-suppression
evi enable
Use evi enable to enable EVI on a transport-facing physical interface.
Use undo evi enable to restore the default.
Syntax
evi enable
undo evi enable
Default
EVI is disabled on an interface.
Views
Layer 2 Ethernet interface view, Layer 3 Ethernet interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Usage guidelines
Enable EVI on physical interfaces that provide transport network access.
Examples
# Enable EVI on Ten-GigabitEthernet 1/1/1.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface ten-gigabitethernet 1/1/1
[Sysname-Ten-GigabitEthernet1/1/1] evi enable
evi extend-vlan
Use evi extend-vlan to specify a list of VLANs that can be extended to remote sites over an EVI tunnel.
Use undo evi extend-vlan to remove the configuration.
Syntax
evi extend-vlan vlan-list
undo evi extend-vlan vlan-list
Default
No extended VLANs are configured.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
vlan-list: Specifies a space-separated list of up to 10 VLAN items. Each item specifies a VLAN ID or a range of VLAN IDs in the format of start-vlan-id to end-vlan-id. The end VLAN ID must be greater than the start VLAN ID. The value range for VLAN IDs is 1 to 4094.
Usage guidelines
Do not specify VLAN 1 as an extended VLAN.
Examples
# Specify extended VLANs 2 to 10, 15, and 100 to 200 on the EVI tunnel interface Tunnel 101.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 101 mode evi
[Sysname-tunnel101] evi extend-vlan 2 to 10 15 100 to 200
evi flooding enable
Use evi flooding enable to enable EVI flooding for all destination-unknown frames.
Use undo evi flooding enable to disable EVI flooding.
Syntax
evi flooding enable
undo evi flooding enable
Default
EVI flooding is disabled. The device floods unknown unicast and multicast frames only to internal interfaces.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Usage guidelines
EVI flooding enables the device to flood all destination-unknown frames to an EVI tunnel interface.
If selective flood is also enabled for a MAC address in a list of VLANs, EVI flooding has higher priority than the selective flood setting. The device will flood frames destined for that MAC address, whether or not the frames are from a VLAN in the VLAN list for selective flood.
To ensure correct EVI flooding, do not configure both the evi flooding enable command and the evi selective-flooding mac-address command.
Examples
# Enable EVI flooding on Tunnel 101.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 101 mode evi
[Sysname-tunnel 101] evi flooding enable
Related commands
evi selective-flooding mac-address
evi isis ded-priority
Use evi isis ded-priority to change the DED priority of the edge device on an EVI tunnel interface.
Use undo evi isis ded-priority to restore the default DED priority.
Syntax
evi isis ded-priority value
undo evi isis ded-priority
Default
The DED priority value is 64.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
value: Specifies a DED priority value in the range of 0 to 127.
Usage guidelines
The edge devices on an EVI link exchange their DED priority in EVI IS-IS hello packets to elect a DED for periodic LSDB synchronization.
The edge device with higher DED priority is more likely to be elected as the DED on an EVI link. If two edge devices have the same DED priority, the one with the highest MAC address is elected.
Examples
# Set the DED priority value of Tunnel 101 to 2.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 101 mode evi
[Sysname-tunnel101] evi isis ded-priority 2
Related commands
display evi isis tunnel
evi isis timer csnp
Use evi isis timer csnp to set the CSNP packet transmit interval.
Use undo evi isis timer csnp to restore the default.
Syntax
evi isis timer csnp seconds
undo evi isis timer csnp
Default
The CSNP packet transmit interval is 10 seconds.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
seconds: Specifies an interval in the range of 1 to 600 seconds.
Usage guidelines
The setting takes effect only if the edge device is the DED on an EVI link in the tunnel.
The DEDs in an EVI network regularly send CSNP packets to advertise LSP summaries to remote sites for LSDB synchronization.
Examples
# Set the CSNP transmit interval to 15 seconds.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 101 mode evi
[Sysname-tunnel101] evi isis timer csnp 15
Related commands
display evi isis tunnel
evi isis timer hello
Use evi isis timer hello to set the EVI IS-IS hello interval.
Use undo evi isis timer hello to restore the default.
Syntax
evi isis timer hello seconds
undo evi isis timer hello
Default
The EVI IS-IS hello interval is 10 seconds.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
seconds: Specifies an interval in the range of 3 to 255 seconds.
Usage guidelines
Set the hello interval depending on the network convergence requirement and system resources.
· To increase the speed of network convergence, decrease the hello interval.
· To conserve resources, increase the hello interval.
If the edge device is a DED, its hello interval is one-third of the hello interval set by using this command.
Examples
# Set the EVI IS-IS hello interval to 6 seconds.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 101 mode evi
[Sysname-tunnel101] evi isis timer hello 6
Related commands
display evi isis tunnel
evi isis timer holding-multiplier
Use evi isis timer holding-multiplier to configure the hello multiplier for calculating the EVI IS-IS adjacency hold time.
Use undo evi isis timer holding-multiplier to restore the default.
Syntax
evi isis timer holding-multiplier value
undo evi isis timer holding-multiplier
Default
The hello multiplier for calculating the EVI IS-IS adjacency hold time is 3.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
value: Specifies a multiplier in the range of 3 to 1000.
Usage guidelines
Adjacency hold time is the amount of time that the remote edge devices can retain the adjacency with the local edge device before an adjacency update.
· If Graceful Restart is disabled, the adjacency hold time equals the EVI IS-IS hello interval multiplied by the hello multiplier.
· If Graceful Restart is enabled, the adjacency hold time equals the greater of the following values:
¡ The restart interval.
¡ The EVI IS-IS hello interval multiplied by the hello multiplier.
If an edge device is a DED, its hello interval is one-third of the hello interval set by using the evi isis timer hello command.
Edge devices send their adjacency hold time in hello packets to update the adjacencies with their neighbors. An edge device removes the adjacency with a neighbor if it does not receive a hello packet from the neighbor before the timer expires.
The maximum adjacency hold time is 65535 seconds. If this value is exceeded, the actual adjacency hold time is set to 65535 seconds.
Examples
# Set the hello multiplier to 6 for calculating EVI IS-IS adjacency hold time.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 101 mode evi
[Sysname-tunnel101] evi isis timer holding-multiplier 6
Related commands
· display evi isis tunnel
· evi isis timer hello
evi isis timer lsp
Use evi isis timer lsp to configure the minimum LSP transmit interval and the maximum number of LSPs that can be sent at each interval.
Use undo evi isis timer lsp to restore the default.
Syntax
evi isis timer lsp time [ count count ]
undo evi isis timer lsp
Default
The minimum LSP transmit interval is 100 milliseconds. A maximum of five LSPs can be sent at each interval.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
time: Specifies the minimum LSP transmit interval, a multiple of 100 in the range of 100 to 1000 milliseconds.
count count: Specifies the maximum number of LSP segments that can be sent at each interval. The value range is 1 to 1000.
Usage guidelines
The edge device generates an LSP update when any LSDB content changes. For example, an LSP update is generated when a MAC address is removed or added.
Use this command to control the number of LSP segments that the edge device sends out. To decrease the number of LSP segments, increase the interval and decrease the maximum number of LSP segments sent at each interval.
Examples
# Set the minimum LSP transmit interval to 500 ms.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 101 mode evi
[Sysname-tunnel101] evi isis timer lsp 500
Related commands
display evi isis brief
evi isis track
Use evi isis track to associate an EVI tunnel interface with a track entry.
Use undo evi isis track to remove the track entry association for an EVI tunnel interface.
Syntax
evi isis track track-entry-number
undo evi isis track
Default
An EVI tunnel interface is not associated with any track entry.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
track-entry-number: Specifies a track entry number in the range of 1 to 1024.
Usage guidelines
You can associate an EVI tunnel interface with only one track entry. If you execute this command multiple times, the most recent association takes effect.
EVI IS-IS uses a hello mechanism to monitor the connectivity of each EVI link on an EVI tunnel. To detect the connectivity of a particular EVI link more quickly, you can associate its tunnel interface with a track entry. The monitoring protocol used in this entry can only be BFD.
EVI IS-IS changes the state of an EVI-Link interface in response to the track entry state, as shown in Table 19.
Table 19 Action on the monitored EVI-Link in response to the track entry state change
Track entry state |
State of the monitored EVI link |
Action on the EVI-Link interface |
Positive |
The EVI link is operating correctly. |
Places the EVI-Link interface in up state. |
Negative |
The EVI link has failed. |
Places the EVI-Link interface in down state. |
NotReady |
The EVI link is not monitored. This situation occurs when the Track module or the monitoring module is not ready, for example, because the Track module is restarting or the monitoring settings are incomplete. In this situation, EVI cannot obtain information about the EVI link from the Track module. |
N/A |
For more information about configuring a track entry, see Track configuration in High Availability Configuration Guide.
Examples
# Associate Tunnel 101 with track entry 1.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 101
[Sysname-tunnel101] evi isis track 1
evi neighbor-discovery authentication
Use evi neighbor-discovery authentication to enable ENDP authentication.
Use undo evi neighbor-discovery authentication to disable ENDP authentication.
Syntax
evi neighbor-discovery authentication { cipher | simple } string
undo evi neighbor-discovery authentication
Default
ENDP authentication is disabled.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
cipher: Specifies an authentication key in encrypted form.
simple: Specifies an authentication key in plaintext form.
string: Specifies the authentication key. Its plaintext form is a case-sensitive string of 1 to 24 characters in length. Its encrypted form is a case-sensitive string of 1 to 65 characters.
Usage guidelines
Configure ENDP authentication in an insecure network to prevent malicious registration with an ENDS.
Make sure all authentication-enabled ENDCs and ENDSs in an EVI network use the same authentication key.
If authentication is disabled on an ENDS, all ENDCs, including authentication-enabled ENDCs, can register with the ENDS without authentication.
If authentication is enabled on an ENDS, only authentication-enabled ENDCs that use the same authentication key as the ENDS can register with the ENDS.
For security purposes, all authentication keys, including keys set in plaintext form, are stored in encrypted form.
Examples
# Enable ENDP authentication on the EVI tunnel interface Tunnel 1 and specify web-evi as the authentication key.
<Sysname> system
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1 mode evi
[Sysname-Tunnel1] evi neighbor-discovery authentication simple web-evi
Related commands
· display evi neighbor-discovery client summary
· display evi neighbor-discovery server summary
evi neighbor-discovery client enable
Use evi neighbor-discovery client enable to configure an EVI tunnel interface as the ENDC of an ENDS.
Use undo evi neighbor-discovery client enable to remove an ENDS from an EVI tunnel interface.
Syntax
evi neighbor-discovery client enable server-ip
undo evi neighbor-discovery client enable server-ip
Default
The ENDC feature is disabled.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
server-ip: Specifies the IP address of a remote ENDS-enabled EVI tunnel interface.
Usage guidelines
For redundancy, you can configure up to two ENDS addresses on an EVI tunnel interface. These two ENDSs work independently. The failure of one ENDS does not affect the neighbor discovery and EVI link maintenance in the EVI network.
On an ENDS-enabled EVI tunnel interface, you can use the evi neighbor-discovery client enable command to add only one ENDS address. An ENDS is always an ENDC of itself. When you enable ENDS on an EVI tunnel interface, an ENDC is automatically enabled, with the source address of the EVI tunnel as the ENDS address.
To guarantee that each edge device can obtain the addresses of all its EVI neighbors, make sure the ENDSs are the same across the EVI network.
Examples
# Configure Tunnel 1 as an ENDC of the ENDS at 11.0.0.1.
<Sysname> system
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1 mode evi
[Sysname-Tunnel1] evi neighbor-discovery client enable 11.0.0.1
Related commands
display evi neighbor-discovery client summary
evi neighbor-discovery client register-interval
Use evi neighbor-discovery client register-interval to configure the interval at which the ENDCs on an EVI tunnel interface update their registration with their ENDSs.
Use undo evi neighbor-discovery client register-interval to restore the default.
Syntax
evi neighbor-discovery client register-interval time-value
undo evi neighbor-discovery client register-interval
Default
An ENDC updates its registration with its ENDS every 15 seconds.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
time-value: Specifies a registration update interval in the range of 5 to 120 seconds.
Usage guidelines
ENDP uses an ENDS probe timer and a registration aging timer in addition to the ENDC register timer set with this command.
· ENDS probe timer—Sets the interval for an ENDC to detect an ENDS. This timer is maintained on ENDCs and is not user configurable.
· ENDC register timer—Sets the interval for an ENDC to update its registration with an ENDS. This timer is by default 15 seconds and can be changed with the evi neighbor-discovery client register-interval command on ENDCs.
· Registration aging timer—This timer is five times the ENDC register timer. This timer is maintained on ENDSs. When the registration aging timer for an ENDC expires, ENDS removes the ENDC from its ENDC database.
When an ENDC sends a register request to join the EVI network, a 5-second ENDS probe timer starts. The ENDC sends a register request to the ENDS every 5 seconds until it receives a response from the ENDS.
When the ENDC receives a response from the ENDS, the ENDS probe timer stops and an ENDC register timer starts. The ENDC regularly sends register updates at the interval set by the register timer.
If the ENDC does not receive a response after sending five consecutive register packets, the ENDC clears its neighbor information database and starts the ENDS probe timer.
The ENDC adds the register timer setting to each register packet. The ENDS records this timer setting when it adds the ENDC to the ENDC database. If no register update is received from the ENDC before five times the timer is reached, ENDS removes the ENDC from the EVI network.
Examples
# Set the ENDC registration update interval to 30 seconds on the EVI tunnel interface Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> system
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1 mode evi
[Sysname-Tunnel1] evi neighbor-discovery client register-interval 30
Related commands
display evi neighbor-discovery client summary
evi neighbor-discovery server enable
Use evi neighbor-discovery server enable to enable ENDS on an EVI tunnel interface.
Use undo evi neighbor-discovery server enable to disable ENDS on an EVI tunnel interface.
Syntax
evi neighbor-discovery server enable
undo evi neighbor-discovery server enable
Default
ENDS is disabled.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Usage guidelines
When you enable ENDS on an EVI tunnel interface, an ENDC is automatically enabled, with the source address of the EVI tunnel as the ENDS address. You can use the evi neighbor-discovery client register-interval command to modify the interval at which the ENDC registers with the ENDS.
Examples
# Enable IPv4 ENDS.
<Sysname> system
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1 mode evi
[Sysname-Tunnel1] evi neighbor-discovery server enable
Related commands
display evi neighbor-discovery server summary
evi network-id
Use evi network-id to assign a network ID to an EVI tunnel interface.
Use undo evi network-id to remove the network ID.
Syntax
evi network-id number
undo evi network-id
Default
No network ID is assigned to any EVI tunnel interface.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
number: Specifies a network ID in the range of 1 to 16777215.
Usage guidelines
An edge device can belong to multiple EVI networks. Each EVI network is uniquely identified by a network ID.
Each edge device has only one EVI tunnel in each EVI network. To assign an edge device to an EVI network, you must create an EVI tunnel interface and assign the network ID of the EVI network to the EVI tunnel interface.
Assign the same network ID to the EVI tunnel interfaces of all edge devices in an EVI network.
Examples
# Assign EVI network ID 123 to the EVI tunnel interface Tunnel 1.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1 mode evi
[Sysname-Tunnel1] evi network-id 123
Related commands
interface tunnel
evi selective-flooding mac-address
Use evi selective-flooding mac-address to enable flooding specific destination-unknown frames to an EVI tunnel interface.
Use undo evi selective-flooding mac-address to disable flooding specific destination-unknown frames to an EVI tunnel interface.
Syntax
evi selective-flooding mac-address mac-address vlan vlan-id-list
undo evi selective-flooding mac-address mac-address vlan vlan-id-list
Default
Selective flood is disabled for all MAC addresses. The device floods unknown unicast and multicast frames only to internal interfaces.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
mac-address: Specifies a MAC address, which cannot be all Fs.
vlan vlan-id-list: Specifies a space-separated list of up to 10 VLAN items. Each item specifies a VLAN ID or a range of VLAN IDs in the format of start-vlan-id to end-vlan-id. The end VLAN ID must be greater than the start VLAN ID. The value range for VLAN IDs is 1 to 4094.
Usage guidelines
|
CAUTION: Do not configure selective flood for local unicast MAC addresses. The setting might cause remote devices to drop packets destined for the MAC address. |
Enable selective flood for the following types of MAC addresses:
· Unknown unicast addresses that require inter-site forwarding. By default, the device floods unknown unicast frames only to internal interfaces.
· Known or unknown multicast addresses that require inter-site forwarding. EVI does not support multicast forwarding based on the multicast forwarding table.
Examples
# Configure selective flood for 000f-e201-0101 in VLANs 2 to 10 on the EVI tunnel interface Tunnel 101.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 101 mode evi
[Sysname-tunnel 101] evi selective-flooding mac-address 000f-e201-0101 vlan 2 to 10
evi site-id
Use evi site-id to configure a site ID for the device.
Use undo evi site-id to restore the default.
Syntax
evi site-id site-id
undo evi site-id
Default
The site ID of the device is 0.
Views
System view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
site-id: Specifies a site ID in the range of 1 to 65535.
Usage guidelines
By default, all edge devices in an EVI network have a site ID of 0. To identify the site of each edge device, you can change their site IDs.
Manually assigned site IDs must be unique in the EVI network. If the edge devices at two sites are assigned the same site ID, EVI IS-IS isolates the device with the lower MAC address. The isolated device cannot exchange any EVI IS-IS packets with other neighbors except that it can receive EVI IS-IS hello packets. To identify isolated devices, use the display evi isis brief command or the display evi isis peer command.
|
NOTE: EVI IS-IS does not perform isolation for edge devices that use the default site ID. |
Examples
# Assign a site ID of 201 to the device.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] evi site-id 201
Related commands
· display evi-isis brief
· display evi isis peer
evi-isis
Use evi-isis to create an EVI IS-IS process or enter EVI IS-IS process view.
Use undo evi-isis to delete an EVI IS-IS process or clear the configuration that has made in EVI IS-IS process view.
Syntax
evi-isis process-id
undo evi-isis process-id
Default
No EVI IS-IS process exists.
Views
System view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
process-id: Specifies an EVI IS-IS process ID in the range of 0 to 65535.
Usage guidelines
Each EVI network has one EVI IS-IS process. Before you can configure settings in EVI IS-IS process view, you must create the process.
An EVI IS-IS process is created automatically when you perform a task that can trigger automatic EVI IS-IS process creation on a tunnel interface. The ID of an automatically created process is the same as the EVI tunnel interface number. For more information about automatic EVI IS-IS process creation, see EVI Configuration Guide.
Alternatively, you can use the evi-isis command to create an EVI IS-IS process manually.
To delete a manually created EVI IS-IS process, you must use the undo evi-isis command.
· If EVI IS-IS settings exist on the EVI tunnel interface, the undo evi-isis command only deletes settings configured in EVI IS-IS process view.
· If no EVI IS-IS settings exist on the EVI tunnel interface, the undo evi-isis command deletes both the EVI IS-IS process and all settings configured in EVI IS-IS process view.
An automatically created EVI IS-IS process is automatically deleted when you delete all EVI IS-IS settings from the EVI tunnel interface.
Examples
# Enter EVI IS-IS process view.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] evi-isis 101
[Sysname-evi-isis-101]
Related commands
display evi isis brief
filter-policy
Use filter-policy to specify a routing policy for an EVI IS-IS process.
Use undo filter-policy to remove the routing policy on an EVI IS-IS process.
Syntax
filter-policy policy-name
undo filter-policy
Default
No routing policy is assigned to any EVI IS-IS process.
Views
EVI IS-IS process view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
policy-name: Specifies a routing policy name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 63 characters.
Usage guidelines
You can configure a routing policy to match MAC reachability information that can be advertised to the remote EVI sites. The routing policy is also called a reachability information filtering policy.
The routing policy for EVI IS-IS can only contain the following filters:
· MAC list.
· VLAN list.
For more information about configuring routing policies, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.
Examples
# Specify the routing policy EVI-Filter for EVI IS-IS process 101.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] evi-isis 101
[Sysname-evi-isis-101] filter-policy EVI-Filter
graceful-restart
Use graceful-restart to enable Graceful Restart for an EVI IS-IS process.
Use undo graceful-restart to disable Graceful Restart for an EVI IS-IS process.
Syntax
graceful-restart
undo graceful-restart
Default
Graceful Restart is disabled.
Views
EVI IS-IS process view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Usage guidelines
To guarantee nonstop forwarding while the peer EVI IS-IS processes are re-establishing their adjacency after a process restart or active/standby switchover occurs, enable Graceful Restart for the peer EVI IS-IS processes at two ends of the EVI tunnel.
Examples
# Enable Graceful Restart for EVI IS-IS process 101.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] evi-isis 101
[Sysname-evi-isis-101] graceful-restart
Related commands
display evi isis graceful-restart status
graceful-restart interval
Use graceful-restart interval to configure the GR restart interval for EVI IS-IS.
Use undo graceful-restart interval to restore the default.
Syntax
graceful-restart interval interval-value
undo graceful-restart interval
Default
The GR restart interval is 300 seconds.
Views
EVI IS-IS process view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
interval-value: Specifies the GR restart interval (the intended restart time), in the range of 30 to 1800 seconds.
Examples
# Set the GR restart interval to 120 seconds for EVI IS-IS process 1.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] evi-isis 1
[Sysname-evi-isis-1] graceful-restart interval 120
Related commands
display evi isis graceful-restart status
gre key vlan-id
Use gre key vlan-id to enable an EVI tunnel interface to generate a GRE key for tunneled packets based on their VLAN IDs.
Use undo gre key to disable GRE key generation on an EVI tunnel interface.
Syntax
gre key vlan-id
undo gre key
Default
EVI tunneled packets do not contain a GRE key.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Usage guidelines
The GRE key setting must be the same across an EVI network.
Configure this command on an EVI tunnel interface if any remote edge devices generate VLAN ID-based GRE keys for EVI tunneled packets. The EVI tunnel interface accepts an incoming tunneled packet only if the GRE key in the packet matches one of the local GRE keys.
Examples
# Enable EVI tunnel interface 1 to generate VLAN ID-based GRE keys for tunneled packets.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1 mode evi
[Sysname-Tunnel2] gre key vlan-id
keepalive
Use keepalive to configure the keepalive interval on an EVI tunnel interface and configure the maximum number of consecutive keepalive failures that are allowed before a remote end is declared unavailable.
Use undo keepalive to restore the default.
Syntax
keepalive [ seconds [ times ] ]
undo keepalive
Default
The EVI link keepalive interval is 5 seconds and the maximum number of consecutive keepalive failures is two.
Views
Tunnel interface view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
seconds: Specifies a keepalive interval in the range of 1 to 32767 seconds.
times: Specifies the maximum number of consecutive keepalive failures in the range of 1 to 255.
Usage guidelines
The EVI-Link interfaces on an EVI tunnel regularly send keepalive packets to test the availability of their peer ends.
If no acknowledgment is received from the peer end before the timeout timer expires, an EVI-Link interface retransmits a keepalive packet. The timeout timer is the same as the keepalive interval.
When the maximum number of consecutive keepalive failures is reached, the EVI-Link interface state changes to Down. The EVI-Link interface state changes back to Up after the interface receives a keepalive acknowledgment or keepalive packet.
Examples
# Set the keepalive interval to 20 seconds and the maximum number of consecutive keepalive failures to 5.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface tunnel 1 mode evi
[Sysname-Tunnel1] keepalive 20 5
Related commands
interface tunnel
log-peer-change enable
Use log-peer-change enable to enable EVI IS-IS adjacency change logging.
Use undo log-peer-change enable to disable outputting EVI IS-IS adjacency change logging.
Syntax
log-peer-change enable
undo log-peer-change enable
Default
EVI IS-IS adjacency change logging is enabled.
Views
EVI IS-IS process view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Usage guidelines
Adjacency change logging enables an EVI IS-IS process to send a log message to the information center when an adjacency change occurs. With the information center, you can set log message filtering and output rules, including output destinations. For more information about using the information center, see Network Management and Monitoring Configuration Guide.
Examples
# Disable adjacency change logging for an EVI IS-IS process.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] evi-isis 1
[Sysname-evi-isis-1] undo log-peer-change enable
reset evi arp-suppression
Use reset evi arp-suppression to clear EVI ARP flood suppression entries.
Syntax
reset evi arp-suppression interface tunnel interface-number [ vlan vlan-id ]
Views
User view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
interface tunnel interface-number: Specifies an EVI tunnel interface by its number.
vlan vlan-id: Specifies a VLAN ID in the range of 1 to 4094. If you do not specify a VLAN, this command clears the flood suppression entries in every VLAN.
Examples
# Clear the EVI ARP flood suppression entries on Tunnel 101.
<Sysname> reset evi arp-suppression interface tunnel 101
This will delete all entries under the specified interface. Continue? [Y/N]:y
Related commands
· display evi arp-suppression
· evi arp-suppression enable
reset evi isis all
Use reset evi isis all to clear dynamic EVI IS-IS data.
Syntax
reset evi isis all [ process-id ]
Views
User view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
process-id: Specify an EVI IS-IS process ID in the range of 1 to 65535. If you do not specify a process, this command clears all EVI IS-IS processes' dynamic data.
Examples
# Clear dynamic data on EVI IS-IS process 1.
<Sysname> reset evi isis all 1
snmp context-name
Use snmp context-name to configure an SNMP context for an EVI IS-IS process.
Use undo snmp context-name to restore the default.
Syntax
snmp context-name context-name
undo snmp context-name
Default
No SNMP context is configured for an EVI IS-IS process.
Views
EVI IS-IS process view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
context-name: Specifies a context name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 32 characters.
Usage guidelines
In addition to the private EVI IS-IS MIB, EVI IS-IS shares the standard IS-IS MIB with IS-IS and other protocols that use IS-IS in the control plane. For SNMP to correctly identify a protocol's management information in the standard IS-IS MIB, you must configure a unique context for each of these protocols. If a protocol supports multiple processes, you must assign a unique context to each process.
The context names must be unique among all the protocols and their processes.
Context is a method introduced to SNMPv3 for multiple instance managements. For SNMPv1/v2c, you must specify a context name as a community name for protocol identification.
Examples
# Configure the SNMP context name as eviisis100 for EVI IS-IS process 100.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] evi-isis 100
[Sysname-evi-isis-100] snmp context-name eviisis100
snmp-agent trap enable evi-isis
Use snmp-agent trap enable evi-isis to enable EVI IS-IS SNMP notifications.
Use undo snmp-agent trap enable evi-isis to disable EVI IS-IS SNMP notifications.
Syntax
snmp-agent trap enable evi-isis [ adjacency-state-change | area-mismatch | buffsize-mismatch | id-length-mismatch | link-disconnect | lsp-parse-error | lsp-size-exceeded | max-seq-exceeded | maxarea-mismatch | new-ded | own-lsp-purge | protocol-support | rejected-adjacency | skip-sequence-number | topology-change | version-skew ] *
undo snmp-agent trap enable evi-isis [ adjacency-state-change | area-mismatch | buffsize-mismatch | id-length-mismatch | link-disconnect | lsp-parse-error | lsp-size-exceeded | max-seq-exceeded | maxarea-mismatch | new-ded | own-lsp-purge | protocol-support | rejected-adjacency | skip-sequence-number | topology-change | version-skew ] *
Default
All EVI IS-IS SNMP notifications are enabled.
Views
System view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
adjacency-state-change: Specifies notifications about EVI IS-IS adjacency status changes.
area-mismatch: Specifies notifications about area address mismatches between hello packets.
buffsize-mismatch: Specifies notifications about buffer size mismatches for LSPs.
id-length-mismatch: Specifies notifications about system ID length mismatches of EVI IS-IS packets.
link-disconnect: Specifies notifications about EVI link failures.
lsp-parse-error: Specifies notifications about LSP parse failures.
lsp-size-exceeded: Specifies notifications about propagation failures caused by oversized LSPs.
max-seq-exceeded: Specifies notifications about attempts to exceed the maximum LSP sequence number.
maxarea-mismatch: Specifies notifications about maximum area address mismatches of hello packets.
new-ded: Specifies notifications about the device's being elected as the DED.
own-lsp-purge: Specifies notifications about attempts to remove the local LSP.
protocol-support: Specifies notifications about supported-protocol mismatches for non-pseudo node LSPs.
rejected-adjacency: Specifies notifications about adjacency creation failures.
skip-sequence-number: Specifies notifications about LSP sequence number duplications.
topology-change: Specifies notifications about edge device topology changes at the local site. This notification will not be sent if a new-ded notification has been sent for the same event.
version-skew: Specifies notifications about hello packet version mismatches.
Usage guidelines
To report critical EVI IS-IS events to an NMS, enable SNMP notifications for EVI IS-IS.
If you do not specify a notification, this command enables all EVI IS-IS SNMP notifications.
For EVI IS-IS SNMP notifications to be sent correctly, you must also configure SNMP on the device. For more information about SNMP configuration, see the network management and monitoring configuration guide for the device.
Examples
# Enable EVI IS-IS adjacency status change notifications.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] snmp-agent trap enable evi-isis adjacency-state-change
timer lsp-max-age
Use timer lsp-max-age to specify the maximum lifetime of LSPs.
Use undo timer lsp-max-age to restore the default.
Syntax
timer lsp-max-age seconds
undo timer lsp-max-age
Default
The maximum LSP lifetime is 1200 seconds.
Views
EVI IS-IS process view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
seconds: Specifies the maximum LSP lifetime in the range of 3 to 65535 seconds.
Usage guidelines
This command specifies the maximum amount of time an LSP generated by the local EVI IS-IS process can be valid in an LSDB. When the timer decreases to zero, the LSP is removed from the LSDB.
Examples
# Set the maximum LSP lifetime to 25 minutes (1500 seconds) on EVI IS-IS process 101.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] evi-isis 101
[Sysname-evi-isis-101] timer lsp-max-age 1500
Related commands
display evi isis brief
timer lsp-refresh
Use timer lsp-refresh to specify the LSP refresh interval.
Use undo timer lsp-refresh to restore the default.
Syntax
timer lsp-refresh seconds
undo timer lsp-refresh
Default
The LSP update interval is 900 seconds.
Views
EVI IS-IS process view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
seconds: Specifies an LSP refresh interval in the range of 1 to 65534 seconds.
Usage guidelines
Each edge device updates the LSPs that they generated at the LSP refresh interval to maintain LSDB consistency across the EVI network.
To avoid unnecessary LSP age-outs at remote edge devices, make sure the LSP refresh interval is shorter than the LSP lifetime.
Examples
# Set the LSP refresh interval to 1500 seconds.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] evi-isis 101
[Sysname-evi-isis-101] timer lsp-refresh 1500
Related commands
· display evi isis brief
· timer lsp-max-age
virtual-system
Use virtual-system to create an EVI IS-IS virtual system.
Use undo virtual-system to delete an EVI IS-IS virtual system.
Syntax
virtual-system systemid
undo virtual-system systemid
Default
No EVI IS-IS virtual system is created.
Views
EVI IS-IS process view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
systemid: Specifies a virtual system ID in the XXXX.XXXX.XXXX format. Each X represents a hexadecimal digit.
Usage guidelines
The virtual system ID must be unique in the EVI network.
An EVI IS-IS process sends all local MAC reachability information in one LSP. By default, an LSP can convey up to 55 x 210 MAC address entries.
To increase this number to accommodate all local MAC address entries, create virtual systems. Each virtual system represents an increase of 55 x 210 MAC address entries.
Examples
# Create the virtual system 0001.0001.0001.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] evi-isis 101
[Sysname-evi-isis-101] virtual-system 0001.0001.0001