07-MPLS Configuration Guide

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08-MPLS L3VPN configuration
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Contents

Configuring MPLS L3VPN· 2

Overview·· 2

Basic MPLS L3VPN architecture· 2

MPLS L3VPN concepts· 2

MPLS L3VPN route advertisement 4

MPLS L3VPN packet forwarding· 5

MPLS L3VPN networking schemes· 6

Inter-AS VPN·· 8

Carrier's carrier 12

Nested VPN·· 14

HoVPN·· 15

OSPF VPN extension· 16

BGP AS number substitution· 19

MPLS L3VPN FRR·· 20

Protocols and standards· 20

Configuration restrictions and guidelines· 21

MPLS L3VPN configuration task list 21

Configuring basic MPLS L3VPN·· 21

Configuration prerequisites· 21

Configuring VPN instances· 22

Configuring routing between a PE and a CE· 23

Configuring routing between PEs· 28

Configuring BGP VPNv4 route control 28

Configuring inter-AS VPN·· 30

Configuring inter-AS option A· 30

Configuring inter-AS option B· 30

Configuring inter-AS option C·· 31

Configuring nested VPN·· 34

Configuring HoVPN·· 36

Configuring an OSPF sham link· 37

Configuring a loopback interface· 37

Redistributing the loopback interface route· 37

Creating a sham link· 37

Specifying the VPN label processing mode on the egress PE· 38

Configuring BGP AS number substitution· 38

Configuring MPLS L3VPN FRR·· 39

Enabling SNMP notifications for MPLS L3VPN·· 40

Enabling logging for BGP route flapping· 41

Displaying and maintaining MPLS L3VPN·· 41

MPLS L3VPN configuration examples· 43

Configuring basic MPLS L3VPN·· 43

Configuring an MPLS L3VPN over a GRE tunnel 48

Configuring a hub-spoke network· 52

Configuring MPLS L3VPN inter-AS option A· 59

Configuring MPLS L3VPN inter-AS option B· 64

Configuring MPLS L3VPN inter-AS option C·· 69

Configuring MPLS L3VPN carrier's carrier 76

Configuring nested VPN·· 84

Configuring HoVPN·· 93

Configuring an OSPF sham link· 100

Configuring BGP AS number substitution· 104

Configuring MPLS L3VPN FRR·· 108

 


Configuring MPLS L3VPN

This chapter describes MPLS L3VPN configuration.

Overview

MPLS L3VPN is a L3VPN technology used to interconnect geographically dispersed VPN sites. MPLS L3VPN uses BGP to advertise VPN routes and uses MPLS to forward VPN packets over a service provider backbone.

MPLS L3VPN provides flexible networking modes, excellent scalability, and convenient support for MPLS TE.

Basic MPLS L3VPN architecture

Figure 1 Basic MPLS L3VPN architecture

 

A basic MPLS L3VPN architecture has the following types of devices:

·          Customer edge device—A CE device resides on a customer network and has one or more interfaces directly connected to a service provider network. It does not support VPN or MPLS.

·          Provider edge device—A PE device resides at the edge of a service provider network and connects to one or more CEs. All MPLS VPN services are processed on PEs.

·          Provider device—A P device is a core device on a service provider network. It is not directly connected to any CE. A P device has only basic MPLS forwarding capability and does not handle VPN routing information.

MPLS L3VPN concepts

Site

A site has the following features:

·          A site is a group of IP systems with IP connectivity that does not rely on any service provider network.

·          The classification of a site depends on the topology relationship of the devices, rather than the geographical positions. However, the devices at a site are, in most cases, adjacent to each other geographically.

·          The devices at a site can belong to multiple VPNs, which means that a site can belong to multiple VPNs.

·          A site is connected to a provider network through one or more CEs. A site can contain multiple CEs, but a CE can belong to only one site.

Sites connected to the same provider network can be classified into different sets by policies. Only the sites in the same set can access each other through the provider network. Such a set is called a VPN.

VPN instance

VPN instances, also called virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) instances, implement route isolation, data independence, and data security for VPNs.

A VPN instance has the following components:

·          A separate Label Forwarding Information Base (LFIB).

·          An IP routing table.

·          Interfaces bound to the VPN instance.

·          VPN instance administration information, including route distinguishers (RDs), route targets (RTs), and route filtering policies.

To associate a site with a VPN instance, bind the VPN instance to the PE's interface connected to the site. A site can be associated with only one VPN instance, and different sites can associate with the same VPN instance. A VPN instance contains the VPN membership and routing rules of associated sites.

VPN-IPv4 address

Each VPN independently manages its address space. The address spaces of VPNs might overlap. For example, if both VPN 1 and VPN 2 use the addresses on subnet 10.110.10.0/24, address space overlapping occurs.

BGP cannot process overlapping VPN address spaces. For example, if both VPN 1 and VPN 2 use the subnet 10.110.10.0/24 and each advertise a route destined for the subnet, BGP selects only one of them. This results in the loss of the other route.

Multiprotocol BGP (MP-BGP) can solve this problem by advertising VPN-IPv4 addresses (also called VPNv4 addresses).

Figure 2 VPN-IPv4 address structure

 

As shown in Figure 2, a VPN-IPv4 address consists of 12 bytes. The first eight bytes represent the RD, followed by a four-byte IPv4 prefix. The RD and the IPv4 prefix form a unique VPN-IPv4 prefix.

An RD can be in one of the following formats:

·          When the Type field is 0, the Administrator subfield occupies two bytes, the Assigned number subfield occupies four bytes, and the RD format is 16-bit AS number:32-bit user-defined number. For example, 100:1.

·          When the Type field is 1, the Administrator subfield occupies four bytes, the Assigned number subfield occupies two bytes, and the RD format is 32-bit IPv4 address:16-bit user-defined number. For example, 172.1.1.1:1.

·          When the Type field is 2, the Administrator subfield occupies four bytes, the Assigned number subfield occupies two bytes, and the RD format is 32-bit AS number:16-bit user-defined number, where the minimum value of the AS number is 65536. For example, 65536:1.

To guarantee global uniqueness for a VPN-IPv4 address, do not set the Administrator subfield to any private AS number or private IP address.

Route target attribute

MPLS L3VPN uses route target community attributes to control the advertisement of VPN routing information. A VPN instance on a PE supports the following types of route target attributes:

·          Export target attribute—A PE sets the export target attribute for VPN-IPv4 routes learned from directly connected sites before advertising them to other PEs.

·          Import target attribute—A PE checks the export target attribute of VPN-IPv4 routes received from other PEs. If the export target attribute matches the import target attribute of a VPN instance, the PE adds the routes to the routing table of the VPN instance.

Route target attributes define which sites can receive VPN-IPv4 routes, and from which sites a PE can receive routes.

Like RDs, route target attributes can be one of the following formats:

·          16-bit AS number:32-bit user-defined number. For example, 100:1.

·          32-bit IPv4 address:16-bit user-defined number. For example, 172.1.1.1:1.

·          32-bit AS number:16-bit user-defined number, where the minimum value of the AS number is 65536. For example, 65536:1.

MP-BGP

MP-BGP supports multiple address families, including IPv4 multicast and VPN-IPv4 address families.

In MPLS L3VPN, MP-BGP advertises VPN-IPv4 routes for VPN sites between PEs.

MPLS L3VPN route advertisement

In a basic MPLS L3VPN, CEs and PEs are responsible for advertising VPN routing information. P routers maintain only the routes within the backbone. A PE maintains only routing information for directly connected VPNs, rather than for all VPNs.

VPN routing information is advertised from the local CE to the remote CE by using the following process:

1.        From the local CE to the ingress PE:

The CE advertises standard IPv4 routing information to the ingress PE over a static route, RIP route, OSPF route, IS-IS route, EBGP route, or IBGP route.

2.        From the ingress PE to the egress PE:

The ingress PE performs the following operations:

a.    Adds RD and route target attributes to these standard IPv4 routes to create VPN-IPv4 routes.

b.    Saves them to the routing table of the VPN instance created for the CE.

c.    Advertises the VPN-IPv4 routes to the egress PE through MP-BGP.

3.        From the egress PE to the remote CE:

After receiving the VPN-IPv4 routes, the egress PE performs the following operations:

a.    Compares the routes' export target attributes with the local import target attributes.

b.    Adds the routes to the routing table of the VPN instance if the export and local import target attributes match each other.

c.    Restores the VPN-IPv4 routes to the original IPv4 routes.

d.    Advertises those routes to the connected CE over a static route, RIP route, OSPF route, IS-IS route, EBGP route, or IBGP route.

MPLS L3VPN packet forwarding

In a basic MPLS L3VPN (within a single AS), a PE adds the following information into VPN packets:

·          Outer tagIdentifies the public tunnel from the local PE to the remote PE. The public tunnel can be an LSP, an MPLS TE tunnel, or a GRE tunnel. Based on the outer tag, a VPN packet can be forwarded along the public tunnel to the remote PE. For a GRE public tunnel, the outer tag is the GRE encapsulation. For an LSP or MPLS TE tunnel, the outer tag is an MPLS label.

·          Inner labelIdentifies the remote VPN site. The remote PE uses the inner label to forward packets to the target VPN site. MP-BGP advertises inner labels for VPN routes among PEs.

Figure 3 VPN packet forwarding

 

As shown in Figure 3, a VPN packet is forwarded from Site 1 to Site 2 by using the following process:

1.        Site 1 sends an IP packet with the destination address 1.1.1.2. CE 1 transmits the packet to PE 1.

2.        PE 1 performs the following operations:

a.    Finds the matching VPN route based on the inbound interface and destination address of the packet.

b.    Labels the packet with both the inner label and the outer tag.

c.    Forwards the packet to the public tunnel.

3.        P devices forward the packet to PE 2 by the outer tag.

¡  If the outer tag is an MPLS label, the label is removed from the packet at the penultimate hop.

¡  If the outer tag is GRE encapsulation, PE 2 removes the GRE encapsulation.

4.        PE 2 performs the following operations:

a.    Uses the inner label to find the matching VPN instance to which the destination address of the packet belongs.

b.    Looks up the routing table of the VPN instance for the output interface.

c.    Removes the inner label and forwards the packet out of the interface to CE 2.

5.        CE 2 transmits the packet to the destination through IP forwarding.

When two sites of a VPN are connected to the same PE, the PE directly forwards packets between the two sites through the VPN routing table without adding any tag or label.

For more information about GRE, see Layer 3—IP Services Configuration Guide.

MPLS L3VPN networking schemes

In MPLS L3VPNs, route target attributes are used to control the advertisement and reception of VPN routes between sites. They work independently and can be configured with multiple values to support flexible VPN access control and implement multiple types of VPN networking schemes.

Basic VPN networking scheme

In the simplest case, all users in a VPN form a closed user group. They can forward traffic to each other but cannot communicate with any user outside the VPN.

For the basic VPN networking scheme, you must assign a route target to each VPN for identifying the export target attribute and import target attribute of the VPN. Moreover, this route target cannot be used by any other VPNs.

Figure 4 Network diagram for basic VPN networking scheme

 

As shown in Figure 4, the route target for VPN 1 is 100:1, while that for VPN 2 is 200:1. The two VPN 1 sites can communicate with each other, and the two VPN 2 sites can communicate with each other. However, the VPN 1 sites cannot communicate with the VPN 2 sites.

Hub and spoke networking scheme

The hub and spoke networking scheme is suitable for a VPN where all users must communicate with each other through an access control device.

In a hub and spoke network as shown in Figure 5, configure route targets as follows:

·          On spoke PEs (PEs connected to spoke sites), set the export target to Spoke and the import target to Hub.

·          On the hub PE (PE connected to the hub site), use two interfaces that each belong to a different VPN instance to connect the hub CE. One VPN instance receives routes from spoke PEs and has the import target set to Spoke. The other VPN instance advertises routes to spoke PEs and has the export target set to Hub.

These route targets rules produce the following results:

·          The hub PE can receive all VPN-IPv4 routes from spoke PEs.

·          All spoke PEs can receive VPN-IPv4 routes advertised by the hub PE.

·          The hub PE advertises the routes learned from a spoke PE to the other spoke PEs so the spoke sites can communicate with each other through the hub site.

·          The import target attribute of a spoke PE is different from the export target attribute of any other spoke PE. Therefore, any two spoke PEs cannot directly advertise VPN-IPv4 routes to each other or directly access each other.

Figure 5 Network diagram for hub and spoke network

 

A route in Site 1 is advertised to Site 2 by using the following process:

1.        Spoke-CE 1 advertises a route in Site 1 to Spoke-PE 1.

2.        Spoke-PE 1 changes the route to a VPN-IPv4 route and advertises the VPN-IPv4 route to Hub-PE through MP-BGP.

3.        Hub-PE adds the VPN-IPv4 route into the routing table of VPN 1-in, changes it to the original IPv4 route, and advertises the IPv4 route to Hub-CE.

4.        Hub-CE advertises the IPv4 route back to Hub-PE.

5.        Hub-PE adds the IPv4 route to the routing table of VPN 1-out, changes it to a VPN-IPv4 route, and advertises the VPN-IPv4 route to Spoke-PE 2 through MP-BGP.

6.        Spoke-PE 2 changes the VPN-IPv4 route to the original IPv4 route, and advertises the IPv4 route to Site 2.

After spoke sites exchange routes through the hub site, they can communicate with each other through the hub site.

Extranet networking scheme

The extranet networking scheme allows specific resources in a VPN to be accessed by users not in the VPN.

In this networking scheme, if a VPN instance needs to access a shared site, the export target attribute and the import target attribute of the VPN instance must be contained in the import target attribute and the export target attribute of the VPN instance of the shared site, respectively.

Figure 6 Network diagram for extranet networking scheme

 

As shown in Figure 6, route targets configured on PEs produce the following results:

·          PE 3 can receive VPN-IPv4 routes from PE 1 and PE 2.

·          PE 1 and PE 2 can receive VPN-IPv4 routes advertised by PE 3.

·          Site 1 and Site 3 of VPN 1 can communicate with each other, and Site 2 of VPN 2 and Site 3 of VPN 1 can communicate with each other.

·          PE 3 advertises neither the VPN-IPv4 routes received from PE 1 to PE 2 nor the VPN-IPv4 routes received from PE 2 to PE 1 (routes learned from an IBGP neighbor are not advertised to any other IBGP neighbor). Therefore, Site 1 of VPN 1 and Site 2 of VPN 2 cannot communicate with each other.

Inter-AS VPN

In an inter-AS VPN networking scenario, multiple sites of a VPN are connected to multiple ISPs in different ASs, or to multiple ASs of an ISP.

The following inter-AS VPN solutions are available:

·          VRF-to-VRF connections between ASBRs—This solution is also called inter-AS option A.

·          EBGP redistribution of labeled VPN-IPv4 routes between ASBRs—ASBRs advertise VPN-IPv4 routes to each other through MP-EBGP. This solution is also called inter-AS option B.

·          Multihop EBGP redistribution of labeled VPN-IPv4 routes between PE routers—PEs advertise VPN-IPv4 routes to each other through MP-EBGP. This solution is also called inter-AS option C.

Inter-AS option A

In this solution, PEs of two ASs are directly connected, and each PE is also the ASBR of its AS. Each PE treats the other as a CE and advertises unlabeled IPv4 unicast routes through EBGP. The PEs associate a VPN instance with at least one interface.

Figure 7 Network diagram for inter-AS option A

 

As shown in Figure 7, VPN 1 routes are advertised from CE 1 to CE 3 by using the following process:

1.        PE 1 advertises the VPN routes learned from CE 1 to ASBR 1 through MP-IBGP.

2.        ASBR 1 performs the following operations:

a.    Adds the routes to the routing table of the VPN instance whose import target attribute matches the export target attribute of the routes.

b.    Advertises the routes as IPv4 unicast routes to its CE (ASBR 2) through EBGP.

3.        ASBR 2 adds the IPv4 unicast routes to the routing table of the VPN instance bound to the receiving interface, and advertises the routes to PE 3 through MP-IBGP.

4.        PE 3 advertises the received routes to CE 3.

Packets forwarded within an AS are VPN packets that carry two labels. Packets forwarded between ASBRs are common IP packets.

Inter-AS option A is easy to carry out because no special configuration is required on the PEs acting as the ASBRs.

However, it has limited scalability because the PEs acting as the ASBRs must manage all the VPN routes and create VPN instances on a per-VPN basis. This leads to excessive VPN-IPv4 routes on the PEs. Associateing a separate interface with each VPN also requires additional system resources.

Inter-AS option B

In this solution, two ASBRs use MP-EBGP to exchange VPN-IPv4 routes that they obtain from the PEs in their respective ASs.

Figure 8 Network diagram for inter-AS option B

 

As shown in Figure 8, VPN 1 routes are advertised from CE 1 to CE 3 by using the following process:

1.        PE 1 advertises the VPN routes learned from CE 1 to ASBR 1 through MP-IBGP.

Assume that the inner label assigned by PE 1 to the routes is L1.

2.        ASBR 1 advertises the VPN-IPv4 routes to ASBR 2 through MP-IBGP.

Before advertising the routes, ASBR 1 modifies the next hop as its own address, assigns a new inner label (L2) to the routes, and associates L1 with L2.

3.        ASBR 2 advertises the VPN-IPv4 routes to PE 3 through MP-IBGP.

Before advertising the routes, ASBR 2 modifies the next hop as its own address, assigns a new inner label (L3) to the routes, and associates L2 with L3.

4.        PE 3 advertises the received routes to CE 3.

A packet is forwarded from CE 3 to CE 1 by using the following process:

1.        PE 3 encapsulates the received packet with two labels, and forwards the encapsulated packet to ASBR 2.

The two labels are the inner label for the VPN (L3) and the outer tag for the public tunnel from PE 3 to ASBR 2.

2.        ASBR 2 removes the outer tag, replaces L3 with L2, and forwards the packet to ASBR 1.

Packets between ASBR 1 and ASBR 2 carry only one inner label.

3.        ASBR 1 replaces L2 with L1, adds the outer tag of the public tunnel from ASBR 1 to PE 1, and forwards the packet to PE 1.

4.        PE 1 removes the outer tag and inner label and forwards the packet to CE 1.

In this solution, ASBRs must receive all inter-AS VPN routes. Therefore, ASBRs cannot filter incoming VPN-IPv4 routes by route targets.

Inter-AS option B has better scalability than option A. However, it requires that ASBRs maintain and advertise VPN routes.

Inter-AS option C

The inter-AS option A and option B solutions require that the ASBRs maintain and advertise VPN-IPv4 routes. When every AS needs to exchange a great amount of VPN routes, the ASBRs might become bottlenecks, which hinders network extension. Inter-AS option C has better scalability because it makes PEs directly exchange VPN-IPv4 routes.

In this solution, PEs exchange VPN-IPv4 routes over a multihop MP-EBGP session. Each PE must have a route to the peer PE and a label for the route so that the inter-AS public tunnel between the PEs can be set up. Inter-AS option C sets up a public tunnel by using the following methods:

·          A label distribution protocol within the AS, for example, LDP.

·          Labeled IPv4 unicast route advertisement by ASBRs through BGP.

Labeled IPv4 unicast route advertisement refers to the process of assigning MPLS labels to IPv4 unicast routes and advertising the IPv4 unicast routes and their labels.

Figure 9 Network diagram for inter-AS option C

 

As shown in Figure 9, VPN 1 routes are advertised from CE 1 to CE 3 by using the following process:

1.        PE 1 advertises the VPN routes learned from CE 1 as VPN-IPv4 routes to PE 3 through multihop MP-EBGP.

Assume that the inner label assigned by PE 1 for the routes is Lx.

2.        PE 3 advertises the received routes to CE 3.

Setting up an inter-AS public tunnel is difficult in this solution. A public tunnel, for example, the one from PE 3 to PE 1, is set up by using the following process:

1.        Within AS 100, the public tunnel from ASBR 1 to PE 1 is set up by using a label distribution protocol, for example, LDP.

Assume that the outgoing label for the public tunnel on ASBR 1 is L1.

2.        ASBR 1 advertises labeled IPv4 unicast routes to ASBR 2 through EBGP to set up the public tunnel from ASBR 2 to ASBR 1.

ASBR 1 assigns a label (L2) to the route destined for PE 1, and advertises the route and its label (L2) to ASBR 2. The next hop for the route is ASBR 1. The incoming label for the public tunnel on ASBR 1 is L2.

3.        ASBR 2 advertises labeled IPv4 unicast routes to PE 3 through IBGP to set up the public tunnel from PE 3 directly to ASBR 2.

ASBR 2 assigns a label (L3) to the route destined for PE 1, and advertises the route and its label (L3) to PE 3. The next hop for the route is ASBR 2. The incoming label for the public tunnel on ASBR 2 is L3, and the outgoing label is L2.

4.        MPLS packets cannot be forwarded directly from PE 3 to ASBR 2. Therefore, another public tunnel from PE 3 to ASBR 2 is required to be set up hop by hop through a label distribution protocol, for example, LDP.

Assume that the outgoing label for the public tunnel on PE 3 is Lv.

After route advertisement and public tunnel setup, a packet is forwarded from CE 3 to CE 1 by using the following process:

1.        PE 3 performs the following routing table lookups for the packet:

a.    Finds a matching route with next hop PE 1 and inner label Lx, and encapsulates the packet with label Lx.

b.    Finds the route to PE 1 with next hop ASBR 2 and label L3, and encapsulates the packet with label L3 as the outer label.

c.    Finds the route to ASBR 2 with outgoing label Lv, and encapsulates the packet with label Lv as the outmost label.

2.        AS 200 transmits the packet to ASBR 2 by the outmost label.

3.        ASBR 2 removes the outmost label, replaces L3 with L2, and forwards the packet to ASBR 1.

4.        ASBR 1 replaces L2 with L1, and forwards the packet.

5.        AS 100 transmits the packet to PE 1 by the outer label.

6.        PE 1 removes the outer label, and forwards the packet to CE 1 according to the inner label Lx.

As shown in Figure 10, to improve scalability, you can specify an RR in each AS to exchange VPN-IPv4 routes with PEs in the same AS. The RR in each AS maintains all VPN-IPv4 routes. The RRs in two ASs establish a multihop MP-EBGP session to advertise VPN-IPv4 routes.

Figure 10 Network diagram for inter-AS option C using RRs

 

Carrier's carrier

If a customer of the MPLS L3VPN service provider is also a service provider:

·          The MPLS L3VPN service provider is called the provider carrier or the Level 1 carrier.

·          The customer is called the customer carrier or the Level 2 carrier.

This networking model is referred to as carrier's carrier.

The PEs of the Level 2 carrier directly exchange customer networks over a BGP session. The Level 1 carrier only learns the backbone networks of the Level 2 carrier, without learning customer networks.

For packets between customer networks to travel through the Level 1 carrier, the PE of the Level 1 carrier and the CE of the Level 2 carrier must assign labels to the backbone networks of the Level 2 carrier. The CE of the Level 2 carrier is a PE within the Level 2 carrier network.

Follow these guidelines to assign labels:

·          If the PE and the CE are in a same AS, you must configure IGP and LDP between them. If they are in different ASs, you must configure MP-EBGP to assign labels to IPv4 unicast routes exchanged between them.

·          You must enable MPLS on the CE of the Level 2 carrier regardless of whether the PE and CE are in the same AS.

A Level 2 carrier can be an ordinary ISP or an MPLS L3VPN service provider.

As shown in Figure 11, when the customer carrier is an ordinary ISP, its PEs and CEs run IGP to communicate with each other. The PEs do not need to run MPLS. PE 3 and PE 4 exchange customer network routes (IPv4 unicast routes) through an IBGP session.

Figure 11 Scenario where the Level 2 carrier is an ISP

 

As shown in Figure 12, when the customer carrier is an MPLS L3VPN service provider, its PEs and CEs must run IGP and LDP to communicate with each other. PE 3 and PE 4 exchange customer network routes (VPN-IPv4 routes) through an MP-IBGP session.

Figure 12 Scenario where the Level 2 carrier is an MPLS L3VPN service provider

 

 

NOTE:

As a best practice, establish equal cost LSPs between the Level 1 carrier and the Level 2 carrier if equal cost routes exist between them.

 

Nested VPN

The nested VPN technology exchanges VPNv4 routes between PEs and CEs of the ISP MPLS L3VPN and allows a customer to manage its own internal VPNs. Figure 13 shows a nested VPN network. On the service provider's MPLS VPN network, there is a customer VPN named VPN A. The customer VPN contains two sub-VPNs, VPN A-1 and VPN A-2.

The service provider PEs consider the customer's network as a common VPN user and do not join any sub-VPNs. The service provider CE devices (CE 1 and CE 2) exchange VPNv4 routes including sub-VPN routing information with the service provider PEs, which implements the propagation of the sub-VPN routing information throughout the customer network.

The nested VPN technology supports both symmetric networking and asymmetric networking. Sites of the same VPN can have the same number or different numbers of internal VPNs. Nested VPN also supports multiple-level nesting of internal VPNs.

Figure 13 Network diagram for nested VPN

 

Propagation of routing information

In a nested VPN network, routing information is propagated by using the following process:

1.        After receiving VPN routes from customer CEs, a customer PE advertises VPN-IPv4 routes to the provider CE through MP-BGP.

2.        The provider CE advertises the VPN-IPv4 routes to the provider PE through MP-BGP.

3.        After receiving a VPN-IPv4 route, the provider PE keeps the customer's internal VPN information, and appends the customer's MPLS VPN attributes on the service provider network. It replaces the RD of the VPN-IPv4 route with the RD of the customer's MPLS VPN on the service provider network. It also adds the export route-target (ERT) attribute of the customer's MPLS VPN on the service provider network to the extended community attribute list of the route. The internal VPN information for the customer is maintained on the provider PE.

4.        The provider PE advertises VPN-IPv4 routes carrying the comprehensive VPN information to the other PEs of the service provider.

5.        After another provider PE receives the VPN-IPv4 routes, it matches the VPN-IPv4 routes to the import targets of its local VPNs. Each local VPN accepts routes of its own and advertises them to provider CEs. If a provider CE (such as CE 7 and CE 8 in Figure 13) is connected to a provider PE through an IPv4 connection, the PE advertises IPv4 routes to the CE. If it is a VPN-IPv4 connection (a customer MPLS VPN network), the PE advertises VPN-IPv4 routes to the CE.

6.        After receiving VPN-IPv4 routes from the provider CE, a customer PE matches those routes to local import targets. Each customer VPN accepts only its own routes and advertises them to connected customer CEs (such as CE 3, CE 4, CE 5, and CE 6 in Figure 13).

HoVPN

Hierarchy of VPN (HoVPN), also called Hierarchy of PE (HoPE), prevents PEs from being bottlenecks and is applicable to large-scale VPN deployment.

HoVPN divides PEs into underlayer PEs (UPEs) or user-end PEs, and superstratum PEs (SPEs) or service provider-end PEs. UPEs and SPEs have different functions and comprise a hierarchical PE. The HoPE and common PEs can coexist in an MPLS network.

Figure 14 Basic architecture of HoVPN

 

As shown in Figure 14, UPEs and SPEs play the following different roles:

·          A UPE is directly connected to CEs. It provides user access. It maintains the routes of directly connected VPN sites. It does not maintain the routes of the remote sites in the VPN, or it only maintains their summary routes. A UPE assigns inner labels to the routes of its directly connected sites, and advertises the labels along with VPN routes to the SPE through MP-BGP. A UPE features high access capability, small routing table capacity, and low forwarding performance.

·          An SPE is connected to UPEs and is in the internal network. It manages and advertises VPN routes. It maintains all the routes of the VPNs connected through UPEs, including the routes of both the local and remote sites. An SPE advertises routes along with labels to UPEs, including the default routes of VPN instances or summary routes and the routes permitted by the routing policy. By using routing policies, you can control which sites in a VPN can communicate with each other. An SPE features large routing table capacity, high forwarding performance, and fewer interface resources.

Either MP-IBGP or MP-EBGP can run between SPE and UPE. When MP-IBGP runs between SPE and UPEs, the SPE acts as the RR of multiple UPEs to reflect routes between UPEs.

HoVPN supports HoPE recursion:

·          An HoPE can act as a UPE to form a new HoPE with an SPE.

·          An HoPE can act as an SPE to form a new HoPE with multiple UPEs.

HoVPN supports multilevel recursion. In HoPE recursion, the concepts of SPE and UPE are relative. A PE might be the SPE of its underlayer PEs and a UPE of its SPE at the same time.

Figure 15 Recursion of HoPEs

 

Figure 15 shows a three-level HoPE. The PE in the middle is called the middle-level PE (MPE). MP-BGP runs between SPE and MPE, and between MPE and UPE.

MP-BGP advertises the following routes:

·          All the VPN routes of UPEs to the SPEs.

·          The default routes of the VPN instance of the SPEs or the VPN routes permitted by the routing policies to the UPEs.

The SPE maintains the VPN routes of all sites in the HoVPN. Each UPE maintains only VPN routes of its directly connected sites. An MPE has fewer routes than the SPE but has more routes than a UPE.

OSPF VPN extension

This section describes the OSPF VPN extension. For more information about OSPF, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.

OSPF for VPNs on a PE

If OSPF runs between a CE and a PE to exchange VPN routes, the PE must support multiple OSPF instances to create independent routing tables for VPN instances. Each OSPF process is bound to a VPN instance. Routes learned by an OSPF process are added into the routing table of the bound VPN instance.

OSPF area configuration between a PE and a CE

The OSPF area between a PE and a CE can be either a non-backbone area or a backbone area.

In the OSPF VPN extension application, the MPLS VPN backbone is considered the backbone area (area 0). The area 0 of each VPN site must be connected to the MPLS VPN backbone (physically connected or logically connected through a virtual link) because OSPF requires that the backbone area be contiguous.

BGP/OSPF interaction

If OSPF runs between PEs and CEs, each PE redistributes BGP routes to OSPF and advertises the routes to CEs through OSPF. OSPF considers the routes redistributed from BGP as external routes but the OSPF routes actually might belong to the same OSPF domain. This problem can be resolved by configuring the same domain ID for sites in an OSPF domain.

Figure 16 Network diagram for BGP/OSPF interaction

 

As shown in Figure 16, CE 11, CE 21, and CE 22 belong to the same VPN and the same OSPF domain.

Before a domain ID is configured, VPN 1 routes are advertised from CE 11 to CE 21 and CE 22 by using the following process:

1.        PE 1 redistributes OSPF routes from CE 11 into BGP, and advertises the VPN routes to PE 2 through BGP.

2.        PE 2 redistributes the BGP routes to OSPF, and advertises them to CE 21 and CE 22 in AS External LSAs (Type 5) or NSSA External LSAs (Type 7).

After a domain ID is configured, VPN 1 routes are advertised from CE 11 to CE 21 and CE 22 by using the following process:

1.        PE 1 redistributes OSPF routes into BGP, adds the domain ID to the redistributed BGP VPNv4 routes as a BGP extended community attribute, and advertises the routes to PE 2.

2.        PE 2 compares the domain ID in the received routes with the locally configured domain ID. If they are the same and the received routes are intra-area or inter-area routes, OSPF advertises these routes in Network Summary LSAs (Type 3). Otherwise, OSPF advertises these routes in AS External LSAs (Type 5) or NSSA External LSAs (Type 7).

Routing loop avoidance

Figure 17 Network diagram for routing loop avoidance

 

As shown in Figure 17, Site 1 is connected to two PEs. When a PE advertises VPN routes learned from MP-BGP to Site 1 through OSPF, the routes might be received by the other PE. This results in a routing loop.

OSPF VPN extension uses the following tags to avoid routing loops:

·          DN bit (for Type 3 LSAs)—When a PE redistributes BGP routes into OSPF and creates Type 3 LSAs, it sets the DN bit for the LSAs. When receiving the Type 3 LSAs advertised by CE 11, the other PE ignores the LSAs whose DN bit is set to avoid routing loops.

·          Route tag (for Type 5 or 7 LSAs)—The two PEs use the same route tag. When a PE redistributes BGP routes into OSPF and creates Type 5 or 7 LSAs, it adds the route tag to the LSAs. When receiving the Type 5 or 7 LSAs advertised by CE 11, the other PE compares the route tag in the LSAs against the local route tag. If they are the same, the PE ignores the LSAs to avoid routing loops.

OSPF sham link

As shown in Figure 18, two routes exist between site 1 and site 2 of VPN 1:

·          A route connected through PEs—Inter-area route or external route.

¡  Inter-area route—The route is an inter-area route if the two PEs have the same domain ID configured for the OSPF process of VPN 1.

¡  External route—The route is an external route if the two PEs have no or different domain IDs configured for the OSPF process of VPN 1.

·          A route directly connected through CEs—Intra-area route, which is called a backdoor link.

The inter-area route priority is lower than the intra-area route priority. To use the inter-area route, you can establish a sham link between the two PEs to change the inter-area route to an intra-area route. VPN traffic are forwarded over the sham link through metric adjustment.

Figure 18 Network diagram for sham link

 

A sham link is considered a virtual point-to-point link within a VPN and is advertised in a Type 1 LSA. It is identified by the source IP address and destination IP address that are the local PE address and the remote PE address in the VPN address space. Typically, the source and destination addresses are loopback interface addresses with a 32-bit mask.

To add a route to the destination IP address of a sham link to a VPN instance, the remote PE must advertise the source IP address of the sham link as a VPN-IPv4 address through MP-BGP. To avoid routing loops, a PE does not advertise the sham link's destination address.

BGP AS number substitution

BGP detects routing loops by examining AS numbers. If EBGP runs between PE and CE, you must assign different AS numbers to geographically different sites to ensure correct transmission of routing information.

The BGP AS number substitution function allows physically dispersed CEs to use the same AS number. The function is a BGP outbound policy and affects routes to be advertised.

With the BGP AS number substitution function, when a PE advertises a route to a CE, if an AS number identical to that of the CE exists in the AS_PATH of the route, the PE replaces it with its own AS number.

After you enable the BGP AS number substitution function, the PE performs BGP AS number substitution for all routes and re-advertises them to connected CEs in the peer group.

Figure 19 Application of BGP AS number substitution

 

As shown in Figure 19, both Site and Site 2 use the AS number 800. AS number substitution is enabled on PE 2 for CE 2. Before advertising updates received from CE 1 to CE 2, PE 2 substitutes its own AS number 100 for the AS number 800. In this way, CE 2 can correctly receive the routing information from CE 1.

However, the AS number substitution function also introduces a routing loop in Site 2 because route updates originated from CE 3 can be advertised back to Site 2 through PE 2 and CE 2. To remove the routing loop, you can configure a routing policy on PE 2 to add the SoO attribute to route updates received from CE 2 and CE 3 so that PE 2 does not advertise route updates from CE 3 to CE 2.

 

 

NOTE:

The device does not support adding the SoO attribute to routes.

 

MPLS L3VPN FRR

MPLS L3VPN Fast Reroute (FRR) is applicable to a dual-homed scenario. By using BFD to detect the primary link, FRR enables a PE router to use the backup link when the primary link fails. The PE router then selects a new optimal route, and uses the new optimal route to forward traffic.

Figure 20 MPLS L3VPN FRR

 

As shown in Figure 20, configure FRR on the egress node PE 2, and specify the backup next hop for VPN 1 as PE 3. When PE 2 receives an IPv4 route from CE 2 and a VPNv4 route from PE 3 (both routes are destined for VPN 1 connected to CE 2), PE 2 uses the IPv4 route as the primary link, and the VPNv4 route as the backup link.

PE 2 uses echo-mode BFD to detect the connectivity of the link from PE 2 to CE 2. When the link operates correctly, traffic from CE 1 to CE 2 goes through the path CE 1PE 1PE 2CE 2. When the link fails, PE 2 switches traffic to the link PE 2—PE 3—CE 2, and traffic from CE 1 to CE 2 goes through the path CE 1PE 1PE 2PE 3CE 2. This avoids traffic interruption before route convergence completes (switching to the link CE 1—PE 1—PE 3—CE 2).

In this scenario, PE 2 is responsible for primary link detection and traffic switchover.

Protocols and standards

·          RFC 3107, Carrying Label Information in BGP-4

·          RFC 4360, BGP Extended Communities Attribute

·          RFC 4364, BGP/MPLS IP Virtual Private Networks (VPNs)

·          RFC 4577, OSPF as the Provider/Customer Edge Protocol for BGP/MPLS IP Virtual Private Networks (VPNs)

Configuration restrictions and guidelines

Before you create MPLS L3VPN instances, you must reserve a local-type VLAN interface for each VPN instance by executing the reserve-vlan-interface command. For more information about reserving VLAN interface resources, see VLAN configuration in Layer 2—LAN Switching Configuration Guide.

MPLS L3VPN configuration task list

Tasks at a glance

(Required.) Configuring basic MPLS L3VPN

(Optional.) Configuring inter-AS VPN

(Optional.) Configuring nested VPN

(Optional.) Configuring HoVPN

(Optional.) Configuring an OSPF sham link

(Optional.) Specifying the VPN label processing mode on the egress PE

(Optional.) Configuring BGP AS number substitution

(Optional.) Configuring MPLS L3VPN FRR

(Optional.) Enabling SNMP notifications for MPLS L3VPN

(Optional.) Enabling logging for BGP route flapping

 

Configuring basic MPLS L3VPN

Tasks at a glance

 

Configuring VPN instances:

1.       (Required.) Creating a VPN instance

2.       (Required.) Associating a VPN instance with an interface

3.       (Optional.) Configuring route related attributes for a VPN instance

(Required.) Configuring routing between a PE and a CE

(Required.) Configuring routing between PEs

(Optional.) Configuring BGP VPNv4 route control

 

Configuration prerequisites

Before you configure basic MPLS L3VPN, perform the following tasks:

·          Configure an IGP for the MPLS backbone (on the PEs and Ps) to achieve IP connectivity.

·          Configure basic MPLS for the MPLS backbone.

·          Configure MPLS LDP for the MPLS backbone so that LDP LSPs can be established.

Configuring VPN instances

VPN instances isolate VPN routes from public network routes and routes among VPNs. This feature allows VPN instances to be used in network scenarios besides MPLS L3VPNs.

All VPN instance configurations are performed on PEs.

Creating a VPN instance

A VPN instance is a collection of the VPN membership and routing rules of its associated site. A VPN instance might correspond to more than one VPN.

To create and configure a VPN instance:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Create a VPN instance and enter VPN instance view.

ip vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

By default, no VPN instance is created.

3.       Configure an RD for the VPN instance.

route-distinguisher route-distinguisher

By default, no RD is specified for a VPN instance.

4.       (Optional.) Configure a description for the VPN instance.

description text

By default, no description is configured for a VPN instance.

5.       (Optional.) Configure a VPN ID for the VPN instance.

vpn-id vpn-id

By default, no VPN ID is configured for a VPN instance.

 

Associating a VPN instance with an interface

After creating and configuring a VPN instance, associate the VPN instance with the interface connected to the CE.

To associate a VPN instance with an interface:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter interface view.

interface interface-type interface-number

N/A

3.       Associate a VPN instance with the interface.

ip binding vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

By default, an interface is not associated with a VPN instance.

The ip binding vpn-instance command deletes the IP address of the current interface. You must re-configure an IP address for the interface after configuring the command.

 

Configuring route related attributes for a VPN instance

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter VPN instance view or IPv4 VPN view

·         Enter VPN instance view:
ip vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

·         Enter IPv4 VPN view:

a.    ip vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

b.    address-family ipv4

IPv4 VPN prefers the configurations in IPv4 VPN view over the configurations in VPN instance view.

3.       Configure route targets.

vpn-target vpn-target&<1-8> [ both | export-extcommunity | import-extcommunity ]

By default, no route targets are configured.

4.       Set the maximum number of active routes.

routing-table limit number { warn-threshold | simply-alert }

By default, the number of active routes in a VPN instance is not limited.

Setting the maximum number of active routes for a VPN instance can prevent the PE from learning too many routes.

5.       Apply an import routing policy.

import route-policy route-policy

By default, all routes matching the import target attribute are accepted.

The specified routing policy must have been created.

For information about routing policies, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.

6.       Apply an export routing policy.

export route-policy route-policy

By default, routes to be advertised are not filtered.

The specified routing policy must have been created.

For information about routing policies, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.

7.       Associate the VPN instance with a tunnel policy.

tnl-policy tunnel-policy-name

By default, no tunnel policy is associated with a VPN instance.

The associated tunnel policy must have been created.

For information about tunnel policies, see "Configuring tunnel policies."

 

Configuring routing between a PE and a CE

You can configure static routing, RIP, OSPF, IS-IS, EBGP, or IBGP between a PE and a CE.

Configuring static routing between a PE and a CE

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Configure a static route for a VPN instance.

ip route-static vpn-instance s-vpn-instance-name dest-address { mask-length | mask } { interface-type interface-number [ next-hop-address ] |next-hop-address [ public ] [ track track-entry-number ] | vpn-instance d-vpn-instance-name next-hop-address [ track track-entry-number ] } [ permanent ] [ preference preference-value ] [ tag tag-value ] [ description description-text ]

By default, no static route is configured for a VPN instance.

Perform this configuration on the PE. On the CE, configure a common static route.

For more information about static routing, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.

 

Configuring RIP between a PE and a CE

A RIP process belongs to the public network or a single VPN instance. If you create a RIP process without binding it to a VPN instance, the process belongs to the public network.

To configure RIP between a PE and a CE:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Create a RIP process for a VPN instance and enter RIP view.

rip [ process-id ] vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

Perform this configuration on the PE. On the CE, create a common RIP process.

3.       Enable RIP on the interface attached to the specified network.

network network-address

By default, RIP is disabled on an interface.

 

Configuring OSPF between a PE and a CE

An OSPF process that is bound to a VPN instance does not use the public network router ID configured in system view. Therefore, you must specify a router ID when starting a process or configure an IP address for at least one interface of the VPN instance.

An OSPF process belongs to the public network or a single VPN instance. If you create an OSPF process without binding it to a VPN instance, the process belongs to the public network.

To configure OSPF between a PE and a CE:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Create an OSPF process for a VPN instance and enter the OSPF view.

ospf [ process-id | router-id router-id | vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] *

Perform this configuration on the PE. On the CE, create a common OSPF process.

3.       (Optional.) Configure an OSPF domain ID.

domain-id domain-id [ secondary ]

The default domain ID is 0.

Perform this configuration on the PE.

The domain ID is carried in the routes of the OSPF process. When redistributing routes from the OSPF process, BGP adds the domain ID as an extended community attribute into BGP routes.

An OSPF process can be configured with only one domain ID. Domain IDs of different OSPF processes can be the same.

All OSPF processes of a VPN must be configured with the same domain ID.

4.       Configure the type codes of OSPF extended community attributes.

ext-community-type { domain-id type-code1 | router-id type-code2 | route-type type-code3 }

The defaults are as follows:

·         0x0005 for Domain ID.

·         0x0107 for Router ID.

·         0x0306 for Route Type.

Perform this configuration on the PE.

5.       Create an OSPF area and enter area view.

area area-id

By default, no OSPF area is created.

6.       Enable OSPF on the interface attached to the specified network in the area.

network ip-address wildcard-mask

By default, an interface neither belongs to any area nor runs OSPF.

 

Configuring IS-IS between a PE and a CE

An IS-IS process belongs to the public network or a single VPN instance. If you create an IS-IS process without binding it to a VPN instance, the process belongs to the public network.

To configure IS-IS between a PE and a CE:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Create an IS-IS process for a VPN instance and enter IS-IS view.

isis [ process-id ] vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

Perform this configuration on the PE. On the CE, configure common IS-IS.

3.       Configure a network entity title for the IS-IS process.

network-entity net

By default, no NET is configured.

4.       Return to system view.

quit

N/A

5.       Enter interface view.

interface interface-type interface-number

N/A

6.       Enable the IS-IS process on the interface.

isis enable [ process-id ]

By default, no IS-IS process is enabled on the interface.

 

Configuring EBGP between a PE and a CE

1.        Configure the PE:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enable BGP and enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

3.       Enter BGP-VPN instance view.

ip vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

Configuration commands in BGP-VPN instance view are the same as those in BGP view. For details, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.

4.       Configure the CE as the VPN EBGP peer.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } as-number as-number

By default, no BGP peer is configured.

For more information about BGP peers and peer groups, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.

5.       Create the BGP-VPN IPv4 unicast family and enter its view.

address-family ipv4 [ unicast ]

By default, the BGP-VPN IPv4 unicast family is not created.

6.       Enable IPv4 unicast route exchange with the specified peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } enable

By default, BGP does not exchange IPv4 unicast routes with any peer.

7.       Redistribute the routes of the local CE.

import-route protocol [ { process-id | all-processes } [ med med-value | route-policy route-policy-name ] * ]

A PE must redistribute the routes of the local CE into its VPN routing table so it can advertise them to the peer PE.

8.       (Optional.) Allow the local AS number to appear in the AS_PATH attribute of a received route, and set the maximum number of repetitions.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } allow-as-loop [ number ]

By default, BGP discards incoming route updates that contain the local AS number.

BGP detects routing loops by examining AS numbers. In a hub-spoke network where EBGP is running between a PE and a CE, the routing information the PE advertises to a CE carries the AS number of the PE. Therefore, the route updates that the PE receives from the CE also include the AS number of the PE. This causes the PE to be unable to receive the route updates. In this case, you must configure this command to allow routing loops.

 

2.        Configure the CE:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

3.       Configure the PE as a BGP peer.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } as-number as-number

By default, no BGP peer is created.

4.       Create the BGP IPv4 unicast family and enter its view.

address-family ipv4 [ unicast ]

By default, the BGP IPv4 unicast family is not created.

5.       Enable IPv4 unicast route exchange with the specified peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } enable

By default, BGP does not exchange IPv4 unicast routes with any peer.

6.       (Optional.) Configure route redistribution.

import-route protocol [ { process-id | all-processes } [ allow-direct | med med-value | route-policy route-policy-name ] * ]

A CE must redistribute its routes to the PE so the PE can advertise them to the peer CE.

 

Configuring IBGP between a PE and a CE

Use IBGP between PE and CE only in a basic MPLS L3VPN network. In networks such as Hub&Spoke, Extranet, inter-AS VPN, carrier's carrier, nested VPN, and HoVPN, you cannot use IBGP between PE and CE.

1.        Configure the PE:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

3.       Enter BGP-VPN instance view.

ip vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

Configuration commands in BGP-VPN instance view are the same as those in BGP view. For details, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.

4.       Configure the CE as the VPN IBGP peer.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } as-number as-number

By default, no BGP peer is created.

5.       Create the BGP-VPN IPv4 unicast family and enter its view.

address-family ipv4 [ unicast ]

By default, the BGP-VPN IPv4 unicast family is not created.

6.       Enable IPv4 unicast route exchange with the specified peer.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } enable

By default, BGP does not exchange IPv4 unicast routes with any peer.

7.       Configure the CE as a client of the RR.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } reflect-client

By default, no RR or RR client is configured, and the PE does not advertise routes learned from the IBGP peer CE to other IBGP peers, including VPNv4 IBGP peers. The PE advertises routes learned from the CE to other IBGP peers only when you configure the IBGP peer CE as a client of the RR.

Configuring an RR does not change the next hop of a route. To change the next hop of a route, configure an inbound policy on the receiving side.

8.       (Optional.) Enable route reflection between clients.

reflect between-clients

Route reflection between clients is enabled by default.

9.       (Optional.) Configure the cluster ID for the RR.

reflector cluster-id { cluster-id | ip-address }

By default, the RR uses its own router ID as the cluster ID.

If multiple RRs exist in a cluster, use this command to configure the same cluster ID for all RRs in the cluster to avoid routing loops.

 

2.        Configure the CE:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

3.       Configure the PE as an IBGP peer.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } as-number as-number

By default, no BGP peer is created.

4.       Create the BGP IPv4 unicast family and enter its view.

address-family ipv4 [ unicast ]

By default, the BGP IPv4 unicast family is not created.

5.       Enable IPv4 unicast route exchange with the specified peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } enable

By default, BGP does not exchange IPv4 unicast routes with any peer.

6.       (Optional.) Configure route redistribution.

import-route protocol [ { process-id | all-processes } [ allow-direct | med med-value | route-policy route-policy-name ] * ]

A CE must redistribute its routes to the PE so the PE can advertise them to the peer CE.

 

Configuring routing between PEs

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

3.       Configure the remote PE as a BGP peer.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } as-number as-number

By default, no BGP peer is created.

4.       Specify the source interface for route updates.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } connect-interface interface-type interface-number

By default, BGP uses the egress interface of the optimal route destined for the peer as the source interface.

5.       Create the BGP VPNv4 address family and enter its view.

address-family vpnv4

By default, the BGP VPNv4 address family is not created.

6.       Enable BGP VPNv4 route exchange with the specified peer.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } enable

By default, BGP does not exchange BGP VPNv4 routes with any peer.

 

Configuring BGP VPNv4 route control

BGP VPNv4 route control is configured similarly with BGP route control, except that it is configured in BGP VPNv4 address family view. For detailed information about BGP route control, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.

To configure BGP VPNv4 route control:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

3.       Enter BGP VPNv4 address family view.

address-family vpnv4

N/A

4.       (Optional.) Configure filtering of advertised routes.

filter-policy { acl-number | prefix-list prefix-list-name } export [ protocol process-id ]

By default, BGP does not filter advertised routes.

5.       (Optional.) Configure filtering of received routes.

filter-policy { acl-number | prefix-list prefix-list-name } import

By default, BGP does not filter received routes.

6.       (Optional.) Advertise community attributes to a peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } advertise-community

By default, no community attributes are advertised to any peer or peer group.

7.       Allow the local AS number to appear in the AS_PATH attribute of routes received from the peer, and set the maximum number of repetitions.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } allow-as-loop [ number ]

By default, BGP discards route updates that contain the local AS number.

8.       (Optional.) Filter routes received from or advertised to a peer or peer group based on an AS_PATH list.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } as-path-acl aspath-filter-number { import | export }

By default, no AS filtering list is applied to a peer or peer group.

9.       (Optional.) Advertise a default VPN route to a peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } default-route-advertise vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

By default, no default VPN route is advertised to a peer or peer group.

10.     (Optional.) Apply an ACL to filter routes received from or advertised to a peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } filter-policy acl-number { export | import }

By default, no ACL-based filtering is configured.

11.     Save all route updates from a peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } keep-all-routes

By default, BGP does not save route updates from any peer.

12.     Specify the router as the next hop of routes sent to a peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } next-hop-local

By default, the router sets itself as the next hop for routes sent to a peer or peer group.

13.     (Optional.) Configure BGP to not change the next hop of routes sent to an EBGP peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } next-hop-invariable

By default, the router sets itself as the next hop for routes sent to an EBGP peer or peer group.

In an inter-AS option C network where an RR is used to advertise VPNv4 routes, configure this command on the RR so the RR does not change the next hop of routes sent to EBGP peers and clients.

14.     (Optional.) Specify a preferred value for routes received from a peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } preferred-value value

By default, the preferred value is 0.

15.     Apply a prefix list to filter routes received from or advertised to a peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } prefix-list prefix-list-name { export | import }

By default, no prefix list based filtering is configured.

16.     (Optional.) Configure BGP updates advertised to an EBGP peer or peer group to carry only public AS numbers.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } public-as-only

By default, BGP route updates advertised to an EBGP peer or peer group can carry both public and private AS numbers.

17.     Configure the router as a route reflector and specify a peer or peer group as its client.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } reflect-client

By default, no RR is configured.

18.     Specify the maximum number of routes BGP can receive from a peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } route-limit prefix-number [ { alert-only | discard | reconnect reconnect-time } | percentage-value ] *

By default, the number of routes that BGP can receive from a peer or peer group is not limited.

19.     Apply a routing policy to a peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } route-policy route-policy-name { export | import }

By default, no routing policy is applied to a peer or peer group.

20.     Enable route target-based filtering of received VPNv4 routes.

policy vpn-target

By default, this feature is enabled.

21.     Enable route reflection between clients.

reflect between-clients

By default, route reflection between clients is enabled on the RR.

22.     Configure a cluster ID for the route reflector.

reflector cluster-id { cluster-id | ip-address }

By default, the RR uses its own router ID as the cluster ID.

23.     Configure filtering of reflected routes.

rr-filter extended-community-number

By default, the RR does not filter reflected routes.

 

Configuring inter-AS VPN

If the MPLS backbone spans multiple ASs, you must configure inter-AS VPN.

Configuring inter-AS option A

Inter-AS option A applies to scenarios with a few VPNs.

To configure inter-AS option A, create VPN instances on PEs and ASBRs. The VPN instances on PEs are used to allow CEs to access the network. The VPN instances on ASBRs are used to access the peer ASBRs. An ASBR considers the peer ASBR as a CE.

The route targets configured on the PEs must match those configured on the ASBRs in the same AS to make sure VPN routes sent by the PEs (or ASBRs) can be received by the ASBRs (or PEs). Route targets configured on the PEs in different ASs do not have such requirements.

For more information, see "Configuring basic MPLS L3VPN."

Configuring inter-AS option B

To configure inter-AS option B, configure PEs and ASBRs.

·          PE configuration:

Configure basic MPLS L3VPN, and specify the ASBR in the same AS as an MP-IBGP peer. The route targets for the VPN instances on the PEs in different ASs must match for the same VPN. For more information about PE configuration, see "Configuring basic MPLS L3VPN."

·          ASBR configuration:

¡  Configure a routing protocol, and enable MPLS and LDP on the interface connecting to an internal router of the AS.

¡  Specify the PE in the same AS as an MP-IBGP peer, and the ASBR in a different AS as an MP-EBGP peer.

¡  Disable VPN target filtering for VPNv4 routes so the ASBR can maintain all VPNv4 routes and advertise the routes to the peer ASBR.

¡  Enable MPLS on the interface connected to the remote ASBRs. There is no need to configure a label distribution protocol, for example, MPLS LDP.

An ASBR always sets itself as the next hop of VPNv4 routes advertised to an MP-IBGP peer regardless of the peer next-hop-local command.

To configure inter-AS option B on an ASBR:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter interface view of the interface connected to an internal router of the AS.

interface interface-type interface-number

N/A

3.       Enable MPLS on the interface.

mpls enable

By default, MPLS is disabled on the interface.

4.       Enable MPLS LDP on the interface.

mpls ldp enable

By default, MPLS LDP is disabled on the interface.

5.       Return to system view.

quit

N/A

6.       Enter interface view of the interface connecting to the remote ASBR.

interface interface-type interface-number

N/A

7.       Enable MPLS on the interface.

mpls enable

By default, MPLS is disabled on the interface.

8.       Return to system view.

quit

N/A

9.       Enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

10.     Create a BGP peer.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } as-number as-number

By default, no BGP peer is configured.

Configure PEs in the same AS as IBGP peers, and ASBRs in different ASs as EBGP peers.

11.     Enter BGP VPNv4 address family view.

address-family vpnv4

N/A

12.     Enable BGP to exchange VPNv4 routes with the PE in the same AS and the ASBR in different ASs.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } enable

By default, BGP cannot exchange VPNv4 routing information with a peer.

13.     Disable route target based filtering of VPNv4 routes.

undo policy vpn-target

By default, the PE filters received VPNv4 routes by route targets.

The routes surviving the filtering are added to the routing table, and the others are discarded.

 

Configuring inter-AS option C

To configure inter-AS option C, configure PEs and ASBRs.

·          PE configuration:

¡  Configure basic MPLS L3VPN, and specify the PE in another AS as an MP-EBGP peer. The route targets for the VPN instances on the PEs in different ASs must match for the same VPN.

¡  Execute the peer ebgp-max-hop command to enable the local router to establish an EBGP session to an indirectly-connected peer because the PEs are not directly connected.

¡  Specify the ASBR in the same AS as an IBGP peer, and enable BGP to exchange labeled IPv4 unicast routes with the ASBR.

·          ASBR configuration:

¡  Configure a routing protocol, and enable MPLS and LDP on the interface connecting to an internal router of the AS.

¡  Specify the PE in the same AS as an IBGP peer, and the ASBR in a different AS as an EBGP peer.

¡  Enable BGP to exchange labeled IPv4 unicast routes with the PE in the same AS and the ASBR in different AS.

¡  Enable MPLS on the interface connected to the remote ASBR. There is no need to configure a label distribution protocol, for example, MPLS LDP.

¡  Configure a routing policy to determine which IPv4 unicast routes are advertised to the IBGP or EBGP peer with MPLS labels.

In addition, configure BGP to advertise routes destined for a PE on PEs or ASBRs. For more information, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.

Configuring a PE

For basic MPLS L3VPN configurations on a PE, see "Configuring basic MPLS L3VPN." The following table describes inter-AS option C specific configurations.

To configure a PE for inter-AS option C:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

3.       Configure the ASBR in the same AS as an IBGP peer.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } as-number as-number

By default, no BGP peer is created.

4.       Configure the PE of another AS as an EBGP peer.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } as-number as-number

By default, no BGP peer is created.

5.       Create the BGP IPv4 unicast address family and enter its view.

address-family ipv4 [ unicast ]

By default, the BGP IPv4 unicast address family is not created.

6.       Enable BGP to exchange IPv4 unicast routes with the ASBR in the same AS.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } enable

By default, BGP does not exchange IPv4 unicast routes with any peer.

7.       Enable BGP to exchange labeled IPv4 routes with the ASBR in the same AS.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } label-route-capability

By default, BGP cannot exchange labeled routes with any IPv4 peer or peer group.

8.       Return to BGP view.

quit

N/A

9.       Enter BGP VPNv4 address family view.

address-family vpnv4

N/A

10.     Enable BGP to exchange VPNv4 routes with the PE in different ASs.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } enable

By default, BGP cannot exchange VPNv4 routes with any peer.

11.     (Optional.) Configure the PE to not change the next hop of routes advertised to the EBGP peer.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } next-hop-invariable

Configure this command on the RR so the RR does not change the next hop of advertised VPNv4 routes.

 

Configuring an ASBR

To set up an inter-AS public tunnel for the inter-AS option C solution, an ASBR must assign an MPLS label to the route destined for a PE, and advertise the label along with the route. Typically, the routes advertised by an ASBR through BGP include the PE address as well as other routes. You can configure a routing policy to filter routes. Routes surviving the filtering are assigned labels, and all others are advertised as common IPv4 routes.

To configure a routing policy, use the following commands:

·          if-match mpls-labelMatches routes carrying MPLS labels.

·          apply mpls-labelSets MPLS labels for IPv4 routes to be advertised to a peer. You can use this command together with if-match clauses. For example, when used together with the if-match mpls-label command, the apply mpls-label sets new MPLS labels for routes with MPLS labels. The newly assigned labels are advertised along with the routes.

For more information about routing policy configuration, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.

To configure an ASBR-PE for inter-AS option C:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       (Optional.) Create a routing policy, and enter routing policy view.

route-policy route-policy-name { deny | permit } node node-number

By default, no routing policy is created.

3.       (Optional.) Match IPv4 routes carrying labels.

if-match mpls-label

By default, no MPLS label match criterion is configured.

4.       (Optional.) Set labels for IPv4 routes.

apply mpls-label

By default, no MPLS label is set for IPv4 routes.

5.       Return to system view.

quit

N/A

6.       Enter interface view of the interface connected to an internal router of the AS.

interface interface-type interface-number

N/A

7.       Enable MPLS on the interface.

mpls enable

By default, MPLS is disabled on the interface.

8.       Enable MPLS LDP on the interface.

mpls ldp enable

By default, MPLS LDP is disabled on the interface.

9.       Return to system view.

quit

N/A

10.     Enter interface view of the interface connected to the remote ASBR.

interface interface-type interface-number

N/A

11.     Enable MPLS on the interface.

mpls enable

By default, MPLS is disabled on the interface.

12.     Return to system view.

quit

N/A

13.     Enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

14.     Configure the PE in the same AS as an IBGP peer.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } as-number as-number

By default, no BGP peer is created.

15.     Configure the ASBR in another AS as an EBGP peer.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } as-number as-number

By default, no BGP peer is created.

16.     Create the BGP IPv4 unicast address family and enter its view.

address-family ipv4 [ unicast ]

By default, the BGP IPv4 unicast address family is not created.

17.     Enable exchange of IPv4 unicast routes with the PE in the same AS and the ASBR in another AS.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } enable

By default, BGP does not exchange IPv4 unicast routes with any peer.

18.     Enable exchange of labeled IPv4 routes with the PE in the same AS and the ASBR in another AS.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } label-route-capability

By default, BGP cannot advertise labeled routes to any IPv4 peer or peer group.

19.     Configure the ASBR-PE to set itself as the next hop of routes advertised to the PE in the local AS.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } next-hop-local

By default, BGP does not use its address as the next hop of routes advertised to an IBGP peer or peer group.

20.     (Optional.) Apply a routing policy to routes incoming from or outgoing to a peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } route-policy route-policy-name { export | import }

By default, no routing policy is applied.

 

Configuring a routing policy on an ASBR-PE

A routing policy on an ASBR-PE performs the following operations:

·          Assigns MPLS labels to routes received from the PEs in the local AS before advertising them to the peer ASBR-PE.

·          Assigns new MPLS labels to labeled IPv4 routes advertised to PEs in the local AS.

Which IPv4 routes are assigned with MPLS labels depends on the routing policy. Only routes that meet the criteria are assigned with labels. All other routes are still common IPv4 routes.

To configure a routing policy for inter-AS option C on an ASBR-PE:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Create a routing policy and enter routing policy view.

route-policy route-policy-name { deny | permit } node node-number

By default, no routing policy is created.

3.       Match IPv4 routes carrying labels.

if-match mpls-label

By default, no match criterion is configured.

4.       Set labels for IPv4 routes.

apply mpls-label

By default, no apply clause is configured.

 

Configuring nested VPN

For a network with many VPNs, nested VPN is a good solution to implement layered management of VPNs and to conceal the deployment of internal VPNs.

To build a nested VPN network, perform the following configurations:

·          Configurations between customer PE and customer CE—Configure VPN instances on the customer PE and configure route exchange between customer PE and customer CE.

·          Configurations between customer PE and provider CE—Configure BGP VPNv4 route exchange between them. To make sure the provider CE can receive all BGP VPNv4 routes, configure the undo policy vpn-target command on the provider CE to not filter VPNv4 routes by RTs.

·          Configurations between provider CE and provider PE—Configure VPN instances and enable nested VPN on the provider PE and configure BGP VPNv4 route exchange between the provider CE and provider PE.

·          Configurations between provider PEs—Configure BGP VPNv4 route exchange between them.

Nested VPN allows a customer PE to directly exchange VPNv4 routes with a provider PE, without needing to deploy a provider CE. In this case, the customer PE also acts as the provider CE. Therefore, you must configure provider CE settings on it.

Configurations on the customer CE, customer PE, and provider CE are similar to basic MPLS L3VPN configurations. This task describes the configurations on the provider PE.

When you configure nested VPN, follow these guidelines:

·          The address spaces of sub-VPNs of a VPN cannot overlap.

·          Do not assign nested VPN peers addresses that public network peers use.

·          Nested VPN does not support multihop EBGP. A provider PE and a provider CE must use the addresses of the directly connected interfaces to establish a neighbor relationship.

To configure nested VPN:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

3.       Enter BGP VPNv4 address family view.

address-family vpnv4

N/A

4.       Enable nested VPN.

nesting-vpn

By default, nested VPN is disabled.

5.       Return to BGP view.

quit

N/A

6.       Enter BGP-VPN instance view.

ip vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

N/A

7.       Specify the peer CE or the peer group of the peer CE.

peer { group-name | peer-address [ mask-length ] } as-number as-number

By default, no peer is specified.

8.       Create the BGP-VPN VPNv4 address family and enter its view.

address-family vpnv4

By default, the BGP-VPN VPNv4 address family is not created.

9.       (Optional.) Enable BGP VPNv4 route exchange with the peer CE or the peer group of the peer CE.

peer { group-name | peer-address [ mask-length ] } enable

By default, BGP does not exchange VPNv4 routes with any peer.

 

Configuring HoVPN

In a HoVPN networking scenario, perform basic MPLS L3VPN settings on UPE and SPE. In addition, configure the following settings on the SPE:

·          Specify the BGP peer or peer group as a UPE.

·          Advertise the default route of the specified VPN instance or routes matching a routing policy to the UPE.

·          Create a BGP-VPN instance so the learned VPNv4 routes can be added into the BGP routing table of the corresponding VPN instance by RTs.

Associating an interface with a VPN instance is not required on the SPE because no interface on the SPE is directly connected to the customer network.

As a best practice, do not configure both the peer default-route-advertise vpn-instance and peer upe route-policy commands at the same time.

To configure SPE for HoVPN:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

3.       Specify a BGP peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | peer-address [ mask-length ] } as-number as-number

By default, no BGP peer is specified.

4.       Enter BGP-VPN VPNv4 address family view.

address-family vpnv4

N/A

5.       Enable BGP VPNv4 route exchange with the peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } enable

By default, BGP does not exchange VPNv4 routes with any peer.

6.       Specify the BGP peer or peer group as a UPE.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } upe

By default, no peer is a UPE.

7.       Advertise routes to the UPE.

·         Advertise a default VPN route to the UPE:
peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } default-route-advertise vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

·         Advertise routes permitted by a routing policy to the UPE:
peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } upe route-policy route-policy-name export

By default, no route is advertised to the UPE.

Do not configure both commands.

The peer default-route-advertise vpn-instance command advertises a default route using the local address as the next hop to the UPE, regardless of whether the default route is present in the local routing table. However, if the specified peer is not a UPE, the command does not advertise a default route.

8.       Return to BGP view.

quit

N/A

9.       Create a BGP-VPN instance, and enter BGP-VPN instance view.

ip vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

By default, no BGP-VPN instance is created.

 

Configuring an OSPF sham link

When a backdoor link exists between the two sites of a VPN, you can create a sham link between PEs to forward VPN traffic through the sham link on the backbone rather than the backdoor link. A sham link is considered an OSPF intra-area route.

The source and destination addresses of the sham link must be loopback interface addresses with 32-bit masks. The loopback interfaces must be bound to VPN instances, and their addresses are advertised through BGP.

Before you configure an OSPF sham link, complete the following tasks:

·          Configure basic MPLS L3VPN (OSPF is used between PE and CE).

·          Configure OSPF in the LAN where customer CEs reside.

Configuring a loopback interface

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Create a loopback interface and enter loopback interface view.

interface loopback interface-number

By default, no loopback interface is created.

3.       Associate the loopback interface with a VPN instance.

ip binding vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

By default, the interface is associated with no VPN instance.

4.       Configure the address of the loopback interface.

ip address ip-address { mask | mask-length }

N/A

 

Redistributing the loopback interface route

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

3.       Enter BGP-VPN instance view.

ip vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

N/A

4.       Enter BGP-VPN IPv4 unicast address family view.

address-family ipv4 [ unicast ]

N/A

5.       Redistribute direct routes into BGP (including the loopback interface route).

import-route direct

By default, no direct routes are redistributed into BGP.

 

Creating a sham link

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter OSPF view.

ospf [ process-id | router-id router-id | vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] *

As a best practice, specify a router ID.

3.       Configure the external route tag for imported VPN routes.

route-tag tag-value

If BGP runs within an MPLS backbone, and the BGP AS number is not greater than 65535, the first two octets of the external route tag are 0xD000 and the last two octets are the local BGP AS number. If the AS number is greater than 65535, the external route tag is 0.

4.       Enter OSPF area view.

area area-id

N/A

5.       Configure a sham link.

sham-link source-ip-address destination-ip-address [ cost cost | dead dead-interval | hello hello-interval | { { hmac-md5 | md5 } key-id { cipher cipher-string | plain plain-string } | simple { cipher cipher-string | plain plain-string } } | retransmit retrans-interval | trans-delay delay ] *

By default, no sham link is configured.

 

Specifying the VPN label processing mode on the egress PE

An egress PE can process VPN labels in either POPGO or POP mode:

·          POPGO forwarding—Pops the label and forwards the packet out of the egress interface corresponding to the label.

·          POP forwarding—Pops the label and forwards the packet through the FIB table.

To specify the VPN label processing mode on an egress PE:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

3.       Specify the VPN label processing mode as POPGO forwarding.

vpn popgo

The default is POP forwarding.

 

Configuring BGP AS number substitution

When CEs at different sites have the same AS number, configure the BGP AS number substitution function to avoid route loss. If the AS_PATH attribute of a route contains the AS number of the specified CE, the PE replaces the AS number with its own AS number before advertising the route to that CE.

To configure BGP AS number substitution:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

3.       Enter BGP-VPN instance view.

ip vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

N/A

4.       Configure a BGP peer or peer group.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } as-number as-number

N/A

5.       Enable the BGP AS number substitution function.

peer { group-name | ip-address [ mask-length ] } substitute-as

By default, BGP AS number substitution is disabled.

For more information about this command, see Layer 3—IP Routing Command Reference.

 

Configuring MPLS L3VPN FRR

There are two methods to configure MPLS L3VPN FRR:

·          Method 1Execute the pic command in BGP-VPN IPv4 unicast address family view. The device calculates a backup next hop for each BGP route in the VPN instance if there are two or more unequal-cost routes to reach the destination.

·          Method 2Execute the fast-reroute route-policy command in BGP-VPN IPv4 unicast address family view to reference a routing policy in which a backup next hop is specified by using the apply fast-reroute backup-nexthop command. The backup next hop calculated by the device must be the same as the specified backup next hop. Otherwise, the device does not generate a backup next hop for the primary route. You can also configure if-match clauses in the routing policy to identify the routes protected by FRR.

If both methods are configured, Method 2 takes precedence over Method 1.

To configure MPLS L3VPN FRR:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Configure the source IP address for BFD echo packets.

bfd echo-source-ip ip-address

The bfd echo-source-ip command is required when echo-mode BFD is used to detect primary route connectivity in VPNv4 route backup for an IPv4 route. For more information about this command, see High Availability Command Reference.

3.       Create a routing policy and enter routing policy view.

route-policy route-policy-name permit node node-number

By default, no routing policy is created.

This step is required to enable MPLS L3VPN FRR in Method 2.

For more information about this command, see Layer 3—IP Routing Command Reference.

4.       Set the backup next hop for FRR.

apply fast-reroute backup-nexthop ip-address

By default, no backup next hop address is set for FRR.

This step is required to enable MPLS L3VPN FRR in Method 2.

For more information about this command, see Layer 3—IP Routing Command Reference.

5.       Return to system view.

quit

N/A

6.       Enter BGP view.

bgp as-number

N/A

7.       (Optional.) Use echo-mode BFD to detect the connectivity to the next hop of the primary route.

primary-path-detect bfd echo

By default, ARP is used to detect the connectivity to the next hop.

Use this command if necessary in VPNv4 route backup for an IPv4 route.

For more information about this command, see Layer 3—IP Routing Command Reference.

8.       Enter BGP-VPN instance view.

ip vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

N/A

9.       Enter BGP-VPN IPv4 unicast address family view.

address-family ipv4 [ unicast ]

N/A

10.     Enable MPLS L3VPN FRR.

·         (Method 1) Enable MPLS L3VPN FRR for the address family:
pic

·         (Method 2) Reference a routing policy to specify a backup next hop for the address family:
fast-reroute route-policy route-policy-name

By default, MPLS L3VPN FRR is disabled.

Method 1 might result in routing loops. Use it with caution.

By default, no routing policy is referenced.

The apply fast-reroute backup-nexthop command can take effect in the routing policy that is being used. Other apply commands do not take effect.

For more information about the command, see Layer 3—IP Routing Command Reference.

 

Enabling SNMP notifications for MPLS L3VPN

This feature enables MPLS L3VPN to generate SNMP notifications. The generated SNMP notifications are sent to the SNMP module.

For more information about SNMP notifications, see Network Management and Monitoring Configuration Guide.

To enable SNMP notifications for MPLS L3VPN:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enable SNMP notifications for MPLS L3VPN.

snmp-agent trap enable l3vpn

By default, SNMP notifications for MPLS L3VPN are enabled.

 

Enabling logging for BGP route flapping

This feature enables BGP to generate logs for BGP route flappings that trigger log generation. The generated logs are sent to the information center. For the logs to be output correctly, you must also configure information center on the device. For more information about the information center, see Network Management and Monitoring Configuration Guide.

To enable logging for BGP route flapping:

 

Step

Command

Remarks

1.       Enter system view.

system-view

N/A

2.       Enter BGP VPNv4 address family view or BGP-VPN VPNv4 address family view.

·         Enter BGP VPNv4 address family view:

a.    bgp as-number

b.    address-family vpnv4

·         Enter BGP-VPN VPNv4 address family view:

a.    bgp as-number

b.    ip vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

c.    address-family vpnv4

N/A

3.       Enable logging for BGP route flapping.

log-route-flap monitor-time monitor-count [ log-count-limit | route-policy route-policy-name ] *

By default, logging for BGP route flapping is disabled.

 

Displaying and maintaining MPLS L3VPN

You can soft-reset or reset BGP sessions to apply new BGP configurations. A soft reset operation updates BGP routing information without tearing down BGP connections. A reset operation updates BGP routing information by tearing down, and then re-establishing BGP connections. Soft reset requires that BGP peers have route refresh capability.

Execute the following commands in user view to soft reset or reset BGP connections:

 

Task

Command

Soft reset BGP sessions for VPNv4 address family.

refresh bgp { ip-address [ mask-length ] | all | external | group group-name | internal } { export | import } vpnv4 [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ]

Reset BGP sessions for VPNv4 address family.

reset bgp { as-number | ip-address [ mask-length ] | all | external | internal | group group-name } vpnv4 [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ]

 

For more information about the refresh bgp vpnv4 and reset bgp vpnv4 commands, see Layer 3—IP Routing Command Reference.

Execute the following commands in any view to display MPLS L3VPN:

 

Task

Command

Display the routing table for a VPN instance (in standalone mode).

display ip routing-table vpn-instance vpn-instance-name [ statistics | verbose ] [ standby slot slot-number ]

Display the routing table for a VPN instance (in IRF mode).

display ip routing-table vpn-instance vpn-instance-name [ statistics | verbose ] [ standby chassis chassis-number slot slot-number ]

Display information about a specified or all VPN instances.

display ip vpn-instance [ instance-name vpn-instance-name ]

Display the FIB of a VPN instance.

display fib vpn-instance vpn-instance-name

Display FIB entries that match the specified destination IP address in the specified VPN instance.

display fib vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ip-address [ mask | mask-length ]

Display BGP VPNv4 peer group information.

display bgp group vpnv4 [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] [ group-name group-name ]

Display BGP VPNv4 peer information (in standalone mode).

display bgp peer vpnv4 [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] [ ip-address mask-length | { ip-address | group-name group-name } log-info | [ [ ip-address ] verbose ] [ standby slot slot-number ] ]

Display BGP VPNv4 peer information (in IRF mode).

display bgp peer vpnv4 [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] [ ip-address mask-length | { ip-address | group-name group-name } log-info | [ [ ip-address ] verbose ] [ standby chassis chassis-number slot slot-number ] ]

Display BGP VPNv4 routes (in standalone mode).

display bgp routing-table vpnv4 [ [ route-distinguisher route-distinguisher ] [ network-address [ { mask | mask-length } [ longest-match ] ] | network-address [ mask | mask-length ] advertise-info | as-path-acl as-path-acl-number | community-list { { basic-community-list-number | comm-list-name } [ whole-match ] | adv-community-list-number } ] | [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] peer ip-address { advertised-routes | received-routes } [ network-address [ mask | mask-length ] | statistics ] | statistics ] [ standby slot slot-number ]

Display BGP VPNv4 routes (in IRF mode).

display bgp routing-table vpnv4 [ [ route-distinguisher route-distinguisher ] [ network-address [ { mask | mask-length } [ longest-match ] ] | network-address [ mask | mask-length ] advertise-info | as-path-acl as-path-acl-number | community-list { { basic-community-list-number | comm-list-name } [ whole-match ] | adv-community-list-number } ] | [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] peer ip-address { advertised-routes | received-routes } [ network-address [ mask | mask-length ] | statistics ] | statistics ] [ standby chassis chassis-number slot slot-number ]

Display incoming labels for BGP IPv4 unicast routes.

display bgp routing-table ipv4 [ unicast ] [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] inlabel

Display outgoing labels for BGP IPv4 unicast routes (in standalone mode).

display bgp routing-table ipv4 [ unicast ] [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] outlabel [ standby slot slot-number ]

Display outgoing labels for BGP IPv4 unicast routes (in IRF mode).

display bgp routing-table ipv4 [ unicast ] [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] outlabel [ standby chassis chassis-number slot slot-number ]

Display incoming labels for BGP VPNv4 routes.

display bgp routing-table vpnv4 inlabel

Display outgoing labels for BGP VPNv4 routes (in standalone mode).

display bgp routing-table vpnv4 outlabel [ standby slot slot-number ]

Display outgoing labels for BGP VPNv4 routes (in IRF mode).

display bgp routing-table vpnv4 outlabel [ standby chassis chassis-number slot slot-number ]

Display BGP VPNv4 address family update group information.

display bgp update-group vpnv4 [ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ] [ ip-address ]

Display OSPF sham link information (in standalone mode).

display ospf [ process-id ] sham-link [ area area-id ] [ standby slot slot-number ]

Display OSPF sham link information (in IRF mode).

display ospf [ process-id ] sham-link [ area area-id ] [ standby chassis chassis-number slot slot-number ]

 

For more information about the display ip routing-table, display bgp group vpnv4, display bgp peer vpnv4, and display bgp update-group vpnv4 commands, see Layer 3—IP Routing Command Reference.

MPLS L3VPN configuration examples

Configuring basic MPLS L3VPN

Network requirements

CE 1 and CE 3 belong to VPN 1. CE 2 and CE 4 belong to VPN 2.

VPN 1 uses route target attribute 111:1. VPN 2 uses route target attribute 222:2. Users of different VPNs cannot access each other.

EBGP is used to exchange VPN routing information between CE and PE.

PEs use OSPF to communicate with each other and use MP-IBGP to exchange VPN routing information.

Figure 21 Network diagram

 

Table 1 Interface and IP address assignment

Device

Interface

IP address

Device

Interface

IP address

CE 1

Vlan-int11

10.1.1.1/24

P

Loop0

2.2.2.9/32

PE 1

Loop0

1.1.1.9/32

 

Vlan-int12

172.2.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int11

10.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int13

172.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int13

172.1.1.1/24

PE 2

Loop0

3.3.3.9/32

 

Vlan-int12

10.2.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int12

172.2.1.2/24

CE 2

Vlan-int12

10.2.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int11

10.3.1.2/24

CE 3

Vlan-int11

10.3.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int13

10.4.1.2/24

CE 4

Vlan-int13

10.4.1.1/24

 

 

 

 

Configuration procedure

1.        Configure an IGP on the MPLS backbone to ensure IP connectivity within the backbone:

# Configure PE 1.

<PE1> system-view

[PE1] interface loopback 0

[PE1-LoopBack0] ip address 1.1.1.9 32

[PE1-LoopBack0] quit

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 13

[PE1-Vlan-interface13] ip address 172.1.1.1 24

[PE1-Vlan-interface13] quit

[PE1] ospf

[PE1-ospf-1] area 0

[PE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 172.1.1.0 0.0.0.255

[PE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 1.1.1.9 0.0.0.0

[PE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] quit

[PE1-ospf-1] quit

# Configure the P device.

<P> system-view

[P] interface loopback 0

[P-LoopBack0] ip address 2.2.2.9 32

[P-LoopBack0] quit

[P] interface vlan-interface 13

[P-Vlan-interface13] ip address 172.1.1.2 24

[P- Vlan-interface13] quit

[P] interface vlan-interface 12

[P-Vlan-interface12] ip address 172.2.1.1 24

[P-Vlan-interface12] quit

[P] ospf

[P-ospf-1] area 0

[P-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 172.1.1.0 0.0.0.255

[P-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 172.2.1.0 0.0.0.255

[P-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 2.2.2.9 0.0.0.0

[P-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] quit

[P-ospf-1] quit

# Configure PE 2.

<PE2> system-view

[PE2] interface loopback 0

[PE2-LoopBack0] ip address 3.3.3.9 32

[PE2-LoopBack0] quit

[PE2] interface vlan-interface 12

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] ip address 172.2.1.2 24

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] quit

[PE2] ospf

[PE2-ospf-1] area 0

[PE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 172.2.1.0 0.0.0.255

[PE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 3.3.3.9 0.0.0.0

[PE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] quit

[PE2-ospf-1] quit

# Execute the display ospf peer command to verify that OSPF adjacencies in Full state have been established between PE 1, P, and PE 2. Execute the display ip routing-table command to verify that the PEs have learned the routes to the loopback interfaces of each other. (Details not shown.)

2.        Configure basic MPLS and MPLS LDP on the MPLS backbone to establish LDP LSPs:

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] mpls lsr-id 1.1.1.9

[PE1] mpls ldp

[PE1-ldp] quit

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 13

[PE1-Vlan-interface13] mpls enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface13] mpls ldp enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface13] quit

# Configure the P device.

[P] mpls lsr-id 2.2.2.9

[P] mpls ldp

[P-ldp] quit

[P] interface vlan-interface 13

[P-Vlan-interface13] mpls enable

[P-Vlan-interface13] mpls ldp enable

[P-Vlan-interface13] quit

[P] interface vlan-interface 12

[P-Vlan-interface12] mpls enable

[P-Vlan-interface12] mpls ldp enable

[P-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure PE 2.

[PE2] mpls lsr-id 3.3.3.9

[PE2] mpls ldp

[PE2-ldp] quit

[PE2] interface vlan-interface 12

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] mpls enable

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] mpls ldp enable

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Execute the display mpls ldp peer command to verify that LDP sessions in Operational state have been established between PE 1, P, and PE 2. Execute the display mpls ldp lsp command to verify that the LSPs have been established by LDP. (Details not shown.)

3.        Configure VPN instances on PEs:

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[PE1] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 100:1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 111:1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[PE1] ip vpn-instance vpn2

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn2] route-distinguisher 100:2

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn2] vpn-target 222:2

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn2] quit

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 11

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] ip address 10.1.1.2 24

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] quit

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip binding vpn-instance vpn2

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.2.1.2 24

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure PE 2.

[PE2] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[PE2] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 200:1

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 111:1

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[PE2] ip vpn-instance vpn2

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn2] route-distinguisher 200:2

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn2] vpn-target 222:2

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn2] quit

[PE2] interface vlan-interface 11

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] ip address 10.3.1.2 24

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] quit

[PE2] interface vlan-interface 13

[PE2-Vlan-interface13] ip binding vpn-instance vpn2

[PE2-Vlan-interface13] ip address 10.4.1.2 24

[PE2-Vlan-interface13] quit

# Configure IP addresses for the CEs according to Figure 21. (Details not shown.)

# Execute the display ip vpn-instance command on the PEs to display the configuration of the VPN instance, for example, on PE 1.

[PE1] display ip vpn-instance

  Total VPN-Instances configured : 2

  VPN-Instance Name               RD                     Create time

  vpn1                            100:1                  2012/02/13 12:49:08

  vpn2                            100:2                  2012/02/13 12:49:20

# Use the ping command on the PEs to verify that the PEs can ping their attached CEs, for example, on PE 1.

[PE1] ping -vpn-instance vpn1 10.1.1.1

Ping 10.1.1.1 (10.1.1.1): 56 data bytes, press CTRL_C to break

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=0 ttl=255 time=1.000 ms

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=1 ttl=255 time=2.000 ms

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=2 ttl=255 time=0.000 ms

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=3 ttl=255 time=1.000 ms

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=4 ttl=255 time=0.000 ms

 

--- Ping statistics for 10.1.1.1 ---

5 packet(s) transmitted, 5 packet(s) received, 0.0% packet loss

round-trip min/avg/max/std-dev = 0.000/0.800/2.000/0.748 ms

4.        Establish EBGP peer relationships between PEs and CEs, and redistribute VPN routes into BGP:

# Configure CE 1.

<CE1> system-view

[CE1] bgp 65410

[CE1-bgp] peer 10.1.1.2 as-number 100

[CE1-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[CE1-bgp-ipv4] peer 10.1.1.2 enable

[CE1-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[CE1-bgp-ipv4] quit

[CE1-bgp] quit

# Configure the other three CEs in the same way that CE 1 is configured. (Details not shown.)

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] bgp 100

[PE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] peer 10.1.1.1 as-number 65410

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 10.1.1.1 enable

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] import-route direct

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn2

[PE1-bgp-vpn2] peer 10.2.1.1 as-number 65420

[PE1-bgp-vpn2] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 10.2.1.1 enable

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn2] import-route direct

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn2] quit

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 2 in the same way that PE 1 is configured. (Details not shown.)

# Execute the display bgp peer ipv4 vpn-instance command on the PEs to verify that a BGP peer relationship in Established state has been established between a PE and a CE. (Details not shown.)

5.        Establish an MP-IBGP peer relationship between PEs:

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] bgp 100

[PE1-bgp] peer 3.3.3.9 as-number 100

[PE1-bgp] peer 3.3.3.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 3.3.3.9 enable

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[PE1-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 2.

[PE2] bgp 100

[PE2-bgp] peer 1.1.1.9 as-number 100

[PE2-bgp] peer 1.1.1.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE2-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 1.1.1.9 enable

[PE2-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[PE2-bgp] quit

# Execute the display bgp peer vpnv4 command on the PEs to verify that a BGP peer relationship in Established state has been established between the PEs. (Details not shown.)

Verifying the configuration

# Execute the display ip routing-table vpn-instance command on the PEs.

[PE1] display ip routing-table vpn-instance vpn1

 

Destinations : 13        Routes : 13

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

10.1.1.0/24         Direct 0    0            10.1.1.2        Vlan11

10.1.1.0/32         Direct 0    0            10.1.1.2        Vlan11

10.1.1.2/32         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

10.1.1.255/32       Direct 0    0            10.1.1.2        Vlan11

10.3.1.0/24         BGP    255  0            3.3.3.9         Vlan13

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

The output shows that PE 1 has a route to the remote CE. Output on PE 2 is similar.

# Verify that CEs of the same VPN can ping each other, whereas those of different VPNs cannot. For example, CE 1 can ping CE 3 (10.3.1.1) but cannot ping CE 4 (10.4.1.1). (Details not shown.)

Configuring an MPLS L3VPN over a GRE tunnel

Network requirements

CE 1 and CE 2 belong to VPN 1. The PEs support MPLS. The P switch does not support MPLS and provides only IP features.

On the backbone, use a GRE tunnel to encapsulate and forward VPN packets to implement MPLS L3VPN.

Configure tunnel policies on the PEs, and specify the tunnel type for VPN traffic as GRE.

Figure 22 Network diagram

 

Table 2 Interface and IP address assignment

Device

Interface

IP address

Device

Interface

IP address

CE 1

Vlan-int12

10.1.1.1/24

P

Vlan-int11

172.1.1.2/24

PE 1

Loop0

1.1.1.9/32

 

Vlan-int12

172.2.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int12

10.1.1.2/24

PE 2

Loop0

2.2.2.9/32

 

Vlan-int11

172.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int11

10.2.1.2/24

 

Tunnel0

20.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int12

172.2.1.2/24

CE 2

Vlan-int12

10.2.1.1/24

 

Tunnel0

20.1.1.2/24

 

Configuration procedure

1.        Configure an IGP on the MPLS backbone to ensure IP connectivity within the backbone.

This example uses OSPF. (Details not shown.)

# Execute the display ospf peer command to verify that OSPF adjacencies in Full state have been established between PE 1, P, and PE 2. Execute the display ip routing-table command to verify that the PEs have learned the routes to the loopback interfaces of each other. (Details not shown.)

2.        Configure basic MPLS on the PEs:

# Configure PE 1.

<PE1> system-view

[PE1] mpls lsr-id 1.1.1.9

# Configure PE 2.

<PE2> system-view

[PE2] mpls lsr-id 2.2.2.9

3.        Configure VPN instances on PEs, and apply tunnel policies to the VPN instances to use a GRE tunnel for VPN packet forwarding:

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] tunnel-policy gre1

[PE1-tunnel-policy-gre1] select-seq gre load-balance-number 1

[PE1-tunnel-policy-gre1] quit

[PE1] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 100:1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 100:1 both

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] tnl-policy gre1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.1.1.2 24

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure PE 2.

[PE2] tunnel-policy gre1

[PE2-tunnel-policy-gre1] select-seq gre load-balance-number 1

[PE2-tunnel-policy-gre1] quit

[PE2] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 100:2

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 100:1 both

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] tnl-policy gre1

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[PE2] interface vlan-interface 11

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] ip address 10.2.1.2 24

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure CE 1.

<CE1> system-view

[CE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[CE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.1.1.1 24

[CE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure CE 2.

<CE2> system-view

[CE2] interface vlan-interface 11

[CE2-Vlan-interface11] ip address 10.2.1.1 24

[CE2-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Execute the display ip vpn-instance command on the PEs to display the configuration of the VPN instance, for example, on PE 1.

[PE1] display ip vpn-instance

  Total VPN-Instances configured : 1

  VPN-Instance Name               RD                     Create time

  vpn1                            100:1                  2012/02/13 15:59:50

# Use the ping command on the PEs to verify that the PEs can ping their attached CEs, for example, on PE 1.

[PE1] ping -vpn-instance vpn1 10.1.1.1

Ping 10.1.1.1 (10.1.1.1): 56 data bytes, press CTRL_C to break

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=0 ttl=255 time=1.000 ms

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=1 ttl=255 time=0.000 ms

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=2 ttl=255 time=0.000 ms

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=3 ttl=255 time=0.000 ms

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=4 ttl=255 time=0.000 ms

 

--- Ping statistics for 10.1.1.1 ---

5 packet(s) transmitted, 5 packet(s) received, 0.0% packet loss

round-trip min/avg/max/std-dev = 0.000/0.200/1.000/0.400 ms

4.        Establish EBGP peer relationships between PEs and CEs, and redistribute VPN routes into BGP:

# Configure CE 1.

[CE1] bgp 65410

[CE1-bgp-default] peer 10.1.1.2 as-number 100

[CE1-bgp-default] address-family ipv4 unicast

[CE1-bgp-default-ipv4] peer 10.1.1.2 enable

[CE1-bgp-default-ipv4] import-route direct

[CE1-bgp-default-ipv4] quit

[CE1-bgp-default] quit

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] bgp 100

[PE1-bgp-default] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-bgp-default-vpn1] peer 10.1.1.1 as-number 65410

[PE1-bgp-default-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE1-bgp-default-ipv4-vpn1] peer 10.1.1.1 enable

[PE1-bgp-default-ipv4-vpn1] peer 10.1.1.1 next-hop-local

[PE1-bgp-default-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp-default-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp-default] quit

# Configure CE 2 and PE 2 in the same way that CE 1 and PE 1 are configured. (Details not shown.)

# Execute the display bgp peer ipv4 vpn-instance command on the PEs to verify that a BGP peer relationship in Established state has been established between a PE and a CE. (Details not shown.)

5.        Establish an MP-IBGP peer relationship between PEs:

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] bgp 100

[PE1-bgp-default] peer 2.2.2.9 as-number 100

[PE1-bgp-default] peer 2.2.2.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE1-bgp-default] address-family vpnv4

[PE1-bgp-default-vpnv4] peer 2.2.2.9 enable

[PE1-bgp-default-vpnv4] quit

[PE1-bgp-default] quit

# Configure PE 2 in the same way that PE 1 is configured. (Details not shown.)

# Execute the display bgp peer vpnv4 command on the PEs to verify that a BGP peer relationship in Established state has been established between the PEs. (Details not shown.)

6.        Configure a GRE tunnel:

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] interface tunnel 0 mode gre

[PE1-Tunnel0] source loopback 0

[PE1-Tunnel0] destination 2.2.2.9

[PE1-Tunnel0] ip address 20.1.1.1 24

[PE1-Tunnel0] mpls enable

[PE1-Tunnel0] quit

# Configure PE 2.

[PE2] interface tunnel 0 mode gre

[PE2-Tunnel0] source loopback 0

[PE2-Tunnel0] destination 1.1.1.9

[PE2-Tunnel0] ip address 20.1.1.2 24

[PE2-Tunnel0] mpls enable

[PE2-Tunnel0] quit

Verifying the configuration

# Use the following command on CE 1 to verify that the CEs have learned the interface route from each other.

[CE1] display ip routing-table

 

Destinations : 13        Routes : 13

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

10.1.1.0/24         Direct 0    0            10.1.1.1        Vlan12

10.1.1.0/32         Direct 0    0            10.1.1.1        Vlan12

10.1.1.1/32         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

10.1.1.255/32       Direct 0    0            10.1.1.1        Vlan12

10.2.1.0/24         BGP    255  0            10.1.1.2        Vlan12

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

# Verify that CE 1 and CE 2 can ping each other. (Details not shown.)

Configuring a hub-spoke network

Network requirements

The Spoke-CEs cannot communicate directly. They can communicate only through Hub-CE.

Configure EBGP between the Spoke-CEs and Spoke-PEs and between Hub-CE and Hub-PE to exchange VPN routing information.

Configure OSPF between the Spoke-PEs and Hub-PE to implement communication between the PEs, and configure MP-IBGP between them to exchange VPN routing information.

Figure 23 Network diagram

 

Table 3 Interface and IP address assignment

Device

Interface

IP address

Device

Interface

IP address

Spoke-CE 1

Vlan-int2

10.1.1.1/24

Hub-CE

Vlan-int6

10.3.1.1/24

Spoke-PE 1

Loop0

1.1.1.9/32

 

Vlan-int7

10.4.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int2

10.1.1.2/24

Hub-PE

Loop0

2.2.2.9/32

 

Vlan-int4

172.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int4

172.1.1.2/24

Spoke-CE 2

Vlan-int3

10.2.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int5

172.2.1.2/24

Spoke-PE 2

Loop0

3.3.3.9/32

 

Vlan-int6

10.3.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int3

10.2.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int7

10.4.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int5

172.2.1.1/24

 

 

 

 

Configuration procedure

1.        Configure an IGP on the MPLS backbone to ensure IP connectivity within the backbone:

# Configure Spoke-PE 1.

<Spoke-PE1> system-view

[Spoke-PE1] interface loopback 0

[Spoke-PE1-LoopBack0] ip address 1.1.1.9 32

[Spoke-PE1-LoopBack0] quit

[Spoke-PE1] interface vlan-interface 4

[Spoke-PE1-Vlan-interface4] ip address 172.1.1.1 24

[Spoke-PE1-Vlan-interface4] quit

[Spoke-PE1] ospf

[Spoke-PE1-ospf-1] area 0

[Spoke-PE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 172.1.1.0 0.0.0.255

[Spoke-PE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 1.1.1.9 0.0.0.0

[Spoke-PE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] quit

[Spoke-PE1-ospf-1] quit

# Configure Spoke-PE 2.

<Spoke-PE2> system-view

[Spoke-PE2] interface loopback 0

[Spoke-PE2-LoopBack0] ip address 3.3.3.9 32

[Spoke-PE2-LoopBack0] quit

[Spoke-PE2] interface vlan-interface 5

[Spoke-PE2-Vlan-interface5] ip address 172.2.1.1 24

[Spoke-PE2-Vlan-interface5] quit

[Spoke-PE2] ospf

[Spoke-PE2-ospf-1] area 0

[Spoke-PE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 172.2.1.0 0.0.0.255

[Spoke-PE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 3.3.3.9 0.0.0.0

[Spoke-PE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] quit

[Spoke-PE2-ospf-1] quit

# Configure Hub-PE.

<Hub-PE> system-view

[Hub-PE] interface loopback 0

[Hub-PE-LoopBack0] ip address 2.2.2.9 32

[Hub-PE-LoopBack0] quit

[Hub-PE] interface vlan-interface 4

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface4] ip address 172.1.1.2 24

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface4] quit

[Hub-PE] interface vlan-interface 5

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface5] ip address 172.2.1.2 24

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface5] quit

[Hub-PE] ospf

[Hub-PE-ospf-1] area 0

[Hub-PE-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 172.1.1.0 0.0.0.255

[Hub-PE-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 172.2.1.0 0.0.0.255

[Hub-PE-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 2.2.2.9 0.0.0.0

[Hub-PE-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] quit

[Hub-PE-ospf-1] quit

# Execute the display ospf peer command on the devices to verify that OSPF adjacencies in Full state have been established between Spoke-PE 1, Spoke-PE 2, and Hub-PE. Execute the display ip routing-table command on the devices to verify that the PEs have learned the routes to the loopback interfaces of each other. (Details not shown.)

2.        Configure basic MPLS and MPLS LDP on the MPLS backbone to establish LDP LSPs:

# Configure Spoke-PE 1.

[Spoke-PE1] mpls lsr-id 1.1.1.9

[Spoke-PE1] mpls ldp

[Spoke-PE1-ldp] quit

[Spoke-PE1] interface vlan-interface 4

[Spoke-PE1-Vlan-interface4] mpls enable

[Spoke-PE1-Vlan-interface4] mpls ldp enable

[Spoke-PE1-Vlan-interface4] quit

# Configure Spoke-PE 2.

[Spoke-PE2] mpls lsr-id 3.3.3.9

[Spoke-PE2] mpls ldp

[Spoke-PE2-ldp] quit

[Spoke-PE2] interface vlan-interface 5

[Spoke-PE2-Vlan-interface5] mpls enable

[Spoke-PE2-Vlan-interface5] mpls ldp enable

[Spoke-PE2-Vlan-interface5] quit

# Configure Hub-PE.

[Hub-PE] mpls lsr-id 2.2.2.9

[Hub-PE] mpls ldp

[Hub-PE-ldp] quit

[Hub-PE] interface vlan-interface 4

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface4] mpls enable

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface4] mpls ldp enable

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface4] quit

[Hub-PE] interface vlan-interface 5

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface5] mpls enable

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface5] mpls ldp enable

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface5] quit

# Execute the display mpls ldp peer command on the devices to verify that LDP sessions in Operational state have been established between Spoke-PE 1, Spoke-PE 2, and Hub-PE. Execute the display mpls ldp lsp command on the devices to verify that the LSPs have been established by LDP. (Details not shown.)

3.        Configure VPN instances on the Spoke-PEs and Hub-PE:

# Configure Spoke-PE 1.

[Spoke-PE1] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[Spoke-PE1] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[Spoke-PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 100:1

[Spoke-PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 111:1 import-extcommunity

[Spoke-PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 222:2 export-extcommunity

[Spoke-PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[Spoke-PE1] interface vlan-interface 2

[Spoke-PE1-Vlan-interface2] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[Spoke-PE1-Vlan-interface2] ip address 10.1.1.2 24

[Spoke-PE1-Vlan-interface2] quit

# Configure Spoke-PE 2.

[Spoke-PE2] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[Spoke-PE2] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[Spoke-PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 100:2

[Spoke-PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 111:1 import-extcommunity

[Spoke-PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 222:2 export-extcommunity

[Spoke-PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[Spoke-PE2] interface vlan-interface 3

[Spoke-PE2-Vlan-interface3] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[Spoke-PE2-Vlan-interface3] ip address 10.2.1.2 24

[Spoke-PE2-Vlan-interface3] quit

# Configure Hub-PE.

[Hub-PE] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[Hub-PE] ip vpn-instance vpn1-in

[Hub-PE-vpn-instance-vpn1-in] route-distinguisher 100:3

[Hub-PE-vpn-instance-vpn1-in] vpn-target 222:2 import-extcommunity

[Hub-PE-vpn-instance-vpn1-in] quit

[Hub-PE] ip vpn-instance vpn1-out

[Hub-PE-vpn-instance-vpn1-out] route-distinguisher 100:4

[Hub-PE-vpn-instance-vpn1-out] vpn-target 111:1 export-extcommunity

[Hub-PE-vpn-instance-vpn1-out] quit

[Hub-PE] interface vlan-interface 6

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface6] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1-in

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface6] ip address 10.3.1.2 24

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface6] quit

[Hub-PE] interface vlan-interface 7

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface7] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1-out

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface7] ip address 10.4.1.2 24

[Hub-PE-Vlan-interface7] quit

# Configure IP addresses for the CEs according to Figure 23. (Details not shown.)

# Execute the display ip vpn-instance command on the PEs to display the configuration of the VPN instance, for example, on Spoke-PE 1.

[Spoke-PE1] display ip vpn-instance

  Total VPN-Instances configured : 1

 

  VPN-Instance Name               RD                     Create time

  vpn1                            100:1                  2009/04/08 10:55:07

# Use the ping command on the PEs to verify that the PEs can ping their attached CEs, for example, on Spoke-PE 1.

[Spoke-PE1] ping -vpn-instance vpn1 10.1.1.1

Ping 10.1.1.1 (10.1.1.1): 56 data bytes, press CTRL_C to break

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=0 ttl=128 time=1.913 ms

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=1 ttl=128 time=2.381 ms

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=2 ttl=128 time=1.707 ms

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=3 ttl=128 time=1.666 ms

56 bytes from 10.1.1.1: icmp_seq=4 ttl=128 time=2.710 ms

 

--- Ping statistics for 10.1.1.1 ---

5 packet(s) transmitted, 5 packet(s) received, 0.0% packet loss

round-trip min/avg/max/std-dev = 1.666/2.075/2.710/0.406 ms

4.        Establish EBGP peer relationships between the PEs and CEs, and redistribute VPN routes into BGP:

# Configure Spoke-CE 1.

<Spoke-CE1> system-view

[Spoke-CE1] bgp 65410

[Spoke-CE1-bgp] peer 10.1.1.2 as-number 100

[Spoke-CE1-bgp] address-family ipv4

[Spoke-CE1-bgp-ipv4] peer 10.1.1.2 enable

[Spoke-CE1-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[Spoke-CE1-bgp-ipv4] quit

[Spoke-CE1-bgp] quit

# Configure Spoke-CE 2.

<Spoke-CE2> system-view

[Spoke-CE2] bgp 65420

[Spoke-CE2-bgp] peer 10.2.1.2 as-number 100

[Spoke-CE2-bgp] address-family ipv4

[Spoke-CE2-bgp-ipv4] peer 10.2.1.2 enable

[Spoke-CE2-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[Spoke-CE2-bgp-ipv4] quit

[Spoke-CE2-bgp] quit

# Configure Hub-CE.

<Hub-CE> system-view

[Hub-CE] bgp 65430

[Hub-CE-bgp] peer 10.3.1.2 as-number 100

[Hub-CE-bgp] peer 10.4.1.2 as-number 100

[Hub-CE-bgp] address-family ipv4

[Hub-CE-bgp-ipv4] peer 10.3.1.2 enable

[Hub-CE-bgp-ipv4] peer 10.4.1.2 enable

[Hub-CE-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[Hub-CE-bgp-ipv4] quit

[Hub-CE-bgp] quit

# Configure Spoke-PE 1.

[Spoke-PE1] bgp 100

[Spoke-PE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[Spoke-PE1-bgp-vpn1] peer 10.1.1.1 as-number 65410

[Spoke-PE1-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4

[Spoke-PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 10.1.1.1 enable

[Spoke-PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] import-route direct

[Spoke-PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[Spoke-PE1-bgp-vpn1] quit

[Spoke-PE1-bgp] quit

# Configure Spoke-PE 2.

[Spoke-PE2] bgp 100

[Spoke-PE2-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[Spoke-PE2-bgp-vpn1] peer 10.2.1.1 as-number 65420

[Spoke-PE2-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4

[Spoke-PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 10.2.1.1 enable

[Spoke-PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] import-route direct

[Spoke-PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[Spoke-PE2-bgp-vpn1] quit

[Spoke-PE2-bgp] quit

# Configure Hub-PE.

[Hub-PE] bgp 100

[Hub-PE-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1-in

[Hub-PE-bgp-vpn1-in] peer 10.3.1.1 as-number 65430

[Hub-PE-bgp-vpn1-in] address-family ipv4

[Hub-PE-bgp-ipv4-vpn1-in] peer 10.3.1.1 enable

[Hub-PE-bgp-ipv4-vpn1-in] import-route direct

[Hub-PE-bgp-ipv4-vpn1-in] quit

[Hub-PE-bgp-vpn1-in] quit

[Hub-PE-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1-out

[Hub-PE-bgp-vpn1-out] peer 10.4.1.1 as-number 65430

[Hub-PE-bgp-vpn1-out] address-family ipv4

[Hub-PE-bgp-ipv4-vpn1-out] peer 10.4.1.1 enable

[Hub-PE-bgp-ipv4-vpn1-out] peer 10.4.1.1 allow-as-loop 2

[Hub-PE-bgp-ipv4-vpn1-out] import-route direct

[Hub-PE-bgp-ipv4-vpn1-out] quit

[Hub-PE-bgp-vpn1-out] quit

[Hub-PE-bgp] quit

# Execute the display bgp peer ipv4 vpn-instance command on the PEs to verify that a BGP peer relationship in Established state has been established between a PE and a CE. (Details not shown.)

5.        Establish an MP-IBGP peer relationship between the Spoke-PEs and Hub-PE:

# Configure Spoke-PE 1.

[Spoke-PE1] bgp 100

[Spoke-PE1-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 as-number 100

[Spoke-PE1-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[Spoke-PE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[Spoke-PE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 2.2.2.9 enable

[Spoke-PE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[Spoke-PE1-bgp] quit

# Configure Spoke-PE 2.

[Spoke-PE2] bgp 100

[Spoke-PE2-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 as-number 100

[Spoke-PE2-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[Spoke-PE2-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[Spoke-PE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 2.2.2.9 enable

[Spoke-PE2-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[Spoke-PE2-bgp] quit

# Configure Hub-PE.

[Hub-PE] bgp 100

[Hub-PE-bgp] peer 1.1.1.9 as-number 100

[Hub-PE-bgp] peer 1.1.1.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[Hub-PE-bgp] peer 3.3.3.9 as-number 100

[Hub-PE-bgp] peer 3.3.3.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[Hub-PE-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[Hub-PE-bgp-vpnv4] peer 1.1.1.9 enable

[Hub-PE-bgp-vpnv4] peer 3.3.3.9 enable

[Hub-PE-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[Hub-PE-bgp] quit

# Execute the display bgp peer vpnv4 command on the PEs to verify that a BGP peer relationship in Established state has been established between the PEs. (Details not shown.)

Verifying the configuration

# Execute the display ip routing-table vpn-instance command on the PEs to display the routes to the CEs. This example uses Spoke-PE 1 to verify that the next hop of the route from a Spoke-PE to its connected Spoke-CE is Hub-PE.

[Spoke-PE1] display ip routing-table vpn-instance vpn1

 

Destinations : 15        Routes : 15

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

10.1.1.0/24         Direct 0    0            10.1.1.2        Vlan2

10.1.1.0/32         Direct 0    0            10.1.1.2        Vlan2

10.1.1.2/32         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

10.1.1.255/32       Direct 0    0            10.1.1.2        Vlan2

10.2.1.0/24         BGP    255  0            2.2.2.9         Vlan4

10.3.1.0/24         BGP    255  0            2.2.2.9         Vlan4

10.4.1.0/24         BGP    255  0            2.2.2.9         Vlan4

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

# Verify that Spoke-CE 1 and Spoke-CE 2 can ping each other. The TTL value indicates that traffic from Spoke-CE 1 to Spoke-CE 2 passes six hops (255-250+1) and is forwarded through Hub-CE. This example uses Spoke-CE 1 to verify their connectivity.

[Spoke-CE1] ping 10.2.1.1

Ping 10.2.1.1 (10.2.1.1): 56 data bytes, press CTRL_C to break

56 bytes from 10.2.1.1: icmp_seq=0 ttl=250 time=1.000 ms

56 bytes from 10.2.1.1: icmp_seq=1 ttl=250 time=2.000 ms

56 bytes from 10.2.1.1: icmp_seq=2 ttl=250 time=0.000 ms

56 bytes from 10.2.1.1: icmp_seq=3 ttl=250 time=1.000 ms

56 bytes from 10.2.1.1: icmp_seq=4 ttl=250 time=0.000 ms

 

--- Ping statistics for 10.2.1.1 ---

5 packet(s) transmitted, 5 packet(s) received, 0.0% packet loss

round-trip min/avg/max/std-dev = 0.000/0.800/2.000/0.748 ms

Configuring MPLS L3VPN inter-AS option A

Network requirements

CE 1 and CE 2 belong to the same VPN. CE 1 accesses the network through PE 1 in AS 100, and CE 2 accesses the network through PE 2 in AS 200.

Configure MPLS L3VPN inter-AS option A, and use the VRF-to-VRF method to manage VPN routes.

Run OSPF on the MPLS backbone in each AS.

Figure 24 Network diagram

 

Table 4 Interface and IP address assignment

Device

Interface

IP address

Device

Interface

IP address

CE 1

Vlan-int12

10.1.1.1/24

CE 2

Vlan-int12

10.2.1.1/24

PE 1

Loop0

1.1.1.9/32

PE 2

Loop0

4.4.4.9/32

 

Vlan-int12

10.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int12

10.2.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int11

172.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int11

162.1.1.2/24

ASBR-PE 1

Loop0

2.2.2.9/32

ASBR-PE 2

Loop0

3.3.3.9/32

 

Vlan-int11

172.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int11

162.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int12

192.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int12

192.1.1.2/24

 

Configuration procedure

1.        Configure IGP on the MPLS backbone to implement the connectivity in the backbone:

This example uses OSPF. (Details not shown.)

# Execute the display ospf peer command to verify that each ASBR-PE has established an OSPF adjacency in Full state with the PE in the same AS, and that PEs and ASBR-PEs in the same AS have learned the routes to the loopback interfaces of each other. Verify that each ASBR-PE and the PE in the same AS can ping each other. (Details not shown.)

2.        Configure basic MPLS and MPLS LDP on the MPLS backbone to establish LDP LSPs:

# Configure basic MPLS on PE 1, and enable MPLS LDP on the interface connected to ASBR-PE 1.

<PE1> system-view

[PE1] mpls lsr-id 1.1.1.9

[PE1] mpls ldp

[PE1-ldp] quit

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 11

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure basic MPLS on ASBR-PE 1, and enable MPLS LDP on the interface connected to PE 1.

<ASBR-PE1> system-view

[ASBR-PE1] mpls lsr-id 2.2.2.9

[ASBR-PE1] mpls ldp

[ASBR-PE1-ldp] quit

[ASBR-PE1] interface vlan-interface 11

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure basic MPLS on ASBR-PE 2, and enable MPLS LDP on the interface connected to PE 2.

<ASBR-PE2> system-view

[ASBR-PE2] mpls lsr-id 3.3.3.9

[ASBR-PE2] mpls ldp

[ASBR-PE2-ldp] quit

[ASBR-PE2] interface vlan-interface 11

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure basic MPLS on PE 2, and enable MPLS LDP on the interface connected to ASBR-PE 2.

<PE2> system-view

[PE2] mpls lsr-id 4.4.4.9

[PE2] mpls ldp

[PE2-ldp] quit

[PE2] interface vlan-interface 11

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Execute the display mpls ldp peer command on the devices to verify that the session status is Operational, and that each PE and the ASBR-PE in the same AS have established a neighbor relationship. (Details not shown.)

3.        Configure VPN instances on PEs:

For the same VPN, the route targets for the VPN instance on the PE must match those for the VPN instance on the ASBR-PE in the same AS. This is not required for PEs in different ASs.

# Configure CE 1.

<CE1> system-view

[CE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[CE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.1.1.1 24

[CE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[PE1] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 100:1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 100:1 both

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.1.1.2 24

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure CE 2.

<CE2> system-view

[CE2] interface vlan-interface 12

[CE2-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.2.1.1 24

[CE2-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure PE 2.

[PE2] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[PE2] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-vpn-instance] route-distinguisher 200:2

[PE2-vpn-instance] vpn-target 200:1 both

[PE2-vpn-instance] quit

[PE2] interface vlan-interface 12

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.2.1.2 24

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] quit

# On ASBR-PE 1, create a VPN instance, and bind the instance to the interface connected to ASBR-PE 2. ASBR-PE 1 considers ASBR-PE 2 to be its CE.

[ASBR-PE1] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[ASBR-PE1] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[ASBR-PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 100:1

[ASBR-PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 100:1 both

[ASBR-PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[ASBR-PE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 192.1.1.1 24

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

# On ASBR-PE 2, create a VPN instance, and bind the instance to the interface connected to ASBR-PE 1. ASBR-PE 2 considers ASBR-PE 1 to be its CE.

[ASBR-PE2] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[ASBR-PE2] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[ASBR-PE2-vpn-vpn-vpn1] route-distinguisher 200:1

[ASBR-PE2-vpn-vpn-vpn1] vpn-target 200:1 both

[ASBR-PE2-vpn-vpn-vpn1] quit

[ASBR-PE2] interface vlan-interface 12

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface12] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface12] ip address 192.1.1.2 24

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Execute the display ip vpn-instance command to display VPN instance configurations. Verify that the PEs can ping the CEs, and the ASBR-PEs can ping each other. (Details not shown.)

4.        Establish EBGP peer relationships between PEs and CEs, and redistribute VPN routes into BGP:

# Configure CE 1.

[CE1] bgp 65001

[CE1-bgp] peer 10.1.1.2 as-number 100

[CE1-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[CE1-bgp-ipv4] peer 10.1.1.2 enable

[CE1-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[CE1-bgp-ipv4] quit

[CE1-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] bgp 100

[PE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] peer 10.1.1.1 as-number 65001

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 10.1.1.1 enable

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp] quit

# Configure CE 2.

[CE2] bgp 65002

[CE2-bgp] peer 10.2.1.2 as-number 200

[CE2-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[CE2-bgp-ipv4] peer 10.2.1.2 enable

[CE2-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[CE2-bgp-ipv4] quit

[CE2-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 2.

[PE2] bgp 200

[PE2-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] peer 10.2.1.1 as-number 65002

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 10.2.1.1 enable

[PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE2-bgp] quit

5.        Establish an MP-IBGP peer relationship between each PE and the ASBR-PE in the same AS, and an EBGP peer relationship between the ASBR-PEs:

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] bgp 100

[PE1-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 as-number 100

[PE1-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 2.2.2.9 enable

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 2.2.2.9 next-hop-local

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[PE1-bgp] quit

# Configure ASBR-PE 1.

[ASBR-PE1] bgp 100

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-vpn1] peer 192.1.1.2 as-number 200

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 192.1.1.2 enable

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-vpn1] quit

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] peer 1.1.1.9 as-number 100

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] peer 1.1.1.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 1.1.1.9 enable

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 1.1.1.9 next-hop-local

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] quit

# Configure ASBR-PE 2.

[ASBR-PE2] bgp 200

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-vpn1] peer 192.1.1.1 as-number 100

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 192.1.1.1 enable

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-vpn1] quit

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] peer 4.4.4.9 as-number 200

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] peer 4.4.4.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 4.4.4.9 enable

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 4.4.4.9 next-hop-local

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 2.

[PE2] bgp 200

[PE2-bgp] peer 3.3.3.9 as-number 200

[PE2-bgp] peer 3.3.3.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE2-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 3.3.3.9 enable

[PE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 3.3.3.9 next-hop-local

[PE2-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[PE2-bgp] quit

Verifying the configuration

# Verify that the CEs can learn the interface routes from each other and ping each other. (Details not shown.)

Configuring MPLS L3VPN inter-AS option B

Network requirements

Site 1 and Site 2 belong to the same VPN. CE 1 of Site 1 accesses the network through PE 1 in AS 100, and CE 2 of Site 2 accesses the network through PE 2 in AS 600. PEs in the same AS run IS-IS.

PE 1 and ASBR-PE 1 exchange VPNv4 routes through MP-IBGP. PE 2 and ASBR-PE 2 exchange VPNv4 routes through MP-IBGP. ASBR-PE 1 and ASBR-PE 2 exchange VPNv4 routes through MP-EBGP.

ASBRs do not perform route target filtering of received VPN-IPv4 routes.

Figure 25 Network diagram

 

Table 5 Interface and IP address assignment

Device

Interface

IP address

Device

Interface

IP address

PE 1

Loop0

2.2.2.9/32

PE 2

Loop0

5.5.5.9/32

 

Vlan-int12

30.0.0.1/8

 

Vlan-int12

20.0.0.1/8

 

Vlan-int11

1.1.1.2/8

 

Vlan-int11

9.1.1.2/8

ASBR-PE 1

Loop0

3.3.3.9/32

ASBR-PE 2

Loop0

4.4.4.9/32

 

Vlan-int11

1.1.1.1/8

 

Vlan-int11

9.1.1.1/8

 

Vlan-int12

11.0.0.2/8

 

Vlan-int12

11.0.0.1/8

 

Configuration procedure

1.        Configure PE 1:

# Configure IS-IS on PE 1.

<PE1> system-view

[PE1] isis 1

[PE1-isis-1] network-entity 10.111.111.111.111.00

[PE1-isis-1] quit

# Configure the LSR ID, and enable MPLS and LDP.

[PE1] mpls lsr-id 2.2.2.9

[PE1] mpls ldp

[PE1-ldp] quit

# Configure interface VLAN-interface 11, and enable IS-IS, MPLS, and LDP on the interface.

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 11

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] ip address 1.1.1.2 255.0.0.0

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] isis enable 1

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure interface Loopback 0, and enable IS-IS on it.

[PE1] interface loopback 0

[PE1-LoopBack0] ip address 2.2.2.9 32

[PE1-LoopBack0] isis enable 1

[PE1-LoopBack0] quit

# Create VPN instance vpn1, and configure the RD and route target attributes.

[PE1] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[PE1] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 11:11

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 1:1 2:2 3:3 import-extcommunity

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 3:3 export-extcommunity

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

# Bind the interface connected to CE 1 to the created VPN instance.

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 30.0.0.1 8

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Enable BGP on PE 1.

[PE1] bgp 100

# Configure IBGP peer 3.3.3.9 as a VPNv4 peer.

[PE1-bgp] peer 3.3.3.9 as-number 100

[PE1-bgp] peer 3.3.3.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 3.3.3.9 enable

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

# Redistribute direct routes to the VPN routing table of vpn1.

[PE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] import-route direct

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp] quit

2.        Configure ASBR-PE 1:

# Enable IS-IS on ASBR-PE 1.

<ASBR-PE1> system-view

[ASBR-PE1] isis 1

[ASBR-PE1-isis-1] network-entity 10.222.222.222.222.00

[ASBR-PE1-isis-1] quit

# Configure the LSR ID, and enable MPLS and LDP.

[ASBR-PE1] mpls lsr-id 3.3.3.9

[ASBR-PE1] mpls ldp

[ASBR-PE1-ldp] quit

# Configure interface VLAN-interface 11, and enable IS-IS, MPLS, and LDP on the interface.

[ASBR-PE1] interface vlan-interface11

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface11] ip address 1.1.1.1 255.0.0.0

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface11] isis enable 1

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure interface VLAN-interface 12, and enable MPLS on it.

[ASBR-PE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 11.0.0.2 255.0.0.0

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface12] mpls enable

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure interface Loopback 0, and enable IS-IS on it.

[ASBR-PE1] interface loopback 0

[ASBR-PE1-LoopBack0] ip address 3.3.3.9 32

[ASBR-PE1-LoopBack0] isis enable 1

[ASBR-PE1-LoopBack0] quit

# Enable BGP on ASBR-PE 1.

[ASBR-PE1] bgp 100

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 as-number 100

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] peer 11.0.0.1 as-number 600

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] peer 11.0.0.1 connect-interface vlan-interface 12

# Disable route target based filtering of received VPNv4 routes.

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-vpnv4] undo policy vpn-target

# Configure both IBGP peer 2.2.2.0 and EBGP peer 11.0.0.1 as VPNv4 peers.

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 11.0.0.1 enable

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 2.2.2.9 enable

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

3.        Configure ASBR-PE 2:

# Enable IS-IS on ASBR-PE 2.

<ASBR-PE2> system-view

[ASBR-PE2] isis 1

[ASBR-PE2-isis-1] network-entity 10.222.222.222.222.00

[ASBR-PE2-isis-1] quit

# Configure the LSR ID, and enable MPLS and LDP.

[ASBR-PE2] mpls lsr-id 4.4.4.9

[ASBR-PE2] mpls ldp

[ASBR-PE2-ldp] quit

# Configure interface VLAN-interface 11, and enable IS-IS, MPLS, and LDP on the interface.

[ASBR-PE2] interface vlan-interface 11

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface11] ip address 9.1.1.1 255.0.0.0

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface11] isis enable 1

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure interface VLAN-interface 12, and enable MPLS on it.

[ASBR-PE2] interface vlan-interface 12

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface12] ip address 11.0.0.1 255.0.0.0

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface12] mpls enable

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure interface Loopback 0, and enable IS-IS on it.

[ASBR-PE2] interface loopback 0

[ASBR-PE2-LoopBack0] ip address 4.4.4.9 32

[ASBR-PE2-LoopBack0] isis enable 1

[ASBR-PE2-LoopBack0] quit

# Enable BGP on ASBR-PE 2.

[ASBR-PE2] bgp 600

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] peer 11.0.0.2 as-number 100

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] peer 11.0.0.2 connect-interface vlan-interface 12

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] peer 5.5.5.9 as-number 600

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] peer 5.5.5.9 connect-interface loopback 0

# Disable route target based filtering of received VPNv4 routes.

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-vpnv4] undo policy vpn-target

# Configure both IBGP peer 5.5.5.9 and EBGP peer 11.0.0.2 as VPNv4 peers.

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 11.0.0.2 enable

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 5.5.5.9 enable

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] quit

4.        Configure PE 2:

# Enable IS-IS on PE 2.

<PE2> system-view

[PE2] isis 1

[PE2-isis-1] network-entity 10.111.111.111.111.00

[PE2-isis-1] quit

# Configure the LSR ID, and enable MPLS and LDP.

[PE2] mpls lsr-id 5.5.5.9

[PE2] mpls ldp

[PE2-ldp] quit

# Configure interface VLAN-interface 11, and enable IS-IS, MPLS, and LDP on the interface.

[PE2] interface vlan-interface 11

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] ip address 9.1.1.2 255.0.0.0

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] isis enable 1

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure interface Loopback 0, and enable IS-IS on it.

[PE2] interface loopback 0

[PE2-LoopBack0] ip address 5.5.5.9 32

[PE2-LoopBack0] isis enable 1

[PE2-LoopBack0] quit

# Create VPN instance vpn1, and configure the RD and route target attributes.

[PE2] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[PE2] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 12:12

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 1:1 2:2 3:3 import-extcommunity

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 3:3 export-extcommunity

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

# Bind the interface connected with CE 2 to the created VPN instance.

[PE2] interface vlan-interface12

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] ip address 20.0.0.1 8

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Enable BGP on PE 2.

[PE2] bgp 600

# Configure IBGP peer 4.4.4.9 as a VPNv4 peer.

[PE2-bgp] peer 4.4.4.9 as-number 600

[PE2-bgp] peer 4.4.4.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE2-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 4.4.4.9 enable

[PE2-bgp-vpnv4] quit

# Redistribute direct routes to the VPN routing table of vpn1.

[PE2-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] import-route direct

[PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE2-bgp] quit

Verifying the configuration

# Verify that PE 1 and PE 2 can ping each other.

[PE1] ping -a 30.0.0.1 -vpn-instance vpn1 20.0.0.1

Ping 20.0.0.1 (20.0.0.1) from 30.0.0.1: 56 data bytes, press CTRL_C to break

56 bytes from 20.0.0.1: icmp_seq=0 ttl=255 time=1.208 ms

56 bytes from 20.0.0.1: icmp_seq=1 ttl=255 time=0.867 ms

56 bytes from 20.0.0.1: icmp_seq=2 ttl=255 time=0.551 ms

56 bytes from 20.0.0.1: icmp_seq=3 ttl=255 time=0.566 ms

56 bytes from 20.0.0.1: icmp_seq=4 ttl=255 time=0.570 ms

 

--- Ping statistics for 20.0.0.1 ---

5 packet(s) transmitted, 5 packet(s) received, 0.0% packet loss

round-trip min/avg/max/std-dev = 0.551/0.752/1.208/0.257 ms

Configuring MPLS L3VPN inter-AS option C

Network requirements

Site 1 and Site 2 belong to the same VPN. Site 1 accesses the network through PE 1 in AS 100, and Site 2 accesses the network through PE 2 in AS 600. PEs in the same AS run IS-IS.

PE 1 and ASBR-PE 1 exchange labeled IPv4 routes through IBGP. PE 2 and ASBR-PE 2 exchange labeled IPv4 routes through IBGP. PE 1 and PE 2 exchange VPNv4 routes through MP-EBGP.

ASBR-PE 1 and ASBR-PE 2 use their respective routing policies and label routes received from each other.

ASBR-PE 1 and ASBR-PE 2 use EBGP to exchange labeled IPv4 routes.

Figure 26 Network diagram

 

Table 6 Interface and IP address assignment

Device

Interface

IP address

Device

Interface

IP address

PE 1

Loop0

2.2.2.9/32

PE 2

Loop0

5.5.5.9/32

 

Vlan-int11

1.1.1.2/8

 

Vlan-int11

9.1.1.2/8

 

Vlan-int12

30.0.0.1/24

 

Vlan-int12

20.0.0.1/24

ASBR-PE 1

Loop0

3.3.3.9/32

ASBR-PE 2

Loop0

4.4.4.9/32

 

Vlan-int11

1.1.1.1/8

 

Vlan-int11

9.1.1.1/8

 

Vlan-int12

11.0.0.2/8

 

Vlan-int12

11.0.0.1/8

CE 1

Vlan-int12

30.0.0.2/24

CE 2

Vlan-int12

20.0.0.2/24

 

Configuration procedure

1.        Configure CE 1:

# Configure an IP address for VLAN-interface 12.

<CE1> system-view

[CE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[CE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 30.0.0.2 24

[CE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure 30.0.0.1 as an EBGP peer, and redistribute direct routes.

[CE1] bgp 65001

[CE1-bgp] peer 30.0.0.1 as-number 100

[CE1-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[CE1-bgp-ipv4] peer 30.0.0.1 enable

[CE1-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[CE1-bgp-ipv4] quit

[CE1-bgp] quit

2.        Configure PE 1:

# Configure IS-IS on PE 1.

<PE1> system-view

[PE1] isis 1

[PE1-isis-1] network-entity 10.111.111.111.111.00

[PE1-isis-1] quit

# Configure the LSR ID, and enable MPLS and LDP.

[PE1] mpls lsr-id 2.2.2.9

[PE1] mpls ldp

[PE1-ldp] quit

# Configure interface VLAN-interface 11, and enable IS-IS, MPLS, and LDP on the interface.

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 11

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] ip address 1.1.1.2 255.0.0.0

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] isis enable 1

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure interface Loopback 0, and enable IS-IS on it.

[PE1] interface loopback 0

[PE1-LoopBack0] ip address 2.2.2.9 32

[PE1-LoopBack0] isis enable 1

[PE1-LoopBack0] quit

# Create VPN instance vpn1, and configure the RD and route target attributes.

[PE1] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[PE1] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 11:11

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 1:1 2:2 3:3 import-extcommunity

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 3:3 export-extcommunity

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

# Associate interface VLAN-interface 12 with VPN instance vpn1, and specify an IP address for the interface.

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 30.0.0.1 24

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Enable BGP on PE 1.

[PE1] bgp 100

# Enable the capability to advertise labeled routes to IBGP peer 3.3.3.9 and to receive labeled routes from the peer.

[PE1-bgp] peer 3.3.3.9 as-number 100

[PE1-bgp] peer 3.3.3.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE1-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE1-bgp-ipv4] peer 3.3.3.9 enable

[PE1-bgp-ipv4] peer 3.3.3.9 label-route-capability

[PE1-bgp-ipv4] quit

# Configure the maximum hop count from PE 1 to EBGP peer 5.5.5.9 as 10.

[PE1-bgp] peer 5.5.5.9 as-number 600

[PE1-bgp] peer 5.5.5.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE1-bgp] peer 5.5.5.9 ebgp-max-hop 10

# Configure peer 5.5.5.9 as a VPNv4 peer.

[PE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 5.5.5.9 enable

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

# Configure 30.0.0.2 as an EBGP peer, and redistribute BGP routes to the routing table of vpn1.

[PE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] peer 30.0.0.2 as-number 65001

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 30.0.0.2 enable

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp] quit

3.        Configure ASBR-PE 1:

# Enable IS-IS on ASBR-PE 1.

<ASBR-PE1> system-view

[ASBR-PE1] isis 1

[ASBR-PE1-isis-1] network-entity 10.222.222.222.222.00

[ASBR-PE1-isis-1] quit

# Configure the LSR ID, and enable MPLS and LDP.

[ASBR-PE1] mpls lsr-id 3.3.3.9

[ASBR-PE1] mpls ldp

[ASBR-PE1-ldp] quit

# Configure interface VLAN-interface 11, and enable IS-IS, MPLS, and LDP on the interface.

[ASBR-PE1] interface vlan-interface 11

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface11] ip address 1.1.1.1 255.0.0.0

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface11] isis enable 1

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure interface VLAN-interface 12, and enable MPLS on it.

[ASBR-PE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 11.0.0.2 255.0.0.0

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface12] mpls enable

[ASBR-PE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure interface Loopback 0, and enable IS-IS on it.

[ASBR-PE1] interface loopback 0

[ASBR-PE1-LoopBack0] ip address 3.3.3.9 32

[ASBR-PE1-LoopBack0] isis enable 1

[ASBR-PE1-LoopBack0] quit

# Create routing policies.

[ASBR-PE1] route-policy policy1 permit node 1

[ASBR-PE1-route-policy-policy1-1] apply mpls-label

[ASBR-PE1-route-policy-policy1-1] quit

[ASBR-PE1] route-policy policy2 permit node 1

[ASBR-PE1-route-policy-policy2-1] if-match mpls-label

[ASBR-PE1-route-policy-policy2-1] apply mpls-label

[ASBR-PE1-route-policy-policy2-1] quit

# Enable BGP on ASBR-PE 1, and apply the routing policy policy2 to routes advertised to IBGP peer 2.2.2.9.

[ASBR-PE1] bgp 100

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 as-number 100

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-ipv4] peer 2.2.2.9 enable

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-ipv4] peer 2.2.2.9 route-policy policy2 export

# Enable the capability to advertise labeled routes to IBGP peer 2.2.2.9 and to receive labeled routes from the peer.

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-ipv4] peer 2.2.2.9 label-route-capability

# Redistribute routes from IS-IS process 1 to BGP.

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-ipv4] import-route isis 1

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-ipv4] quit

# Apply the routing policy policy1 to routes advertised to EBGP peer 11.0.0.1.

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] peer 11.0.0.1 as-number 600

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-ipv4] peer 11.0.0.1 enable

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-ipv4] peer 11.0.0.1 route-policy policy1 export

# Enable the capability to advertise labeled routes to EBGP peer 11.0.0.1 and to receive labeled routes from the peer.

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-ipv4] peer 11.0.0.1 label-route-capability

[ASBR-PE1-bgp-ipv4] quit

[ASBR-PE1-bgp] quit

4.        Configure ASBR-PE 2:

# Enable IS-IS on ASBR-PE 2.

<ASBR-PE2> system-view

[ASBR-PE2] isis 1

[ASBR-PE2-isis-1] network-entity 10.222.222.222.222.00

[ASBR-PE2-isis-1] quit

# Configure the LSR ID, and enable MPLS and LDP.

[ASBR-PE2] mpls lsr-id 4.4.4.9

[ASBR-PE2] mpls ldp

[ASBR-PE2-ldp] quit

# Configure interface VLAN-interface 11, and enable IS-IS, MPLS, and LDP on the interface.

[ASBR-PE2] interface vlan-interface 11

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface11] ip address 9.1.1.1 255.0.0.0

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface11] isis enable 1

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure interface Loopback 0, and enable IS-IS on it.

[ASBR-PE2] interface loopback 0

[ASBR-PE2-LoopBack0] ip address 4.4.4.9 32

[ASBR-PE2-LoopBack0] isis enable 1

[ASBR-PE2-LoopBack0] quit

# Configure interface VLAN-interface 12, and enable MPLS on it.

[ASBR-PE2] interface vlan-interface 12

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface12] ip address 11.0.0.1 255.0.0.0

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface12] mpls enable

[ASBR-PE2-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Create routing policies.

[ASBR-PE2] route-policy policy1 permit node 1

[ASBR-PE2-route-policy-policy1-1] apply mpls-label

[ASBR-PE2-route-policy-policy1-1] quit

[ASBR-PE2] route-policy policy2 permit node 1

[ASBR-PE2-route-policy-policy2-1] if-match mpls-label

[ASBR-PE2-route-policy-policy2-1] apply mpls-label

[ASBR-PE2-route-policy-policy2-1] quit

# Enable BGP on ASBR-PE 2, and enable the capability to advertise labeled routes to IBGP peer 5.5.5.9 and to receive labeled routes from the peer.

[ASBR-PE2] bgp 600

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] peer 5.5.5.9 as-number 600

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] peer 5.5.5.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-ipv4] peer 5.5.5.9 enable

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-ipv4] peer 5.5.5.9 label-route-capability

# Apply the routing policy policy2 to routes advertised to IBGP peer 5.5.5.9.

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-ipv4] peer 5.5.5.9 route-policy policy2 export

# Redistribute routes from IS-IS process 1 into BGP.

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-ipv4] import-route isis 1

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-ipv4] quit

# Apply the routing policy policy1 to routes advertised to EBGP peer 11.0.0.2.

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] peer 11.0.0.2 as-number 100

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-ipv4] peer 11.0.0.2 enable

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-ipv4] peer 11.0.0.2 route-policy policy1 export

# Enable the capability to advertise labeled routes to EBGP peer 11.0.0.2 and to receive labeled routes from the peer.

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-ipv4] peer 11.0.0.2 label-route-capability

[ASBR-PE2-bgp-ipv4] quit

[ASBR-PE2-bgp] quit

5.        Configure PE 2:

# Enable IS-IS on PE 2.

<PE2> system-view

[PE2] isis 1

[PE2-isis-1] network-entity 10.111.111.111.111.00

[PE2-isis-1] quit

# Configure the LSR ID, and enable MPLS and LDP.

[PE2] mpls lsr-id 5.5.5.9

[PE2] mpls ldp

[PE2-ldp] quit

# Configure interface VLAN-interface 11, and enable IS-IS, MPLS, and LDP on the interface.

[PE2] interface vlan-interface 11

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] ip address 9.1.1.2 255.0.0.0

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] isis enable 1

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure interface Loopback 0, and enable IS-IS on it.

[PE2] interface loopback 0

[PE2-LoopBack0] ip address 5.5.5.9 32

[PE2-LoopBack0] isis enable 1

[PE2-LoopBack0] quit

# Create VPN instance vpn1, and configure the RD and route target attributes.

[PE2] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[PE2] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 11:11

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 1:1 2:2 3:3 import-extcommunity

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 3:3 export-extcommunity

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

# Associate interface VLAN-interface 12 with VPN instance vpn1, and specify an IP address for the interface.

[PE2] interface vlan-interface 12

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] ip address 20.0.0.1 24

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Enable BGP on PE 2.

[PE2] bgp 600

# Enable the capability to advertise labeled routes to IBGP peer 4.4.4.9 and to receive labeled routes from the peer.

[PE2-bgp] peer 4.4.4.9 as-number 600

[PE2-bgp] peer 4.4.4.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE2-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE2-bgp-ipv4] peer 4.4.4.9 enable

[PE2-bgp-ipv4] peer 4.4.4.9 label-route-capability

[PE2-bgp-ipv4] quit

# Configure the maximum hop count from PE 2 to EBGP peer 2.2.2.9 as 10.

[PE2-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 as-number 100

[PE2-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE2-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 ebgp-max-hop 10

# Configure peer 2.2.2.9 as a VPNv4 peer.

[PE2-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 2.2.2.9 enable

[PE2-bgp-vpnv4] quit

# Configure 20.0.0.2 as an EBGP peer, and redistribute BGP routes to the routing table of vpn1.

[PE2-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] peer 20.0.0.2 as-number 65002

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 20.0.0.2 enable

[PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE2-bgp] quit

6.        Configure CE 2:

# Configure an IP address for VLAN-interface 12.

<CE2> system-view

[CE2] interface vlan-interface 12

[CE2-Vlan-interface12] ip address 20.0.0.2 24

[CE2-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure 20.0.0.1 as an EBGP peer, and redistribute direct routes.

[CE2] bgp 65002

[CE2-bgp] peer 20.0.0.1 as-number 600

[CE2-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[CE2-bgp-ipv4] peer 20.0.0.1 enable

[CE2-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[CE2-bgp-ipv4] quit

[CE2-bgp] quit

Verifying the configuration

# Execute the display ip routing table command on CE 1 and CE 2 to verify that CE 1 and CE 2 have a route to each other. Verify that CE 1 and CE 2 can ping each other. (Details not shown.)

Configuring MPLS L3VPN carrier's carrier

Network requirements

Configure carrier's carrier for the scenario shown in Figure 27. In this scenario:

·          PE 1 and PE 2 are the provider carrier's PE switches. They provide VPN services for the customer carrier.

·          CE 1 and CE 2 are the customer carrier's switches. They are connected to the provider carrier's backbone as CE switches.

·          PE 3 and PE 4 are the customer carrier's PE switches. They provide MPLS L3VPN services for the end customers.

·          CE 3 and CE 4 are customers of the customer carrier.

The key to carrier's carrier deployment is to configure exchange of two kinds of routes:

·          Exchange of the customer carrier's internal routes on the provider carrier's backbone.

·          Exchange of the end customers' VPN routes between PE 3 and PE 4, the PEs of the customer carrier. In this process, an MP-IBGP peer relationship must be established between PE 3 and PE 4.

Figure 27 Network diagram

 

Table 7 Interface and IP address assignment

Device

Interface

IP address

Device

Interface

IP address

CE 3

Vlan-int11

100.1.1.1/24

CE 4

Vlan-int11

120.1.1.1/24

PE 3

Loop0

1.1.1.9/32

PE 4

Loop0

6.6.6.9/32

 

Vlan-int11

100.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int11

120.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int12

10.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int12

20.1.1.2/24

CE 1

Loop0

2.2.2.9/32

CE 2

Loop0

5.5.5.9/32

 

Vlan-int12

10.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int11

21.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int11

11.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int12

20.1.1.1/24

PE 1

Loop0

3.3.3.9/32

PE 2

Loop0

4.4.4.9/32

 

Vlan-int11

11.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int12

30.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int12

30.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int11

21.1.1.1/24

 

Configuration procedure

1.        Configure MPLS L3VPN on the provider carrier backbone. Enable IS-IS as the IGP, enable LDP between PE 1 and PE 2, and establish an MP-IBGP peer relationship between the PEs:

# Configure PE 1.

<PE1> system-view

[PE1] interface loopback 0

[PE1-LoopBack0] ip address 3.3.3.9 32

[PE1-LoopBack0] quit

[PE1] mpls lsr-id 3.3.3.9

[PE1] mpls ldp

[PE1-ldp] quit

[PE1] isis 1

[PE1-isis-1] network-entity 10.0000.0000.0000.0004.00

[PE1-isis-1] quit

[PE1] interface loopback 0

[PE1-LoopBack0] isis enable 1

[PE1-LoopBack0] quit

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 30.1.1.1 24

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] isis enable 1

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] mpls enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] mpls ldp enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] mpls ldp transport-address interface

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

[PE1] bgp 100

[PE1-bgp] peer 4.4.4.9 as-number 100

[PE1-bgp] peer 4.4.4.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 4.4.4.9 enable

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[PE1-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 2 in the same way that PE 1 is configured. (Details not shown.)

# On PE 1 or PE 2, execute the following commands:

¡  Execute the display mpls ldp peer command to verify that an LDP session in Operational state has been established between PE 1 and PE 2. (Details not shown.)

¡  Execute the display bgp peer vpnv4 command to verify that a BGP peer relationship in Established state has been established between PE 1 and PE 2. (Details not shown.)

¡  Execute the display isis peer command to verify that the IS-IS neighbor relationship has been established between PE 1 and PE 2. (Details not shown.)

2.        Configure the customer carrier network. Enable IS-IS as the IGP, and enable LDP between PE 3 and CE 1, and between PE 4 and CE 2:

# Configure PE 3.

<PE3> system-view

[PE3] interface loopback 0

[PE3-LoopBack0] ip address 1.1.1.9 32

[PE3-LoopBack0] quit

[PE3] mpls lsr-id 1.1.1.9

[PE3] mpls ldp

[PE3-ldp] quit

[PE3] isis 2

[PE3-isis-2] network-entity 10.0000.0000.0000.0001.00

[PE3-isis-2] quit

[PE3] interface loopback 0

[PE3-LoopBack0] isis enable 2

[PE3-LoopBack0] quit

[PE3] interface vlan-interface 12

[PE3-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.1.1.1 24

[PE3-Vlan-interface12] isis enable 2

[PE3-Vlan-interface12] mpls enable

[PE3-Vlan-interface12] mpls ldp enable

[PE3-Vlan-interface12] mpls ldp transport-address interface

[PE3-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure CE 1.

<CE1> system-view

[CE1] interface loopback 0

[CE1-LoopBack0] ip address 2.2.2.9 32

[CE1-LoopBack0] quit

[CE1] mpls lsr-id 2.2.2.9

[CE1] mpls ldp

[CE1-ldp] quit

[CE1] isis 2

[CE1-isis-2] network-entity 10.0000.0000.0000.0002.00

[CE1-isis-2] quit

[CE1] interface loopback 0

[CE1-LoopBack0] isis enable 2

[CE1-LoopBack0] quit

[CE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[CE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.1.1.2 24

[CE1-Vlan-interface12] isis enable 2

[CE1-Vlan-interface12] mpls enable

[CE1-Vlan-interface12] mpls ldp enable

[CE1-Vlan-interface12] mpls ldp transport-address interface

[CE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

PE 3 and CE 1 can establish an LDP session and IS-IS neighbor relationship between them.

# Configure PE 4 and CE 2 in the same way that PE 3 and CE 1 are configured. (Details not shown.)

3.        Perform configurations to allow CEs of the customer carrier to access PEs of the provider carrier, and redistribute IS-IS routes to BGP and BGP routes to IS-IS on the PEs:

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[PE1] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 200:1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 1:1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[PE1] mpls ldp

[PE1-ldp] vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-ldp-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[PE1-ldp] quit

[PE1] isis 2 vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-isis-2] network-entity 10.0000.0000.0000.0003.00

[PE1-isis-2] import-route bgp

[PE1-isis-2] quit

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 11

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] ip address 11.1.1.2 24

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] isis enable 2

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp transport-address interface

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] quit

[PE1] bgp 100

[PE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] import isis 2

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp] quit

# Configure CE 1.

[CE1] interface vlan-interface 11

[CE1-Vlan-interface11] ip address 11.1.1.1 24

[CE1-Vlan-interface11] isis enable 2

[CE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[CE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[CE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp transport-address interface

[CE1-Vlan-interface11] quit

PE 1 and CE 1 can establish an LDP session and an IS-IS neighbor relationship between them.

# Configure PE 2 and CE 2 in the same way that PE 1 and CE 1 are configured. (Details not shown.)

4.        Perform configuration to connect the CEs of the end customers to the PEs of the customer carrier:

# Configure CE 3.

<CE3> system-view

[CE3] interface vlan-interface 11

[CE3-Vlan-interface11] ip address 100.1.1.1 24

[CE3-Vlan-interface11] quit

[CE3] bgp 65410

[CE3-bgp] peer 100.1.1.2 as-number 100

[CE3-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[CE3-bgp-ipv4] peer 100.1.1.2 enable

[CE3-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[CE3-bgp-ipv4] quit

[CE3-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 3.

[PE3] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[PE3] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE3-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 100:1

[PE3-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 1:1

[PE3-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[PE3] interface Vlan-interface11

[PE3-Vlan-interface11] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE3-Vlan-interface11] ip address 100.1.1.2 24

[PE3-Vlan-interface11] quit

[PE3] bgp 100

[PE3-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE3-bgp-vpn1] peer 100.1.1.1 as-number 65410

[PE3-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE3-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 100.1.1.1 enable

[PE3-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] import-route direct

[PE3-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[PE3-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE3-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 4 and CE 4 in the same way that PE 3 and CE 3 are configured. (Details not shown.)

5.        Configure MP-IBGP peer relationship between the PEs of the customer carrier to exchange the end customers' VPN routes:

# Configure PE 3.

[PE3] bgp 100

[PE3-bgp] peer 6.6.6.9 as-number 100

[PE3-bgp] peer 6.6.6.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE3-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE3-bgp-vpnv4] peer 6.6.6.9 enable

[PE3-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[PE3-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 4 in the same way that PE 3 is configured. (Details not shown.)

Verifying the configuration

1.        Display the public network routing table and VPN routing table on the provider carrier PEs, for example, on PE 1:

# Verify that the public network routing table contains only routes of the provider carrier network.

[PE1] display ip routing-table

 

Destinations : 14        Routes : 14

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

3.3.3.9/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

4.4.4.9/32          ISIS   15   10           30.1.1.2        Vlan12

30.1.1.0/24         Direct 0    0            30.1.1.1        Vlan12

30.1.1.0/32         Direct 0    0            30.1.1.1        Vlan12

30.1.1.1/32         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

30.1.1.255/32       Direct 0    0            30.1.1.1        Vlan12

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

# Verify that the VPN routing table contains the internal routes of the customer carrier network, but it does not contain the VPN routes that the customer carrier maintains on the PE.

[PE1] display ip routing-table vpn-instance vpn1

 

Destinations : 18        Routes : 18

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

1.1.1.9/32          ISIS   15   20           11.1.1.1        Vlan11

2.2.2.9/32          ISIS   15   10           11.1.1.1        Vlan11

5.5.5.9/32          BGP    255  10           4.4.4.9         Vlan12

6.6.6.9/32          BGP    255  20           4.4.4.9         Vlan12

10.1.1.0/24         ISIS   15   20           11.1.1.1        Vlan11

11.1.1.0/24         Direct 0    0            11.1.1.2        Vlan11

11.1.1.0/32         Direct 0    0            11.1.1.2        Vlan11

11.1.1.2/32         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

11.1.1.255/32       Direct 0    0            11.1.1.2        Vlan11

20.1.1.0/24         BGP    255  20           4.4.4.9         Vlan12

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

2.        Display the routing table on the customer carrier CEs, for example, on CE 1:

# Verify that the routing table contains the internal routes of the customer carrier network, but it does not contain the VPN routes that the customer carrier maintains.

[CE1] display ip routing-table

 

Destinations : 21        Routes : 21

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

1.1.1.9/32          ISIS   15   10           10.1.1.1        Vlan12

2.2.2.9/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

5.5.5.9/32          ISIS   15   74           11.1.1.2        Vlan11

6.6.6.9/32          ISIS   15   74           11.1.1.2        Vlan11

10.1.1.0/24         Direct 0    0            10.1.1.2        Vlan12

10.1.1.0/32         Direct 0    0            10.1.1.2        Vlan12

10.1.1.2/32         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

10.1.1.255/32       Direct 0    0            10.1.1.2        Vlan12

11.1.1.0/24         Direct 0    0            11.1.1.1        Vlan11

11.1.1.0/32         Direct 0    0            11.1.1.1        Vlan11

11.1.1.1/32         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

11.1.1.255/32       Direct 0    0            11.1.1.1        Vlan11

20.1.1.0/24         ISIS   15   74           11.1.1.2        Vlan11

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

3.        Display the public network routing table and VPN routing table on the customer carrier PEs, for example, on PE 3:

# Verify that the public network routing table contains the internal routes of the customer carrier network.

[PE3] display ip routing-table

 

Destinations : 18        Routes : 18

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

1.1.1.9/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

2.2.2.9/32          ISIS   15   10           10.1.1.2        Vlan12

5.5.5.9/32          ISIS   15   84           10.1.1.2        Vlan12

6.6.6.9/32          ISIS   15   84           10.1.1.2        Vlan12

10.1.1.0/24         Direct 0    0            10.1.1.1        Vlan12

10.1.1.0/32         Direct 0    0            10.1.1.1        Vlan12

10.1.1.1/32         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

10.1.1.255/32       Direct 0    0            10.1.1.1        Vlan12

11.1.1.0/24         ISIS   15   20           10.1.1.2        Vlan12

20.1.1.0/24         ISIS   15   84           10.1.1.2        Vlan12

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

# Verify that the VPN routing table contains the route to the remote VPN customer.

[PE3] display ip routing-table vpn-instance vpn1

 

Destinations : 13        Routes : 13

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

100.1.1.0/24        Direct 0    0            100.1.1.2       Vlan11

100.1.1.0/32        Direct 0    0            100.1.1.2       Vlan11

100.1.1.2/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

100.1.1.255/32      Direct 0    0            100.1.1.2       Vlan11

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

120.1.1.0/24        BGP    255  0            6.6.6.9         Vlan12

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

4.        Verify that PE 3 and PE 4 can ping each other. (Details not shown.)

5.        Verify that CE 3 and CE 4 can ping each other. (Details not shown.)

Configuring nested VPN

Network requirements

The service provider provides nested VPN services for users, as shown in Figure 28.

·          PE 1 and PE 2 are PE devices on the service provider backbone. Both of them support the nested VPN function.

·          CE 1 and CE 2 are connected to the service provider backbone. Both of them support VPNv4 routes.

·          PE 3 and PE 4 are PE devices of the customer VPN. Both of them support MPLS L3VPN.

·          CE 3 through CE 6 are CE devices of the sub-VPNs for the customer VPN.

The key of nested VPN configuration is to understand the processing of routes of sub-VPNs on the service provider PEs:

·          When receiving a VPNv4 route from a CE (CE 1 or CE 2 in this example), a service provider PE

a.    Replaces the RD of the VPNv4 route with the RD of the MPLS VPN on the service provider network where the CE resides.

b.    Adds the export target attribute of the MPLS VPN on the service provider network to the extended community attribute list.

c.    Forwards the VPNv4 route.

·          To implement exchange of sub-VPN routes between customer PEs and service provider PEs, MP-EBGP peers must be established between service provider PEs and customer CEs.

Figure 28 Network diagram

 

Table 8 Interface and IP address assignment

Device

Interface

IP address

Device

Interface

IP address

CE 1

Loop0

2.2.2.9/32

CE 2

Loop0

5.5.5.9/32

 

Vlan-int2

10.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int1

21.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int1

11.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int2

20.1.1.1/24

CE 3

Vlan-int1

100.1.1.1/24

CE 4

Vlan-int1

120.1.1.1/24

CE 5

Vlan-int3

110.1.1.1/24

CE 6

Vlan-int3

130.1.1.1/24

PE 1

Loop0

3.3.3.9/32

PE 2

Loop0

4.4.4.9/32

 

Vlan-int1

11.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int1

21.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int2

30.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int2

30.1.1.2/24

PE 3

Loop0

1.1.1.9/32

PE 4

Loop0

6.6.6.9/32

 

Vlan-int1

100.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int1

120.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int2

10.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int2

20.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int3

110.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int3

130.1.1.2/24

 

Configuration procedure

1.        Configure MPLS L3VPN on the service provider backbone. Enable IS-IS, enable LDP, and establish an MP-IBGP peer relationship between PE 1 and PE 2:

# Configure PE 1.

<PE1> system-view

[PE1] interface loopback 0

[PE1-LoopBack0] ip address 3.3.3.9 32

[PE1-LoopBack0] quit

[PE1] mpls lsr-id 3.3.3.9

[PE1] mpls ldp

[PE1-ldp] quit

[PE1] isis 1

[PE1-isis-1] network-entity 10.0000.0000.0000.0004.00

[PE1-isis-1] quit

[PE1] interface loopback 0

[PE1-LoopBack0] isis enable 1

[PE1-LoopBack0] quit

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 2

[PE1-Vlan-interface2] ip address 30.1.1.1 24

[PE1-Vlan-interface2] isis enable 1

[PE1-Vlan-interface2] mpls enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface2] mpls ldp enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface2] quit

[PE1] bgp 100

[PE1-bgp] peer 4.4.4.9 as-number 100

[PE1-bgp] peer 4.4.4.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 4.4.4.9 enable

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[PE1-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 2 in the same way that PE 1 is configured. (Details not shown.)

# On PE 1 or PE 2, execute the following commands:

¡  Execute the display mpls ldp peer command to verify that an LDP session in Operational state has been established between PE 1 and PE 2. (Details not shown.)

¡  Execute the display bgp peer vpnv4 command to verify that a BGP peer relationship in Established state has been established between PE 1 and PE 2. (Details not shown.)

¡  Execute the display isis peer command to verify that the IS-IS neighbor relationship has been established between PE 1 and PE 2. (Details not shown.)

2.        Configure the customer VPN. Enable IS-IS, and enable LDP between PE 3 and CE 1, and between PE 4 and CE 2:

# Configure PE 3.

<PE3> system-view

[PE3] interface loopback 0

[PE3-LoopBack0] ip address 1.1.1.9 32

[PE3-LoopBack0] quit

[PE3] mpls lsr-id 1.1.1.9

[PE3] mpls ldp

[PE3-ldp] quit

[PE3] isis 2

[PE3-isis-2] network-entity 10.0000.0000.0000.0001.00

[PE3-isis-2] quit

[PE3] interface loopback 0

[PE3-LoopBack0] isis enable 2

[PE3-LoopBack0] quit

[PE3] interface vlan-interface 2

[PE3-Vlan-interface2] ip address 10.1.1.1 24

[PE3-Vlan-interface2] isis enable 2

[PE3-Vlan-interface2] mpls enable

[PE3-Vlan-interface2] mpls ldp enable

[PE3-Vlan-interface2] quit

# Configure CE 1.

<CE1> system-view

[CE1] interface loopback 0

[CE1-LoopBack0] ip address 2.2.2.9 32

[CE1-LoopBack0] quit

[CE1] mpls lsr-id 2.2.2.9

[CE1] mpls ldp

[CE1-ldp] quit

[CE1] isis 2

[CE1-isis-2] network-entity 10.0000.0000.0000.0002.00

[CE1-isis-2] quit

[CE1] interface loopback 0

[CE1-LoopBack0] isis enable 2

[CE1-LoopBack0] quit

[CE1] interface vlan-interface 2

[CE1-Vlan-interface2] ip address 10.1.1.2 24

[CE1-Vlan-interface2] isis enable 2

[CE1-Vlan-interface2] mpls enable

[CE1-Vlan-interface2] mpls ldp enable

[CE1-Vlan-interface2] quit

An LDP session and an IS-IS neighbor relationship can be established between PE 3 and CE 1.

# Configure PE 4 and CE 2 in the same way that PE 3 and CE 1 are configured. (Details not shown.)

3.        Connect CE 1 and CE 2 to service provider PEs:

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[PE1] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 200:1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 1:1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 1

[PE1-Vlan-interface1] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-Vlan-interface1] ip address 11.1.1.2 24

[PE1-Vlan-interface1] mpls enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface1] quit

[PE1] bgp 100

[PE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] peer 11.1.1.1 as-number 200

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 11.1.1.1 enable

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp] quit

# Configure CE 1.

[CE1] interface vlan-interface 1

[CE1-Vlan-interface1] ip address 11.1.1.1 24

[CE1-Vlan-interface1] mpls enable

[CE1-Vlan-interface1] quit

[CE1] bgp 200

[CE1-bgp] peer 11.1.1.2 as-number 100

[CE1-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4

[CE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 11.1.1.2 enable

[CE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[CE1-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 2 and CE 2 in the same way that PE 1 and CE 1 are configured. (Details not shown.)

4.        Connect sub-VPN CEs to the customer VPN PEs:

# Configure CE 3.

<CE3> system-view

[CE3] interface vlan-interface 1

[CE3-Vlan-interface1] ip address 100.1.1.1 24

[CE3-Vlan-interface1] quit

[CE3] bgp 65410

[CE3-bgp] peer 100.1.1.2 as-number 200

[CE3-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[CE3-bgp-ipv4] peer 100.1.1.2 enable

[CE3-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[CE3-bgp-ipv4] quit

[CE3-bgp] quit

# Configure CE 5.

<CE5> system-view

[CE5] interface vlan-interface 3

[CE5-Vlan-interface3] ip address 110.1.1.1 24

[CE5-Vlan-interface3] quit

[CE5] bgp 65411

[CE5-bgp] peer 110.1.1.2 as-number 200

[CE5-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[CE5-bgp-ipv4] peer 110.1.1.2 enable

[CE5-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[CE5-bgp-ipv4] quit

[CE5-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 3.

[PE3] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[PE3] ip vpn-instance SUB_VPN1

[PE3-vpn-instance-SUB_VPN1] route-distinguisher 100:1

[PE3-vpn-instance-SUB_VPN1] vpn-target 2:1

[PE3-vpn-instance-SUB_VPN1] quit

[PE3] interface vlan-interface 1

[PE3-Vlan-interface1] ip binding vpn-instance SUB_VPN1

[PE3-Vlan-interface1] ip address 100.1.1.2 24

[PE3-Vlan-interface1] quit

[PE3] ip vpn-instance SUB_VPN2

[PE3-vpn-instance-SUB_VPN2] route-distinguisher 101:1

[PE3-vpn-instance-SUB_VPN2] vpn-target 2:2

[PE3-vpn-instance-SUB_VPN2] quit

[PE3] interface vlan-interface 3

[PE3-Vlan-interface3] ip binding vpn-instance SUB_VPN2

[PE3-Vlan-interface3] ip address 110.1.1.2 24

[PE3-Vlan-interface3] quit

[PE3] bgp 200

[PE3-bgp] ip vpn-instance SUB_VPN1

[PE3-bgp-SUB_VPN1] peer 100.1.1.1 as-number 65410

[PE3-bgp-SUB_VPN1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE3-bgp-ipv4-SUB_VPN1] peer 100.1.1.1 enable

[PE3-bgp-ipv4-SUB_VPN1] import-route direct

[PE3-bgp-ipv4-SUB_VPN1] quit

[PE3-bgp-SUB_VPN1] quit

[PE3-bgp] ip vpn-instance SUB_VPN2

[PE3-bgp-SUB_VPN2] peer 100.1.1.1 as-number 65411

[PE3-bgp-SUB_VPN2] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE3-bgp-ipv4-SUB_VPN2] peer 110.1.1.1 enable

[PE3-bgp-ipv4-SUB_VPN2] import-route direct

[PE3-bgp-ipv4-SUB_VPN2] quit

[PE3-bgp-SUB_VPN2] quit

[PE3-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 4, CE 4, and CE 6 in the same way that PE 3, CE 3, and CE 5 are configured. (Details not shown.)

5.        Establish MP-EBGP peer relationships between service provider PEs and their CEs to exchange user VPNv4 routes:

# On PE 1, enable nested VPN and VPNv4 route exchange with CE 1.

[PE1] bgp 100

[PE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] nesting-vpn

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[PE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] address-family vpnv4

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4-vpn1] peer 11.1.1.1 enable

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp] quit

# Enable CE 1 to exchange VPNv4 routes with PE 1.

[CE1] bgp 200

[CE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[CE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 11.1.1.2 enable

# Allow the local AS number to appear in the AS-PATH attribute of the routes received.

[CE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 11.1.1.2 allow-as-loop 2

# Disable route target based filtering of received VPNv4 routes.

[CE1-bgp-vpnv4] undo policy vpn-target

[CE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[CE1-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 2 and CE 2 in the same way that PE 1 and CE 1 are configured. (Details not shown.)

6.        Establish MP-IBGP peer relationships between sub-VPN PEs and CEs of the customer VPN to exchange VPNv4 routes of sub-VPNs:

# Configure PE 3.

[PE3] bgp 200

[PE3-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 as-number 200

[PE3-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE3-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE3-bgp-vpnv4] peer 2.2.2.9 enable

# Allow the local AS number to appear in the AS-PATH attribute of the routes received.

[PE3-bgp-vpnv4] peer 2.2.2.9 allow-as-loop 2

[PE3-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[PE3-bgp] quit

# Configure CE 1.

[CE1] bgp 200

[CE1-bgp] peer 1.1.1.9 as-number 200

[CE1-bgp] peer 1.1.1.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[CE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[CE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 1.1.1.9 enable

[CE1-bgp-vpnv4] undo policy vpn-target

[CE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[CE1-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 4 and CE 2 in the same way that PE 3 and CE 1 are configured. (Details not shown.)

Verifying the configuration

1.        Display the public routing table and VPN routing table on the provider PEs, for example, on PE 1:

# Verify that the public routing table contains only routes on the service provider network.

[PE1] display ip routing-table

 

Destinations : 14        Routes : 14

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

3.3.3.9/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

4.4.4.9/32          ISIS   15   10           30.1.1.2        Vlan2

30.1.1.0/24         Direct 0    0            30.1.1.1        Vlan2

30.1.1.0/32         Direct 0    0            30.1.1.1        Vlan2

30.1.1.1/32         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

30.1.1.255/32       Direct 0    0            30.1.1.1        Vlan2

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

# Verify that the VPN routing table contains sub-VPN routes.

[PE1] display ip routing-table vpn-instance vpn1

 

Destinations : 16       Routes : 16

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

11.1.1.0/24         Direct 0    0            11.1.1.2        Vlan1

11.1.1.0/32         Direct 0    0            11.1.1.2        Vlan1

11.1.1.2/32         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

11.1.1.255/32       Direct 0    0            11.1.1.1        Vlan1

100.1.1.0/24        BGP    255  0            11.1.1.1        NULL0

110.1.1.0/24        BGP    255  0            11.1.1.1        NULL0

120.1.1.0/24        BGP    255  0            4.4.4.9         NULL0

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

130.1.1.0/24        BGP    255  0            4.4.4.9         NULL0

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

2.        Display the VPNv4 routing table on the provider CEs, for example, on CE 1.

# Verify that the VPNv4 routing table on the customer VPN contains internal sub-VPN routes.

[CE1] display bgp routing-table vpnv4

 

BGP Local router ID is 2.2.2.9

Status codes: * - valid, > - best, d - damped, h - history,

              s - suppressed, S - Stale, i - internal, e - external

              Origin: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete

 

Total number of routes from all PEs: 4

 

Route Distinguisher: 100:1

Total number of routes: 1

 

    Network            NextHop         MED        LocPrf     PrefVal Path/Ogn

 

* > 100.1.1.0/24       1.1.1.9         0          100        0      200 65410?

 

Route Distinguisher: 101:1

Total number of routes: 1

 

    Network            NextHop         MED        LocPrf     PrefVal Path/Ogn

 

* > 110.1.1.0/24       1.1.1.9         0          100        0       200 65411?

 

Route Distinguisher: 200:1

Total number of routes: 1

 

    Network            NextHop         MED        LocPrf     PrefVal Path/Ogn

 

* > 120.1.1.0/24       11.1.1.2                              0       100 200

                                                                     65420?

 

Route Distinguisher: 201:1

Total number of routes: 1

 

    Network            NextHop         MED        LocPrf     PrefVal Path/Ogn

 

* > 130.1.1.0/24       11.1.1.2                              0       100 200

                                                                     65421?

3.        Display the VPN routing table on the customer PEs, for example, on PE 3:

# Verify that the VPN routing table contains routes sent by the provider PE to the sub-VPN.

[PE3] display ip routing-table vpn-instance SUB_VPN1

 

Destinations : 11        Routes : 11

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

100.1.1.0/24        Direct 0    0            100.1.1.2       Vlan1

100.1.1.2/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

120.1.1.0/24        BGP    255  0            2.2.2.9         Vlan2

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

4.        Display the routing table on the CEs of sub-VPNs in the customer VPN, for example, on CE 3 and CE 5:

# Verify that the routing table contains the route to the remote sub-VPN on CE 3.

[CE3] display ip routing-table

 

Destinations : 13        Routes : 13

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

100.1.1.0/24        Direct 0    0            100.1.1.1       Vlan1

100.1.1.0/32        Direct 0    0            100.1.1.1       Vlan1

100.1.1.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

100.1.1.255/32      Direct 0    0            100.1.1.1       Vlan1

120.1.1.0/24        BGP    255  0            100.1.1.2       Vlan1

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

# Verify that the routing table contains the route to the remote sub-VPN on CE 5.

[CE5] display ip routing-table

 

Destinations : 13        Routes : 13

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

110.1.1.0/24        Direct 0    0            110.1.1.1       Vlan1

110.1.1.0/32        Direct 0    0            110.1.1.1       Vlan1

110.1.1.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

110.1.1.255/32      Direct 0    0            110.1.1.1       Vlan1

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

130.1.1.0/24        BGP    255  0            110.1.1.2       Vlan1

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

5.        Verify that CE 3 and CE 4 can ping each other. (Details not shown.)

6.        Verify that CE5 and CE 6 can ping each other. (Details not shown.)

7.        Verify that CE 3 and CE 6 cannot ping each other. (Details not shown.)

Configuring HoVPN

Network requirements

There are two levels of networks, the backbone and the MPLS VPN networks, as shown in Figure 29.

·          SPEs act as PEs to allow MPLS VPNs to access the backbone.

·          UPEs act as PEs of the MPLS VPNs to allow end users to access the VPNs.

·          Performance requirements for the UPEs are lower than those for the SPEs.

·          SPEs advertise routes permitted by the routing policies to UPEs, permitting CE 1 and CE 3 in VPN 1 to communicate with each other, and forbidding CE 2 and CE 4 in VPN 2 from communicating with each other.

Figure 29 Network diagram

 

Table 9 Interface and IP address assignment

Device

Interface

IP address

Device

Interface

IP address

CE 1

Vlan-int12

10.2.1.1/24

CE 3

Vlan-int12

10.1.1.1/24

CE 2

Vlan-int13

10.4.1.1/24

CE 4

Vlan-int13

10.3.1.1/24

UPE 1

Loop0

1.1.1.9/32

UPE 2

Loop0

4.4.4.9/32

 

Vlan-int11

172.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int11

172.2.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int12

10.2.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int12

10.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int13

10.4.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int13

10.3.1.2/24

SPE 1

Loop0

2.2.2.9/32

SPE 2

Loop0

3.3.3.9/32

 

Vlan-int11

172.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int11

172.2.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int12

180.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int12

180.1.1.2/24

 

Configuration procedure

1.        Configure UPE 1:

# Configure basic MPLS and MPLS LDP to establish LDP LSPs.

<UPE1> system-view

[UPE1] interface loopback 0

[UPE1-LoopBack0] ip address 1.1.1.9 32

[UPE1-LoopBack0] quit

[UPE1] mpls lsr-id 1.1.1.9

[UPE1] mpls ldp

[UPE1-ldp] quit

[UPE1] interface vlan-interface 11

[UPE1-Vlan-interface11] ip address 172.1.1.1 24

[UPE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[UPE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[UPE1-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure the IGP protocol (OSPF, in this example).

[UPE1] ospf

[UPE1-ospf-1] area 0

[UPE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 172.1.1.0 0.0.0.255

[UPE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 1.1.1.9 0.0.0.0

[UPE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] quit

[UPE1-ospf-1] quit

# Configure VPN instances vpn1 and vpn2, allowing CE 1 and CE 2 to access UPE 1.

[UPE1] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[UPE1] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[UPE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 100:1

[UPE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 100:1 both

[UPE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[UPE1] ip vpn-instance vpn2

[UPE1-vpn-instance-vpn2] route-distinguisher 100:2

[UPE1-vpn-instance-vpn2] vpn-target 100:2 both

[UPE1-vpn-instance-vpn2] quit

[UPE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[UPE1-Vlan-interface12] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[UPE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.2.1.2 24

[UPE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

[UPE1] interface vlan-interface 13

[UPE1-Vlan-interface13] ip binding vpn-instance vpn2

[UPE1-Vlan-interface13] ip address 10.4.1.2 24

[UPE1-Vlan-interface13] quit

# Establish an MP-IBGP peer relationship with SPE 1.

[UPE1] bgp 100

[UPE1-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 as-number 100

[UPE1-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[UPE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[UPE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 2.2.2.9 enable

[UPE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

# Establish an EBGP peer relationship with CE 1, and redistribute VPN routes into BGP.

[UPE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[UPE1-bgp-vpn1] peer 10.2.1.1 as-number 65410

[UPE1-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[UPE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 10.2.1.1 enable

[UPE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] import-route direct

[UPE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[UPE1-bgp-vpn1] quit

# Establish an EBGP peer relationship with CE 2, and redistribute VPN routes into BGP.

[UPE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn2

[UPE1-bgp-vpn2] peer 10.4.1.1 as-number 65420

[UPE1-bgp-vpn2] address-family ipv4 unicast

[UPE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn2] peer 10.4.1.1 enable

[UPE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn2] import-route direct

[UPE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn2] quit

[UPE1-bgp-vpn2] quit

[UPE1-bgp] quit

2.        Configure CE 1.

<CE1> system-view

[CE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[CE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.2.1.1 255.255.255.0

[CE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

[CE1] bgp 65410

[CE1-bgp] peer 10.2.1.2 as-number 100

[CE1-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[CE1-bgp-ipv4] peer 10.2.1.2 enable

[CE1-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[CE1-bgp-ipv4] quit

[CE1-bgp] quit

3.        Configure CE 2.

<CE2> system-view

[CE2] interface vlan-interface 13

[CE2-Vlan-interface13] ip address 10.4.1.1 255.255.255.0

[CE2-Vlan-interface13] quit

[CE2] bgp 65420

[CE2-bgp] peer 10.4.1.2 as-number 100

[CE2-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[CE2-bgp-ipv4] peer 10.4.1.2 enable

[CE2-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[CE2-bgp-ipv4] quit

[CE2-bgp] quit

4.        Configure UPE 2:

# Configure basic MPLS and MPLS LDP to establish LDP LSPs.

<UPE2> system-view

[UPE2] interface loopback 0

[UPE2-Loopback0] ip address 4.4.4.9 32

[UPE2-Loopback0] quit

[UPE2] mpls lsr-id 4.4.4.9

[UPE2] mpls ldp

[UPE2-ldp] quit

[UPE2] interface vlan-interface 11

[UPE2-Vlan-interface11] ip address 172.2.1.1 24

[UPE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[UPE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[UPE2-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure the IGP protocol (OSPF, in this example).

[UPE2] ospf

[UPE2-ospf-1] area 0

[UPE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 172.2.1.0 0.0.0.255

[UPE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 4.4.4.9 0.0.0.0

[UPE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] quit

[UPE2-ospf-1] quit

# Configure VPN instances vpn1 and vpn2, allowing CE 3 and CE 4 to access UPE 2.

[UPE2] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[UPE2] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[UPE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 300:1

[UPE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 100:1 both

[UPE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[UPE2] ip vpn-instance vpn2

[UPE2-vpn-instance-vpn2] route-distinguisher 400:2

[UPE2-vpn-instance-vpn2] vpn-target 100:2 both

[UPE2-vpn-instance-vpn2] quit

[UPE2] interface vlan-interface 12

[UPE2-Vlan-interface12] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[UPE2-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.1.1.2 24

[UPE2-Vlan-interface12] quit

[UPE2] interface vlan-interface 13

[UPE2-Vlan-interface13] ip binding vpn-instance vpn2

[UPE2-Vlan-interface13] ip address 10.3.1.2 24

[UPE2-Vlan-interface13] quit

# Establish an MP-IBGP peer relationship with SPE 2.

[UPE2] bgp 100

[UPE2-bgp] peer 3.3.3.9 as-number 100

[UPE2-bgp] peer 3.3.3.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[UPE2-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[UPE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 3.3.3.9 enable

[UPE2-bgp-vpnv4] quit

# Establish an EBGP peer relationship with CE 3 and redistribute VPN routes.

[UPE2-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[UPE2-bgp-vpn1] peer 10.1.1.1 as-number 65430

[UPE2-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[UPE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 10.1.1.1 enable

[UPE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] import-route direct

[UPE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[UPE2-bgp-vpn1] quit

# Establish an EBGP peer relationship with CE 4, and redistribute VPN routes into BGP.

[UPE2-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn2

[UPE2-bgp-vpn2] peer 10.3.1.1 as-number 65440

[UPE2-bgp-vpn2] address-family ipv4 unicast

[UPE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn2] peer 10.3.1.1 enable

[UPE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn2] import-route direct

[UPE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn2] quit

[UPE2-bgp-vpn2] quit

[UPE2-bgp] quit

5.        Configure CE 3.

<CE3> system-view

[CE3] interface vlan-interface 12

[CE3-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.1.1.1 255.255.255.0

[CE3-Vlan-interface12] quit

[CE3] bgp 65430

[CE3-bgp] peer 10.1.1.2 as-number 100

[CE3-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[CE3-bgp-ipv4] peer 10.1.1.2 enable

[CE3-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[CE3-bgp-ipv4] quit

[CE3-bgp] quit

6.        Configure CE 4.

<CE4> system-view

[CE4] interface vlan-interface 13

[CE4-Vlan-interface13] ip address 10.3.1.1 255.255.255.0

[CE4-Vlan-interface13] quit

[CE4] bgp 65440

[CE4-bgp] peer 10.3.1.2 as-number 100

[CE4-bgp] address-family ipv4 unicast

[CE4-bgp-ipv4] peer 10.3.1.2 enable

[CE4-bgp-ipv4] import-route direct

[CE4-bgp-ipv4] quit

[CE4-bgp] quit

7.        Configure SPE 1:

# Configure basic MPLS and MPLS LDP to establish LDP LSPs.

<SPE1> system-view

[SPE1] interface loopback 0

[SPE1-LoopBack0] ip address 2.2.2.9 32

[SPE1-LoopBack0] quit

[SPE1] mpls lsr-id 2.2.2.9

[SPE1] mpls ldp

[SPE1-ldp] quit

[SPE1] interface vlan-interface 11

[SPE1-Vlan-interface11] ip address 172.1.1.2 24

[SPE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[SPE1-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[SPE1-Vlan-interface11] quit

[SPE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[SPE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 180.1.1.1 24

[SPE1-Vlan-interface12] mpls enable

[SPE1-Vlan-interface12] mpls ldp enable

[SPE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure the IGP protocol (OSPF, in this example).

[SPE1] ospf

[SPE1-ospf-1] area 0

[SPE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 2.2.2.9 0.0.0.0

[SPE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 172.1.1.0 0.0.0.255

[SPE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 180.1.1.0 0.0.0.255

[SPE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] quit

[SPE1-ospf-1] quit

# Configure VPN instances vpn1 and vpn2.

[SPE1] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[SPE1] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[SPE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 500:1

[SPE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 100:1 both

[SPE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[SPE1] ip vpn-instance vpn2

[SPE1-vpn-instance-vpn2] route-distinguisher 700:1

[SPE1-vpn-instance-vpn2] vpn-target 100:2 both

[SPE1-vpn-instance-vpn2] quit

# Establish MP-IBGP peer relationships with SPE 2 and UPE 1, and specify UPE 1 as a UPE.

[SPE1] bgp 100

[SPE1-bgp] peer 1.1.1.9 as-number 100

[SPE1-bgp] peer 1.1.1.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[SPE1-bgp] peer 3.3.3.9 as-number 100

[SPE1-bgp] peer 3.3.3.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[SPE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[SPE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 3.3.3.9 enable

[SPE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 1.1.1.9 enable

[SPE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 1.1.1.9 upe

[SPE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 1.1.1.9 next-hop-local

[SPE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

# Create BGP-VPN instances for VPN instances vpn1 and vpn2, so the VPNv4 routes learned according to the RT attributes can be added into the BGP routing tables of the corresponding VPN instances.

[SPE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[SPE1-bgp-vpn1] quit

[SPE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn2

[SPE1-bgp-vpn2] quit

[SPE1-bgp] quit

# Advertise to UPE 1 the routes permitted by a routing policy (the routes of CE 3).

[SPE1] ip prefix-list hope index 10 permit 10.1.1.1 24

[SPE1] route-policy hope permit node 0

[SPE1-route-policy-hope-0] if-match ip address prefix-list hope

[SPE1-route-policy-hope-0] quit

[SPE1] bgp 100

[SPE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[SPE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 1.1.1.9 upe route-policy hope export

8.        Configure SPE 2:

# Configure basic MPLS and MPLS LDP to establish LDP LSPs.

<SPE2> system-view

[SPE2] interface loopback 0

[SPE2-LoopBack0] ip address 3.3.3.9 32

[SPE2-LoopBack0] quit

[SPE2] mpls lsr-id 3.3.3.9

[SPE2] mpls ldp

[SPE2-ldp] quit

[SPE2] interface vlan-interface 12

[SPE2-Vlan-interface12] ip address 180.1.1.2 24

[SPE2-Vlan-interface12] mpls enable

[SPE2-Vlan-interface12] mpls ldp enable

[SPE2-Vlan-interface12] quit

[SPE2] interface vlan-interface 11

[SPE2-Vlan-interface11] ip address 172.2.1.2 24

[SPE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls enable

[SPE2-Vlan-interface11] mpls ldp enable

[SPE2-Vlan-interface11] quit

# Configure the IGP protocol (OSPF, in this example).

[SPE2] ospf

[SPE2-ospf-1] area 0

[SPE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 3.3.3.9 0.0.0.0

[SPE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 172.2.1.0 0.0.0.255

[SPE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] network 180.1.1.0 0.0.0.255

[SPE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0] quit

[SPE2-ospf-1] quit

# Configure VPN instances vpn1 and vpn2.

[SPE2] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[SPE2] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[SPE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 600:1

[SPE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 100:1 both

[SPE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[SPE2] ip vpn-instance vpn2

[SPE2-vpn-instance-vpn2] route-distinguisher 800:1

[SPE2-vpn-instance-vpn2] vpn-target 100:2 both

[SPE2-vpn-instance-vpn2] quit

# Establish MP-IBGP peer relationships with SPE 1 and UPE 2, and specify UPE 2 as a UPE.

[SPE2] bgp 100

[SPE2-bgp] peer 4.4.4.9 as-number 100

[SPE2-bgp] peer 4.4.4.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[SPE2-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 as-number 100

[SPE2-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[SPE2-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[SPE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 2.2.2.9 enable

[SPE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 4.4.4.9 enable

[SPE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 4.4.4.9 upe

[SPE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 4.4.4.9 next-hop-local

[SPE2-bgp-vpnv4] quit

# Create BGP-VPN instances for VPN instances vpn1 and vpn2, so the VPNv4 routes learned according to the RT attributes can be added into the BGP routing tables of the corresponding VPN instances.

[SPE2-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[SPE2-bgp-vpn1] quit

[SPE2-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn2

[SPE2-bgp-vpn2] quit

[SPE2-bgp] quit

# Advertise to UPE 2 the routes permitted by a routing policy (the routes of CE 1).

[SPE2] ip prefix-list hope index 10 permit  10.2.1.1 24

[SPE2] route-policy hope permit node 0

[SPE2-route-policy-hope-0] if-match ip address prefix-list hope

[SPE2-route-policy-hope-0] quit

[SPE2] bgp 100

[SPE2-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[SPE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 4.4.4.9 upe route-policy hope export

Verifying the configuration

# Verify that CE 1 and CE3 can learn each other's interface routes and can ping each other. CE 2 and CE 4 cannot learn each other's interface routes and cannot ping each other. (Details not shown.)

Configuring an OSPF sham link

Network requirements

As shown in Figure 30, CE 1 and CE 2 belong to VPN 1. Configure an OSPF sham link between PE 1 and PE 2 so traffic between CE 1 and CE 2 is forwarded through the MPLS backbone, instead of the backdoor link.

Figure 30 Network diagram

 

Table 10 Interface and IP address assignment

Device

Interface

IP address

Device

Interface

IP address

CE 1

Vlan-int11

100.1.1.1/24

CE 2

Vlan-int11

120.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int13

20.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int12

30.1.1.2/24

PE 1

Loop0

1.1.1.9/32

PE 2

Loop0

2.2.2.9/32

 

Loop1

3.3.3.3/32

 

Loop1

5.5.5.5/32

 

Vlan-int11

100.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int11

120.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int12

10.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int12

10.1.1.2/24

Switch A

Vlan-int11

20.1.1.2/24

 

 

 

 

Vlan-int12

30.1.1.1/24

 

 

 

 

Configuration procedure

1.        Configure OSPF on the customer networks:

Configure conventional OSPF on CE 1, Switch A, and CE 2 to advertise addresses of the interfaces as shown in Figure 30. Execute the display ip routing-table command to verify that CE 1 and CE 2 have learned the route to each other. (Details not shown.)

2.        Configure MPLS L3VPN on the backbone:

# Configure basic MPLS and MPLS LDP on PE 1 to establish LDP LSPs.

<PE1> system-view

[PE1] interface loopback 0

[PE1-LoopBack0] ip address 1.1.1.9 32

[PE1-LoopBack0] quit

[PE1] mpls lsr-id 1.1.1.9

[PE1] mpls ldp

[PE1-ldp] quit

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 12

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.1.1.1 24

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] mpls enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] mpls ldp enable

[PE1-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure PE 1 to take PE 2 as an MP-IBGP peer.

[PE1] bgp 100

[PE1-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 as-number 100

[PE1-bgp] peer 2.2.2.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE1-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] peer 2.2.2.9 enable

[PE1-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[PE1-bgp] quit

# Configure OSPF on PE 1.

[PE1]ospf 1

[PE1-ospf-1]area 0

[PE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0]network 1.1.1.9 0.0.0.0

[PE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0]network 10.1.1.0 0.0.0.255

[PE1-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0]quit

[PE1-ospf-1]quit

# Configure basic MPLS and MPLS LDP on PE 2 to establish LDP LSPs.

<PE2> system-view

[PE2] interface loopback 0

[PE2-LoopBack0] ip address 2.2.2.9 32

[PE2-LoopBack0] quit

[PE2] mpls lsr-id 2.2.2.9

[PE2] mpls ldp

[PE2-ldp] quit

[PE2] interface vlan-interface 12

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] ip address 10.1.1.2 24

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] mpls enable

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] mpls ldp enable

[PE2-Vlan-interface12] quit

# Configure PE 2 to take PE 1 as an MP-IBGP peer.

[PE2] bgp 100

[PE2-bgp] peer 1.1.1.9 as-number 100

[PE2-bgp] peer 1.1.1.9 connect-interface loopback 0

[PE2-bgp] address-family vpnv4

[PE2-bgp-vpnv4] peer 1.1.1.9 enable

[PE2-bgp-vpnv4] quit

[PE2-bgp] quit

# Configure OSPF on PE 2.

[PE2]ospf 1

[PE2-ospf-1]area 0

[PE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0]network 2.2.2.9 0.0.0.0

[PE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0]network 10.1.1.0 0.0.0.255

[PE2-ospf-1-area-0.0.0.0]quit

[PE2-ospf-1]quit

3.        Configure PEs to allow CE access:

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[PE1] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 100:1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 1:1

[PE1-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[PE1] interface vlan-interface 11

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] ip address 100.1.1.2 24

[PE1-Vlan-interface11] quit

[PE1] ospf 100 vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-ospf-100] domain-id 10

[PE1-ospf-100] area 1

[PE1-ospf-100-area-0.0.0.1] network 100.1.1.0 0.0.0.255

[PE1-ospf-100-area-0.0.0.1] quit

[PE1-ospf-100] quit

[PE2] bgp 100

[PE1-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] import-route ospf 100

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] import-route direct

[PE1-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE1-bgp] quit

# Configure PE 2.

[PE2] reserve-vlan-interface 3000 to 3050

[PE2] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] route-distinguisher 100:2

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] vpn-target 1:1

[PE2-vpn-instance-vpn1] quit

[PE2] interface vlan-interface 11

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] ip address 120.1.1.2 24

[PE2-Vlan-interface11] quit

[PE2] ospf 100 vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-ospf-100] domain-id 10

[PE2-ospf-100] area 1

[PE2-ospf-100-area-0.0.0.1] network 120.1.1.0 0.0.0.255

[PE2-ospf-100-area-0.0.0.1] quit

[PE2-ospf-100] quit

[PE2] bgp 100

[PE2-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] import-route ospf 100

[PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] import-route direct

[PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE2-bgp] quit

# Execute the display ip routing-table vpn-instance command on the PEs to verify that the path to the peer CE is along the OSPF route across the customer networks, instead of the BGP route across the backbone. (Details not shown.)

4.        Configure a sham link:

# Configure PE 1.

[PE1] interface loopback 1

[PE1-LoopBack1] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE1-LoopBack1] ip address 3.3.3.3 32

[PE1-LoopBack1] quit

[PE1] ospf 100

[PE1-ospf-100] area 1

[PE1-ospf-100-area-0.0.0.1] sham-link 3.3.3.3 5.5.5.5 cost 10

[PE1-ospf-100-area-0.0.0.1] quit

[PE1-ospf-100] quit

# Configure PE 2.

[PE2] interface loopback 1

[PE2-LoopBack1] ip binding vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-LoopBack1] ip address 5.5.5.5 32

[PE2-LoopBack1] quit

[PE2] ospf 100

[PE2-ospf-100] area 1

[PE2-ospf-100-area-0.0.0.1] sham-link 5.5.5.5 3.3.3.3 cost 10

[PE2-ospf-100-area-0.0.0.1] quit

[PE2-ospf-100] quit

Verifying the configuration

# Execute the display ip routing-table vpn-instance command on the PEs to verify the following results: (Details not shown.)

·          The path to the peer CE is now along the BGP route across the backbone.

·          A route to the sham link destination address is present.

# Execute the display ip routing-table command on the CEs to verify that the next hop of the OSPF route to the peer CE is the VLAN interface 11 connected to the PE. The VPN traffic to the peer is forwarded over the backbone. (Details not shown.)

# Verify that a sham link has been established on PEs, for example, on PE 1.

[PE1] display ospf sham-link

 

          OSPF Process 100 with Router ID 100.1.1.2

                  Sham link

Area            Neighbor ID     Source IP       Destination IP  State  Cost

 0.0.0.1         120.1.1.2       3.3.3.3         5.5.5.5         P-2-P 10

# Verify that the peer state is Full on PE 1.

[PE1] display ospf sham-link area 1

 

          OSPF Process 100 with Router ID 100.1.1.2

 

  Sham-Link: 3.3.3.3 --> 5.5.5.5

  Neighbor ID: 120.1.1.2     State: Full

  Area: 0.0.0.1

  Cost: 10  State: P-2-P  Type: Sham

  Timers: Hello 10, Dead 40, Retransmit 5, Transmit Delay 1

  Request list: 0  Retransmit list: 0

Configuring BGP AS number substitution

Network requirements

As shown in Figure 31, CE 1 and CE 2 belong to VPN 1 and are connected to PE 1 and PE 2, respectively. The two CEs have the same AS number, 600. Configure BGP AS number substitution on the PEs to enable the CEs to communicate with each other.

Figure 31 Network diagram

 

Table 11 Interface and IP address assignment

Device

Interface

IP address

Device

Interface

IP address

CE 1

Vlan-int11

10.1.1.1/24

P

Loop0

2.2.2.9/32

 

Vlan-int12

100.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int11

30.1.1.1/24

PE 1

Loop0

1.1.1.9/32

 

Vlan-int12

20.1.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int11

10.1.1.2/24

PE 2

Loop0

3.3.3.9/32

 

Vlan-int12

20.1.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int11

30.1.1.2/24

CE 2

Vlan-int12

10.2.1.1/24

 

Vlan-int12

10.2.1.2/24

 

Vlan-int13

200.1.1.1/24

 

 

 

 

Configuration procedure

1.        Configuring basic MPLS L3VPN:

¡  Configure OSPF on the MPLS backbone to allow the PEs and P device to learn the routes of the loopback interfaces from each other.

¡  Configure basic MPLS and MPLS LDP on the MPLS backbone to establish LDP LSPs.

¡  Establish MP-IBGP peer relationship between the PEs to advertise VPNv4 routes.

¡  Configure the VPN instance of VPN 1 on PE 2 to allow CE 2 to access the network.

¡  Configure the VPN instance of VPN 1 on PE 1 to allow CE 1 to access the network.

¡  Configure BGP between PE 1 and CE 1, and between PE 2 and CE 2 and redistribute routes of CEs into PEs.

For more information about basic MPLS L3VPN configurations, see "Configuring basic MPLS L3VPN."

# Execute the display ip routing-table command on CE 2. The output shows that CE 2 has learned the route to network 10.1.1.0/24, where the interface used by CE 1 to access PE 1 resides. However, it has not learned the route to the VPN (100.1.1.0/24) behind CE 1.

<CE2> display ip routing-table

 

Destinations : 17        Routes : 17

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

10.1.1.0/24         BGP    255  0            10.2.1.2        Vlan12

10.2.1.0/24         Direct 0    0            10.2.1.1        Vlan12

10.2.1.0/32         Direct 0    0            10.2.1.1        Vlan12

10.2.1.1/32         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

10.2.1.255/32       Direct 0    0            10.2.1.1        Vlan12

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

200.1.1.0/24        Direct 0    0            200.1.1.1       Vlan13

200.1.1.0/32        Direct 0    0            200.1.1.1       Vlan13

200.1.1.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

200.1.1.255/24      Direct 0    0            200.1.1.1       Vlan13

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

# Execute the display ip routing-table command on CE 1 to verify that CE 1 has not learned the route to the VPN behind CE 2. (Details not shown.)

# Execute the display ip routing-table vpn-instance command on the PEs. The output shows the route to the VPN behind the peer CE. This example uses PE 2.

<PE2> display ip routing-table vpn-instance vpn1

 

Destinations : 15        Routes : 15

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

10.1.1.0/24         BGP    255  0            1.1.1.9         Vlan11

10.2.1.0/24         Direct 0    0            10.2.1.2        Vlan12

10.2.1.0/32         Direct 0    0            10.2.1.2        Vlan12

10.2.1.2/32         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

10.2.1.255/32       Direct 0    0            10.2.1.2        Vlan12

100.1.1.0/24        BGP    255  0            1.1.1.9         Vlan11

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

200.1.1.0/24        BGP    255  0            10.2.1.1        Vlan12

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

# Enable BGP update packet debugging on PE 2. The output shows that PE 2 advertises the route to 100.1.1.1/32, and the AS_PATH is 100 600.

<PE2> terminal monitor

<PE2> terminal logging level 7

<PE2> debugging bgp update vpn-instance vpn1 10.2.1.1 ipv4

<PE2> refresh bgp all export ipv4 vpn-instance vpn1

*Jun 13 16:12:52:096 2012 PE2 BGP/7/DEBUG: -MDC=1;

         BGP.vpn1: Send UPDATE to peer 10.2.1.1 for following destinations:

         Origin       : Incomplete

         AS Path      : 100 600

         Next Hop     : 10.2.1.2

         100.1.1.0/24,

# Execute the display bgp routing-table ipv4 peer received-routes command on CE 2 to verify that CE 2 has not received the route to 100.1.1.0/24.

<CE2> display bgp routing-table ipv4 peer 10.2.1.2 received-routes

 

 Total number of routes: 2

 

 BGP local router ID is 200.1.1.1

 Status codes: * - valid, > - best, d - dampened, h - history,

               s - suppressed, S - stale, i - internal, e - external

               Origin: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete

 

     Network            NextHop         MED        LocPrf     PrefVal Path/Ogn

 

* >e 10.1.1.0/24        10.2.1.2                              0       100?

*  e 10.2.1.0/24        10.2.1.2        0                     0       100?

2.        Configure BGP AS number substitution on PE 2.

<PE2> system-view

[PE2] bgp 100

[PE2-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] peer 10.2.1.1 substitute-as

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 10.2.1.1 enable

[PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] quit

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE2-bgp] quit

Verifying the configuration

# The output shows that among the routes advertised by PE 2 to CE 2, the AS_PATH of 100.1.1.0/24 has changed from 100 600 to 100 100.

*Jun 13 16:15:59:456 2012 PE2 BGP/7/DEBUG: -MDC=1;

         BGP.vpn1: Send UPDATE to peer 10.2.1.1 for following destinations:

         Origin       : Incomplete

         AS Path      : 100 100

         Next Hop     : 10.2.1.2

         100.1.1.0/24,

# Display again the routing information that CE 2 has received and the routing table.

<CE2> display bgp routing-table ipv4 peer 10.2.1.2 received-routes

 

 Total number of routes: 3

 

 BGP local router ID is 200.1.1.1

 Status codes: * - valid, > - best, d - dampened, h - history,

               s - suppressed, S - stale, i - internal, e - external

               Origin: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete

 

     Network            NextHop         MED        LocPrf     PrefVal Path/Ogn

 

* >e 10.1.1.0/24        10.2.1.2                              0       100?

*  e 10.2.1.0/24        10.2.1.2        0                     0       100?

* >e 100.1.1.0/24       10.2.1.2                              0       100 100?

<CE2> display ip routing-table

 

Destinations : 18        Routes : 18

 

Destination/Mask    Proto  Pre  Cost         NextHop         Interface

0.0.0.0/32          Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

10.1.1.0/24         BGP    255  0            10.2.1.2        Vlan12

10.2.1.0/24         Direct 0    0            10.2.1.1        Vlan12

10.2.1.0/32         Direct 0    0            10.2.1.1        Vlan12

10.2.1.1/32         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

10.2.1.255/32       Direct 0    0            10.2.1.1        Vlan12

100.1.1.0/24        BGP    255  0            10.2.1.2        Vlan12

127.0.0.0/8         Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.0/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.0.0.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

127.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

200.1.1.0/24        Direct 0    0            200.1.1.1       Vlan13

200.1.1.0/32        Direct 0    0            200.1.1.1       Vlan13

200.1.1.1/32        Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

200.1.1.255/32      Direct 0    0            200.1.1.1       Vlan13

224.0.0.0/4         Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

224.0.0.0/24        Direct 0    0            0.0.0.0         NULL0

255.255.255.255/32  Direct 0    0            127.0.0.1       InLoop0

# Verify that the VLAN interfaces of CE 1 and CE 2 can ping each other. (Details not shown.)

Configuring MPLS L3VPN FRR

Network requirements

CE 1 and CE 2 belong to VPN 1.

Configure EBGP between CEs and PEs to exchange VPN routes.

Configure OSPF to ensure connectivity between PEs, and configure MP-IBGP to exchange VPNv4 routing information between PEs.

Configure MPLS L3VPN FRR on PE 2 to achieve the following purposes:

·          When the link PE 2—CE 2 operates correctly, traffic from CE 1 to CE 2 goes through the path CE 1—PE 1—PE 2—CE 2.

·          When BFD detects that the link between PE 2 and CE 2 fails, traffic from CE 1 to CE 2 goes through the path CE 1—PE 1—PE 2—PE 3—CE 2.

Figure 32 Network diagram

 

Table 12 Interface and IP address assignment

Device

Interface

IP address

Device

Interface

IP address

CE 1

Loop0

5.5.5.5/32

PE 2

Loop0

2.2.2.2/32

Vlan-int10

10.2.1.1/24

Vlan-int11

172.1.1.2/24

PE 1

Loop0

1.1.1.1/32

Vlan-int13

10.1.1.2/24

Vlan-int10

10.2.1.2/24

Vlan-int15

172.3.1.2/24

Vlan-int11

172.1.1.1/24

PE 3

Loop0

3.3.3.3/32

Vlan-int12

172.2.1.1/24

Vlan-int12

172.2.1.3/24

CE 2

Loop0

4.4.4.4/32

Vlan-int14

10.3.1.2/24

Vlan-int13

10.1.1.1/24

Vlan-int15

172.3.1.3/24

Vlan-int14

10.3.1.1/24

 

Configuration procedure

1.        Configure IP addresses and masks for interfaces as shown in Table 12, and configure BGP and MPLS L3VPN. (Details not shown.)

For more information about configuring basic MPLS L3VPN, see "Configuring basic MPLS L3VPN."

2.        Configure MPLS L3VPN FRR on PE 2:

# Configure the source IP address of BFD echo packets as 12.1.1.1.

<PE2> system-view

[PE2] bfd echo-source-ip 12.1.1.1

# Create routing policy frr, and specify the backup next hop as 3.3.3.3 for the route to 4.4.4.4/32.

[PE2] ip prefix-list abc index 10 permit 4.4.4.4 32

[PE2] route-policy frr permit node 10

[PE2-route-policy] if-match ip address prefix-list abc

[PE2-route-policy] apply fast-reroute backup-nexthop 3.3.3.3

[PE2-route-policy] quit

# Use echo-mode BFD to detect the primary route connectivity.

[PE2] bgp 100

[PE2-bgp] primary-path-detect bfd echo

# Configure FRR for VPN instance vpn1 to reference routing policy frr.

[PE2-bgp] ip vpn-instance vpn1

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] address-family ipv4 unicast

[PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] fast-reroute route-policy frr

# Specify the preferred value as 200 for BGP routes received from CE 2. This value is greater than the preferred value (0) for routes from PE 3, so PE 2 prefers the routes from CE 2.

[PE2-bgp-ipv4-vpn1] peer 10.1.1.1 preferred-value 200

[PE2-bgp-vpn1] quit

[PE2-bgp] quit

Verifying the configuration

# Display detailed information about the route to 4.4.4.4/32 on PE 2. The output shows the backup next hop for the route.

[PE2] display ip routing-table vpn-instance vpn1 4.4.4.4 32 verbose

 

Summary Count : 1

 

Destination: 4.4.4.4/32

   Protocol: BGP             Process ID: 0

  SubProtID: 0x2                    Age: 01h54m24s

       Cost: 0               Preference: 10

      IpPre: N/A             QosLocalID: N/A

        Tag: 0                    State: Active Adv

  OrigTblID: 0x0                OrigVrf: vpn1

    TableID: 0x102               OrigAs: 300

      NibID: 0x15000002          LastAs: 300

     AttrID: 0x0               Neighbor: 10.1.1.1

      Flags: 0x10060        OrigNextHop: 10.1.1.1

      Label: NULL           RealNextHop: 10.1.1.1

    BkLabel: 1275             BkNextHop: 172.3.1.3

  Tunnel ID: Invalid          Interface: Vlan-int13

BkTunnel ID: 0x409          BkInterface: Vlan-int15

   FtnIndex: 0x0

 

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