17-NVGRE Command Reference

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01-NVGRE commands
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NVGRE commands

arp suppression enable

Use arp suppression enable to enable ARP flood suppression.

Use undo arp suppression enable to disable ARP flood suppression.

Syntax

arp suppression enable

undo arp suppression enable

Default

ARP flood suppression is disabled.

Views

VSI view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

ARP flood suppression reduces ARP request broadcasts by enabling the NVE to reply to ARP requests on behalf of VMs.

This feature snoops ARP packets to populate the ARP flood suppression table with local and remote MAC addresses. If an ARP request has a matching entry, the NVE replies to the request on behalf of the VM. If no match is found, the NVE floods the request to both local and remote sites.

Examples

# Enable ARP flood suppression for the VSI vsi1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] vsi vsi1

[Sysname-vsi-vsi1] arp suppression enable

Related commands

display arp suppression vsi

reset arp suppression vsi

bandwidth

Use bandwidth to set the expected bandwidth for a VSI interface.

Use undo bandwidth to restore the default.

Syntax

bandwidth bandwidth-value

undo bandwidth

Default

The expected bandwidth (in kbps) of a VSI interface equals the interface baud rate divided by 1000.

Views

VSI interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

bandwidth-value: Specifies the expected bandwidth, in the range of 1 to 400000000 kbps.

Usage guidelines

The expected bandwidth is an informational parameter used only by higher-layer protocols for calculation. You cannot adjust the actual bandwidth of an interface by using this command.

Examples

# Set the expected bandwidth to 10000 kbps for VSI-interface 100.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vsi-interface 100

[Sysname-Vsi-interface100] bandwidth 10000

default

Use default to restore the default settings for a VSI interface.

Syntax

default

Views

VSI interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

CAUTION

CAUTION:

The default command might interrupt ongoing network services. Make sure you are fully aware of the impact of this command when you use it on a live network.

 

This command might fail to restore the default settings for some commands for reasons such as command dependencies and system restrictions.

To resolve this problem:

1.     Use the display this command in interface view to identify these commands.

2.     Use their undo forms or follow the command reference to restore their default settings.

3.     If the restoration attempt still fails, follow the error message instructions to resolve the problem.

Examples

# Restore the default settings for VSI-interface 100.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vsi-interface 100

[Sysname-Vsi-interface100] default

This command will restore the default settings. Continue? [Y/N]:y

description (VSI interface view)

Use description to configure the description of a VSI interface.

Use undo description to restore the default.

Syntax

description text

undo description

Default

The description of a VSI interface is interface-name plus Interface (for example, Vsi-interface100 Interface).

Views

VSI interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

text: Specifies a description, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 255 characters.

Examples

# Configure the description as gateway for NVGRE 5000 for VSI-interface 100.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vsi-interface 100

[Sysname-Vsi-interface100] description gateway for NVGRE 5000

description (VSI view)

Use description to configure a description for a VSI.

Use undo description to restore the default.

Syntax

description text

undo description

Default

A VSI does not have a description.

Views

VSI view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

text: Specifies a description, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 80 characters.

Examples

# Configure the description as vsi for vpn1 for the VSI vpn1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] vsi vpn1

[Sysname-vsi-vpn1] description vsi for vpn1

Related commands

display l2vpn vsi

display arp suppression vsi

Use display arp suppression vsi to display ARP flood suppression entries.

Syntax

In standalone mode:

display arp suppression vsi [ name vsi-name ] [ count ]

In IRF mode:

display arp suppression vsi [ name vsi-name ] [ slot slot-number ] [ count ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

name vsi-name: Specifies a VSI by its name. If you do not specify a VSI, this command displays entries for all VSIs.

slot slot-number: Specifies an IRF member device by its member ID. If you do not specify a member device, this command displays entries on the master device. (In IRF mode.)

count: Displays the number of ARP flood suppression entries that match the command.

Examples

# Display ARP flood suppression entries.

<Sysname> display arp suppression vsi

IP address      MAC address    Vsi Name                        Link ID    Aging

1.1.1.2         000f-e201-0101 vsi1                            0x70000    14

1.1.1.3         000f-e201-0202 vsi1                            0x80000    18

1.1.1.4         000f-e201-0203 vsi2                            0x90000    10

# Display the number of ARP flood suppression entries.

<Sysname> display arp suppression vsi count

Total entries: 3

Table 1 Command output

Field

Description

Link ID

Link ID that uniquely identifies an AC or an NVGRE tunnel on a VSI.

Aging

Remaining lifetime (in minutes) of the ARP flood suppression entry. When the timer expires, the entry is deleted.

 

Related commands

arp suppression enable

reset arp suppression vsi

display interface vsi-interface

Use display interface vsi-interface to display information about VSI interfaces.

Syntax

display interface [ vsi-interface [ vsi-interface-id ] ] [ brief [ description | down ] ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

vsi-interface [ vsi-interface-id ]: Specifies VSI interfaces. If you specify a VSI interface, this command displays information about the specified interface. Make sure the specified VSI interface has been created on the device. If you specify only the vsi-interface keyword, this command displays information about all VSI interfaces. If you do not specify the vsi-interface [ vsi-interface-id ] option, this command displays information about all interfaces except for VA interfaces. For more information about VA interfaces, see PPP configuration in Layer 2—WAN Access Configuration Guide.

brief: Display brief interface information. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays detailed interface information.

description: Displays complete interface descriptions. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays only the first 27 characters of interface descriptions.

down: Displays interfaces that are physically down as well as the down reason. If you do not specify this keyword, the command does not filter output by physical interface state.

Examples

# Display information about VSI-interface 100.

<Sysname> display interface vsi-interface 100

Vsi-interface100

Current state: UP

Line protocol state: UP

Description: Vsi-interface100 Interface

Bandwidth: 1000000 kbps

Maximum transmission unit: 1500

Internet address: 10.1.1.1/24 (primary)

IP packet frame type: Ethernet II, hardware address: 4431-9258-0193

IPv6 packet frame type: Ethernet II, hardware address: 4431-9258-0193

Physical: Unknown, baudrate: 1000000 kbps

Last clearing of counters: Never

Last 300 seconds input rate: 0 bytes/sec, 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec

Last 300 seconds output rate: 0 bytes/sec, 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec

Input: 0 packets, 0 bytes, 0 drops

Output: 0 packets, 0 bytes, 0 drops

Table 2 Command output

Field

Description

Current state

Physical link state of the interface:

·     Administratively DOWN—The interface has been shut down by using the shutdown command.

·     DOWN—The interface is administratively up, but its physical state is down (possibly because no physical link exists or the link has failed).

·     UP—The interface is both administratively and physically up.

Line protocol state

Data link layer state of the interface.

·     UP—The data link layer protocol is up.

·     UP(spoofing)—The data link layer protocol is up, but the link is an on-demand link or does not exist.

·     DOWN—The data link layer protocol is down.

Description

Description of the interface.

Bandwidth

Expected bandwidth of the interface.

Maximum transmission unit

MTU of the interface.

Internet protocol processing: Disabled

The interface is not assigned an IP address and cannot process IP packets.

Internet address: ip-address/mask-length (Type)

IP address of the interface and type of the address in parentheses.

Possible IP address types include:

·     Primary—Manually configured primary IP address.

·     Sub—Manually configured secondary IP address. If the interface has both primary and secondary IP addresses, the primary IP address is displayed. If the interface has only secondary IP addresses, the lowest secondary IP address is displayed.

IP packet frame type

IPv4 packet framing format.

hardware address

MAC address.

IPv6 packet frame type

IPv6 packet framing format.

Physical

Physical type of the interface, which is fixed at Unknown.

baudrate

Interface baud rate in kbps.

Last clearing of counters

Last time when the reset counters interface vsi-interface command was used to clear interface statistics.

This field displays Never if the reset counters interface vsi-interface command has never been used on the interface since the device startup.

Last 300 seconds input rate

Average input rate for the last 300 seconds.

Last 300 seconds output rate

Average output rate for the last 300 seconds.

Input: 0 packets, 0 bytes, 0 drops

Incoming traffic statistics on the interface:

·     Number of incoming packets.

·     Number of incoming bytes.

·     Number of dropped incoming packets.

Output: 0 packets, 0 bytes, 0 drops

Outgoing traffic statistics on the interface:

·     Number of outgoing packets.

·     Number of outgoing bytes.

·     Number of dropped outgoing packets.

 

# Display brief information about all VSI interfaces.

<Sysname> display interface vsi-interface brief

Brief information of interface(s) under route mode:

Link: ADM - administratively down; Stby - standby

Protocol: (s) - spoofing

Interface            Link Protocol Main IP         Description

Vsi100               DOWN DOWN     --

# Display brief information and complete description for VSI-interface 100.

<Sysname> display interface vsi-interface 100 brief description

Brief information of interface(s) under route mode:

Link: ADM - administratively down; Stby - standby

Protocol: (s) - spoofing

Interface            Link Protocol Main IP         Description

Vsi100               UP    UP      1.1.1.1         VSI-interface100

# Displays interfaces that are physically down and the down reason.

<Sysname> display interface brief down

Brief information of interface(s) under route mode:

Link: ADM - administratively down; Stby - standby

Interface            Link Cause

Vsi100               DOWN Administratively

Vsi200               DOWN Administratively

Table 3 Command output

Field

Description

Interface

Abbreviated interface name.

Link

Physical link state of the interface:

·     UP—The interface is physically up.

·     DOWN—The interface is physically down.

·     ADM—The interface has been shut down by using the shutdown command. To restore the physical state of the interface, use the undo shutdown command.

·     Stby—The interface is a backup interface in standby state. To see the primary interface, use the display interface-backup state command.

Protocol

Data link layer protocol state of the interface:

·     UP—The data link layer protocol of the interface is up.

·     UP (s)—The data link layer protocol of the interface is up, but the link is an on-demand link or does not exist. The (s) attribute represents the spoofing flag.

·     DOWN—The data link layer protocol of the interface is down.

Main IP

Primary IP address of the interface. This field displays two hyphens (--) if the interface does not have an IP address.

Description

Description of the interface.

Cause

Cause for the physical link state of an interface to be DOWN:

·     Administratively—The interface has been manually shut down by using the shutdown command. To restore the physical state of the interface, use the undo shutdown command.

·     Not connected—The interface is not mapped to any VSI, or the mapped VSI does not have any AC or PW.

 

Related commands

reset counters interface vsi-interface

display l2vpn interface

Use display l2vpn interface to display L2VPN information for Layer 3 interfaces that are mapped to VSIs.

Syntax

display l2vpn interface [ vsi vsi-name | interface-type interface-number ] [ verbose ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

vsi vsi-name: Specifies a VSI name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters.

interface-type interface-number: Specifies an interface by its type and number.

verbose: Displays detailed information about Layer 3 interfaces. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays brief information about Layer 3 interfaces.

Usage guidelines

If you do not specify any parameters, this command displays brief L2VPN information for all Layer 3 interfaces that are mapped to VSIs.

Examples

# Display brief L2VPN information for all Layer 3 interfaces that are mapped to VSIs.

<Sysname> display l2vpn interface

Total number of interfaces: 2, 1 up, 1 down

 

Interface                Owner                           Link ID   State    Type

GE1/0                    vpn3                            1         Up       VSI

GE2/0                    vpn4                            2         Down     VSI

Table 4 Command output

Field

Description

Interface

Layer 3 interface name.

Owner

VSI name.

Link ID

The interface's link ID on the VSI.

State

Physical state of the interface:

·     Up—The interface is physically up.

·     Down—The interface is physically down.

Type

L2VPN type of the interface. This field displays VSI for the NVGRE feature.

 

# Display detailed L2VPN information for all Layer 3 interfaces that are mapped to VSIs.

<Sysname> display l2vpn interface verbose

Interface: GE1/0

    Owner         : vsi1

    Link ID       : 0

    State         : Up

    Type          : VSI

    Statistics    : Enabled

    Input Statistics:

      Octets   :994496

      Packets  :15539

    Output Statistics:

      Octets   :0

      Packets  :0

 

Interface: GE2/0

    Owner         : vsi2

    Link ID       : 0

    State         : Down

    Type          : VSI

    Statistics    : Enabled

    Input Statistics:

      Octets   :0

      Packets  :0

    Output Statistics:

      Octets   :0

      Packets  :0

Table 5 Command output

Field

Description

Interface

Layer 3 interface name.

Owner

VSI name.

Link ID

The interface's link ID on the VSI.

State

Physical state of the interface:

·     Up—The interface is physically up.

·     Down—The interface is physically down.

Type

L2VPN type of the interface. This field displays VSI for the NVGRE feature.

Statistics

Packet statistics state:

·     Enabled—The packet statistics feature is enabled for the interface.

·     Disabled—The packet statistics feature is disabled for the interface.

Input Statistics

Incoming traffic statistics:

·     Octets—Number of incoming bytes.

·     Packets—Number of incoming packets.

Output Statistics

Outgoing traffic statistics:

·     Octets—Number of outgoing bytes.

·     Packets—Number of outgoing packets.

 

display l2vpn mac-address

Use display l2vpn mac-address to display MAC address entries for VSIs.

Syntax

display l2vpn mac-address [ vsi vsi-name ] [ dynamic ] [ count ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

vsi vsi-name: Specifies a VSI name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters. If you do not specify a VSI, this command displays MAC address entries for all VSIs.

dynamic: Specifies dynamic MAC address entries learned in the data plane. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays all MAC address entries, including dynamic remote- and local-MAC entries, and manually added static remote-MAC entries. NVGRE does not support static local-MAC entries.

count: Displays the number of MAC address entries.

Examples

# Display MAC address entries for all VSIs.

<Sysname> display l2vpn mac-address

MAC Address      State    VSI Name                        Link ID/Name  Aging

0000-0000-000b   Static   vpn1                            Tunnel10      NotAging

0000-0000-000c   Dynamic  vpn1                            Tunnel65535   Aging

0000-0000-000d   Dynamic  vpn1                            Tunnel9999999 Aging

--- 3 mac address(es) found  ---

# Display the total number of MAC address entries in all VSIs.

<Sysname> display l2vpn mac-address count

3 mac address(es) found

Table 6 Command output

Field

Description

State

Entry state:

·     Dynamic—Local- or remote-MAC entry dynamically learned in the data plane.

·     Static—Static remote-MAC entry.

Link ID/Name

For a local MAC address, this field displays the AC's link ID on the VSI.

For a remote MAC address, this field displays the tunnel interface name.

Aging

Entry aging state:

·     Aging.

·     NotAging.

 

Related commands

reset l2vpn mac-address

display l2vpn vsi

Use display l2vpn vsi to display information about VSIs.

Syntax

display l2vpn vsi [ name vsi-name ] [ verbose ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

name vsi-name: Specifies a VSI by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters. If you do not specify a VSI, this command displays information about all VSIs.

verbose: Displays detailed information about VSIs. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays brief information about VSIs.

Examples

# Display brief information about all VSIs.

<Sysname> display l2vpn vsi

Total number of VSIs: 1, 1 up, 0 down, 0 admin down

 

VSI Name                        VSI Index       MTU    State

vpna                            0               1500   Up

Table 7 Command output

Field

Description

MTU

MTU on the VSI.

State

VSI state:

·     Up—The VSI is up.

·     Down—The VSI is down.

·     Admin down—The VSI has been manually shut down by using the shutdown command.

 

# Display detailed information about all VSIs.

<Sysname> display l2vpn vsi verbose

VSI Name: 0

  VSI Index               : 0

  VSI State               : Down

  MTU                     : 1500

  Bandwidth               : -

  Broadcast Restrain      : -

  Multicast Restrain      : -

  Unknown Unicast Restrain: -

  MAC Learning            : Enabled

  MAC Table Limit         : -

  Drop Unknown            : -

  Flooding                : Enabled

  Statistics              : Enabled

  Input statistics:

    Octets   : 0

    Packets  : 0

    Errors   : 0

    Discards : 0

  Output statistics:

    Octets   : 0

    Packets  : 0

    Errors   : 0

    Discards : 0

  Gateway Interface       : VSI-interface 100

  NVGRE VSID              : 4096

 

VSI Name: 1

  VSI Index               : 1

  VSI State               : Down

  MTU                     : 1500

  Bandwidth               : -

  Broadcast Restrain      : -

  Multicast Restrain      : -

  Unknown Unicast Restrain: -

  MAC Learning            : Enabled

  MAC Table Limit         : -

  Drop Unknown            : -

  Flooding                : Enabled

  Statistics              : Enabled

  Input Statistics:

    Octets   : 0

    Packets  : 0

    Errors   : 0

    Drops : 0

  Output Statistics:

    Octets   : 0

    Packets  : 0

    Errors   : 0

    Discards : 0

  Gateway Interface       : VSI-interface 101

  NVGRE VSID              : 4097

  Tunnels:

    Tunnel Name          Link ID    State  Type

    Tunnel1              0x7000001  Up     Manual

    Tunnel2              0x7000002  Up     Manual

  ACs:

    AC                               Link ID    State

    GE1/0                            0          Down

Table 8 Command output

Field

Description

VSI Description

Description of the VSI. If the VSI does not have a description, the command does not display this field.

VSI State

VSI state:

·     Up—The VSI is up.

·     Down—The VSI is down.

·     Administratively down—The VSI has been manually shut down by using the shutdown command.

MTU

MTU on the VSI.

Bandwidth

Maximum bandwidth (in kbps) for known unicast traffic on the VSI.

Broadcast Restrain

Broadcast restraint bandwidth (in kbps).

Multicast Restrain

Multicast restraint bandwidth (in kbps).

Unknown Unicast Restrain

Unknown unicast restraint bandwidth (in kbps).

MAC Learning

State of the MAC learning feature:

·     Enabled.

·     Disabled.

MAC Table Limit

Maximum number of MAC address entries on the VSI. Unlimited indicates that the number of MAC address entries is not limited.

Drop Unknown

Action on source MAC-unknown frames received after the maximum number of MAC entries is reached.

·     Enabled—Drops these packets.

·     Disabled—Forwards these packets.

Flooding

State of the VSI's flooding feature:

·     Enabled—Flooding is enabled on the VSI. The NVE floods unknown unicast frames to both local and remote sites.

·     Disabled—Flooding is disabled on the VSI. The NVE floods unknown unicast frames only to local sites.

Statistics

Packet statistics state:

·     Enabled—Packet statistics is enabled for the VSI.

·     Disabled—Packet statistics is disabled for the VSI.

Input statistics

Incoming traffic statistics:

·     Octets—Number of incoming bytes.

·     Packets—Number of incoming packets.

·     Errors—Number of error packets.

·     Discards—Number of discarded packets.

Output statistics

Outgoing traffic statistics:

·     Octets—Number of outgoing bytes.

·     Packets—Number of outgoing packets.

·     Errors—Number of error packets.

·     Discards—Number of discarded packets.

Gateway Interface

VSI interface name.

Link ID

The tunnel's link ID on the VSI.

State

Tunnel state:

·     Up.

·     Down.

Type

Tunnel assignment method. Manual indicates that the tunnel was manually assigned to the NVGRE network.

ACs

ACs that are bound to the VSI.

Link ID

AC's link ID on the VSI.

State

AC state:

·     Up.

·     Down.

 

display nvgre tunnel

Use display nvgre tunnel to display NVGRE tunnel information for NVGRE networks.

Syntax

display nvgre tunnel [ vsid vsid ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

vsid vsid: Specifies a VSID in the range of 4096 to 16777214. If you do not specify a VSID, this command displays NVGRE tunnel information for all NVGRE networks.

Examples

# Display NVGRE tunnel information for all NVGRE networks.

<Sysname> display nvgre tunnel

Total number of NVGREs: 2

 

NVGRE VSID: 4096; VSI name: 1

 

NVGRE VSID: 4097; VSI name: 2; Total tunnels: 2 (1 up, 1 down)

Tunnel name          Link ID    State  Type

Tunnel1              0x7000001  Up     Manual

Tunnel3              0x7000002  Down   Manual

Table 9 Command output

Field

Description

Link ID

Tunnel's link ID in the NVGRE network.

State

Tunnel state:

·     Up.

·     Down.

Type

Tunnel assignment method. Manual indicates that the tunnel was manually assigned to the NVGRE network.

 

Related commands

nvgre

tunnel

flooding disable

Use flooding disable to disable flooding for a VSI.

Use undo flooding disable to enable flooding for a VSI.

Syntax

flooding disable

undo flooding disable

Default

Flooding is enabled for a VSI.

Views

VSI view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

By default, the device floods unknown unicast frames received from the local site to the following interfaces in the frame's NVGRE network:

·     All site-facing interfaces except for the incoming interface.

·     All NVGRE tunnel interfaces.

To confine unknown unicast traffic to the site-facing interfaces, use this command to disable flooding for the VSI bound to the NVGRE network. The VSI will not flood unknown unicast frames to NVGRE tunnel interfaces.

Examples

# Disable flooding for the VSI vsi1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] vsi vsi1

[Sysname-vsi-vsi1] flooding disable

gateway vsi-interface

Use gateway vsi-interface to specify a gateway interface for a VSI.

Use undo gateway vsi-interface to restore the default.

Syntax

gateway vsi-interface vsi-interface-id

undo gateway vsi-interface

Default

No gateway interface is specified for a VSI.

Views

VSI view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

vsi-interface-id: Specifies a VSI interface by its number. The value range for this argument is 0 to 8191.

Usage guidelines

A VSI can have only one gateway interface. Multiple VSIs can share a gateway interface.

Examples

# Specify VSI-interface 100 as the gateway interface for the VSI vpna.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] vsi vpna

[Sysname-vsi-vpna] gateway vsi-interface 100

Related commands

interface vsi-interface

interface vsi-interface

Use interface vsi-interface to create a VSI interface and enter its view, or enter the view of an existing VSI interface.

Use undo interface vsi-interface to delete a VSI interface.

Syntax

interface vsi-interface vsi-interface-id

undo interface vsi-interface vsi-interface-id

Default

No VSI interfaces exist.

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

vsi-interface-id: Specifies a VSI interface number. The value range for this argument is 0 to 8191.

Examples

# Create VSI-interface 100 and enter VSI interface view.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vsi-interface 100

[Sysname-Vsi-interface100]

Related commands

gateway vsi-interface

l2vpn enable

Use l2vpn enable to enable L2VPN.

Use undo l2vpn enable to disable L2VPN.

Syntax

l2vpn enable

undo l2vpn enable

Default

L2VPN is disabled.

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

You must enable L2VPN before you can configure L2VPN settings.

Examples

# Enable L2VPN.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] l2vpn enable

l2vpn rewrite inbound tag

Use l2vpn rewrite inbound tag to configure the VLAN tag processing rule for incoming traffic.

Use undo l2vpn rewrite inbound to restore the default.

Syntax

l2vpn rewrite inbound tag { nest { c-vid vlan-id | s-vid vlan-id [ c-vid vlan-id ] } | remark 1-to-2 s-vid vlan-id c-vid vlan-id } [ symmetric ]

undo l2vpn rewrite inbound

Default

VLAN tags of incoming traffic are not processed.

Views

Layer 3 aggregate interface view

Layer 3 Ethernet interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

nest: Adds VLAN tags.

c-vid: Specifies an inner VLAN tag.

s-vid: Specifies an outer VLAN tag.

vlan-id: Specifies a VLAN ID in the range of 1 to 4094.

remark: Maps VLAN tags.

1-to-2: Performs one-to-two mapping to replace the VLAN tag of single tagged packets with the specified outer and inner VLAN tags.

symmetric: Applies the reverse VLAN tag processing rule to outgoing traffic. If you do not specify this keyword, VLAN tags of outgoing traffic are not processed.

Usage guidelines

To modify the VLAN tag processing rule for incoming traffic, first execute the undo l2vpn rewrite inbound command to remove the existing rule, and then execute the l2vpn rewrite inbound command.

When you use this command, follow these restrictions:

·     The l2vpn rewrite inbound tag nest s-vid vlan-id c-vid vlan-id command takes effect only on untagged packets.

·     The l2vpn rewrite inbound tag remark 1-to-2 command takes effect only on single tagged packets.

Examples

# Configure Layer 3 Ethernet interface GigabitEthernet 1/0 to add outer VLAN tag 100 to incoming frames and remove outer VLAN tag 100 from outgoing frames.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface gigabitethernet 1/0

[Sysname-GigabitEthernet1/0] l2vpn rewrite inbound tag nest s-vid 100 symmetric

mac-address

Use mac-address to assign a MAC address to a VSI interface.

Use undo mac-address to restore the default.

Syntax

mac-address mac-address

undo mac-address

Default

VSI interfaces use the MAC address of the virtual NIC.

Views

VSI interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

mac-address: Specifies a MAC address in H-H-H format.

Examples

# Assign the MAC address 0001-0001-0001 to VSI-interface 100.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vsi-interface 100

[Sysname-Vsi-interface100] mac-address 1-1-1

mac-address static

Use mac-address static to add a static remote-MAC address entry for an NVGRE VSI.

Use undo mac-address static to remove static remote-MAC address entries for an NVGRE VSI.

Syntax

mac-address static mac-address interface tunnel tunnel-number vsi vsi-name

undo mac-address static [ mac-address ] [ interface tunnel tunnel-number ] vsi vsi-name

Default

NVGRE VSIs do not have static remote-MAC address entries.

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

mac-address: Specifies a remote MAC address in H-H-H format. Do not specify a multicast MAC address or an all-zeros MAC address. You can omit the consecutive zeros at the beginning of each segment. For example, you can enter f-e2-1 for 000f-00e2-0001.

interface tunnel tunnel-number: Specifies the NVGRE tunnel interface for the remote MAC address. The tunnel-number argument represents the tunnel interface number. The value for this argument can be 0, 1, 2, 10, or 20. The tunnel interface must already exist.

vsi vsi-name: Specifies the VSI name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters.

Usage guidelines

A remote MAC address is the MAC address of a VM in a remote site.

Remote MAC entries include the following types:

·     Static—Manually added MAC entries.

·     Dynamic—MAC entries learned in the data plane from incoming traffic on NVGRE tunnels.

For a remote address, the manual static entry has higher priority than the dynamic entry.

Examples

# Add the MAC address 000f-e201-0101 to the VSI vsi1. Specify Tunnel 1 as the outgoing interface.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] mac-address static 000f-e201-0101 interface tunnel 1 vsi vsi1

mtu

Use mtu to set the MTU for a VSI interface.

Use undo mtu to restore the default.

Syntax

mtu size

undo mtu

Default

The MTU of a VSI interface is 1500 bytes.

Views

VSI interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

size: Specifies an MTU value. The value range for this argument is 46 to 9216.

Examples

# Set the MTU to 1430 bytes for VSI-interface 100.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vsi-interface 100

[Sysname-Vsi-interface100] mtu 1430

nvgre

Use nvgre to create an NVGRE network and enter its view, or enter the view of an existing NVGRE network.

Use undo nvgre to restore the default.

Syntax

nvgre nvgre-vsid

undo nvgre

Default

No NVGRE networks exist.

Views

VSI view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

nvgre-vsid: Specifies a VSID in the range of 4096 to 16777214.

Usage guidelines

You can create only one NVGRE network for a VSI. The VSID for each VSI must be unique.

Examples

# Create NVGRE network 10000 for the VSI vpna and enter NVGRE network view.

<Sysname> system

[Sysname] vsi vpna

[Sysname-vsi-vpna] nvgre 10000

[Sysname-vsi-vpna-nvgre-10000]

Related commands

vsi

reset arp suppression vsi

Use reset arp suppression vsi to clear ARP flood suppression entries on VSIs.

Syntax

reset arp suppression vsi [ name vsi-name ]

Views

User view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

name vsi-name: Specifies a VSI by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters. If you do not specify a VSI, this command clears ARP flood suppression entries on all VSIs.

Examples

# Clear ARP flood suppression entries on all VSIs.

<Sysname> reset arp suppression vsi

This command will delete all entries. Continue? [Y/N]:y

Related commands

arp suppression enable

display arp suppression vsi

reset counters interface vsi-interface

Use reset counters interface vsi-interface to clear packet statistics on VSI interfaces.

Syntax

reset counters interface [ vsi-interface [ vsi-interface-id ] ]

Views

User view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

vsi-interface [ vsi-interface-id ]: Specifies VSI interfaces. If you specify a VSI interface, this command clears packet statistics on the specified interface. Make sure the specified VSI interface has been created on the device. If you specify only the vsi-interface keyword, this command clears packet statistics on all VSI interfaces. If you do not specify the vsi-interface [ vsi-interface-id ] option, this command clears packet statistics on all interfaces except for VA interfaces.

Usage guidelines

Use this command to clear history statistics before you collect traffic statistics for a time period.

Examples

# Clear packet statistics on VSI-interface 100.

<Sysname> reset counters interface vsi-interface 100

Related commands

display interface vsi-interface

reset l2vpn mac-address

Use reset l2vpn mac-address to clear dynamic MAC address entries on VSIs.

Syntax

reset l2vpn mac-address [ vsi vsi-name ]

Views

User view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

vsi vsi-name: Specifies a VSI by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters. If you do not specify a VSI, this command clears all dynamic MAC address entries on all VSIs.

Usage guidelines

Use this command when the number of dynamic MAC address entries reaches the limit or the device learns incorrect MAC addresses.

Examples

# Clear the dynamic MAC address entries on the VSI vpn1.

<Sysname> reset l2vpn mac-address vsi vpn1

Related commands

display l2vpn mac-address vsi

reset l2vpn statistics vsi

Use reset l2vpn statistics vsi to clear packet statistics on VSIs.

Syntax

reset l2vpn statistics vsi [ name vsi-name ]

Views

User view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

name vsi-name: Specifies a VSI by its name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters. If you do not specify a VSI, this command clears packet statistics on all VSIs.

Examples

# Clear packet statistics on all VSIs.

<Sysname> reset l2vpn statistics vsi

Related commands

statistics enable

selective-flooding mac-address

Use selective-flooding mac-address to enable selective flood for a MAC address.

Use undo selective-flooding mac-address to disable selective flood for a MAC address.

Syntax

selective-flooding mac-address mac-address

undo selective-flooding mac-address mac-address

Default

Selective flood is disabled for all MAC addresses.

Views

VSI view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

mac-address: Specifies a MAC address. The MAC address cannot be all Fs.

Usage guidelines

This command excludes a remote MAC address from the flood suppression done by using the flooding disable command. The NVE will flood the frames destined for the specified MAC address to remote sites when unknown-unicast floods are confined to the local site.

Examples

# Enable selective flood for 000f-e201-0101 on the VSI vsi1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] vsi vsi1

[Sysname-vsi-vsi1] selective-flooding mac-address 000f-e201-0101

Related commands

flooding disable

shutdown (VSI interface view)

Use shutdown to shut down a VSI interface.

Use undo shutdown to bring up a VSI interface.

Syntax

shutdown

undo shutdown

Default

A VSI interface is up.

Views

VSI interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Examples

# Shut down VSI-interface 100.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vsi-interface 100

[Sysname-Vsi-interface100] shutdown

shutdown (VSI view)

Use shutdown to shut down a VSI.

Use undo shutdown to bring up a VSI.

Syntax

shutdown

undo shutdown

Default

VSIs are up.

Views

VSI view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

Use this command to temporarily disable a VSI to provide Layer 2 switching services. The shutdown action does not change settings on the VSI. You can continue to configure the VSI. After you bring up the VSI again, the VSI provides services based on the latest settings.

Examples

# Shut down the VSI vpn1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] vsi vpn1

[Sysname-vsi-vpn1] shutdown

Related commands

display l2vpn vsi

statistics enable

Use statistics enable to enable packet statistics for a VSI.

Use undo statistics enable to disable packet statistics for a VSI.

Syntax

statistics enable

undo statistics enable

Default

Packet statistics is disabled for a VSI.

Views

VSI view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Examples

# Enable packet statistics for the VSI vpls1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] vsi vpls1

[Sysname-vsi-vpls1] statistics enable

Related commands

reset l2vpn statistics vsi

tunnel

Use tunnel to assign an NVGRE tunnel to an NVGRE network.

Use undo tunnel to remove an NVGRE tunnel from an NVGRE network.

Syntax

tunnel tunnel-number

undo tunnel tunnel-number

Default

An NVGRE network does not contain NVGRE tunnels.

Views

NVGRE network view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

tunnel-number: Specifies a tunnel number. The value range for this argument is 0 to 65534. The specified tunnel must be an NVGRE tunnel.

Usage guidelines

This command assigns an NVGRE tunnel to an NVGRE network to provide Layer 2 connectivity for the NVGRE network between two sites.

You can assign multiple NVGRE tunnels to an NVGRE network, and configure a NVGRE tunnel to trunk multiple NVGRE networks.

Examples

# Assign NVGRE tunnels 0 and 1 to NVGRE network 10000.

<Sysname> system

[Sysname] vsi vpna

[Sysname-vsi-vpna] nvgre 10000

[Sysname-vsi-vpna-nvgre-10000] tunnel 0

[Sysname-vsi-vpna-nvgre-10000] tunnel 1

Related commands

display nvgre tunnel

vsi

Use vsi to create a VSI and enter its view, or enter the view of an existing VSI.

Use undo vsi to delete a VSI.

Syntax

vsi vsi-name

undo vsi vsi-name

Default

No VSIs exist.

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

vsi-name: Specifies a VSI name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters.

Usage guidelines

A VSI acts as a virtual switch to provide Layer 2 switching services for an NVGRE network on an NVE. A VSI has all functions of a physical Ethernet switch, including source MAC address learning, MAC address aging, and flooding.

A VSI can provide services only for one NVGRE network.

Examples

# Create the VSI nvgre5000 and enter VSI view.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] vsi nvgre5000

[Sysname-vsi-nvgre5000]

Related commands

display l2vpn vsi

xconnect vsi

Use xconnect vsi to map an AC to a VSI.

Use undo xconnect vsi to restore the default.

Syntax

xconnect vsi vsi-name [ access-mode { ethernet | vlan } ] [ track track-entry-number&<1-3> ]

undo xconnect vsi

Default

An AC is not mapped to any VSI.

Views

Ethernet service instance view

Interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

vsi-name: Specifies the VSI name, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 31 characters.

track track-entry-number&<1-3>: Specifies a space-separated list of up to three track entry numbers in the range of 1 to 1024. The AC is up only if a minimum of one associated track entry is in positive state.

Usage guidelines

To monitor the link status of an AC, associate it with track entries.

To configure this command for an Ethernet service instance, you must first use the encapsulation command to add a traffic match criterion to the service instance.

For traffic that matches the Ethernet service instance or Layer 3 interface, the system uses the VSI's MAC address table to make a forwarding decision.

The access mode determines how an NVE processes the 802.1Q VLAN tags in the inner Ethernet frames assigned to the VSI.

·     VLAN access mode—Ethernet frames received from or sent to the local site must contain 802.1Q VLAN tags.

¡     For an Ethernet frame received from the local site, the NVE removes all its 802.1Q VLAN tags before forwarding the frame.

¡     For an Ethernet frame destined for the local site, the NVE adds 802.1Q VLAN tags to the frame before forwarding the frame.

In VLAN access mode, NVGRE packets sent between NVGRE network sites do not contain 802.1Q VLAN tags. NVGRE can provide Layer 2 connectivity for different 802.1Q VLANs between sites. You can use different 802.1Q VLANs to provide the same service in different sites.

·     Ethernet access mode—The NVE does not process the 802.1Q VLAN tags of Ethernet frames received from or sent to the local site.

¡     For an Ethernet frame received from the local site, the NVE forwards the frame with the 802.1Q VLAN tags intact.

¡     For an Ethernet frame destined for the local site, the NVE forwards the frame without adding 802.1Q VLAN tags.

In Ethernet access mode, NVGRE packets sent between NVGRE network sites contain 802.1Q VLAN tags. NVGRE cannot provide Layer 2 connectivity for different 802.1Q VLANs between sites. You must use the same 802.1Q VLAN to provide the same service between sites.

Examples

# Map GigabitEthernet 1/0 to VSI vpn1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] vsi vpn1

[Sysname-vsi-vpn1] quit

[Sysname] interface gigabitethernet 1/0

[Sysname-GigabitEthernet1/0] xconnect vsi vpn1

Related commands

display l2vpn interface

display l2vpn service-instance

encapsulation

vsi

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