Juniper Routing Manual
Juniper Routing Manual
Juniper Routing Manual
Release 9.3
www.juniper.net
Part Number: 53002720001 , Revision 2
This product includes the Envoy SNMP Engine, developed by Epilogue Technology, an Integrated Systems Company. Copyright 1986-1997, Epilogue Technology Corporation. All rights reserved. This program and its documentation were developed at private expense, and no part of them is in the public domain. This product includes memory allocation software developed by Mark Moraes, copyright 1988, 1989, 1993, University of Toronto. This product includes FreeBSD software developed by the University of California, Berkeley, and its contributors. All of the documentation and software included in the 4.4BSD and 4.4BSD-Lite Releases is copyrighted by the Regents of the University of California. Copyright 1979, 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994. The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. GateD software copyright 1995, the Regents of the University. All rights reserved. Gate Daemon was originated and developed through release 3.0 by Cornell University and its collaborators. Gated is based on Kirtons EGP, UC Berkeleys routing daemon (routed), and DCNs HELLO routing protocol. Development of Gated has been supported in part by the National Science Foundation. Portions of the GateD software copyright 1988, Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Portions of the GateD software copyright 1991, D. L. S. Associates. This product includes software developed by Maker Communications, Inc., copyright 1996, 1997, Maker Communications, Inc. Juniper Networks, the Juniper Networks logo, JUNOS, NetScreen, ScreenOS, and Steel-Belted Radius are registered trademarks of Juniper Networks, Inc. in the United States and other countries. JUNOSe is a trademark of Juniper Networks, Inc. All other trademarks, service marks, registered trademarks, or registered service marks are the property of their respective owners. Juniper Networks assumes no responsibility for any inaccuracies in this document. Juniper Networks reserves the right to change, modify, transfer, or otherwise revise this publication without notice. Products made or sold by Juniper Networks or components thereof might be covered by one or more of the following patents that are owned by or licensed to Juniper Networks: U.S. Patent Nos. 5,473,599, 5,905,725, 5,909,440, 6,192,051, 6,333,650, 6,359,479, 6,406,312, 6,429,706, 6,459,579, 6,493,347, 6,538,518, 6,538,899, 6,552,918, 6,567,902, 6,578,186, and 6,590,785. JUNOS Software Routing Protocols Configuration Guide, Release 9.3 Copyright 2008, Juniper Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Printed in USA. Writing: Ines Salazar, Roy Spencer Editing: Nancy Kurahashi Illustration: Faith Bradford, Nathaniel Woodward Cover Design: Edmonds Design Revision History 10 November 2010Revision 2 The information in this document is current as of the date listed in the revision history. YEAR 2000 NOTICE Juniper Networks hardware and software products are Year 2000 compliant. The JUNOS software has no known time-related limitations through the year 2038. However, the NTP application is known to have some difficulty in the year 2036.
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Part 1
Chapter 1 Chapter 2
Overview
Routing Protocols Concepts Complete Routing and Routing Protocol Configuration Statements 3 15
Part 2
Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7
Part 3
Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10
Routing Instances
Routing Instances Overview Routing Instances Configuration Guidelines Summary of Routing Instances Configuration Statements 205 207 253
Part 4
Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13
Multitopology Routing
Multitopology Routing Overview Configuring Multitopology Routing Summary of Multitopology Routing Configuration Statements 265 269 281
Part 5
Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Chapter 20 Chapter 21
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Chapter 22 Chapter 23 Chapter 24 Chapter 25 Chapter 26 Chapter 27 Chapter 28 Chapter 29 Chapter 30 Chapter 31 Chapter 32 Chapter 33 Chapter 34 Chapter 35 Chapter 36
Summary of OSPF Configuration Statements RIP Overview RIP Configuration Guidelines Summary of RIP Configuration Statements RIPng Overview RIPng Configuration Guidelines Summary of RIPng Configuration Statements ICMP Router Discovery Overview ICMP Router Discovery Configuration Guidelines Summary of ICMP Router Discovery Configuration Statements Neighbor Discovery Overview Neighbor Discovery Configuration Guidelines Summary of Neighbor Discovery Router Advertisement Configuration Statements Secure Neighbor Discovery Configuration Guidelines Summary of Secure Neighbor Discovery Configuration Statements
453 519 521 535 557 559 567 583 585 589 599 601 609 621 625
Part 6
Chapter 37 Chapter 38 Chapter 39
BGP
BGP Overview BGP Configuration Guidelines Summary of BGP Configuration Statements 635 641 709
Part 7
Indexes
Index Index of Statements and Commands 779 799
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About This Guide xxxv Objectives ..................................................................................................xxxv Audience ...................................................................................................xxxv Supported Routing Platforms ....................................................................xxxvi Using the Indexes .....................................................................................xxxvi Using the Examples in This Manual ..........................................................xxxvi Merging a Full Example .....................................................................xxxvii Merging a Snippet .............................................................................xxxvii Documentation Conventions ...................................................................xxxviii List of Technical Publications ..........................................................................xl Documentation Feedback ...........................................................................xlvii Requesting Technical Support .....................................................................xlvii
Part 1
Chapter 1
Overview
Routing Protocols Concepts 3
Routing Databases ...........................................................................................3 Routing Protocol Databases ......................................................................4 JUNOS Routing Tables ...............................................................................4 Forwarding Tables ....................................................................................5 How the Routing and Forwarding Tables Are Synchronized ......................5 Configuring Interfaces .....................................................................................6 Route Preferences ...........................................................................................6 Alternate and Tiebreaker Preferences .......................................................6 How the Active Route Is Determined ........................................................7 Multiple Active Routes ..............................................................................8 Default Route Preference Values ...............................................................8 Equal-Cost Paths and Load Sharing ...............................................................10 IPv6 ...............................................................................................................10 IPv6 Standards ........................................................................................11 IPv6 Packet Headers ...............................................................................11 Header Structure ..............................................................................12 Extension Headers ...........................................................................12 IPv6 Addressing ......................................................................................12 Address Representation ....................................................................13 Address Types ..................................................................................13 Address Scope ..................................................................................13 Address Structure .............................................................................14
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Chapter 2
15
[edit logical-systems] Hierarchy Level ...........................................................15 [edit protocols] Hierarchy Level .....................................................................16 [edit routing-instances] Hierarchy Level ........................................................30 [edit routing-options] Hierarchy Level ...........................................................35
Part 2
Chapter 3
Protocol-Independent Routing Properties Configuration Statements .............43 Minimum Protocol-Independent Routing Properties Configuration ................47 Chapter 4 Configuring Routing Tables and Routes 49
Creating Routing Tables ................................................................................49 Example: Creating Routing Tables ..........................................................51 Configuring Static Routes ..............................................................................51 Specifying the Destination of the Static Route .........................................54 Specifying the Next Hop of the Static Route ............................................54 Specifying an Independent Preference for a Static Route ........................55 Example: Configuring Independent Preferences for an IPv4 Static Route .........................................................................................56 Example: Configuring Independent Preferences for an IPv6 Static Route .........................................................................................57 Example: Configuring Independent Preferences for an Unnumbered Ethernet Interface ......................................................................58 Specifying an LSP as the Next Hop for a Static Route ..............................59 Installing a Static Route into More than One Routing Table ....................60 Examples: Installing a Static Route into More than One Routing Table ..........................................................................................60 Configuring a Connectionless Network Services Static Route ..................60 Example: Configuring a Static CLNS Route .......................................61 Specifying Static Route Options ..............................................................62 Specifying the Route Metric ..............................................................64 Specifying the Route Preference .......................................................65 Specifying Community Information .................................................65 Specifying the AS Path .....................................................................66 Specifying the OSPF Tag ..................................................................67 Specifying Whether a Route Is Installed in the Forwarding Table .....67 Specifying Whether the Route Is Permanently Installed in the Forwarding Table .......................................................................68 Specifying Whether Inactive Routes Are Removed from the Routing or Forwarding Table ...................................................................69 Specifying When the Route Can Be Readvertised .............................70
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Specifying When the Route Can Be Resolved to a Prefix That Is Not Directly Connected ....................................................................70 Configuring Bidirectional Forwarding Detection ...............................71 Configuring a Default Route ....................................................................75 Propagating Static Routes into Routing Protocols ....................................75 Examples: Configuring Static Routes .......................................................76 Configuring Aggregate Routes .......................................................................78 Specifying the Destination of the Aggregate Route ..................................79 Specifying Aggregate Route Options .......................................................80 Specifying the Route Metric ..............................................................81 Specifying the Route Preference .......................................................81 Specifying a Next Hop for a Route ....................................................81 Specifying Community Information .................................................82 Specifying the AS Path .....................................................................83 Specifying Which AS Numbers to Include in the Aggregate Route .........................................................................................84 Specifying the OSPF Tag ..................................................................84 Specifying Whether Inactive Routes Are Removed from the Routing or Forwarding Table ...................................................................84 Specifying Policy with Aggregate Routes .................................................85 Advertising Aggregate Routes .................................................................86 Configuring Generated Routes .......................................................................86 Specifying the Destination of a Generated Route ....................................88 Specifying Generated Route Options .......................................................88 Specifying the Route Metric ..............................................................89 Specifying the Route Preference .......................................................89 Specifying a Next Hop for a Route ....................................................89 Specifying Community Information .................................................90 Specifying the AS Path .....................................................................91 Specifying the OSPF Tag ..................................................................91 Specifying Which AS Numbers to Include in the Generated Route .........................................................................................92 Specifying Whether Inactive Routes Are Removed from the Routing or Forwarding Table ...................................................................92 Specifying Policy with Generated Routes ................................................92 Configuring Martian Addresses ......................................................................93 Adding Martian Addresses ......................................................................94 Deleting Martian Addresses ....................................................................95 Configuring a Flow Route ..............................................................................95 Configuring the Match Condition ............................................................96 Configuring the Action ............................................................................98 Validating Flow Routes ...........................................................................98 Applying a Filter to a Forwarding Table .........................................................99 Chapter 5 Configuring Other Protocol-Independent Routing Properties 101
Configuring the AS Number .........................................................................102 Configuring the Router Identifier .................................................................103 Configuring AS Confederation Members ......................................................103 Configuring Route Recording for Flow Aggregation .....................................104
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Creating Routing Table Groups ....................................................................104 Examples: Creating Routing Table Groups ............................................105 Configuring How Interface Routes Are Imported into Routing Tables ..........106 Configuring Multicast Scoping .....................................................................107 Example: Configuring Multicast Scoping ...............................................107 Enabling Multicast on an Interface ..............................................................108 Configuring Additional Source-Specific Multicast Groups .............................108 Configuring Multicast Forwarding Cache Limits ...........................................109 Configuring Per-Packet Load Balancing .......................................................109 Examples: Configuring Per-Packet Load Balancing ................................111 Configuring Unicast Reverse-Path-Forwarding Check ..................................112 Example: Configuring Unicast RPF .......................................................113 Configuring Graceful Restart ........................................................................113 Configuring a Route Distinguisher ...............................................................114 Configuring a Dynamic Tunnel ....................................................................114 Configuring Logging for the Routing Protocol Process .................................116 Examples: Configuring Logging for the Routing Protocol Process ..........116 Configuring Route Resolution ......................................................................116 Enabling an Indirect Next Hop ....................................................................117 Enabling Nonstop Routing ...........................................................................118 Tracing Global Routing Protocol Operations ................................................119 Examples: Tracing Global Routing Protocol Operations ........................120 Enabling Distributed Periodic Packet Management .....................................121 Enabling Source Routing .............................................................................122 Configuring a Timer to Delay Multiple Exit Discriminator IGP Updates ........122 Chapter 6 Logical System Overview 125
Overview .....................................................................................................125 Logical Systems and Virtual Routers .....................................................127 Logical System Configuration Statements ....................................................127 Minimum Logical System Configuration ......................................................127 Logical System Configuration Guidelines .....................................................129 Configuring a Logical System ......................................................................129 Logical System Configuration Statement .....................................................130 logical-systems ............................................................................................130 Chapter 7 Summary of Protocol-Independent Routing Properties Configuration Statements 131 active ..........................................................................................................132 aggregate ....................................................................................................133 as-path ........................................................................................................135 auto-export ..................................................................................................137 autonomous-system ....................................................................................138 bfd-liveness-detection ..................................................................................140 brief ............................................................................................................143 color ............................................................................................................143 community ..................................................................................................144 confederation ..............................................................................................145
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destination-networks ...................................................................................146 disable .........................................................................................................146 discard ........................................................................................................147 dynamic-tunnels ..........................................................................................148 export .........................................................................................................148 export-rib ....................................................................................................149 fate-sharing .................................................................................................150 filter ............................................................................................................151 flow .............................................................................................................152 forwarding-cache .........................................................................................153 forwarding-table ..........................................................................................153 full ...............................................................................................................153 generate ......................................................................................................154 graceful-restart ............................................................................................155 import .........................................................................................................156 import-policy ...............................................................................................156 import-rib ....................................................................................................157 independent-domain ...................................................................................157 indirect-next-hop .........................................................................................158 input ...........................................................................................................158 install ..........................................................................................................159 instance-export ...........................................................................................160 instance-import ...........................................................................................160 interface ......................................................................................................161 interface (Multicast via Static Routes) ....................................................161 interface (Multicast Scoping) .................................................................162 interface-routes ...........................................................................................163 lsp-next-hop ................................................................................................164 martians ......................................................................................................165 maximum-paths ..........................................................................................166 maximum-prefixes ......................................................................................167 med-igp-update-interval ..............................................................................168 metric .........................................................................................................169 metric (Aggregate, Generated, or Static Route) .....................................169 metric (Qualified Next Hop on Static Route) .........................................170 multicast .....................................................................................................171 no-install .....................................................................................................171 no-readvertise .............................................................................................172 no-retain .....................................................................................................172 nonstop-routing ...........................................................................................172 options ........................................................................................................173 p2mp-lsp-next-hop ......................................................................................174 passive ........................................................................................................174 policy ..........................................................................................................175 ppm ............................................................................................................176 preference ...................................................................................................177 prefix ..........................................................................................................178 qualified-next-hop .......................................................................................179 readvertise ..................................................................................................180 resolution ....................................................................................................181 resolution-ribs .............................................................................................181
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resolve ........................................................................................................182 restart-duration ...........................................................................................183 retain ..........................................................................................................184 rib ...............................................................................................................185 rib (General) ..........................................................................................186 rib (Route Resolution) ...........................................................................187 rib-group .....................................................................................................188 rib-groups ....................................................................................................189 route-distinguisher-id ...................................................................................190 route-record ................................................................................................190 router-id ......................................................................................................191 routing-options ............................................................................................191 scope ...........................................................................................................192 source-address ............................................................................................193 source-routing .............................................................................................193 ssm-groups ..................................................................................................194 static ...........................................................................................................195 tag ...............................................................................................................198 threshold .....................................................................................................199 traceoptions ................................................................................................200 tunnel-type ..................................................................................................202 unicast-reverse-path ....................................................................................202
Part 3
Chapter 8 Chapter 9
Routing Instances
Routing Instances Overview Routing Instances Configuration Guidelines 205 207
Configuring Routing Instances .....................................................................209 Routing Instances Minimum Configuration .................................................213 BGP .......................................................................................................214 IS-IS ......................................................................................................214 Layer 2 VPN ..........................................................................................215 LDP .......................................................................................................215 MSDP ....................................................................................................216 Multiprotocol BGP-Based Multicast VPNs ...............................................216 OSPF .....................................................................................................217 OSPFv3 .................................................................................................217 PIM .......................................................................................................218 RIP ........................................................................................................218 VPLS .....................................................................................................219 Configuring Multiple Instances of BGP .........................................................219 Example: Configuring Multiple Instances of BGP ...................................220 Configuring Multiple Instances of IS-IS ........................................................220 Example: Configuring Multiple Routing Instances of IS-IS .....................221 Configuring Multiple Instances of LDP .........................................................225 Configuring Multiple Instances of MSDP ......................................................226
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Configuring Multiple Instances of OSPF .......................................................226 Example: Configuring Multiple Routing Instances of OSPF ....................227 Configuring Multiple Instances of PIM .........................................................229 Configuring Multiple Instances of RIP ..........................................................230 Configuring an Instance ..............................................................................231 Configuring VPNs ........................................................................................232 Configuring a Virtual Switch ........................................................................232 Configuring an Instance Type ......................................................................233 Configuring a VRF Routing Instance ......................................................234 Configuring a Non-VPN VRF Routing Instance ......................................235 Configuring a VPLS Routing Instance ....................................................236 Configuring a Route Distinguisher ...............................................................236 Configuring Filter-Based Forwarding ...........................................................237 Configuring Class-of-Service-Based Forwarding ...........................................239 Configuring Secondary VRF Import and Export Policy ................................240 Configuring Policy-Based Export for Routing Instances ...............................241 Example: Configuring Policy-Based Export for an Overlapping VPN .....241 Example: Configuring Policy-Based Export for a Nonforwarding Instance .........................................................................................243 Configuring a VRF Table Label ....................................................................245 Configuring a VRF Target ............................................................................245 Configuring an OSPF Domain ID .................................................................246 Examples: Configuring an OSPF Domain ID .........................................249 Configuring Route Limits for Routing Tables ...............................................251 Configuring an Independent AS Domain .....................................................251 Chapter 10 Summary of Routing Instances Configuration Statements 253
description ..................................................................................................253 forwarding-options ......................................................................................253 instance-type ...............................................................................................254 interface ......................................................................................................255 no-vrf-advertise ...........................................................................................255 protocols .....................................................................................................256 route-distinguisher ......................................................................................259 routing-instances .........................................................................................260 routing-options ............................................................................................260 vrf-export ....................................................................................................261 vrf-import ....................................................................................................261 vrf-table-label ..............................................................................................262 vrf-target .....................................................................................................262
Part 4
Chapter 11
Multitopology Routing
Multitopology Routing Overview 265
Routing Table Naming Conventions for Multitopology Routing ....................265 Routing Protocol Support for Multitopology Routing ....................................266
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Filter-Based Forwarding Support .................................................................266 Multitopology Routing Standards .................................................................267 Chapter 12 Configuring Multitopology Routing 269
Configuring Topologies ................................................................................269 Configuring Multitopology Routing in OSPF .................................................270 Configuring Topologies and SPF Options for MT-OSPF .........................270 Configuring a Prefix Export Limit for MT-OSPF .....................................272 Configuring a Topology to Appear Overloaded ......................................272 Configuring Interface Properties for MT-OSPF ......................................272 Disabling MT-OSPF on an OSPF Interface .............................................273 Disabling MT-OSPF on a Virtual Link ....................................................273 Advertising MPLS Label-Switched Paths into MT-OSPF .........................274 Configuring Other MT-OSPF Properties .................................................275 Configuring Multitopology Routing in Static Routes .....................................276 Configuring Multitopology Routing in BGP ...................................................277 BGP Route Resolution in Multitopology Routing ..........................................277 Configuring Filter-Based Forwarding for Multitopology Routing ...................278 Chapter 13 Summary of Multitopology Routing Configuration Statements 281
community ..................................................................................................282 rib ...............................................................................................................283 topologies ....................................................................................................284 topology ......................................................................................................285 topology (Filter-Based Forwarding) .......................................................286 topology (Multitopology Routing) ..........................................................287 topology (OSPF) ....................................................................................288 topology (OSPF Interface) .....................................................................289 topology-id ..................................................................................................290
Part 5
Chapter 14
IS-IS Standards ............................................................................................293 IS-IS Terminology ........................................................................................294 ISO Network Addresses ...............................................................................295 IS-IS Packets ................................................................................................296 Persistent Route Reachability ......................................................................296 IS-IS Extensions to Support Traffic Engineering ...........................................296 Configuring IS-IS IGP Shortcuts .............................................................296 IS-IS Extensions to Support Route Tagging ..................................................297
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Chapter 15
299
Minimum IS-IS Configuration ......................................................................302 Configuring IS-IS Authentication ..................................................................303 Configuring Interface-Specific Properties .....................................................304 Enabling Checksum .....................................................................................305 Configuring the CSNP Interval .....................................................................306 Configuring Mesh Groups ............................................................................306 Modifying the Interface Metric ....................................................................306 Modifying the Maximum Number of Areas Advertised ................................307 Enabling Wide Metrics for Traffic Engineering ............................................307 Configuring Route Preferences ....................................................................308 Configuring a Prefix Export Limit ................................................................308 Configuring IS-IS Levels on an Interface ......................................................308 Disabling IS-IS on a Level ......................................................................309 Example: Disabling IS-IS on a Level ................................................310 Advertising Interface Addresses Without Running IS-IS ........................310 Configuring Authentication for Hello Packets ........................................310 Modifying the Hello Interval ..................................................................311 Modifying the Hold-Time Value .............................................................311 Modifying the IS-IS Metric .....................................................................312 Modifying the Traffic Engineering Metric ..............................................312 Configuring the Priority for Becoming the Designated Router ...............312 Configuring the Router to Advertise Without Running IS-IS ...................313 Modifying the LSP Interval ..........................................................................313 Configuring Label Distribution Protocol Synchronization .............................313 Modifying the LSP Lifetime ..........................................................................314 Advertising Label-Switched Paths into IS-IS .................................................314 Configuring the Router to Appear Overloaded .............................................315 Configuring SPF Options for IS-IS ................................................................316 Configuring Graceful Restart ........................................................................317 IS-IS and Multipoint Configurations .............................................................317 Configuring Point-to-Point Interfaces ...........................................................317 Configuring IS-IS Traffic Engineering Attributes ...........................................318 Configuring IS-IS to Use IGP Shortcuts ..................................................318 Configuring IS-IS to Ignore the Metric of RSVP Label-Switched Paths ....319 Disabling IS-IS Support for Traffic Engineering .....................................320 Installing IPv4 Routes into the Multicast Routing Table .........................320 Configuring the BFD Protocol ......................................................................320 Configuring Loose Authentication Check .....................................................323 Disabling Adjacency Hold-Down Timers ......................................................323 Configuring Hello Packet Padding ...............................................................323 Configuring Support for Connectionless Network Services ..........................324 Example: Configuring CLNS for IS-IS .....................................................325 Disabling IS-IS .............................................................................................326 Disabling IPv4 Routing ................................................................................327 Disabling IPv6 Routing ................................................................................327 Configuring IS-IS Routing Policy ..................................................................328 Examples: Configuring IS-IS Routing Policy ..........................................328 Configuring IS-IS Multicast Topologies .........................................................330 Example: Configuring IS-IS Multicast Topologies ...................................331
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Configuring IS-IS IPv6 Unicast Topologies ...................................................332 Installing a Default Route to the Nearest Level 1/Level 2 Router ..................333 Tracing IS-IS Protocol Traffic .......................................................................333 Examples: Tracing IS-IS Protocol Traffic ................................................334 Chapter 16 Summary of IS-IS Configuration Statements 337
authentication-key .......................................................................................338 authentication-type .....................................................................................339 bfd-liveness-detection ..................................................................................340 checksum ....................................................................................................341 clns-routing .................................................................................................342 csnp-interval ................................................................................................342 disable .........................................................................................................343 disable (IS-IS) ........................................................................................344 disable (LDP Synchronization) ..............................................................345 export .........................................................................................................345 external-preference .....................................................................................346 family ..........................................................................................................347 graceful-restart ............................................................................................348 hello-authentication-key ..............................................................................349 hello-authentication-type .............................................................................350 hello-interval ...............................................................................................351 hello-padding ..............................................................................................352 hold-time .....................................................................................................353 hold-time (IS-IS) ....................................................................................353 hold-time (LDP Synchronization) ..........................................................354 ignore-attached-bit ......................................................................................354 ignore-lsp-metrics ........................................................................................355 interface ......................................................................................................356 ipv4-multicast ..............................................................................................357 ipv4-multicast-metric ...................................................................................358 ipv6-multicast ..............................................................................................358 ipv6-multicast-metric ...................................................................................359 ipv6-unicast .................................................................................................359 ipv6-unicast-metric ......................................................................................360 isis ...............................................................................................................360 label-switched-path .....................................................................................361 ldp-synchronization .....................................................................................362 level ............................................................................................................363 level (Global IS-IS) .................................................................................363 level (IS-IS Interfaces) ............................................................................364 loose-authentication-check ..........................................................................365 lsp-interval ..................................................................................................365 lsp-lifetime ..................................................................................................366 max-areas ...................................................................................................366 mesh-group .................................................................................................367 metric .........................................................................................................368 multicast-rpf-routes .....................................................................................368 no-adjacency-holddown ..............................................................................369
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no-authentication-check ..............................................................................369 no-csnp-authentication ................................................................................370 no-hello-authentication ................................................................................370 no-ipv4-multicast .........................................................................................371 no-ipv4-routing ............................................................................................371 no-ipv6-multicast .........................................................................................372 no-ipv6-routing ............................................................................................372 no-ipv6-unicast ............................................................................................373 no-psnp-authentication ................................................................................373 no-unicast-topology .....................................................................................374 overload ......................................................................................................375 passive ........................................................................................................376 point-to-point ..............................................................................................377 preference ...................................................................................................377 prefix-export-limit .......................................................................................378 priority ........................................................................................................378 reference-bandwidth ...................................................................................379 rib-group .....................................................................................................380 shortcuts .....................................................................................................381 spf-options ..................................................................................................382 te-metric ......................................................................................................383 topologies ....................................................................................................384 traceoptions ................................................................................................385 traffic-engineering .......................................................................................387 wide-metrics-only ........................................................................................388 Chapter 17 ES-IS Overview 389
Minimum ES-IS Configuration .....................................................................392 Configuring ES-IS on an Interface ................................................................392 Configuring the Hello Interval ......................................................................393 Configuring the End System Configuration Timer ........................................393 Configuring Graceful Restart for ES-IS .........................................................393 Configuring the Preference ..........................................................................394 Tracing ES-IS Protocol Traffic ......................................................................394 Chapter 19 Summary of ES-IS Configuration Statements 397
disable .........................................................................................................397 esct .............................................................................................................398 esis ..............................................................................................................398 graceful-restart ............................................................................................399 hello-interval ...............................................................................................399 interface ......................................................................................................400
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OSPF Protocol Overview .............................................................................403 OSPF Version 3 .....................................................................................404 OSPF Standards ..........................................................................................405 OSPF Area Terminology ..............................................................................406 Areas ....................................................................................................406 Area Border Routers .............................................................................406 Backbone Areas ....................................................................................406 AS Boundary Routers ............................................................................407 Stub Areas ............................................................................................407 Not-So-Stubby Areas .............................................................................407 Transit Areas .........................................................................................407 OSPF Routing Algorithm .............................................................................407 OSPF Packets ..............................................................................................408 OSPF Packet Header .............................................................................409 Hello Packets ........................................................................................409 Database Description Packets ...............................................................410 Link-State Request Packets ...................................................................410 Link-State Update Packets .....................................................................410 Link-State Acknowledgment Packets .....................................................410 Link-State Advertisement Packet Types ................................................410 External Metrics ..........................................................................................411 Designated Router .......................................................................................411 OSPF Extensions to Support Traffic Engineering .........................................411 Configuring OSPF IGP Shortcuts ...........................................................412 Chapter 21 OSPF Configuration Guidelines 413
Minimum OSPF Configuration .....................................................................418 Configuring the Backbone Area and Other Areas .........................................418 Configuring the Backbone Area .............................................................419 Configuring a Nonbackbone Area .........................................................419 Configuring a Stub Area ........................................................................420 Configuring a Not-So-Stubby Area .........................................................420 Configuring an OSPF Virtual Link ..........................................................421 Example: Configuring an OSPF Virtual Link ....................................422 Disabling NSSA Support on an ASBR ABR ...................................................422 Disabling Compatibility with RFC 1583 .......................................................423 Configuring OSPF on Router Interfaces .......................................................423 Configuring an Interface on a Broadcast or Point-to-Point Network ......423 Configuring an Interface on a Point-to-Multipoint Network ...................424 Configuring an Interface on a Nonbroadcast, Multiaccess Network .......424 Configuring an OSPF Demand Circuit Interface ....................................425 Configuring Multiarea Adjacency in OSPFv2 ................................................426 Configuring Multiple Address Families for OSPFv3 ......................................427
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Configuring Authentication for OSPFv2 .......................................................427 Example: Configuring IPsec Authentication for an OSPFv2 Interface ....429 Example: Configuring a Transition of MD5 Keys ...................................430 Example: Configuring MD5 Authentication ...........................................430 Configuring Authentication for OSPFv3 .......................................................431 Configuring a Prefix Export Limit ................................................................431 Configuring the Priority for Becoming the Designated Router .....................432 Configuring Route Summarization ...............................................................432 Modifying the Interface Metric ....................................................................433 Configuring Route Preferences ....................................................................433 Configuring OSPF Timers ............................................................................434 Modifying the Hello Interval ..................................................................434 Controlling the LSA Retransmission Interval .........................................435 Modifying the Router Dead Interval ......................................................435 Specifying the Transit Delay .................................................................436 Configuring the BFD Protocol ......................................................................436 Configuring Label Distribution Protocol Synchronization with the IGP .........438 Configuring Graceful Restart ........................................................................439 Configuring SPF Options for OSPF ..............................................................439 Advertising Interface Addresses Without Running OSPF .............................440 Configuring OSPF Passive Traffic Engineering Mode ...................................441 Advertising Label-Switched Paths into OSPF ...............................................442 Configuring the Router to Appear Overloaded .............................................442 Enabling OSPF Traffic Engineering Support .................................................443 Example: Enabling OSPF Traffic Engineering Support ..........................444 Modifying the Traffic Engineering Metric .....................................................445 Configuring OSPF Routing Policy ................................................................445 Configuring Import and Export Policies for Network Summaries ..........446 Configuring Priority for Prefixes in Import Policy ..................................447 Example: Configure a Route Filter Policy to Specify Priority for Prefixes Learned Through OSPF ..................................................................448 Configuring OSPF Routing Table Groups .....................................................449 Configuring a Sham Link .............................................................................449 Configuring a Peer Interface ........................................................................449 Tracing OSPF Protocol Traffic ......................................................................450 Examples: Tracing OSPF Protocol Traffic ..............................................451 Chapter 22 Summary of OSPF Configuration Statements 453
area .............................................................................................................454 area-range ...................................................................................................455 authentication .............................................................................................456 bfd-liveness-detection ..................................................................................457 dead-interval ...............................................................................................459 default-lsa ....................................................................................................460 default-metric ..............................................................................................461 demand-circuit ............................................................................................462 disable .........................................................................................................463 disable (LDP Synchronization) ..............................................................463 disable (OSPF) ......................................................................................464
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domain-id ....................................................................................................465 domain-vpn-tag ...........................................................................................465 export .........................................................................................................466 external-preference .....................................................................................467 graceful-restart ............................................................................................468 hello-interval ...............................................................................................469 hold-time .....................................................................................................470 ignore-lsp-metrics ........................................................................................470 import .........................................................................................................471 inter-area-prefix-export ...............................................................................472 inter-area-prefix-import ...............................................................................473 interface ......................................................................................................474 interface-type ..............................................................................................476 ipsec-sa .......................................................................................................477 label-switched-path .....................................................................................478 ldp-synchronization .....................................................................................479 lsp-metric-into-summary .............................................................................480 md5 ............................................................................................................481 metric .........................................................................................................482 metric-type ..................................................................................................483 neighbor ......................................................................................................484 network-summary-export ............................................................................485 network-summary-import ...........................................................................485 no-nssa-abr .................................................................................................486 no-rfc-1583 .................................................................................................487 no-summaries .............................................................................................487 nssa .............................................................................................................488 ospf .............................................................................................................489 ospf3 ...........................................................................................................489 overload ......................................................................................................490 passive ........................................................................................................491 peer-interface ..............................................................................................492 poll-interval .................................................................................................493 preference ...................................................................................................494 prefix-export-limit .......................................................................................495 priority ........................................................................................................496 realm ...........................................................................................................497 reference-bandwidth ...................................................................................498 retransmit-interval .......................................................................................499 rib-group .....................................................................................................500 route-type-community .................................................................................501 secondary ....................................................................................................501 sham-link ....................................................................................................502 sham-link-remote ........................................................................................502 shortcuts .....................................................................................................503 simple-password .........................................................................................503 spf-options ..................................................................................................504 stub .............................................................................................................505 summaries ..................................................................................................506 te-metric ......................................................................................................507
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traceoptions ................................................................................................508 traffic-engineering .......................................................................................511 traffic-engineering (OSPF) .....................................................................512 traffic-engineering (Passive TE Mode) ...................................................513 transit-delay ................................................................................................514 transmit-interval ..........................................................................................515 type-7 ..........................................................................................................516 virtual-link ...................................................................................................517 Chapter 23 RIP Overview 519
RIP Overview ..............................................................................................519 RIP Standards ..............................................................................................520 RIP Packets .................................................................................................520 Chapter 24 RIP Configuration Guidelines 521
Minimum RIP Configuration ........................................................................523 Defining RIP Global Properties ....................................................................523 Defining RIP Neighbor Properties ................................................................524 Configuring Authentication ..........................................................................524 Modifying the Incoming Metric ...................................................................525 Configuring RIP Timers ...............................................................................525 Configuring the Number of Route Entries in an Update Message .................526 Accepting Packets Whose Reserved Fields Are Nonzero ..............................526 Configuring Update Messages ......................................................................527 Configuring Routing Table Groups ...............................................................527 Applying Import Policy ................................................................................527 Configuring Group-Specific Properties .........................................................527 Applying Export Policy ..........................................................................528 Controlling Route Preference ................................................................529 Modifying the Outgoing Metric .............................................................529 Configuring Graceful Restart ........................................................................529 Configuring the BFD Protocol ......................................................................530 Disabling Strict Address Check ....................................................................532 Tracing RIP Protocol Traffic .........................................................................532 Example: Tracing RIP Protocol Traffic ...................................................533 Example: Configuring RIP ...........................................................................533 Chapter 25 Summary of RIP Configuration Statements 535
any-sender ..................................................................................................535 authentication-key .......................................................................................536 authentication-type .....................................................................................537 bfd-liveness-detection ..................................................................................538 check-zero ...................................................................................................540 export .........................................................................................................541 graceful-restart ............................................................................................541 group ...........................................................................................................542
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holddown ....................................................................................................543 import .........................................................................................................544 message-size ...............................................................................................545 metric-in .....................................................................................................546 metric-out ...................................................................................................547 neighbor ......................................................................................................548 no-check-zero ..............................................................................................549 preference ...................................................................................................549 receive ........................................................................................................550 rib-group .....................................................................................................551 rip ...............................................................................................................551 route-timeout ..............................................................................................552 send ............................................................................................................553 traceoptions ................................................................................................554 update-interval ............................................................................................556 Chapter 26 RIPng Overview 557
RIPng Overview ..........................................................................................557 RIPng Standards ..........................................................................................558 RIPng Packets .............................................................................................558 Chapter 27 RIPng Configuration Guidelines 559
Minimum RIPng Configuration ....................................................................560 Defining RIPng Global Properties ................................................................561 Defining RIPng Neighbor Properties ............................................................561 Modifying the Incoming Metric ...................................................................561 Configuring RIPng Timers ...........................................................................562 Configuring Update Messages ......................................................................562 Applying Import Policy ................................................................................563 Configuring Group-Specific Properties .........................................................563 Applying Export Policy ..........................................................................564 Controlling Route Preference ................................................................564 Modifying the Outgoing Metric .............................................................564 Configuring Graceful Restart ........................................................................565 Tracing RIPng Protocol Traffic .....................................................................565 Example: Configuring RIPng .......................................................................566 Chapter 28 Summary of RIPng Configuration Statements 567
export .........................................................................................................567 graceful-restart ............................................................................................568 group ...........................................................................................................569 holddown ....................................................................................................570 import .........................................................................................................571 metric-in .....................................................................................................572 metric-out ...................................................................................................573 neighbor ......................................................................................................574
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preference ...................................................................................................575 receive ........................................................................................................576 ripng ...........................................................................................................577 route-timeout ..............................................................................................577 send ............................................................................................................578 traceoptions ................................................................................................579 update-interval ............................................................................................581 Chapter 29 ICMP Router Discovery Overview 583
ICMP Router Discovery Standards ...............................................................583 Operation of a Router Discovery Server ......................................................583 Router Advertisement Messages ..................................................................584 Chapter 30 ICMP Router Discovery Configuration Guidelines 585
Minimum Router Discovery Server Configuration .......................................586 Configuring the Addresses to Include in Router Advertisements ..................586 Configuring the Frequency of Router Advertisements .................................587 Modifying the Router Advertisement Lifetime .............................................587 Tracing ICMP Protocol Traffic ......................................................................587 Example: Tracing ICMP Protocol Traffic ................................................588 Chapter 31 Summary of ICMP Router Discovery Configuration Statements 589
address ........................................................................................................589 advertise .....................................................................................................590 broadcast ....................................................................................................590 disable .........................................................................................................591 ignore ..........................................................................................................591 ineligible ......................................................................................................591 interface ......................................................................................................592 lifetime ........................................................................................................593 max-advertisement-interval .........................................................................594 min-advertisement-interval .........................................................................594 multicast .....................................................................................................595 priority ........................................................................................................596 router-discovery ..........................................................................................596 traceoptions ................................................................................................597 Chapter 32 Neighbor Discovery Overview 599
Neighbor Discovery Standards ....................................................................599 Router Discovery .........................................................................................600 Address Resolution ...............................................................................600 Redirect ................................................................................................600
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Chapter 33
601
Minimum Neighbor Discovery Configuration ...............................................602 Configuring Router Advertisement on an Interface ......................................602 Configuring the Hop Limit ...........................................................................603 Modifying the Default Router Lifetime .........................................................603 Enabling Stateful Autoconfiguration ............................................................603 Configuring the Frequency of Router Advertisements .................................604 Modifying the Reachable Time Limit ...........................................................604 Modifying the Frequency of Neighbor Solicitation Messages .......................604 Configuring Prefix Information ....................................................................605 Setting the Prefix for Onlink Determination ..........................................605 Setting the Prefix for Stateless Address Autoconfiguration ....................605 Configuring the Preferred Lifetime ........................................................606 Configuring the Valid Lifetime ..............................................................606 Tracing Router Advertisement Traffic ..........................................................606 Chapter 34 Summary of Neighbor Discovery Router Advertisement Configuration Statements 609 autonomous ................................................................................................609 current-hop-limit .........................................................................................610 default-lifetime ............................................................................................610 interface ......................................................................................................611 managed-configuration ...............................................................................612 max-advertisement-interval .........................................................................612 min-advertisement-interval .........................................................................613 no-autonomous ...........................................................................................613 no-managed-configuration ..........................................................................613 no-on-link ....................................................................................................613 no-other-stateful-configuration ....................................................................613 on-link .........................................................................................................614 other-stateful-configuration .........................................................................614 preferred-lifetime ........................................................................................615 prefix ..........................................................................................................615 reachable-time ............................................................................................616 retransmit-timer ..........................................................................................616 router-advertisement ...................................................................................617 traceoptions ................................................................................................618 valid-lifetime ...............................................................................................620 Chapter 35 Secure Neighbor Discovery Configuration Guidelines 621
Enabling Secure Neighbor Discovery ...........................................................622 Configuring Cryptographic Address Parameters ..........................................622 Specifying the Pathname for the Key File .............................................623 Specifying the RSA Key Length .............................................................623 Configuring Timestamp Parameters ............................................................623 Tracing Secure Neighbor Discovery Traffic ..................................................624
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Chapter 36
625
cryptographic-address .................................................................................625 key-length ...................................................................................................626 key-pair .......................................................................................................626 neighbor-discovery ......................................................................................627 secure .........................................................................................................628 security-level ...............................................................................................629 timestamp ...................................................................................................630 traceoptions ................................................................................................631
Part 6
Chapter 37
BGP
BGP Overview 635
BGP Standards .............................................................................................636 Autonomous Systems ..................................................................................636 AS Paths and Attributes ...............................................................................637 External and Internal BGP ...........................................................................637 BGP Routes .................................................................................................638 BGP Messages .............................................................................................638 Open Messages .....................................................................................639 Update Messages ..................................................................................639 Keepalive Messages ..............................................................................639 Notification Messages ...........................................................................640 Chapter 38 BGP Configuration Guidelines 641
Minimum BGP Configuration .......................................................................643 Enabling BGP ..............................................................................................644 Specifying the Local Routers AS Number .............................................644 Defining an AS Confederation and Its Members ...................................644 Assigning a BGP Identifier .....................................................................645 Defining BGP Global Properties .............................................................645 Defining BGP Groups and Peers ............................................................647 Defining a Group with Static Peers .................................................647 Defining a Group with Dynamic Peers ............................................649 Defining the Group Type ................................................................649 Specifying the Peers AS Number ...................................................650 Defining Group Properties ..............................................................650 Defining Peer Properties ................................................................652 Examples: Enabling BGP .......................................................................654 Modifying the Hold-Time Value ...................................................................658 Configuring MTU Discovery .........................................................................659 Configuring Graceful Restart ........................................................................659 Advertising an Explicit Null Label ................................................................659 Configuring Aggregate Labels for VPNs .......................................................660
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Configuring Authentication ..........................................................................660 Applying IPsec Security Association ............................................................662 Opening a Peer Connection Passively .........................................................663 Configuring the Local IP Address .................................................................663 Configuring the Multiple Exit Discriminator Metric ......................................663 Defining a MED Metric Directly .............................................................664 Using Routing Policy to Define a MED Metric .......................................665 Examples: Configuring the MED Metric ................................................666 Controlling the Aggregator Path Attribute ....................................................667 Configuring an EBGP Multihop Session ........................................................667 Configuring a Single-Hop EBGP Peer to Accept a Remote Next Hop ............667 Example: Configure an Import Routing Policy for an EBGP Peer to Accept a Remote Next Hop ........................................................................668 Configuring the BGP Local Preference .........................................................669 Controlling Route Preference .......................................................................669 Examples: Controlling Route Preference ...............................................670 Configuring Routing Table Path Selection ....................................................671 Example: Always Comparing MEDs ......................................................671 Configuring BGP to Select Multiple BGP Paths .............................................672 Configuring a Local AS ................................................................................673 Examples: Configuring a Local AS .........................................................673 Removing Private AS Numbers from AS Paths ............................................675 Configuring Route Reflection .......................................................................676 Examples: Configuring Route Reflection ...............................................678 Enabling Route Flap Damping .....................................................................681 Enabling Multiprotocol BGP .........................................................................682 Limiting the Number of Prefixes Received on a BGP Peering Session ....685 Limiting the Number of Prefixes Accepted on a BGP Peering Session ....685 Configuring BGP Routing Table Groups .................................................686 Resolving Routes to PE Routers Located in Other ASs ...........................687 Allowing Labeled and Unlabeled Routes ...............................................687 Enabling BGP to Carry Flow-Specification Routes ........................................687 Configuring Flow-Specification Routes for IPv4 Unicast ........................687 Configuring Flow-Specification Routes for Layer 3 VPNs .......................688 Enabling BGP to Carry Connectionless Network Services Routes .................689 Example: Enabling CLNS Between Two Routers ...................................689 Example: Configuring CLNS Within a VPN ............................................691 Enabling Route Target Filtering ...................................................................693 Configuring Prefix-Based Outbound Route Filtering ....................................694 Enabling Layer 2 VPN and VPLS Signaling ...................................................695 Configuring BGP Routing Policy ...................................................................696 Applying Routing Policy ........................................................................696 Applying Policies to Routes Being Imported into the Routing Table from BGP .................................................................................697 Applying Policies to Routes Being Exported from the Routing Table into BGP ...................................................................................697 Setting BGP to Advertise Inactive Routes ..............................................697 Configuring BGP to Advertise the Best External Route to Internal Peers ..............................................................................................697
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Configuring How Often BGP Exchanges Routes with the Routing Table ..............................................................................................699 Disabling Suppression of Route Advertisements ...................................699 Configuring EBGP Peering Using IPv6 Link-Local Address ...........................700 Configuring IPv6 BGP Routes over IPv4 Transport .......................................701 Example: Configuring IPv6 BGP Routes over IPv4 Transport ................701 Configuring BGP to Log System Log Messages .............................................702 Describing BGP Router Configuration ..........................................................702 Blocking Nonpeer TCP Connection Attempts ...............................................702 Applying BGP Export Policy to VRF Routes .................................................703 Enabling Next-Hop Reachability Information ...............................................703 Configuring the BFD Protocol ......................................................................703 Configuring the Segment Size for TCP .........................................................706 Tracing BGP Protocol Traffic ........................................................................706 Examples: Tracing BGP Protocol Traffic ................................................707 Chapter 39 Summary of BGP Configuration Statements 709
accept-remote-nexthop ...............................................................................709 accepted-prefix-limit ...................................................................................710 advertise-external ........................................................................................712 advertise-inactive ........................................................................................713 advertise-peer-as .........................................................................................714 aggregate-label ............................................................................................715 allow ...........................................................................................................716 as-override ..................................................................................................717 authentication-algorithm .............................................................................718 authentication-key .......................................................................................719 authentication-key-chain .............................................................................720 authentication-key-chains ............................................................................721 bfd-liveness-detection ..................................................................................722 bgp ..............................................................................................................724 bgp-orf-cisco-mode ......................................................................................725 cluster .........................................................................................................726 damping ......................................................................................................727 description ..................................................................................................728 disable .........................................................................................................729 explicit-null ..................................................................................................730 export .........................................................................................................731 family ..........................................................................................................732 flow .............................................................................................................734 graceful-restart ............................................................................................735 group ...........................................................................................................736 hold-time .....................................................................................................738 import .........................................................................................................739 include-mp-next-hop ...................................................................................740 ipsec-sa .......................................................................................................740 iso-vpn ........................................................................................................741 keep ............................................................................................................742 labeled-unicast ............................................................................................743
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local-address ...............................................................................................744 local-as ........................................................................................................745 local-interface ..............................................................................................746 local-preference ...........................................................................................747 log-updown .................................................................................................748 metric-out ...................................................................................................749 mtu-discovery .............................................................................................751 multihop ......................................................................................................752 multipath .....................................................................................................753 neighbor ......................................................................................................754 no-advertise-peer-as ....................................................................................755 no-aggregator-id ..........................................................................................756 no-client-reflect ...........................................................................................757 no-validate ..................................................................................................758 out-delay .....................................................................................................759 outbound-route-filter ...................................................................................760 passive ........................................................................................................761 path-selection ..............................................................................................762 peer-as ........................................................................................................763 preference ...................................................................................................764 prefix-limit ..................................................................................................765 remove-private ............................................................................................767 resolve-vpn ..................................................................................................768 rib ...............................................................................................................769 rib-group .....................................................................................................770 route-target .................................................................................................771 tcp-mss .......................................................................................................772 traceoptions ................................................................................................773 type .............................................................................................................776 vpn-apply-export .........................................................................................776
Part 7
Indexes
Index ...........................................................................................................779 Index of Statements and Commands ..........................................................799
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List of Figures
Figure 1: Synchronizing Routing Exchange Between the Routing and Forwarding Tables .............................................................................5 Figure 2: Route to Forwarding Next-Hop Bindings .......................................117 Figure 3: Route to Forwarding Indirect Next-Hop Bindings ..........................118 Figure 4: Configuration for Multiple Routing Instances ................................222 Figure 5: Configuration for Multiple Routing Instances ................................227 Figure 6: Configuration of Policy-Based Export for an Overlapping VPN ......242 Figure 7: Install Default Route to Nearest Level 1/Level 2 Router .................333 Figure 8: ASs, External BGP, and Internal BGP ............................................637 Figure 9: Example: BGP Confederation Topology ........................................655 Figure 10: Local AS Configuration ...............................................................674 Figure 11: Simple Route Reflector ...............................................................678
List of Figures
xxxi
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List of Figures
List of Tables
Table 1: Notice Icons ..............................................................................xxxviii Table 2: Text and Syntax Conventions ....................................................xxxviii Table 3: Technical Documentation for Supported Routing Platforms ..............xl Table 4: JUNOS Software Network Operations Guides .................................xliv Table 5: JUNOS Software with Enhanced Services Documentation ...............xlv Table 6: Additional Books Available Through http://www.juniper.net/books ................................................................xlvi Table 7: Default Route Preference Values ........................................................8 Table 8: Flow Route Match Conditions ..........................................................96 Table 9: Flow Route Action Modifiers ............................................................98 Table 10: Examples of Routing Tables for Custom Topologies .....................265
List of Tables
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List of Tables
Objectives on page xxxv Audience on page xxxv Supported Routing Platforms on page xxxvi Using the Indexes on page xxxvi Using the Examples in This Manual on page xxxvi Documentation Conventions on page xxxviii List of Technical Publications on page xl Documentation Feedback on page xlvii Requesting Technical Support on page xlvii
Objectives
This guide is designed for network administrators who are configuring and monitoring a Juniper Networks J-series, M-series, MX-series, or T-series routing platform.
NOTE: This guide documents Release 9.3 of the JUNOS software. For additional information about the JUNOS softwareeither corrections to or information that might have been omitted from this guidesee the software release notes at http://www.juniper.net/.
Audience
This guide is designed for network administrators who are configuring and monitoring a Juniper Networks M-series, MX-series, T-series, EX-series, or J-series routing platform. To use this guide, you need a broad understanding of networks in general, the Internet in particular, networking principles, and network configuration. You must also be familiar with one or more of the following Internet routing protocols:
Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) Distance Vector Multicast Routing Protocol (DVMRP) Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS)
Objectives
xxxv
Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) router discovery Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) Protocol-Independent Multicast (PIM) Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) Routing Information Protocol (RIP) Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)
Personnel operating the equipment must be trained and competent; must not conduct themselves in a careless, willfully negligent, or hostile manner; and must abide by the instructions provided by the documentation.
The primary entry refers to the statement summary section. The secondary entry, usage guidelines, refers to the section in a configuration guidelines chapter that describes how to use the statement or command.
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If the example configuration does not start at the top level of the hierarchy, the example is a snippet. In this case, use the load merge relative command. These procedures are described in the following sections.
From the HTML or PDF version of the manual, copy a configuration example into a text file, save the file with a name, and copy the file to a directory on your routing platform. For example, copy the following configuration to a file and name the file ex-script.conf. Copy the ex-script.conf file to the /var/tmp directory on your routing platform.
system { scripts { commit { file ex-script.xsl; } } } interfaces { fxp0 { disable; unit 0 { family inet { address 10.0.0.1/24; } } } }
2.
Merge the contents of the file into your routing platform configuration by issuing the load merge configuration mode command:
[edit] user@host# load merge /var/tmp/ex-script.conf load complete
Merging a Snippet
To merge a snippet, follow these steps:
1.
From the HTML or PDF version of the manual, copy a configuration snippet into a text file, save the file with a name, and copy the file to a directory on your routing platform. For example, copy the following snippet to a file and name the file ex-script-snippet.conf. Copy the ex-script-snippet.conf file to the /var/tmp directory on your routing platform.
commit {
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file ex-script-snippet.xsl; }
2.
Move to the hierarchy level that is relevant for this snippet by issuing the following configuration mode command:
[edit] user@host# edit system scripts [edit system scripts]
3.
Merge the contents of the file into your routing platform configuration by issuing the load merge relative configuration mode command:
[edit system scripts] user@host# load merge relative /var/tmp/ex-script-snippet.conf load complete
For more information about the load command, see the JUNOS CLI User Guide.
Documentation Conventions
Table 1 on page xxxviii defines notice icons used in this guide.
Table 1: Notice Icons
Icon Meaning Informational note Description Indicates important features or instructions.
Caution
Warning
Laser warning
Table 2 on page xxxviii defines the text and syntax conventions used in this guide.
Table 2: Text and Syntax Conventions
Convention
Bold text like this
Examples To enter configuration mode, type the configure command: user@host> configure
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Documentation Conventions
Examples
user@host> show chassis alarms No alarms currently active
Introduces important new terms. Identifies book names. Identifies RFC and Internet draft titles.
A policy term is a named structure that defines match conditions and actions. JUNOS System Basics Configuration Guide RFC 1997, BGP Communities Attribute
Represents variables (options for which you substitute a value) in commands or configuration statements.
Configure the machines domain name: [edit] root@# set system domain-name domain-name
Represents names of configuration statements, commands, files, and directories; IP addresses; configuration hierarchy levels; or labels on routing platform components.
hierarchy level.
Enclose optional keywords or variables. Indicates a choice between the mutually exclusive keywords or variables on either side of the symbol. The set of choices is often enclosed in parentheses for clarity. Indicates a comment specified on the same line as the configuration statement to which it applies. Enclose a variable for which you can substitute one or more values. Identify a level in the configuration hierarchy. Identifies a leaf statement at a configuration hierarchy level.
# (pound sign)
[ ] (square brackets)
; (semicolon)
Represents J-Web graphical user interface (GUI) items you click or select.
In the Logical Interfaces box, select All Interfaces. To cancel the configuration, click Cancel.
Documentation Conventions
xxxix
Access Privilege
Explains how to configure access privileges in user classes by using permission flags and regular expressions. Lists the permission flags along with their associated command-line interface (CLI) operational mode commands and configuration statements. Provides an overview of the class-of-service (CoS) functions of the JUNOS software and describes how to configure CoS features, including configuring multiple forwarding classes for transmitting packets, defining which packets are placed into each output queue, scheduling the transmission service level for each queue, and managing congestion through the random early detection (RED) algorithm. Describes how to use the JUNOS command-line interface (CLI) to configure, monitor, and manage Juniper Networks routing platforms. This material was formerly covered in the JUNOS System Basics Configuration Guide. Provides a detailed explanation and configuration examples for several of the most complex features in the JUNOS software. Provides an overview of hardware and software resources that ensure a high level of continuous routing platform operation and describes how to configure high availability (HA) features such as nonstop active routing (NSR) and graceful Routing Engine switchover (GRES). Provides an overview of traffic engineering concepts and describes how to configure traffic engineering protocols.
Class of Service
Feature Guide
High Availability
MPLS Applications
xl
Multiplay Solutions
Network Interfaces
Network Management
Policy Framework
Routing Protocols
Services Interfaces
xli
System Basics
VPNs
JUNOS References
Describes the JUNOS configuration mode commands. Provides a hierarchy reference that displays each level of a configuration hierarchy, and includes all possible configuration statements that can be used at that level. This material was formerly covered in the JUNOS System Basics Configuration Guide. Describes the JUNOS software operational mode commands you use to monitor and troubleshoot interfaces. Describes the JUNOS software operational mode commands you use to monitor and troubleshoot routing policies and protocols, including firewall filters. Describes the JUNOS software operational mode commands you use to monitor and troubleshoot system basics, including commands for real-time monitoring and route (or path) tracing, system software management, and chassis management. Also describes commands for monitoring and troubleshooting services such as class of service (CoS), IP Security (IPsec), stateful firewalls, flow collection, and flow monitoring. Describes how to access and interpret system log messages generated by JUNOS software modules and provides a reference page for each message.
Describes how to use the J-Web graphical user interface (GUI) to configure, monitor, and manage Juniper Networks routing platforms.
Describes how to use the JUNOScript application programming interface (API) to monitor and configure Juniper Networks routing platforms. Provides reference pages for the configuration tag elements in the JUNOS XML API.
xlii
Hardware Documentation
Hardware Guide
Describes how to install, maintain, and troubleshoot routing platforms and components. Each platform has its own hardware guide. Describes the routing platform's Physical Interface Cards (PICs). Each platform has its own PIC guide. Describes the Dense Port Concentrators (DPCs) for all MX-series routers.
PIC Guide
DPC Guide
JUNOScope Documentation
Describes the JUNOScope software graphical user interface (GUI), how to install and administer the software, and how to use the software to manage routing platform configuration files and monitor routing platform operations.
Describes the Advanced Insight Manager (AIM) application, which provides a gateway between JUNOS devices and Juniper Support Systems (JSS) for case management and intelligence updates. Explains how to run AI-Scripts on Juniper Networks devices.
Provides an overview, basic instructions, and specifications for J-series routing platforms. The guide explains how to prepare your site for installation, unpack and install the router and its components, install licenses, and establish basic connectivity. Use the Getting Started Guide for your router model. Explains how to configure the interfaces on J-series Services Routers for basic IP routing with standard routing protocols, ISDN backup, and digital subscriber line (DSL) connections. Explains how to configure J-series Services Routers in virtual private networks (VPNs) and multicast networks, configure data link switching (DLSw) services, and apply routing techniques such as policies, stateless and stateful firewall filters, IP Security (IPsec) tunnels, and class-of-service (CoS) classification for safer, more efficient routing.
xliii
Release Notes
Summarize new features and known problems for a particular software release, provide corrections and updates to published JUNOS, JUNOScript, and NETCONF manuals, provide information that might have been omitted from the manuals, and describe upgrade and downgrade procedures. Describe the available documentation for the routing platform and summarize known problems with the hardware and accompanying software. Each platform has its own release notes. Contain corrections and updates to the published JUNOScope manual, provide information that might have been omitted from the manual, and describe upgrade and downgrade procedures. Summarize AIS new features and guidelines, identify known and resolved problems, provide information that might have been omitted from the manuals, and provide initial setup, upgrade, and downgrade procedures. Summarize AI-Scripts new features, identify known and resolved problems, provide information that might have been omitted from the manuals, and provide instructions for automatic and manual installation, including deleting and rolling back. Briefly describe Services Router features, identify known hardware problems, and provide upgrade and downgrade instructions.
Interfaces
MPLS
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Hardware
To configure and operate a J-series Services Router running JUNOS software with enhanced services, you must also use the configuration statements and operational mode commands documented in JUNOS configuration guides and command references. To configure and operate a WX Integrated Services Module, you must also use WX documentation.
Table 5: JUNOS Software with Enhanced Services Documentation
Book
All Platforms
Description
Explains how to configure J-series interfaces for basic IP routing with standard routing protocols, ISDN service, firewall filters (access control lists), and class-of-service (CoS) traffic classification. Explains how to configure and manage security services such as stateful firewall policies, IP Security (IPsec) virtual private networks (VPNs), firewall screens, Network Address Translation (NAT), Public Key Cryptography, and Application Layer Gateways (ALGs). Shows how to monitor J-series devices and routing operations, firewall and security services, system alarms and events, and network performance. This guide also shows how to administer user authentication and access, upgrade software, and diagnose common problems. Provides the complete JUNOS software with enhanced services configuration hierarchy and describes the configuration statements and operational mode commands not documented in the standard JUNOS manuals.
J-series Only
Provides guidelines and examples for designing and implementing IPsec VPNs), firewalls, and routing on J-series Services Routers running JUNOS software with enhanced services.
xlv
JUNOS Cookbook
MPLS-Enabled Applications
xlvi
Documentation Feedback
We encourage you to provide feedback, comments, and suggestions so that we can improve the documentation. You can send your comments to [email protected], or fill out the documentation feedback form at https://www.juniper.net/cgi-bin/docbugreport/. If you are using e-mail, be sure to include the following information with your comments:
Document name Document part number Page number Software release version (not required for Network Operations Guides [NOGs])
JTAC policiesFor a complete understanding of our JTAC procedures and policies, review the JTAC User Guide located at http://www.juniper.net/customers/support/downloads/710059.pdf. Product warrantiesFor product warranty information, visit http://www.juniper.net/support/warranty/. JTAC Hours of Operation The JTAC centers have resources available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year.
Self-Help Online Tools and Resources For quick and easy problem resolution, Juniper Networks has designed an online self-service portal called the Customer Support Center (CSC) that provides you with the following features:
Documentation Feedback
xlvii
Find product documentation: http://www.juniper.net/techpubs/ Find solutions and answer questions using our Knowledge Base:
http://kb.juniper.net/
To verify service entitlement by product serial number, use our Serial Number Entitlement (SNE) Tool located at https://tools.juniper.net/SerialNumberEntitlementSearch/. Opening a Case with JTAC You can open a case with JTAC on the Web or by telephone.
Use the Case Management tool in the CSC at http://www.juniper.net/cm/ . Call 1-888-314-JTAC (1-888-314-5822 toll-free in the USA, Canada, and Mexico).
For international or direct-dial options in countries without toll-free numbers, visit us at http://www.juniper.net/support/requesting-support.html.
xlviii
Part 1
Overview
Routing Protocols Concepts on page 3 Complete Routing and Routing Protocol Configuration Statements on page 15
Overview
Overview
Chapter 1
Routing Databases on page 3 Configuring Interfaces on page 6 Route Preferences on page 6 Equal-Cost Paths and Load Sharing on page 10 IPv6 on page 10
Routing Databases
The JUNOS software maintains two databases for routing information:
Routing tableContains all the routing information learned by all routing protocols. Forwarding tableContains the routes actually used to forward packets through the router.
In addition, the interior gateway protocols (IGPs), IS-IS, and OSPF maintain link-state databases. This section includes the following topics:
Routing Protocol Databases on page 4 JUNOS Routing Tables on page 4 Forwarding Tables on page 5 How the Routing and Forwarding Tables Are Synchronized on page 5
Routing Databases
inet.0Default Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) unicast routing table inet6.0Default Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) unicast routing table instance-name.inet.0Unicast routing table for a particular routing instance inet.1Multicast forwarding cache inet.2Unicast routes used for multicast reverse path forwarding (RPF) lookup inet.3MPLS routing table for path information mpls.0MPLS routing table for label-switched path (LSP) next hops
Routing Databases
NOTE: For clarity, this manual contains general discussions of routing tables as if there were only one table. However, when it is necessary to distinguish among the routing tables, their names are explicitly used.
Forwarding Tables
The JUNOS software installs all active routes from the routing table into the forwarding table. The active routes are used to forward packets to their destinations. The JUNOS kernel maintains a master copy of the forwarding table. It copies the forwarding table to the Packet Forwarding Engine, which is the part of the router responsible for forwarding packets.
Routing Databases
Configuring Interfaces
When you configure a protocol on an interface, you must also configure a protocol family on that interface. For information about configuring interfaces, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide and JUNOS Services Interfaces Configuration Guide. For information about configuring protocol families, see the individual protocol configuration chapters in this guide.
Route Preferences
For unicast routes, the JUNOS routing protocol process uses the information in its routing table, along with the properties set in the configuration file, to choose an active route for each destination. While the JUNOS software might know of many routes to a destination, the active route is the preferred route to that destination and is the one that is installed in the forwarding table and used when actually routing packets. The routing protocol process generally determines the active route by selecting the route with the lowest preference value. The preference value is an arbitrary value in the range from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1) that the software uses to rank routes received from different protocols, interfaces, or remote systems. The preference value is used to select routes to destinations in external autonomous systems (ASs) or routing domains; it has no effect on the selection of routes within an AS (that is, within an IGP). Routes within an AS are selected by the IGP and are based on that protocols metric or cost value. This section includes the following topics:
Alternate and Tiebreaker Preferences on page 6 How the Active Route Is Determined on page 7 Multiple Active Routes on page 8 Default Route Preference Values on page 8
Configuring Interfaces
Choose the path with the lowest preference value (routing protocol process preference). Routes that are not eligible to be used for forwarding (for example, because they were rejected by routing policy or because a next hop is inaccessible) have a preference of 1 and are never chosen. For BGP, prefer the path with higher local preference. For non-BGP paths, choose the path with the lowest preference2 value. If the path includes an AS path:
a.
2. 3.
Prefer the route with a shorter AS path. Confederation sequences are considered to have a path length of 0, and AS and confederation sets are considered to have a path length of 1.
b.
Prefer the route with the lower origin code. Routes learned from an IGP have a lower origin code than those learned from an EGP, and both have lower origin codes than incomplete routes (routes whose origin is unknown). Depending on whether nondeterministic routing table path selection behavior is configured, there are two possible cases:
c.
If nondeterministic routing table path selection behavior is not configured (that is, if the path-selection cisco-nondeterministic statement is not included in the BGP configuration), for paths with the same neighboring AS numbers at the front of the AS path, prefer the path with the lowest multiple exit discriminator (MED) metric. Confederation AS numbers are not considered when deciding what the neighbor AS number is. When you display the routes in the routing table using the show route command, they generally appear in order from most preferred to least preferred. Routes that share the same neighbor AS are grouped together in the command output. Within a group, the best route is listed first and the other routes are marked with the NotBest flag in the State field of the show route detail command. To always compare MEDs whether or not the peer ASs of the compared routes are the same, use the path-selection (always-compare-med) statement. For an example, see Configuring Routing Table Path Selection on page 671.
If nondeterministic routing table path selection behavior is configured (that is, the path-selection cisco-nondeterministic statement is included in the BGP configuration), prefer the path with the lowest MED metric. When you display the routes in the routing table using the show route command, they generally appear in order from most preferred to least preferred and are ordered with the best route first, followed by all other routes in order from newest to oldest.
Route Preferences
In both cases, confederations are not considered when determining neighboring ASs. Also, in both cases, a missing metric is treated as if a MED were present but zero.
4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
Prefer strictly internal paths, which include IGP routes and locally generated routes (static, direct, local, and so forth). Prefer strictly external (EBGP) paths over external paths learned through interior sessions (IBGP). For BGP, prefer the path whose next hop is resolved through the IGP route with the lowest metric. For BGP, prefer the path with the largest number of BGP next hops. For BGP, prefer the route with the lowest IP address value for the BGP router ID. For EBGP only, prefer the current active route when a route is received from different neighboring ASs, by default. To disable this default behavior, specify the external-router-id option at the [edit protocols bgp path-selection] hierarchy level. For more information, see Configuring Routing Table Path Selection on page 671. For BGP, prefer the route with the shortest route reflection cluster list. Routes without a cluster list are considered to have a cluster list of length 0. address.
9.
10. Prefer the path that was learned from the neighbor with the lowest peer IP
Route Preferences
How Route Is Learned System routes Static and Static LSPs RSVP-signaled LSPs
Statement to Modify Default Preference static RSVP preference in the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide LDP preference in the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide OSPF preference IS-IS preference IS-IS , preference RIP preference RIPng preference JUNOS Multicast Protocols Configuration Guide JUNOS Multicast Protocols Configuration Guide aggregate OSPF external-preference IS-IS external-preference IS-IS external-preference BGP preference, export, import JUNOS Multicast Protocols Configuration Guide
LDP-signaled LSPs
OSPF internal route IS-IS Level 1 internal route IS-IS Level 2 internal route Redirects Kernel SNMP Router discovery RIP RIPng PIM DVMRP Aggregate OSPF AS external routes IS-IS Level 1 external route IS-IS Level 2 external route BGP MSDP
10 15 18 30 40 50 55 100 100 105 110 130 150 160 165 170 175
In general, the narrower the scope of the statement, the higher precedence its preference value is given, but the smaller the set of routes it affects. To modify the default preference value for routes learned by routing protocols, you generally apply routing policy when configuring the individual routing protocols. You also can modify some preferences with other configuration statements, which are indicated in the
Route Preferences
table. For information about defining and applying routing policies, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
IPv6
Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) is the new version of the Internet Protocol (IP). The Internet Protocol allows numerous nodes on different networks to interoperate seamlessly. Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) is currently used in intranets and private networks, as well as the Internet. IPv6 is the successor to IPv4, and is based for the most part on IPv4. IPv4 has been widely deployed and used to network the Internet today. With the rapid growth of the Internet, enhancements to IPv4 are needed to support the influx of new subscribers, Internet-enabled devices, and applications. IPv6 is designed to enable the global expansion of the Internet. IPv6 builds upon the functionality of IPv4, providing improvements to addressing, configuration and maintenance, and security. IPv6 offers the following benefits:
Expanded addressing capabilitiesIPv6 provides a larger address space. IPv6 addresses consist of 128 bits, while IPv4 addresses consist of 32 bits. 128-bit addressing increases the address space by approximately 1029 unique addresses, enough to last for the forseeable future. Header format simplificationIPv6 packet header format is designed to be efficient. IPv6 standardizes the size of the packet header to 40 bytes, divided into 8 fields. Improved support for extensions and optionsExtension headers carry Internet-layer information and have a standard size and structure. Flow labeling capabilityFlow labels provide consistent handling of packets belonging to the same flow. Improved privacy and securityIPv6 supports extensions for authentication and data integrity, which enhance privacy and security.
10
IPv6 Standards on page 11 IPv6 Packet Headers on page 11 IPv6 Addressing on page 12
IPv6 Standards
IPv6 is defined in the following documents:
RFC 1981, Path MTU Discovery for IP version 6 RFC 2373, IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture RFC 2460, Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6) RFC 2461, Neighbor Discovery for IP Version 6 RFC 2462, IPv6 Stateless Address Auto configuration RFC 2463, Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMPv6) for the Internet Protocol Version 6 RFC 2464, Transmission of IPv6 Packets over Ethernet Networks RFC 2472, IP Version 6 over PPP RFC 2474, Definition of the Differentiated Services Field (DS Field) in the IPv4 and IPv6 Headers RFC 2675, IPv6 Jumbo grams RFC 2767, Dual Stack Hosts using the "Bump-In-the-Stack" Technique (BIS) RFC 2878, PPP Bridging Control Protocol RFC 2893, Transition Mechanisms for IPv6 Hosts and Routers Internet draft draft-ietf-dhc-dhcpv6-16.txt, Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (expires May 2001) Internet draft draft-kato-bgp-ipv6-link-local-00.txt, BGP4+ Peering Using IPv6 Link-local Address (expires April 2002) Internet draft draft-ietf-idr-flow-spec-00.txt, Dissemination of Flow Specification Rules
To access Internet Requests for Comments (RFCs) and drafts, see http://www.ietf.org.
IPv6
11
Header Structure
IPv6 packet headers contain many of the fields found in IPv4 packet headers; some of these fields have been modified from IPv4. The 40-byte IPv6 header consists of the following 8 fields:
Traffic classClass-of-service (CoS) priority of the packet. Previously the type-of-service (ToS) field in IPv4. However, the semantics of this field (for example, DiffServ code points) are identical to IPv4. Destination addressFinal destination node address for the packet. Flow labelPacket flows requiring a specific CoS. The flow label identifies all packets belonging to a specific flow, and routers can identify these packets and handle them in a similar fashion. Hop limitMaximum number of hops allowed. Previously the time-to-live (TTL) field in IPv4. Next headerNext extension header to examine. Previously the protocol field in IPv4. Payload lengthLength of the IPv6 payload. Previously the total length field in IPv4. Source addressAddress of the source node sending the packet. VersionVersion of the Internet Protocol.
Extension Headers
In IPv6, extension headers are used to encode optional Internet-layer information. Extension headers are placed between the IPv6 header and the upper layer header in a packet. Extension headers are chained together using the next header field in the IPv6 header. The next header field indicates to the router which extension header to expect next. If there are no more extension headers, the next header field indicates the upper layer header (TCP header, User Datagram Protocol [UDP] header, ICMPv6 header, an encapsulated IP packet, or other items).
IPv6 Addressing
IPv6 uses a 128-bit addressing model. This creates a much larger address space than IPv4 addresses, which are made up of 32 bits. IPv6 addresses also contain a scope field that categorizes what types of applications are suitable for the address. IPv6 does not support broadcast addresses, but instead uses multicast addresses to serve this role. In addition, IPv6 also defines a new type of address called anycast. This section discusses the following topics that provide background information about IPv6 addressing:
12
IPv6
Address Representation
IPv6 addresses consist of 8 groups of 16-bit hexadecimal values separated by colons (:). The IPv6 address format is as follows:
aaaa:aaaa:aaaa:aaaa:aaaa:aaaa:aaaa:aaaa aaaa is a 16-bit hexadecimal value, and a is a 4-bit hexadecimal value. Following is
You can compress 16-bit groups of zeros to "::", as shown here, but only once per address:
3FFE::1:200:F8FF:FE75:50DF
Address Types
There are three types of IPv6 addresses:
UnicastFor a single interface. MulticastFor a set of interfaces on the same physical medium. A packet is sent to all of the interfaces associated with the address. AnycastFor a set of interfaces on different physical mediums. A packet is sent to only one of the interfaces associated with this address, not to all the interfaces.
Address Scope
IPv6 addresses have scope, which identifies the application suitable for the address. Unicast and multicast addresses support scoping. Unicast addresses support two types of scope: global scope and local scope. There are two types of local scope: link-local addresses and site-local addresses. Link-local unicast addresses are used within a single network link. The first ten bits of the prefix identify the address as a link-local address. Link-local addresses cannot be used outside a network link. Site-local unicast addresses are used within a site or intranet. A site consists of multiple network links, and site-local addresses identify nodes inside the intranet. Site-local addresses cannot be used outside the site. Multicast addresses support 16 different types of scope, including node, link, site, organization, and global scope. A 4-bit field in the prefix identifies the scope.
IPv6
13
Address Structure
Unicast addresses identify a single interface. The address consists of n bits for the prefix, and 128 n bits for the interface ID. Multicast addresses identify a set of interfaces. The address is made up of the first 8 bits of all ones, a 4-bit flags field, a 4-bit scope field, and a 112-bit group ID:
11111111 | flags | scope | group ID
The first octet of ones identifies the address as a multicast address. The flags field identifies whether the multicast address is a well-known address or a transient multicast address. The scope field identifies the scope of the multicast address. The 112-bit group ID identifies the multicast group. Similar to multicast addresses, anycast addresses identify a set of interfaces. However, packets are sent to only one of the interfaces, not to all interfaces. Anycast addresses are allocated from the normal unicast address space and cannot be distinguished from a unicast address in format. Therefore, each member of an anycast group must be configured to recognize certain addresses as anycast addresses.
14
IPv6
Chapter 2
[edit logical-systems] Hierarchy Level on page 15 [edit protocols] Hierarchy Level on page 16 [edit routing-instances] Hierarchy Level on page 30 [edit routing-options] Hierarchy Level on page 35
15
} ripng { ripng-configuration; } router-advertisement { router-advertisement-configuration; } router-discovery { router-discovery-configuration; } } routing-instances { routing-instance-name { routing-instance-configuration; } } routing-options { routing-option-configuration; } } }
bgp { accept-remote-nexthop; advertise-external <conditional>; advertise-inactive; advertise-peer-as; authentication-algorithm algorithm; authentication-key key; authentication-key-chain key-chain; cluster cluster-identifier; damping; description text-description; disable; export [ policy-names ]; family { (iso-vpn | inet | inet6 | inet-vpn | inet6-vpn | l2-vpn) { (any | multicast | unicast | signaling) { prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } rib-group group-name; } labeled-unicast { aggregate-label { community community-name;
16
} explicit-null { connected-only; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } resolve-vpn; rib inet.3; rib-group group-name; } } route-target { advertise-default; external-paths number; prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } } signaling { prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } } } graceful-restart { disable; restart-time seconds; stale-routes-time seconds; } hold-time seconds; import [ policy-names ]; include-mp-next-hop; ipsec-sa ipsec-sa; keep (all | none); local-address address; local-as autonomous-system <private>; local-preference local-preference; log-updown; metric-out (metric | minimum-igp <offset> | igp <offset>); multihop { <ttl-value>; no-nexthop-change; } no-advertise-peer-as; no-aggregator-id; no-client-reflect; out-delay seconds; passive; path-selection { (cisco-non-deterministic | always-compare-med | external-router-id); med-plus-igp { igp-multiplier number;
17
med-multiplier number; } } peer-as autonomous-system; preference preference; remove-private; tcp-mss segment-size; traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } vpn-apply-export; group group-name { accept-remote-nexthop; advertise-external <conditional>; advertise-inactive; advertise-peer-as; [ network/mask-length ]; as-override; authentication-algorithm algorithm; authentication-key key; authentication-key-chain key-chain; bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } holddown-interval milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; multiplier number; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } cluster cluster-identifier; damping; description text-description; export [ policy-names ]; family { (iso-vpn | inet | inet6 | inet-vpn | inet6-vpn | l2-vpn) { (any | multicast | unicast | signaling) { explicit-null { connected-only; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } rib-group group-name; } flow { no-validate policy-name; }
18
labeled-unicast { prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } resolve-vpn; rib inet.3; rib-group group-name; } } route-target { advertise-default; external-paths number; prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } } signaling { prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } } } graceful-restart { disable; restart-time seconds; stale-routes-time seconds; } hold-time seconds; import [ policy-names ]; ipsec-sa ipsec-sa; keep (all | none); local-address address; local-as autonomous-system <private>; local-preference local-preference; log-updown; metric-out (metric | minimum-igp <offset> | igp <offset>); mtu-discovery; multihop <ttl-value>; multipath { multiple-as; } no-advertise-peer-as; no-aggregator-id; no-client-reflect; out-delay seconds; passive; peer-as autonomous-system; preference preference; remove-private; tcp-mss segment-size; traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>;
19
} type type; vpn-apply-export; neighbor address { accept-remote-nexthop; advertise-external <conditional>; advertise-inactive; advertise-peer-as; as-override; authentication-algorithm algorithm; authentication-key key; authentication-key-chain key-chain; bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; multiplier number; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } cluster cluster-identifier; damping; description text-description; export [ policy-names ]; family { (iso-vpn | inet | inet6 | inet-vpn | inet6-vpn | l2-vpn) { (any | multicast | unicast | signaling) { explicit-null { connected-only; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } rib-group group-name; } flow { no-validate policy-name; } labeled-unicast { prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } resolve-vpn; rib inet.3; rib-group group-name; } } route-target {
20
advertise-default; external-paths number; prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } } signaling { prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } } } graceful-restart { disable; restart-time seconds; stale-routes-time seconds; } hold-time seconds; import [ policy-names ]; ipsec-sa ipsec-sa; keep (all | none); local-address address; local-as autonomous-system <private>; local-interface interface-name; local-preference local-preference; log-updown; metric-out (metric | minimum-igp <offset> | igp <offset>); mtu-discovery; multihop <ttl-value>; multipath { multiple-as; } no-advertise-peer-as; no-aggregator-id; no-client-reflect; out-delay seconds; passive; peer-as autonomous-system; preference preference; remove-private; tcp-mss segment-size; traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } vpn-apply-export; } } }
ES-IS
21
disable; restart-duration seconds; } preference preference; interface (interface-name | all) { disable; hello-interval seconds; esct seconds; } traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } }
IS-IS
isis { clns-routing; disable; export [ policy-names ]; ignore-attached-bit; graceful-restart { disable; helper-disable; restart-duration seconds; } label-switched-path name level level metric metric; level level-number { authentication-key key; authentication-type authentication; external-preference preference; ipv6-multicast-metric number; no-csnp-authentication; no-hello-authentication; no-psnp-authentication; preference preference; prefix-export-limit number; wide-metrics-only; } loose-authentication-check; lsp-lifetime seconds; max-areas; no-adjacency-holddown; no-authentication-check; no-ipv4-routing; no-ipv6-routing; overload { advertise-high-metrics; timeout seconds; } reference-bandwidth reference-bandwidth; rib-group { inet group--name; inet6 group--name; } spf-options {
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delay milliseconds; holddown milliseconds; rapid-runs number; } topologies { ipv4-multicast; ipv6-unicast; } traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } traffic-engineering { disable; family inet { shortcuts <ignore-lsp-metrics> { multicast-rpf-routes; } } family inet6 { shortcuts; } } interface (all | interface-name) { disable; bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; multiplier number; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } checksum; csnp-interval (seconds | disable); hello-padding (adaptive | loose | strict); ldp-synchronization { disable; hold-time seconds; } lsp-interval milliseconds; mesh-group (value | blocked); no-ipv4-multicast; no-ipv6-multicast; no-ipv6-unicast; no-unicast-topology; passive; point-to-point; level level-number { disable;
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hello-authentication-key key; hello-authentication-type authentication; hello-interval seconds; hold-time seconds; ipv4-multicast-metric number; ipv6-multicast-metric number; ipv6-unicast-metric number; metric metric; passive; priority number; te-metric metric; } } }
OSPF
ospf { disable; export [ policy-names ]; external-preference preference; graceful-restart { disable; helper-disable; notify-duration seconds; restart-duration seconds; } import [ policy-names ]; no-nssa-abr; overload { timeout seconds; } preference preference; reference-bandwidth reference-bandwidth; rib-group group-name; sham-link { local address; } spf-options { delay milliseconds; holddown milliseconds; rapid-runs milliseconds; } traffic-engineering { accept-unnumbered-interfaces; multicast-rpf-routes; no-topology; shortcuts { ignore-lsp-metrics; lsp-metric-into-summary; } } traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } area area-id {
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area-range network/mask-length <restrict> <exact> <override-metric metric>; interface interface-name { demand-circuit; disable; bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; multiplier number; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } ipsec-sa <sa-name>; } authentication { md5 key-id { key [ key-values ]; } simple-password key-id; } dead-interval seconds; hello-interval seconds; interface-type type; ldp-synchronization { disable; hold-time seconds; } metric metric; neighbor address <eligible>; network-summary-export [ policy-names ]; network-summary-import [ policy-names ]; passive; poll-interval seconds; priority number; retransmit-interval seconds; te-metric metric; transit-delay seconds; } label-switched-path name metric metric; nssa { area-range network/mask-length <restrict> <exact> <override-metric metric>; default-lsa { default-metric metric; metric-type type; type-7; } (no-summaries | summaries); } peer-interface interface-name { disable;
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dead-interval seconds; hello-interval seconds; retransmit-interval seconds; transit-delay seconds; } sham-link-remote address { ipsec-sa <sa-name>; } demand-circuit; metric metric; } stub <default-metric metric> <(no-summaries | summaries)>; virtual-link neighbor-id router-id transit-area area-id { disable; ipsec-sa <sa-name>; } authentication { md5 key-id; simple-password key-id; } dead-interval seconds; hello-interval seconds; retransmit-interval seconds; transit-delay seconds;
OSPFv3
ospf3 { disable; export [ policy-names ]; external-preference preference; import [ policy-names ]; overload { timeout seconds; } preference preference; reference-bandwidth reference-bandwidth; rib-group group-name; spf-options { delay milliseconds; holddown milliseconds; rapid-runs number; } traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } area area-id { area-range network/mask-length <restrict> <exact> <override-metric metric>; interface interface-name { disable; dead-interval seconds; hello-interval seconds; ipsec-sa name; metric metric; neighbor address <eligible>; passive;
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priority number; retransmit-interval seconds; transit-delay seconds; } inter-area-prefix-export [policy-names ]; inter-area-prefix-import [ policy-names ]; nssa { area-range network/mask-length <restrict> <exact> <override-metric metric>; default-lsa { default-metric metric; metric-type type; type-7; } (no-summaries | summaries); } stub <default-metric metric> <(no-summaries | summaries)>; virtual-link neighbor-id router-id transit-area area-id { disable; dead-interval seconds; hello-interval seconds; ipsec-sa name; retransmit-interval seconds; transit-delay seconds; } } }
RIP
rip { any-sender; authentication-key password; authentication-type type; (check-zero | no-check-zero); graceful-restart { disable; restart-time seconds; } holddown seconds; import [ policy-names ]; message-size number; metric-in metric; receive receive-options; rib-group group-name; route-timeout seconds; send send-options; update-interval seconds; traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } group group-name { bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds;
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minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; multiplier number; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (0 | 1 | automatic); } export [ policy-names ]; metric-out metric; preference preference; route-timeout seconds; update-interval seconds; neighbor neighbor-name { authentication-key password; authentication-type type; bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; version (1 | automatic); } (check-zero | no-check-zero); import [ policy-names ]; message-size number; metric-in metric; receive receive-options; route-timeout seconds; send send-options; update-interval seconds; } } }
RIPng
ripng { graceful-restart { disable; restart-time seconds; } holddown seconds; import [ policy-names ]; metric-in metric; receive <none>; route-timeout seconds; send <none>; update-interval seconds; traceoptions {
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file name <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } group group-name { export [ policy-names ]; metric-out metric; preference number; route-timeout seconds; update-interval seconds; neighbor neighbor-name { import [ policy-names ]; metric-in metric; receive <none>; route-timeout seconds; send <none>; update-interval seconds; } } }
Router Advertisement
router-advertisement { interface interface-name { current-hop-limit number; default-lifetime seconds; (managed-configuration | no-managed-configuration); max-advertisement-interval seconds; min-advertisement-interval seconds; (other-stateful-configuration | no-other-stateful-configuration); prefix prefix { (autonomous | no-autonomous); (on-link | no-on-link); preferred-lifetime seconds; valid-lifetime seconds; } reachable-time milliseconds; retransmit-timer milliseconds; traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <detail> <disable>; } } } router-discovery { disable; traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <detail> <disable>; } interface interface-name { min-advertisement-interval seconds; max-advertisement-interval seconds; lifetime seconds; } address address {
Router Discovery
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neighbor-discovery { secure { security-level { (default | secure-messages-only); } cryptographic-address { key-length number; key-pair pathname; } timestamp { clock-drift number; known-peer-window seconds; new-peer-window seconds; } traceoptions { file filename <match> <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag; no-remote-trace <file filename> <flag flag>; } } }
NOTE: The virtual-switch instance type is not supported at the [edit logical-systems logical-system-name hierarchy level. For more detailed information about configuring a virtual switch on MX-series routers, see the JUNOS MX-series Layer 2 Configuration Guide.
routing-instances { routing-instance-name { bridge-domains bridge-domain-name { domain-type bridge; <vlan-id (all | none | number)>; <vlan-tags outer number inner number>; <routing-interface routing-interface-name>; interface interface-name; bridge-options { interface-mac-linit limit; mac-statistics; mac-table-size limit;
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no-mac-learning; static-mac mac-address; } } description text; forwarding-options; interface interface-name; instance-type (forwarding | layer2control | l2vpn | no-forwarding | virtual-router | virtual-switch | vpls | vrf); no-vrf-advertise; route-distinguisher (as-number:number | ip-address:number); vrf-import [ policy-names ]; vrf-export [ policy-names ]; vrf-table-label; vrf-target { export community-name; import community-name; } protocols { bgp { bgp-configuration; } isis { isis-configuration; } l2vpn { l2vpn-configuration; } ldp { ldp-configuration; } msdp { msdp-configuration; } ospf { domain-id domain-id; domain-vpn-tag number; route-type-community (vendor | iana); ospf-configuration; } ospf 3 { domain-id domain-id; domain-vpn-tag number; route-type-community (vendor | iana); ospf3-configuration; } pim { pim-configuration; } rip { rip-configuration; } vpls { vpls-configuration; } }
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routing-options { aggregate { defaults { ... aggregate-options ... } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; ... aggregate-options ... } } auto-export { (disable | enable); family { inet { flow { (disable | enable); rib-group rib-group; } multicast { (disable | enable); rib-group rib-group; } unicast { (disable | enable); rib-group rib-group; } } } traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } } autonomous-system autonomous-system <loops number> { independent-domain; } confederation confederation-autonomous-systems members autonomous-system; dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name { destination-prefix prefix; source-address address; tunnel-type type-of-tunnel; } fate-sharing { group group-name; cost value; from address { to address; } flow { route name { match { match-conditions; } then { actions;
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} } validation { traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } } generate { defaults { generate-options; } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; generate-options; } } instance-export [ policy-names ]; instance-import [ policy-names ]; interface-routes { family (inet | inet6) { export { lan; point-to-point; } } rib-group group-name; } martians { destination-prefix match-type <allow>; } maximum-paths path-limit <log-only | threshold value log-interval seconds>; maximum-prefixes prefix-limit <log-only | threshold value log-interval seconds>; multicast { forwarding-cache { threshold (suppress | reuse) value value; } interface interface-name { enable; } scope scope-name { interface interface-name; prefix destination-prefix; } scope-policy policy-name; ssm-groups { addresses; } } options { syslog (level level | upto level); } resolution { rib routing-table-name { import [ policy-names ];
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resolution-ribs [ routing-table-names ]; } } rib routing-table-name { aggregate { defaults { ... aggregate-options ... } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; ... aggregate-options ... } } filter { input filter-name; } generate { defaults { generate-options; } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; generate-options; } } martians { destination-prefix match-type <allow>; } static { defaults { static-options; } passive group-name; route destination-prefix { lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } next-hop; p2mp-lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } qualified-next-hop address { interface interface-name; metric metric; preference preference; } static-options; } } } passive { group-name { import-policy [ policy-names ]; import-rib [ group-names ];
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export-rib group-name; } } route-distinguisher-id address; route-record; router-id address; static { defaults { static-options; } rib-group group-name; route destination-prefix { bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } local-address ip-address; minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-ttl milliseconds; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; version (1 | automatic); } lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } next-hop; qualified-next-hop address { interface interface-name; metric metric; preference preference; } static-options; } } traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } } } } }
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aggregate { defaults { ... aggregate-options ... } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; ... aggregate-options ... } } auto-export { (disable | enable); family { inet { flow { (disable | enable); rib-group rib-group; } multicast { (disable | enable); rib-group rib-group; } unicast { (disable | enable); rib-group rib-group; } } } traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } } autonomous-system autonomous-system <loops number>; confederation confederation-autonomous-system members autonomous-system; dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name { destination-prefix prefix; source-address address; tunnel-type tunnel-type; } fate-sharing { group group-name; cost value; from address { to address; } } flow { route name { match { match-conditions; } then { actions; } } validation {
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traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } } forwarding-table { export [ policy-names ]; (indirect-next-hop | no-indirect-next-hop); unicast-reverse-path (active-paths | feasible-paths); } generate { defaults { generate-options; } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; generate-options; } } graceful-restart { disable; restart-duration seconds; } instance-export [ policy-names ]; instance-import [ policy-names ]; interface-routes { family (inet | inet6) { export { lan; point-to-point; } } rib-group group-name; } martians { destination-prefix match-type <allow>; } maximum-paths path-limit <log-only | threshold value log-interval seconds>; maximum-prefixes prefix-limit <log-only | threshold value log-interval seconds>; multicast { forwarding-cache { threshold (suppress | reuse) value value; } interface interface-name { enable; } scope scope-name { interface interface-name; prefix destination-prefix; } scope-policy policy-name; ssm-groups { address; } }
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options { syslog (level level | upto level); } ppm { delegate-processing; } resolution { rib routing-table-name { import [ policy-names ]; resolution-ribs [ routing-table-names ]; } } rib routing-table-name { aggregate { defaults { ... aggregate-options ... } rib-group group-name; route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; ... aggregate-options ... } } filter { input filter-name; } generate { defaults { generate-options; } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; generate-options; } } martians { destination-prefix match-type <allow>; } static { defaults { static-options; } rib-group group-name; route destination-prefix { lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } next-hop; qualified-next-hop address { interface interface-name; metric metric; preference preference; } static-options; }
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} } rib-groups { group-name { import-policy [ policy-names ]; import-rib [ group-names ]; export-rib group-name; } } route-distinguisher-id address; route-record; router-id address; static { defaults { static-options; } rib-group group-name; route destination-prefix { bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } holddown-interval milliseconds; local-address ip-address; minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-ttl number; multiplier number; neighbor address; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } next-hop; p2mp-lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } qualified-next-hop (address | interface-name) { interface interface-name; metric metric; preference preference; } source-routing { (ip | ipv6); } static-options; } }
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topologies { (inet | inet6) { topology name; } } traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } } }
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Part 2
Protocol-Independent Routing Properties Overview on page 43 Configuring Routing Tables and Routes on page 49 Configuring Other Protocol-Independent Routing Properties on page 101 Logical System Overview on page 125 Summary of Protocol-Independent Routing Properties Configuration Statements on page 131
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42
Chapter 3
Add routing table entries, including static routes, aggregated (coalesced) routes, generated routes (routes of last resort), and martian routes (routes to ignore). Create additional routing tables and routing table groups. Set the autonomous system (AS) number of the router for use by the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP). Set the router ID, which is used by BGP and Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) to identify the router from which a packet originated. Define BGP confederation members for use by BGP. Configure multicast administrative scoping. Configure how much system logging information to log for the routing protocol process. Configure system-wide tracing (debugging) to track standard and unusual routing operations and record this information in a log file.
This chapter discusses the following topics related to understanding and configuring protocol-independent routing properties:
Protocol-Independent Routing Properties Configuration Statements on page 43 Minimum Protocol-Independent Routing Properties Configuration on page 47
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policy policy-name; ... aggregate-options ... } } auto-export { (disable | enable); family { inet { multicast { (disable | enable); rib-group rib-group; } unicast { (disable | enable); rib-group rib-group; } } } traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } } autonomous-system autonomous-system <loops number>; confederation confederation-autonomous-system members autonomous-system; dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name { destination-prefix prefix; source-address address; tunnel-type type-of-tunnel; } fate-sharing { group group-name; cost value; from address { to address; } } forwarding-table { export [ policy-names ]; (indirect-next-hop | no-indirect-next-hop); unicast-reverse-path (active-paths | feasible-paths); } generate { defaults { generate-options; } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; generate-options; } } instance-export [ policy-names ]; instance-import [ policy-names ]; interface-routes { export { lan;
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point-to-point; } rib-group group-name; } martians { destination-prefix match-type <allow>; } maximum-paths route-limit <log-only | threshold value>; multicast { forwarding-cache { threshold (suppress | reuse) value value; } interface interface-name; scope scope-name { interface [ interface-names ]; prefix destination-prefix; } ssm-groups { address; } } ppm { delegate-processing; } resolution { rib routing-table-name { import [ policy-names ] resolution-ribs [ routing-table-names ]; } } rib routing-table-name { aggregate { defaults { ... aggregate-options ... } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; ... aggregate-options ... } } generate { defaults { generate-options; } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; generate-options; } } martians { destination-prefix match-type <allow>; } source-routing { (ip | ipv6); } static {
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defaults { static-options; } rib-group group-name; route destination-prefix { bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } <local-address ip-address>; minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-ttl number; multiplier number; neighbor address; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } next-hop; p2mp-lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } qualified-next-hop { interface interface-name; metric metric; preference preference; } static-options; } } } rib-groups { group-name { import-policy [ policy-names ]; import-rib [ group-names ]; export-rib group-name; } } route-record; router-id address; static { defaults { static-options; } rib-group group-name; route destination-prefix { bfd-liveness-detection {
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detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } <local-address ip-address>; minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-ttl number; multiplier number; neighbor address; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } next-hop; qualified-next-hop { interface interface-name; metric metric; preference preference; } static-options; } } traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } }
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Chapter 4
Creating Routing Tables on page 49 Configuring Static Routes on page 51 Configuring Aggregate Routes on page 78 Configuring Generated Routes on page 86 Configuring Martian Addresses on page 93 Configuring a Flow Route on page 95 Applying a Filter to a Forwarding Table on page 99
49
rib routing-table-name { static { defaults { static-options; } rib-group group-name; route destination-prefix { lsp-next-hop lsp-name { metric metric; preference preference; } next-hop; p2mp-lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } qualified-next-hop address { metric metric; preference preference; } static-options; } } aggregate { defaults { ... aggregate-options ... } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; ... aggregate-options ... } } generate { defaults { generate-options; } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; generate-options; } } martians { destination-prefix match-type <allow>; } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. The routing table name, routing-table-name, includes the protocol family, optionally followed by a period and a number. The protocol family can be inet for the IPv4 family, inet6 for the IPv6 family, or iso for the International Standards Organization (ISO) protocol family. The number represents the routing instance. The first instance is 0.
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Configure the primary IPv6 routing table inet6.0 and add a static route to it:
[edit routing-options] rib inet6.0 { static { route 8:1::1/128 next-hop 8:3::1; } }
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minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; multiplier number; neighbor address; minimum-receive-ttl number; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } lsp-next-hop lsp-name { metric metric; preference preference; } next-hop address; next-hop options; p2mp-lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } qualified-next-hop address { metric metric; preference preference; } static-options; } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To configure static routes in one of the other routing tables, to explicitly configure static routes in the default IPv4 route table (inet.0), or to explicitly configure static routes in the primary IPv6 routing table (inet6.0), include the static statement:
rib routing-table-name { static { defaults { static-options; } rib-group group-name; route destination-prefix { bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } <local-address ip-address>; minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-ttl number; multiplier number; neighbor address; no-adaptation; transmit-interval {
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threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } lsp-next-hop lsp-name { metric metric; preference preference; } next-hop address; next-hop options; p2mp-lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } qualified-next-hop address { metric metric; preference preference; } static-options; } } }
NOTE: You cannot configure static routes for the IPv4 multicast routing table (inet.1) or the IPv6 multicast routing table (inet6.1). For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. The static statement consists of two parts:
defaultsSpecify global static route options. These options only set default
attributes inherited by all newly created static routes. These are treated as global defaults and apply to all the static routes you configure in the static statement. This part of the static statement is optional.
NOTE: Specifying the global static route options does not create default routes. These options only set default attributes inherited by all newly created static routes.
routeConfigure individual static routes. In this part of the static statement, you
optionally can configure static route options. These options apply to the individual destination only and override any options you configured in the defaults part of the static statement. The following sections explain how to configure static routes:
Specifying the Destination of the Static Route on page 54 Specifying the Next Hop of the Static Route on page 54 Specifying an Independent Preference for a Static Route on page 55
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Specifying an LSP as the Next Hop for a Static Route on page 59 Installing a Static Route into More than One Routing Table on page 60 Configuring a Connectionless Network Services Static Route on page 60 Specifying Static Route Options on page 62 Configuring a Default Route on page 75 Propagating Static Routes into Routing Protocols on page 75 Examples: Configuring Static Routes on page 76
network/mask-length, where network is the network portion of the IP address and mask-length is the destination prefix length. default if this is the default route to the destination. This is equivalent to specifying an IP address of 0.0.0.0/0.
specified as:
IPv4 or IPv6 address of the next hop Interface name (for point-to-point interfaces only)
address or interface-name to specify an IP address of a multipoint interface
NOTE: If an interface becomes unavailable, all configured static routes on that interface are withdrawn from the routing table.
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NOTE: Within a routing instance, you cannot configure a static route with the next-table inet.0 statement if any static route in the main routing instance is already configured with the next-table statement to point to the inet.0 routing table of the routing instance. For example, if you configure on the main routing instance a static route 192.168.88.88/32 with next-table test.inet.0 and the routing instance test is also configured with a static route 192.168.88.88/32 next-table inet.0, the configuration commit fails. Instead, you must configure a rib group both on the main instance and on the routing instance, which enables you to install the static route into both routing tables. For more information, see Installing a Static Route into More than One Routing Table on page 60.
rejectDo not forward packets addressed to this destination. Instead, drop the
packets, send ICMP (or ICMPv6) unreachable messages to the packets originators, and install a reject route for this destination into the routing table.
discardDo not forward packets addressed to this destination. Instead, drop the packets, do not send ICMP (or ICMPv6) unreachable messages to the packets originators, and install a reject route for this destination into the routing table. receiveCause packets to the destination to be received by the local router.
NOTE: The preference and metric options configured by means of this statement only apply to the qualified next hops. The qualified next hop preference and metric override the route preference and metric (for that specific qualified next hop), similar to how the route preference overrides the default preference and metric (for that specific route). To specify an independent preference for a static route on a point-to-point interface or on an Ethernet interface, include the following statements:
qualified-next-hop address { interface interface-name; metric metric; preference preference; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. Specify a next-hop interface by including the qualified-next-hop option. Specifying a next-hop interface is useful when you are creating a route to an IPv6 link-local next-hop address (which is a link-only scope address and is specific only to an
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interface). The preference value can be a number from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1). A lower number indicates a more preferred route. The metric value can be a number from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1). You can configure static routes on an unnumbered Ethernet interface by using the qualified-next-hop option to specify the unnumbered interface as the next-hop interface for a configured static route. To configure an unnumbered Ethernet interface as the next-hop interface for a static route and to specify independent preferences, include the following statements:
qualified-next-hop interface-name { metric metric; preference preference; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. Keep the following points in mind when you configure static routes for unnumbered Ethernet interfaces:
The prefix length of the static route must be 32. The router uses the Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) to resolve the media access control (MAC) address of the destination interface.
For information about how to configure an unnumbered Ethernet interface, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
NOTE: The qualified-next-hop statement is mutually exclusive with all other types of next hops, except for next-hop address. Therefore, you cannot configure next-hop reject, next-hop discard, and next-hop receive with qualified-next-hop for the same destination. For sample configurations, see the following sections:
Example: Configuring Independent Preferences for an IPv4 Static Route on page 56 Example: Configuring Independent Preferences for an IPv6 Static Route on page 57 Example: Configuring Independent Preferences for an Unnumbered Ethernet Interface on page 58
A static route to 0.0.0.0/8 with a next hop through 192.168.1.254, with a metric of 10 and preference of 10.
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A static route to 10.0.0.0/8 with a next hop through 192.168.1.254, with a metric of 6 and preference of 5. A static route to 10.0.0.0/8 with a next hop through 192.168.1.2, with a metric of 6 and preference of 7.
[edit] routing-options { static { defaults { metric 10; preference 10; } route 0.0.0.0/8 { next-hop 192.168.1.254 { retain; no-readvertise; } route 10.0.0.0/8 { next-hop [192.168.1.2]; qualified-next-hop 192.168.1.254 { preference 5; } metric 6; preference 7; } } } }
A static route to fec0:1:1:4::/64 with a next hop through fec0:1:1:2::1, with a metric 10 and preference 10. A static route to fec0:1:1:5::/64 with a next hop through fec0:1:1:2::2, with a metric 6 and preference 5. A static route to fec0:1:1:5::/64 with a next hop through fec0:1:1:2::3, with a metric 6 and preference 7.
[edit] routing-options { rib inet6.0 { static { defaults { metric 10; preference 10; } route fec0:1:1:4::/64 { next-hop fec0:1:1:2::1 { retain; no-readvertise; }
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An unnumbered Ethernet interface ge-0/0/0, which borrows an IP address from donor interface lo0. A static route to 7.7.7.1/32 with a next hop through unnumbered interface ge-0/0/0.0 with a with a metric of 5 and preference of 6.
interfaces { lo0 { unit 0 { family inet { address 5.5.5.1/32; address 6.6.6.1/32; } } } } interfaces ge-0/0/0 { unit 0 { family inet { unnumbered-address lo0.0; } } } routing-options { static { route 7.7.7.1/32 { qualified next-hop ge-0/0/0.0 { metric 5; preference 6; } } } }
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NOTE: The preference and metric configured by means of the lsp-next-hop statement only apply to the LSP next hops. The LSP next-hop preference and metric override the route preference and metric (for that specific LSP next hop), similar to how the route preference overrides the default preference and metric (for that specific route). For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. The preference value can be a number in the range from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1) with a lower number indicating a more preferred route. The metric value can be a number in the range from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1).
NOTE: The lsp-next-hop statement is mutually exclusive with all other types of next hops, except for next-hop address and qualified-next-hop. Therefore, you cannot configure next-hop reject, next-hop discard, next-hop receive, and next-table with lsp-next-hop for the same destination. To specify a point-to-multipoint LSP as the next hop for a static route, include the following statements:
p2mp-lsp-next-hop { interface interface-name; metric metric; preference preference; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. Enable the qualified next-hop address on the interface by specifying the interface option. The preference value can be a number from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 -1). A lower number indicates a more preferred route. The metric value can be a number from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1).
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. The first routing table you list in the import-rib statement must be the one you configured in the rib-group statement.
Examples: Installing a Static Route into More than One Routing Table
Install an IPv4 static route into inet.0 and inet.2:
[edit routing-options rib table1.inet.0 static] rib-group groupA; [edit routing-options rib-groups] groupA { import-rib [table1.inet.0 inet.0 inet.2]; }
Install an IPv6 static route into the inet6.0 and inet6.2 routing tables:
[edit routing-options rib table1.inet6.0 static] rib-group groupA; [edit routing-options rib-groups] groupA { import-rib [table1.inet6.0 inet6.0 inet6.2]; }
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NOTE: CLNS is supported for J-series Services Routers only. To configure a CLNS static route, include the following statements:
rib (iso.0 | instance-name.iso.0) static { route nsap-prefix { next-hop (interface-name | iso-net); qualified-next-hop (interface-name | iso-net) { metric metric; preference preference; } } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the CLNS statement summary sections in the J-series Services Router Advanced WAN Access Configuration Guide. Specify the iso.0 routing table option to configure a primary instance CLNS static route. Specify the instance-name.iso.0 routing table option to configure CLNS static route for a particular routing instance. Specify the route nsap-prefix statement to configure the destination for the CLNS static route. Specify the next-hop (interface-name | iso-net) statement to configure the next hop, specified as an ISO network entity title (NET) or interface name. Specify the qualified-next-hop (interface-name | iso-net) statement to configure the qualified next hop, specified as an ISO network entity title or interface name.
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For information on CLNS, see Configuring Support for Connectionless Network Services on page 324 and the J-series Services Router Advanced WAN Access Configuration Guide.
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community [ community-ids ]; (install | no-install); metric metric <type type>; (preference | preference2 | color | color2) preference <type type>; (readvertise | no-readvertise); resolve; (retain | no-retain); tag string; } } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To configure static route options for IPv6 static routes, include one or more options in the defaults or route part of the static statement. Each of these options is explained in the sections that follow.
rib inet6.0 { static { defaults { (active | passive); as-path <as-path> <origin (egp | igp | incomplete)> <atomic-aggregate> <aggregator as-number in-address>; community [ community-ids ]; (install | no-install); metric metric <type type>; (preference | preference2 | color | color2) preference <type type>; (readvertise | no-readvertise); resolve; (no-retain | retain); } rib-group group-name; route destination-prefix { (active | passive); as-path <as-path> <origin (egp | igp | incomplete)> <atomic-aggregate> <aggregator as-number in-address>; bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } local-address ip-address; minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-ttl number; multiplier number; neighbor address; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); }
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community [ community-ids ]; (install | no-install); metric metric <type type>; (preference | preference2 | color | color2) preference <type type>; (readvertise | no-readvertise); resolve; (retain | no-retain); } } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. The following sections explain how to specify static route options:
Specifying the Route Metric on page 64 Specifying the Route Preference on page 65 Specifying Community Information on page 65 Specifying the AS Path on page 66 Specifying the OSPF Tag on page 67 Specifying Whether a Route Is Installed in the Forwarding Table on page 67 Specifying Whether the Route Is Permanently Installed in the Forwarding Table on page 68 Specifying Whether Inactive Routes Are Removed from the Routing or Forwarding Table on page 69 Specifying When the Route Can Be Readvertised on page 70 Specifying When the Route Can Be Resolved to a Prefix That Is Not Directly Connected on page 70 Configuring Bidirectional Forwarding Detection on page 71
To associate a metric value with an IPv6 route, include the metric statement:
rib inet6.0 static (defaults | route) { metric metric <type type>; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. In the type option, you can specify the type of route. For OSPF, when routes are exported to OSPF, type 1 routes are advertised in type 1 externals, and routes of
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any other type are advertised in type 2 externals. Note that if a qualified-next-hop metric value is configured, this value will override the route metric.
To do this for IPv6 static routes, include one or more of the following statements:
rib inet6.0 static (defaults | route) { (preference | preference2 | color | color2) preference <type type>; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. The preference value can be a number in the range from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1) with a lower number indicating a more preferred route. For more information about preference values, see Route Preferences on page 6. Note that if a qualified-next-hop preference value is configured, this value will override the route preference. In the type option, you can specify the type of route.
To associate community information with IPv6 routes, include the community statement:
rib inet6.0 static (defaults | route) { community [ community-ids ]; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
community-ids is one or more community identifiers for either communities or
extended communities.
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number in the range from 0 through 65,535. You also can specify community-ids as one of the following well-known community names, which are defined in RFC 1997:
to external BGP peers, including peers in other members ASs inside a BGP confederation. You can also explicitly exclude BGP community information with a static route using the none option. Include none when configuring an individual route in the route portion of the static statement to override a community option specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
NOTE: Extended community attributes are not supported at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level. You must configure extended communities at the [edit policy-options] hierarchy level. For information about configuring extended communities information, see the Configuring the Extended Communities Attribute section in the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
To associate AS path information with IPv6 routes, include the as-path statement:
rib inet6.0 static (defaults | route) { as-path <as-path> <origin (egp | igp | incomplete)> <atomic-aggregate> <aggregator as-number in-address>; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
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as-path is the AS path to include with the route. It can include a combination of
individual AS path numbers and AS sets. Enclose sets in brackets ( [ ] ). The first AS number in the path represents the AS immediately adjacent to the local AS. Each subsequent number represents an AS that is progressively farther from the local AS, heading toward the origin of the path. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.1, the range that you can configure for the AS number has been extended to provide BGP support for 4-byte AS numbers as defined in RFC 4893, BGP Support for Four-octet AS Number Space. You can now configure a number from 1 through 4,294,967,295. The JUNOS software continues to support 2-byte AS numbers. You also can specify the AS path using the BGP origin attribute, which indicates the origin of the AS path information:
igpPath information originated within the local AS. egpPath information originated in another AS. incompletePath information learned by some other means.
To attach the BGP ATOMIC_AGGREGATE path attribute to the static route, specify the atomic-aggregate statement. This path attribute indicates that the local system selected a less specific route rather than a more specific route. To attach the BGP AGGREGATOR path attribute to the static route, specify the aggregator statement. When using this statement, you must specify the last AS number that formed the static route (encoded as two octets), followed by the IP address of the BGP system that formed the static route.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
To configure the software not to install active IPv6 static routes into the forwarding table, include the no-install statement:
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Even if you configure a route so it is not installed in the forwarding table, the route is still eligible to be exported from the routing table to other protocols. To explicitly install IPv4 routes into the forwarding table, include the install statement. Include this statement when configuring an individual route in the route portion of the static statement to override a no-install option specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
static (defaults | route) { install; }
To explicitly install IPv6 routes into the forwarding table, include the install statement. Include this statement when configuring an individual route in the route portion of the static statement to override a no-install statement specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
rib inet6.0 static (defaults | route) { install; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
To have an IPv6 static route remain in the forwarding table, include the retain statement. Doing this greatly reduces the time required to restart a system that has a large number of routes in its routing table.
rib inet6.0 static (defaults | route) { retain; }
To explicitly specify that IPv4 routes be deleted from the forwarding table, include the no-retain statement. Include this statement when configuring an individual route in the route portion of the static statement to override a retain option specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
static (defaults | route) {
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no-retain; }
To explicitly specify that IPv6 routes be deleted from the forwarding table, include the no-retain statement. Include this statement when configuring an individual route in the route portion of the static statement to override a retain statement specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
rib inet6.0 static (defaults | route) { no-retain; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
Specifying Whether Inactive Routes Are Removed from the Routing or Forwarding Table
Static routes are only removed from the routing table if the next hop becomes unreachable. This can occur if the local or neighbor interface goes down. To have an IPv4 static route remain installed in the routing and forwarding tables, include the passive statement:
static (defaults | route) { passive; }
To have an IPv6 static route remain installed in the routing and forwarding tables, include the passive statement:
rib inet6.0 static (defaults | route) { passive; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. Routes that have been configured to remain continually installed in the routing and forwarding tables are marked with reject next hops when they are inactive. To explicitly remove IPv4 static routes when they become inactive, include the active statement. Include this statement when configuring an individual route in the route portion of the static statement to override a passive option specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
static (defaults | route) { active; }
To explicitly remove IPv6 static routes when they become inactive, include the active statement. Include this statement when configuring an individual route in the route portion of the static statement to override a passive statement specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
To mark an IPv6 static route as being ineligible for readvertisement, include the no-readvertise statement:
rib inet6.0 static (defaults | route) { no-readvertise; }
To explicitly readvertise IPv4 static routes, include the readvertise statement. Include the readvertise statement when configuring an individual route in the route portion of the static statement to override a no-readvertise statement specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
static (defaults | route) { readvertise; }
To explicitly readvertise IPv6 static routes, include the readvertise statement. Include the readvertise statement when configuring an individual route in the route portion of the static statement to override a no-readvertise option specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
rib inet6.0 static (defaults | route) { readvertise; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
Specifying When the Route Can Be Resolved to a Prefix That Is Not Directly Connected
By default, static routes can point only to a directly connected next hop. You can configure an IPv4 route to a prefix that is not directly connected by resolving the route through the inet.0 and inet.3 routing tables. To configure an IPv4 static route to a prefix that is not a directly connected next hop, include the resolve statement:
static (defaults | route) {
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resolve; }
You can configure an IPv6 route to a prefix that is not directly connected by resolving the route through the inet6.0 routing table. To configure an IPv6 static route to a prefix that is not a directly connected next hop, include the resolve statement:
rib inet6.0 static (defaults | route) { resolve; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.1, the BFD protocol is supported for IPv6 static routes. Global unicast and link-local IPv6 addresses are supported for static routes. The BFD protocol is not supported on multicast or anycast IPv6 addresses. For IPv6, the BFD protocol supports only static routes and beginning with JUNOS Release 9.3. OSPV3. IPv6 for BFD is not supported for any other protocol. To configure the BFD
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protocol for IPv6 static routes, include the bfd-liveness-detection statement at the [edit routing-options rib inet6.0 static route destination-prefix] hierarchy level. Beginning with JUNOS Release 8.5, you can configure a hold-down interval to specify how long the BFD session must remain up before state change notification is sent. To specify the hold-down interval, include the holddown-interval statement:
static route destination-prefix { bfd-liveness-detection { holddown-interval milliseconds; } }
You can configure a number in the range from 0 through 255,000 milliseconds, and the default is 0. If the BFD session goes down and then comes back up during the hold-down interval, the timer is restarted.
NOTE: If a single BFD session includes multiple static routes, the hold-down interval with the highest value is used. To specify the minimum transmit and receive intervals for failure detection, include the minimum-interval statement:
static route destination-prefix { bfd-liveness-detection { minimum-interval milliseconds; } }
This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router transmits hello intervals as well as the minimum interval that the router expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. You can configure a number in the range from 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. You can also specify the minimum transmit and receive intervals separately. To specify only the minimum receive interval for failure detection, include the minimum-receive-interval statement:
static route destination-prefix { bfd-liveness-detection { minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; } }
This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. You can configure a number in the range from 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. To specify the number of hello packets not received by the neighbor that causes the originating interface to be declared down, include the multiplier statement:
static route destination-prefix { bfd-liveness-detection {
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multiplier number; } }
The default value is 3. You can configure a number in the range from 1 through 255. To specify a threshold for detecting the adaptation of the detection time, include the threshold statement:
static route destination-prefix { bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } } }
When the BFD session detection time adapts to a value equal to or higher than the threshold, a single trap and a system log message are sent. The detection time is based on the multiplier of the minimum-interval or the minimum-receive-interval value. The threshold must be a higher value than the multiplier for either of these configured values. For example if the minimum-receive-interval is 300 ms and the multiplier is 3, the total detection time is 900 ms. Therefore, the detection time threshold must have a value higher than 900. To specify only the minimum transmit interval for failure detection, include the transmit-interval minimum-interval statement:
static route destination-prefix { bfd-liveness-detection { transmit-interval { minimum-interval milliseconds; } } }
This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router transmits hello packets to the neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. You can configure a value in the range from 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. To specify the transmit threshold for detecting the adaptation of the transmit interval, include the transmit-interval threshold statement:
static route destination-prefix { bfd-liveness-detection { transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; } } }
The threshold value must be greater than the transmit interval. When the BFD session detection time adapts to a value higher than the threshold, a single trap and a system log message are sent. The detection time is based on the multiplier of the
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value than the multiplier for either of these configured values. To specify the BFD version, include the version statement:
static route destination-prefix { bfd-liveness-detection { version (1 | automatic); } }
The default is to have the version detected automatically. To include an IP address for the next hop of the BFD session, include the neighbor statement:
static route destination-prefix { next-hop interface-name; bfd-liveness-detection { neighbor address; } }
NOTE: You must configure the neighbor statement if the next hop specified is an interface name. If you specify an IP address as the next hop, that address is used as the neighbor address for the BFD session. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.0, you can configure BFD sessions not to adapt to changing network conditions. To disable BFD adaptation, include the no-adaptation statement:
bfd-liveness-detection { no-adaptation; }
NOTE: We recommend that you not disable BFD adaptation unless it is preferable not to have BFD adaptation in your network. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
NOTE: If BFD is configured only on one end of a static route, the route is removed from the routing table. BFD establishes a session when BFD is configured on both ends of the static route. BFD is not supported on ISO address families in static routes. BFD does support IS-IS. If you configure Graceful Routing Engine Switchover (GRES) at the same time as BFD, GRES does not preserve the BFD state information during a failover.
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The JUNOS software also supports BFD over multihop static routes. For example, you can configure BFD over a Layer 3 path to provide path integrity over that path. You can limit the number of hops by specifying the time-to-live (TTL). To configure BFD over multihop static routes, include the following statements:
static route destination-prefix { bfd-liveness-detection { local-address ip-address; minimum-receive-ttl number; } }
To specify the source address for the multihop static route and to enable multihop BFD support, include the local-address statement. To specify the number of hops, include the minimum-receive-ttl statement. You must configure this statement for a multihop BFD session. You can configure a value in the range from 1 through 255. It is optional for a single-hop BFD session. If you configure the minimum-receive-ttl statement for a single-hop session, the value must be 255. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
To configure an IPv6 static route, include the next-hop address and retain statements:
rib inet6.0 static (default | route) { next-hop address; retain; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
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To propagate IPv6 static routes into the routing protocols, include the discard statement:
rib inet6.0 static (defaults | route) { discard; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. In this configuration, you use the discard option instead of reject because discard does not send an ICMP (or ICMPv6) unreachable message for each packet that it drops.
Configure IPv4 static routes that are retained in the forwarding table when the routing software shuts down normally:
[edit] user@host# set routing-options static route 0.0.0.0/0 next-hop 192.168.1.254 retain [edit] user@host# set routing-options static route 10.1.1.1/32 next-hop 127.0.0.1 retain [edit] user@host# show routing-options { static { route 0.0.0.0/0 { next-hop 192.168.1.254; retain; } route 10.1.1.1/32 { next-hop 127.0.0.1; retain; } } }
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Configure an IPv4 static route and have it propagate into the routing protocols. In this example, specify that the route 143.172.0.0/6 next-hop 127.0.0.1 should be discarded.
[edit] user@host# set routing-options static route 143.172.0.0/6 discard [edit] user@host# show routing-options { static { route 143.172.0.0/6 discard; } }
Resolve an IPv6 static route to non-next-hop router 1::/64 using next-hop router 2000::1:
[edit] user@host# set routing-options rib inet6.0 static route 1::/64 next-hop 2000::1 resolve [edit] user@host# show route 1::/64 inet6.0: 26 destinations, 27 routes (25 active, 0 holddown, 1 hidden) + = Active Route, - = Last Active, * = Both 1::/64 *[Static/5] 00:01:50 > to 8:1::2 via ge-0/1/0.0
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user@host# show route 2000::1 inet6.0: 26 destinations, 27 routes (25 active, 0 holddown, 1 hidden) + = Active Route, - = Last Active, * = Both 2000::/126 *[BGP/170] 00:05:32, MED 20, localpref 100 AS path: 2 I > to 8:1::2 via ge-0/1/0.0
Reject next hopIf a more-specific packet does not match a more-specific route, the packet is rejected and an ICMP unreachable message is sent to the packets originator. Metric value as configured with the aggregate statement. Preference value that results from the policy filter on the primary contributor, if a filter is specified. AS path as configured in the aggregate statement, if any. Otherwise, the path is computed by aggregating the paths of all contributing routes. Community as configured in the aggregate statement, if any is specified.
NOTE: You can configure only one aggregate route for each destination prefix.
To configure aggregate routes in the default routing table (inet.0), include the aggregate statement:
aggregate { defaults { ... aggregate-options ... } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; ... aggregate-options ...
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} }
To configure aggregate routes in one of the other routing tables, or to explicitly configure aggregate routes in the default routing table (inet.0), include the aggregate statement:
rib routing-table-name { aggregate { defaults { ... aggregate-options ... } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; ... aggregate-options ... } } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
NOTE: You cannot configure aggregate routes for the IPv4 multicast routing table (inet.1) nor the IPv6 multicast routing table (inet6.1). The aggregate statement consists of two parts:
defaultsHere you specify global aggregate route options. These are treated as global defaults and apply to all the aggregate routes you configure in the aggregate statement. This part of the aggregate statement is optional. routeHere you configure individual aggregate routes. In this part of the aggregate
statement, you optionally can configure aggregate route options. These options apply to the individual destination only and override any options you configured in the defaults part of the aggregate statement. The following sections explain how to configure aggregate routes:
Specifying the Destination of the Aggregate Route on page 79 Specifying Aggregate Route Options on page 80 Specifying Policy with Aggregate Routes on page 85 Advertising Aggregate Routes on page 86
network/mask-length, where network is the network portion of the IP address and mask-length is the destination prefix length.
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default if this is the default route to the destination. This is equivalent to specifying an IP address of 0.0.0.0/0.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. The following sections explain how to specify aggregate route options:
Specifying the Route Metric on page 81 Specifying the Route Preference on page 81 Specifying a Next Hop for a Route on page 81 Specifying Community Information on page 82 Specifying the AS Path on page 83 Specifying Which AS Numbers to Include in the Aggregate Route on page 84 Specifying the OSPF Tag on page 84 Specifying Whether Inactive Routes Are Removed from the Routing or Forwarding Table on page 84
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. In the type option, you can specify the type of route.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. The preference value can be a number in the range from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1) with a lower number indicating a more preferred route. For more information about preference values, see Route Preferences on page 6. In the type option, you can specify the type of route.
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Being able to discard next hops allows you to originate a summary route, which is advertisable through dynamic routing protocols, and allows you to discard received traffic that does not match a more specific route than the summary route. To discard next hops, include the discard option:
discard;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. community-value is the community identifier and can be a number in the range from 0 through 65,535.
community-ids is one or more community identifiers for either communities or
You also can specify community-ids for communities as one of the following well-known community names, which are defined in RFC 1997:
to external BGP peers, including peers in other members ASs inside a BGP confederation. You can explicitly exclude BGP community information with an aggregate route using the none option. Include none when configuring an individual route in the route portion of the aggregate statement to override a community option specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
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NOTE: Extended community attributes are not supported at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level. You must configure extended communities at the [edit policy-options] hierarchy level. For information about configuring extended communities information, see the Configuring the Extended Communities Attribute section in the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
as-path is the AS path to include with the route. It can include a combination of
individual AS path numbers and AS sets. Enclose sets in brackets ( [ ] ). The first AS number in the path represents the AS immediately adjacent to the local AS. Each subsequent number represents an AS that is progressively farther from the local AS, heading toward the origin of the path.
NOTE: Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.1, the numeric AS range has been extended to provide BGP support for 4-byte AS numbers, as defined in RFC 4893, BGP Support for Four-octet AS Number Space. For the AS number, you can now configure a value from 1 through 4,294,967,295. You also can specify the AS path using the BGP origin attribute, which indicates the origin of the AS path information:
egpPath information originated in another AS. igpPath information originated within the local AS. incompletePath information was learned by some other means.
To attach the BGP ATOMIC_AGGREGATE path attribute to the aggregate route, specify the atomic-aggregate option. This path attribute indicates that the local system selected a less specific route rather than a more specific route. To attach the BGP AGGREGATOR path attribute to the aggregate route, specify the aggregator option. When using this option, you must specify the last AS number that formed the aggregate route (encoded as two octets), followed by the IP address of the BGP system that formed the aggregate route.
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To explicitly have all AS numbers from all contributing paths be included in the aggregate routes path, include the full option when configuring routes. Include this option when configuring an individual route in the route portion of the aggregate statement to override a retain option specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
aggregate (defaults | route) { full; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
Specifying Whether Inactive Routes Are Removed from the Routing or Forwarding Table
Static routes are only removed from the routing table if the next hop becomes unreachable. The next hop will become unreachable if there are no contributing routes. To have an aggregate route remain continually installed in the routing and forwarding tables, include the passive option when configuring the route:
aggregate (defaults | route) { passive; }
Routes that have been configured to remain continually installed in the routing and forwarding tables are marked with reject next hops when they are inactive. To explicitly remove aggregate routes when they become inactive, include the active option when configuring routes. Include this option when configuring an individual
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route in the route portion of the aggregate statement to override a retain option specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
aggregate (defaults | route) { active; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
Compare the protocols preferences of the contributing routes. The lower the preference, the better the route. This is similar to the comparison that is done while determining the best route for the routing table. Compare the protocols preferences2 of the contributing routes. The lower preference2 value is better. If only one route has preferences2, then this route is preferred. The preference values are the same. Proceed with a numerical comparison of the prefix values.
a. b.
2.
3.
The primary contributor is the numerically smallest prefix value. If the two prefixes are numerically equal, the primary contributor is the route that has the smallest prefix length value.
4.
At this point, the two routes are the same. The primary contributor does not change. An additional next hop will be available for the existing primary contributor.
A rejected contributor still can contribute to a less specific aggregate route. If you do not specify a policy filter, all candidate routes contribute to an aggregate route. To associate a routing policy with an aggregate route, include the policy statement when configuring the route:
aggregate (defaults | route) { policy policy-name; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: Currently, you can configure only one generated route for each destination prefix.
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To configure generated routes in the default routing table (inet.0), include the generate statement:
generate { defaults { generate-options; } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; generate-options; } }
To configure generated routes in one of the other routing tables, or to explicitly configure generated routes in the default route table (inet.0), include the generate statement:
rib routing-table-name { generate { defaults { generate-options; } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; generate-options; } } }
NOTE: You cannot configure generated routes for the IPv4 multicast routing table (inet.1) or the IPv6 multicast routing table (inet6.1). For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. The generate statement consists of two parts:
defaultsHere you specify global generated route options. These are treated as global defaults and apply to all the generated routes you configure in the generate statement. This part of the generate statement is optional. routeHere you configure individual generated routes. In this part of the generate statement, you optionally can configure generated route options. These options apply to the individual destination only and override any options you configured in the defaults part of the generate statement.
Specifying the Destination of a Generated Route on page 88 Specifying Generated Route Options on page 88 Specifying Policy with Generated Routes on page 92
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network/mask-length, where network i s the network portion of the IP address and mask-length is the destination prefix length. default if this is the default route to the destination. This is equivalent to specifying an IP address of 0.0.0.0/0.
Specifying the Route Metric on page 89 Specifying the Route Preference on page 89 Specifying a Next Hop for a Route on page 89 Specifying Community Information on page 90
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Specifying the AS Path on page 91 Specifying the OSPF Tag on page 91 Specifying Which AS Numbers to Include in the Generated Route on page 92 Specifying Whether Inactive Routes Are Removed from the Routing or Forwarding Table on page 92
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. In the type option, you specify the type of route.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. The preference value can be a number in the range from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1) with a lower number indicating a more preferred route. For more information about preference values, see Route Preferences on page 6. In the type option, you specify the type of route.
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routing table, but ICMP unreachable messages are not sent. The discard next-hop feature allows you to originate a summary route, which is advertisable through dynamic routing protocols, and allows you to discard received traffic that does not match a more specific route than the summary route. For example:
[edit routing-options generate route 1.0.0.0/8] user@host# set discard
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
community-ids is one or more community identifiers for either communities or
You also can specify community-ids for communities as one of the following well-known community names, which are defined in RFC 1997:
no-exportRoutes containing this community name are not advertised outside a BGP confederation boundary. no-export-subconfedRoutes containing this community name are not advertised
to external BGP peers, including peers in other members ASs inside a BGP confederation. You can explicitly exclude BGP community information with a generated route using the none option. Include none when configuring an individual route in the route portion of the generate statement to override a community option specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
NOTE: Extended community attributes are not supported at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level. You must configure extended communities at the [edit policy-options] hierarchy level. For information about configuring extended communities, see the Configuring the Extended Communities Attribute section in the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
as-path is the AS path to include with the route. It can include a combination of
individual AS path numbers and AS sets. Enclose sets in brackets ( [ ] ). The first AS number in the path represents the AS immediately adjacent to the local AS. Each subsequent number represents an AS that is progressively farther from the local AS, heading toward the origin of the path.
NOTE: Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.1, the numeric AS range has been extended to provide BGP support for 4-byte AS numbers, as defined in RFC 4983, BGP Support for Four-octet AS Number Space. For the AS number, you can now configure a number from 1 through 4,294,967,295. You also can specify the AS path using the BGP origin attribute, which indicates the origin of the AS path information:
egpPath information originated in another AS. igpPath information originated within the local AS. incompletePath information was learned by some other means.
To attach the BGP ATOMIC_AGGREGATE path attribute to the generated route, specify the atomic-aggregate option. This path attribute indicates that the local system selected a less specific route rather than a more specific route. To attach the BGP AGGREGATOR path attribute to the generated route, specify the aggregator option. When using this option, you must specify the last AS number that formed the generated route (encoded as two octets), followed by the IP address of the BGP system that formed the generated route.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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To explicitly have all AS numbers from all contributing paths be included in the generated routes path, include the full state when configuring routes. Include this option when configuring an individual route in the route portion of the generate statement to override a retain option specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
full;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure the brief or full statement, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
Specifying Whether Inactive Routes Are Removed from the Routing or Forwarding Table
Static routes are only removed from the routing table if the next hop becomes unreachable. The next hop will become unreachable if there are no contributing routes. To have a generated route remain continually installed in the routing and forwarding tables, include the passive option when configuring the route:
generate (defaults | route) { passive; }
Routes that have been configured to remain continually installed in the routing and forwarding tables are marked with reject next hops when they are inactive. To explicitly remove generated routes when they become inactive, include the active option when configuring routes. Include this option when configuring an individual route in the route portion of the generate statement to override a retain option specified in the defaults portion of the statement.
generate (defaults | route) { active; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
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through the policy filter. The policy can accept or reject the route as a contributor to the generated route and, if the contributor is accepted, the policy can modify the default preferences. The following algorithm is used to compare two generated contributing routes in order to determine which one is the primary or preferred contributor:
1.
Compare the protocols preference of the contributing routes. The lower the preference, the better the route. This is similar to the comparison that is done while determining the best route for the routing table. Compare the protocols preference2 of the contributing routes. The lower preference2 value is better. If only one route has preference2, then this route is preferred. The preference values are the same. Proceed with a numerical comparison of the prefixes' values. a. The primary contributor is the numerically smallest prefix value.
2.
3.
b. If the two prefixes are numerically equal, the primary contributor is the route that has the smallest prefix length value. At this point, the two routes are the same. The primary contributor does not change. An additional next hop will be available for the existing primary contributor. A rejected contributor still can contribute to less specific generated route. If you do not specify a policy filter, all candidate routes contribute to a generated route. To associate a routing policy with an generated route, include the policy statement:
policy policy-name;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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In IPv6, the loopback address, the reserved and unassigned prefixes from RFC 2373, and the link-local unicast prefix are the default martian addresses. The following sections explain how to configure martian routes:
To add martian addresses to the list of default martian addresses in other routing tables, or to explicitly add martian addresses to the list of default martian addresses in the primary IPv6 routing table (inet6.0), include the martians statement:
rib inet6.0 { martians { destination-prefix match-type; } }
To add martian addresses to the list of default martian addresses in any other routing tables, or to explicitly add martian addresses to the list of default martian addresses in the default routing table (inet.0), include the martians statement:
rib routing-table-name { martians { destination-prefix match-type; } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. In destination-prefix, specify the routing destination in one of the following ways:
network/mask-lengthnetwork is the network portion of the IP address and mask-length is the destination prefix length.
In match-type, specify the type of match to apply to the destination prefix. For more information about match types, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
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To delete a martian address from other routing tables, or to explicitly delete a martian address from the primary IPv6 routing table (inet6.0), include the martians statement:
rib inet6.0 { martians { destination-prefix match-type allow; } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
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} }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Flow routes are propagated by BGP through flow-specification NLRI messages. You must enable BGP to propagate these NLRIs. For more information on configuring BGP, see BGP Configuration Guidelines on page 641. The following sections describe the specified tasks:
Configuring the Match Condition on page 96 Configuring the Action on page 98 Validating Flow Routes on page 98
Description IP destination address field. TCP or User Datagram Protocol (UDP) destination port field. You cannot specify both the port and destination-port match conditions in the same term. In place of the numeric value, you can specify one of the following text synonyms (the port numbers are also listed): afs (1483), bgp (179), biff (512), bootpc (68), bootps (67), cmd (514), cvspserver (2401), dhcp (67), domain (53), eklogin (2105), ekshell (2106), exec (512), finger (79), ftp (21), ftp-data (20), http (80), https (443), ident (113), imap (143), kerberos-sec (88), klogin (543), kpasswd (761), krb-prop (754), krbupdate (760), kshell (544), ldap (389), login (513), mobileip-agent (434), mobilip-mn (435), msdp (639), netbios-dgm (138), netbios-ns (137), netbios-ssn (139), nfsd (2049), nntp (119), ntalk (518), ntp (123), pop3 (110), pptp (1723), printer (515), radacct (1813), radius (1812), rip (520), rkinit (2108), smtp (25), snmp (161), snmptrap (162), snpp (444), socks (1080), ssh (22), sunrpc (111), syslog (514), tacacs-ds (65), talk (517), telnet (23), tftp (69), timed (525), who (513), xdmcp (177), zephyr-clt (2103), or zephyr-hm (2104).
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Description Differentiated Services code point (DSCP). The DiffServ protocol uses the type-of-service (ToS) byte in the IP header. The most significant six bits of this byte form the DSCP. You can specify DSCP in hexadecimal or decimal form.
fragment type
Fragment type field. The keywords are grouped by the fragment type with which they are associated:
icmp-code number
ICMP code field. This value or keyword provides more specific information than icmp-type. Because the values meaning depends upon the associated icmp-type value, you must specify icmp-type along with icmp-code. In place of the numeric value, you can specify one of the following text synonyms (the field values are also listed). The keywords are grouped by the ICMP type with which they are associated:
parameter-problem: ip-header-bad (0), required-option-missing (1) redirect: redirect-for-host (1), redirect-for-network (0), redirect-for-tos-and-host (3), redirect-for-tos-and-net (2) time-exceeded: ttl-eq-zero-during-reassembly (1), ttl-eq-zero-during-transit (0) unreachable: communication-prohibited-by-filtering (13), destination-host-prohibited (10), destination-host-unknown (7), destination-network-prohibited (9), destination-network-unknown (6), fragmentation-needed (4), host-precedence-violation (14), host-unreachable (1), host-unreachable-for-TOS (12), network-unreachable (0), network-unreachable-for-TOS (11), port-unreachable (3), precedence-cutoff-in-effect (15), protocol-unreachable (2), source-host-isolated (8), source-route-failed (5)
icmp-type number
ICMP packet type field. Normally, you specify this match in conjunction with the protocol match statement to determine which protocol is being used on the port. In place of the numeric value, you can specify one of the following text synonyms (the field values are also listed): echo-reply (0), echo-request (8), info-reply (16), info-request (15), mask-request (17), mask-reply (18), parameter-problem (12), redirect (5), router-advertisement (9), router-solicit (10), source-quench (4), time-exceeded (11), timestamp (13), timestamp-reply (14), or unreachable (3).
Total IP packet length. TCP or UDP source or destination port field. You cannot specify both the port match and either the destination-port or source-port match condition in the same term. In place of the numeric value, you can specify one of the text synonyms listed under destination-port.
protocol number
IP protocol field. In place of the numeric value, you can specify one of the following text synonyms (the field values are also listed): ah, egp (8), esp (50), gre (47), icmp (1), igmp (2), ipip (4), ipv6 (41), ospf (89), pim (103), rsvp (46), tcp (6), or udp (17). IP source address field.
source prefix
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Description TCP or UDP source port field. You cannot specify the port and source-port match conditions in the same term. In place of the numeric field, you can specify one of the text synonyms listed under destination-port.
tcp-flag type
Description
Accept a packet. This is the default. Discard a packet silently, without sending an Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) message. Replace any communities in the route with the specified communities. Continue to the next match condition for evaluation. Specify a routing instance to which packets are forwarded.
Limit the bandwidth on the flow route. Sample the traffic on the flow route.
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Flow routes received using the BGP NLRI messages are validated before they are installed into the flow primary instance routing table instance.inetflow.0. The validation procedure is described in the draft-ietf-idr-flow-spec-00.txt, Dissemination of Flow Specification Rules. You can bypass the validation process and use your own specific import policy. To trace validation operations, include the validation statement at the [edit routing-options flow] hierarchy level:
[edit routing-options flow] validation { traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: Forwarding table filtering is not supported on the interfaces you configure as tunnel sources. Input filters affect only the transit packets exiting the tunnel. Forwarding table filtering is not supported with the flow routes configuration.
For more information about forwarding table filters, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
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Chapter 5
Configuring the AS Number on page 102 Configuring the Router Identifier on page 103 Configuring AS Confederation Members on page 103 Configuring Route Recording for Flow Aggregation on page 104 Creating Routing Table Groups on page 104 Configuring How Interface Routes Are Imported into Routing Tables on page 106 Configuring Multicast Scoping on page 107 Enabling Multicast on an Interface on page 108 Configuring Additional Source-Specific Multicast Groups on page 108 Configuring Multicast Forwarding Cache Limits on page 109 Configuring Per-Packet Load Balancing on page 109 Configuring Unicast Reverse-Path-Forwarding Check on page 112 Configuring Graceful Restart on page 113 Configuring a Route Distinguisher on page 114 Configuring a Dynamic Tunnel on page 114 Configuring Logging for the Routing Protocol Process on page 116 Configuring Route Resolution on page 116 Enabling an Indirect Next Hop on page 117 Enabling Nonstop Routing on page 118 Tracing Global Routing Protocol Operations on page 119 Enabling Distributed Periodic Packet Management on page 121 Enabling Source Routing on page 122 Configuring a Timer to Delay Multiple Exit Discriminator IGP Updates on page 122
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To specify the maximum number of times that this AS number can appear in an AS path, include the loops option. You can specify a value in the range from 1 through 10. The default value is 1. The AS path attribute is modified when a route is advertised to an EBGP peer. Each time a route is advertised to an EBGP peer, the local router prepends its AS number to the existing path attribute, and a value of 1 is added to the AS number. The default loop value of 1 means that an AS number can appear in an AS path only one time. That is, when the local router advertises an AS path to an EBGP peer, that peer cannot advertise that AS path to another EBGP peer. To ensure that the AS path can be advertised by the peer that receives the route to another EBGP peer, specify a loops value of 2.
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NOTE: When you specify the same AS number in more than one routing instance on the local router, you must configure the same number of loops for the AS number in each instance. For example, if you configure a value of 3 for the loops statement in a VPN routing and forwarding (VRF) routing instance that uses the same AS number as that of the master instance, you must also configure a value of 3 loops for the AS number in the master instance. Use the independent-domain option if the loops statement must be enabled only on a subset of routing instances. For more information about configuring an independent AS domain, see Configuring an Independent AS Domain on page 251.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: We strongly recommend that you configure the router identifier under the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level to avoid unpredictable behavior if the interface address on a loopback interface changes.
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If you are using BGP, you can enable the local router to participate as a member of an AS confederation. To do this, include the confederation statement:
confederation confederation-autonomous-system members [ autonomous-systems ];
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Specify the AS confederation identifier, along with the AS numbers that are members of the confederation. Note that peer adjacencies will not form if two BGP neighbors disagree about whether an adjacency falls within a particular confederation.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. For more information about flow aggregation and sampling, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. The routing table group can have any name you choose (specified in group-name). If the group name you specify is not created explicitly, as described in Configuring Other Protocol-Independent Routing Properties on page 101, you can create it by naming it in the rib-groups statement. Each routing table group must contain one or more routing tables that the JUNOS software uses when importing routes (specified in the import-rib statement). The first
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routing table you specify is the primary routing table, and any additional routing tables are the secondary routing tables. The primary routing table determines the address family of the routing table group. To configure an Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) routing table group, specify inet.0 as the primary routing table. To configure an Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) routing table group, specify inet6.0 as the primary routing table. If you configure an IPv6 routing table group, the primary and all secondary routing tables must be IPv6 routing tables (inet6.x). You cannot have inet and inet6 routing tables in the same import-rib statement. Each routing table group optionally can contain one routing table group that the JUNOS software uses when exporting routes to the routing protocols (specified in the export-rib statement). If you have configured a routing table, configure the OSPF primary instance at the [edit protocols ospf] hierarchy level with the statements needed for your network so that routes are installed in inet.0 and in the forwarding table. Make sure to include the routing table group. For more information, see Configuring Multiple Instances of OSPF on page 226. After specifying the routing table from which to import routes, you can apply one or more policies to control which routes will be installed in the routing table group. To apply a policy to routes being imported into the routing table group, include the import-policy statement:
rib-groups group-name { import-policy [ policy-names ]; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
Create an IPv6 routing table group so that interface routes are installed into two routing tables, inet6.0 and inet6.2:
[edit] routing-options { interface-routes {
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To associate an IPv6 routing table group with an interface, include the interface-routes statement at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level:
interface-routes { rib-group inet6 group-name; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To create the routing table groups, include the passive statement at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level. For configuration information, see Creating Routing Table Groups on page 104. If you have configured a routing table, configure the OSPF primary instance at the [edit protocols ospf] hierarchy level with the statements needed for your network so that routes are installed in inet.0 and in the forwarding table. Make sure to include the routing table group. For more information, see Configuring Multiple Instances of OSPF on page 226. To export local routes, include the export statement:
export { lan; point-to-point; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
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To export LAN routes, include the lan option. To export point-to-point routes, include the point-to-point option. Only local routes on point-to-point interfaces configured with a destination address are exportable.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. Specify a name for the scope, its address range, and the router interfaces on which you are configuring scoping. You can apply a multicast scoping policy to the routing table. To apply a scoping policy, include the scoping-policy statement at the [edit routing-options multicast] hierarchy level. For more information on configuring a scoping policy, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary section for these statements.
NOTE: You cannot enable multicast traffic on an interface and configure PIM on the same interface simultaneously.
NOTE: Static routes must be configured before you can enable multicast on an interface. Configuring the interface statement alone does not install any routes into the routing table. This feature relies on the static route configuration.
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address; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For an overview of logical systems and a detailed example of logical system configuration, see the logical systems chapter of the JUNOS Feature Guide. By default, there are no limits on the number of multicast forwarding cache entries. Specify a value for the threshold at which to suppress new multicast forwarding cache entries and an optional reuse value for the threshold at which the router will begin to create new multicast forwarding cache entries. The range for both is from 1 through 200,000. If configured, the reuse value should be less than the suppression threshold value. The suppression value is mandatory. If you do not specify the optional reuse value, then the number of multicast forwarding cache entries is limited to the suppression value. A new entry is created as soon as the number of multicast forwarding cache entries falls below the suppression value. For information about supported standards for multicast scoping, see the JUNOS Multicast Protocols Configuration Guide.
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On routers with an Internet Processor I ASIC, when per-packet load balancing is configured, traffic between routers with multiple paths is spread in a random fashion across the available interfaces. The forwarding table balances the traffic headed to a destination, transmitting packets in round-robin fashion among the multiple next hops (up to a maximum of eight equal-cost load-balanced paths). The traffic is load-balanced on a per-packet basis.
NOTE: Per-packet load distribution uses a hashing algorithm that distributes packets over equal-cost links. The algorithm is designed to distribute packets to prevent any single link from being saturated. However, per-packet load balancing offers no guarantee of equal distribution of traffic over equal-cost links, nor does it guarantee that increasing the number of Internet flows will create a better hash distribution. On routers with the Internet Processor II ASIC and T-series Internet Processor II ASIC, when per-packet load balancing is configured, traffic between routers with multiple paths is divided into individual traffic flows (up to a maximum of 16 equal-cost load-balanced paths). Packets for each individual flow are kept on a single interface. To recognize individual flows in the transit traffic, the router examines each of the following:
Source IP address Destination IP address Protocol Source port number Destination port number Source interface index Type of service (ToS)
The router recognizes packets in which all of these parameters are identical, and it ensures that these packets are sent out through the same interface. This prevents problems that might otherwise occur with packets arriving at their destination out of their original sequence. The following steps shows how to configure per-packet load balancing:
1.
Define a load-balancing routing policy by including one or more policy-statement statements at the [edit policy-options] hierarchy level, defining an action of load-balance per-packet:
policy-statement policy-name { from { match-conditions; route-filter destination-prefix match-type <actions>; prefix-list name; } then { load-balance per-packet; } }
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2.
Apply the policy to routes exported from the routing table to the forwarding table. To do this, include the export statement:
export policy-name;
NOTE: You cannot apply the export policy to VRF routing instances.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: Specify all next-hops of that route, if more than one exists, when allocating a label corresponding to a route that is being advertised.
NOTE: Configure the forwarding-options hash key for MPLS to include the IP payload.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To consider only active paths during the unicast RPF check, include the active-paths option. To consider all feasible paths during the unicast RPF check, include the feasible-paths option.
NOTE: Reverse-path forwarding is not supported on the interfaces you configure as tunnel sources. This affects only the transit packets exiting the tunnel. You must enable unicast RPF check on an interface. To do so, include the rpf-check statement:
rpf-check <fail-filter filter-name>;
[edit interfaces interface-name unit logical-unit-number family (inet | inet6)] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name interfaces interface-name unit logical-unit-number family (inet | inet6)]
For more information about configuring unicast RPF on an interface, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
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The restarting router is not already cooperating with another restart already in progress. The grace period does not expire.
Graceful restart is disabled by default. You must configure graceful restart at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level to enable the feature for Layer 2 and Layer 3 VPNs. To enable graceful restart, include the graceful-restart statement:
graceful-restart { disable; restart-duration seconds; }
To disable graceful restart, include the disable statement. To configure a time period for complete restart, include the restart-duration statement. You can specify a number between 120 and 900. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. For a detailed example of a graceful restart configuration, see the JUNOS High Availability Configuration Guide.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. For more information about VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
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traffic to be forwarded to that route. Formerly, GRE tunnels had to be established manually. Only GRE IPv4 tunnels are supported. To configure a dynamic tunnel between two PE routers, include the dynamic-tunnels statement:
dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name { destination-networks prefix; source-address address; tunnel-type type; }
Specify the IPv4 prefix range (for example, 10/8 or 11.1/16) for the destination network by including the destination-networks statement. Only tunnels within the specified IPv4 prefix range can be created.
destination-networks prefix;
[edit routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name]
Specify the source address for the GRE tunnels by including the source-address statement. The source address specifies the address used as the source for the local tunnel endpoint. It can be any local address on the router (typically the router ID or the loopback address).
source-address address;
[edit routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name]
Specify the type of tunnel to be dynamically created by including the tunnel-type statement. The only currently valid value is gre (for GRE tunnels).
tunnel-type type;
[edit routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name]
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: System logging frequently deals with processes logged at the info or notice severity level. Make sure that your regular system logging configurations include the info or notice levels.
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To specify the name of the routing table to modify, include the rib routing-table-name statement. To specify one or more import policies to use for route resolution, include the import [ policy-names ] statement. To specify one or more routing tables to use for route resolution, include the resolution-ribs [ routing-table-names ] statement. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
You can enable the JUNOS software to maintain the indirect next hop to forwarding next-hop binding on the Packet Forwarding Engine forwarding table. As a result, fewer route to forwarding next-hop bindings need to be updated, which improves the route convergence time. Figure 3 on page 118 illustrates the route to forwarding next-hop bindings with indirect next hop enabled.
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NOTE: When virtual private LAN service (VPLS) is configured in the router, the indirect-next-hop statement is not supported at the [edit routing-options forwarding-table] hierarchy level. To disable indirectly connected next hops, include the no-indirect-next-hop statement:
no-indirect-next-hop;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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NOTE: You cannot configure nonstop routing and graceful restart protocol extensions simultaneously. To ensure proper operation, include either the nonstop-routing statement or the graceful-restart statement at the hierarchy level, but not both statements at the same time. For more detailed information about nonstop routing, see the JUNOS High Availability Configuration Guide.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You can specify the following global routing protocol tracing flags:
allTrace all tracing operations. condition-managerTrace condition manager events. config-internalTrace configuration internals. generalTrace all normal operations and routing table changes (a combination
normalTrace all normal operations. nsr-synchronizationTrace nonstop-routing synchronization events. parseTrace configuration parsing. policyTrace policy operations and actions. regex-parseTrace regular-expression parsing. routeTrace routing table changes. stateTrace state transitions. taskTrace interface transactions and processing. timerTrace timer usage.
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detailProvide detailed trace information. receiveTrace only packets being received. sendTrace only packets being transmitted.
NOTE: Use the trace flags detail and all with caution. These flags may cause the CPU to become very busy.
The flags in a traceoptions flag statement are identifiers. When you use the set command to configure a flag, any flags that might already be set are not modified. In the following example, setting the csn tracing flag has no effect on the already configured detail flag. Use the delete command to delete a particular flag.
[edit protocols isis] user@host# show traceoptions { flag csn detail; } [edit protocols isis] user@host# set traceoptions flag csn [edit protocols isis] user@host# show traceoptions { flag csn detail; } user@host# delete traceoptions flag detail [edit protocols isis] user@host# show traceoptions { flag csn; }
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file routing size 10m files 10; flag all; flag normal disable; } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: Distributed PPM is supported only on the M120, M320, MX-series, T-series, and TX Matrix routing platforms. The following types of sessions are not supported by distributed PPM:
Protocols other than BFD Multihop BFD session BFD session over a label-switched path Any protocol session that does not explicitly specify that the adjacency and periodic sends must be distributed Sessions over aggregated Ethernet interfaces and integrated routing and bridging interfaces
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In addition, on the M120 routing platform, when Forwarding Engine Board (FEB) redundancy is configured and a FEB fails over, PPM sessions do not automatically switch over to the newly active FEB. For more information about FEB redundancy, see the JUNOS System Basics Configuration Guide.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary sections for this statement. The default interval is 10 minutes. The interval that you can configure is in the range from 10 through 600. You must separately configure the BGP group or peer that you want to delay sending MED IGP updates for the configured interval. For more information, see Configuring the Multiple Exit Discriminator Metric on page 663.
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NOTE: If you have nonstop routing enabled and a switchover occurs, the delayed MED updates might be advertised as soon as the switchover occurs. For more detailed information about nonstop routing, see the JUNOS High Availability Configuration Guide.
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Chapter 6
NOTE: Beginning with JUNOS software Release 9.3, the logical router feature has been renamed logical system. All configuration statements, operational commands, show command outputs, error messages, log messages, and SNMP MIB objects that contain the string logical-router or logical-routers have been changed to logical-system and logical-systems, respectively. This chapter discusses the following topics related to understanding and configuring logical system properties:
Overview on page 125 Logical System Configuration Statements on page 127 Minimum Logical System Configuration on page 127 Logical System Configuration Guidelines on page 129 Configuring a Logical System on page 129 Logical System Configuration Statement on page 130
Overview
Logical systems perform a subset of the actions of a physical router and have their own unique routing tables, interfaces, policies, and routing instances. A set of logical systems within a single router can handle the functions previously performed by several small routers.
Overview
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Open Shortest Path First (OSPF), Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS), Routing Information Protocol (RIP), RIP next generation (RIPng), Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP), Label Distribution Protocol (LDP), static routes, various multicast protocols, and IP version 4 (IPv4) and version 6 (IPv6) are supported at the [edit logical-systems protocols] hierarchy level. Basic Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) for core provider router functionality is supported at the [edit logical-systems protocols mpls]] hierarchy level. All policy-related statements available at the [edit policy-options] hierarchy level are supported at the [edit logical-systems policy-options] hierarchy level. Most routing options statements available at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level are supported at the [edit logical-systems routing-options] hierarchy level. Only the route-record statement is not supported at the [edit logical-systems routing-options] hierarchy level. Graceful Routing Engine switchover (GRES) is supported. You can assign most interface types to a logical system, including SONET interfaces, Ethernet interfaces, Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) interfaces, ATM2 interfaces, Channelized Q Performance Processor (QPP) interfaces, aggregated interfaces, link services interfaces, and multilink services interfaces. Source class usage, destination class usage, unicast reverse path forwarding, class of service, firewall filters, class-based forwarding, and policy-based accounting work with logical systems when you configure these features on the physical router. Multicast protocols, such as Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) and Distance Vector Multicast Routing Protocol (DVMRP) are supported at the [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols] hierarchy level. Rendezvous point (RP) and source designated router (DR) functionality for multicast protocols within a logical system is also supported. The Bidirectional Forwarding Protocol (BFD) is supported.
You can configure a maximum of 15 logical systems on one physical router. The router has only one configuration file, which contains configuration information for the physical router and all associated logical systems. Master users can access the full configuration. However, logical system users can access only the portion of the configuration related to their particular logical system. All configuration commits performed by a logical system user are treated as commit private. For more information on the commit private command, see the JUNOS System Basics Configuration Guide. If a logical system experiences an interruption of its routing protocol process (rpd), the core dump output is saved in a file in the following location: /var/tmp/rpd_logical-system-name.core-tarball.number.tgz. Likewise, if you issue the restart routing command in a logical system, only the routing protocol process (rpd) for the logical system is restarted.
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Overview
If you configure trace options for a logical system, the output log file is stored in the following location: /var/tmp/logical-system-name. The following Physical Interface Cards (PICs) are not supported with logical systems: Adaptive Services PIC, ES PIC, Monitoring Services PIC, and Monitoring Services II PIC. Sampling, port mirroring, IP Security (IPsec), and Generalized MPLS (GMPLS) are not supported. Label-switched path (LSP) ping and traceroute for autonomous system (AS) number lookup are not supported. If you configure multiple logical systems, you can configure a VPLS routing instance only for the first logical system configured at the [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances instance-name protocols vpls] hierarchy level.
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[edit interfaces] [edit policy-options] [edit protocols] [edit routing-instances] [edit routing-options]
Each of these hierarchy levels is used to configure an aspect of the logical system. The logical system fully supports each subsequent hierarchy level. You always have at least one logical system, the master logical system by default. For documentation of these aspects of the logical system, see the documentation for each hierarchy level. The configurations are not documented separately for logical systems. For a detailed example of a logical system configuration, see the JUNOS Feature Guide. For information on configuring logical system interface properties, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide and the JUNOS Services Interfaces Configuration Guide. For information on configuring logical system routing policy properties, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. For information on configuring logical system multicast protocols, see the JUNOS Multicast Protocols Configuration Guide. For information on configuring logical system routing protocols, see Interior Gateway Protocols on page 291 and BGP on page 633. For information on configuring logical system routing instances, see Routing Instances on page 203. For information on configuring logical system routing options, see Protocol-Independent Routing Properties on page 41.
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logical-systems
Syntax Hierarchy Level Release Information Description Options Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Statement name changed from logical-router beginning with JUNOS Release 9.3. (M-series, MX-series, and T-series only) Configure a logical system.
logical-system-nameName of the logical system.
See Logical System Configuration Guidelines on page 129. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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Chapter 7
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active
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(active | passive); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure whether static, aggregate, or generated routes are removed from the routing and forwarding tables when they become inactive. Routes that have been configured to remain continually installed in the routing and forwarding tables are marked with reject next hops when they are inactive.
activeRemove a route from the routing and forwarding tables when it becomes
inactive.
active
See Configuring Static Routes on page 51, Configuring Aggregate Routes on page 78, and Configuring Generated Routes on page 86. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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active
aggregate
Syntax
aggregate { defaults { ... aggregate-options ... } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; ... aggregate-options ... } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name], [edit routing-options], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name]
Hierarchy Level
with the route when it is installed in the routing table. Specify zero or more of the following options in aggregate-options. Each option is explained separately.
(active | passive); as-path <as-path> <origin (egp | igp | incomplete)> <atomic-aggregate> <aggregator as-number in-address>; community [ community-ids ]; discard; (brief | full); (metric | metric2 | metric3 | metric4) value <type type>; (preference | preference2 | color | color2) preference <type type>; tag string;
defaultsSpecify global aggregate route options. These options only set default
attributes inherited by all newly created aggregate routes. These are treated as global defaults and apply to all the aggregate routes you configure in the aggregate statement. This part of the aggregate statement is optional.
route destination-prefixConfigure a nondefault aggregate route:
aggregate
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defaultFor the default route to the destination. This is equivalent to specifying an IP address of 0.0.0.0/0. destination-prefix/prefix-lengthdestination-prefix is the network portion of the IP address, and prefix-length is the destination prefix length.
See Configuring Aggregate Routes on page 78. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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aggregate
as-path
Syntax
as-path <as-path> <origin (egp | igp | incomplete)> <atomic-aggregate> <aggregator as-number ip-address>; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Associate Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) autonomous system (AS) path information with a static, aggregate, or generated route. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.1, the numeric range for the AS number has been extended to provide BGP support for 4-byte AS numbers. For more information, see Configuring the AS Number on page 102. JUNOS continues to support 2-byte AS numbers.
Options
route. You must specify the last AS number that formed the aggregate route (encoded as two octets) for as-number, followed by the IP address of the BGP system that formed the aggregate route for in-address.
as-path(Optional) AS path to include with the route. It can include a combination
of individual AS path numbers and AS sets. Enclose sets in brackets ( [ ] ). The first AS number in the path represents the AS immediately adjacent to the local AS. Each subsequent number represents an AS that is progressively farther from the local AS, heading toward the origin of the path. You cannot specify a regular expression for as-path; you must use a full, valid AS path.
atomic-aggregate(Optional) Attach the BGP atomic-aggregate path attribute to the
aggregate route. This path attribute indicates that the local system selected a less specific route instead of a more specific route.
origin egp(Optional) BGP origin attribute that indicates that the path information
as-path
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origin igp(Optional) BGP origin attribute that indicates that the path information
See Configuring Static Routes on page 51, Configuring Aggregate Routes on page 78, and Configuring Generated Routes on page 86. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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as-path
auto-export
Syntax
auto-export { (disable | enable); family { inet { multicast { (disable | enable); rib-group rib-group; } unicast { (disable | enable); rib-group rib-group; } } traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Export routes between routing instances.
(disable | enable)Disable or enable auto-export.
Default: Enable
familyAddress family. inetInternet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) address family. multicastMulticast routing information. unicastUnicast routing information.
See Configuring Policy-Based Export for Routing Instances on page 241. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
auto-export
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autonomous-system
Syntax
autonomous-system autonomous-system <loops number> { independent-domain; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the routers AS number. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.1, the numeric range is extended to provide BGP support for 4-byte AS numbers as defined in RFC 4893, BGP Support for Four-octet AS Number Space. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.2, you can also configure a 4-byte AS number using the AS-dot notation format of two integer values joined by a period: <16-bit high-order value in decimal>.<16-bit low-order value in decimal>. For example, the 4-byte AS number of 65,546 in plain-number format is represented as 1.10 in the AS-dot notation format.
Options
Information Center (NIC). Range: 1 through 4,294,967,295 in plain-number format Range: 0.0 through 65535.65535 in AS-dot notation format.
number(Optional) Maximum number of times this AS number can appear in an AS
NOTE: When you specify the same AS number in more than one routing instance on the local router, you must configure the same number of loops for the AS number in each instance. For example, if you configure a value of 3 for the loops statement in a VRF routing instance that uses the same AS number as that of the master instance, you must also configure a value of 3 loops for the AS number in the master instance. Use the independent-domain option if the loops statement must be enabled only on a subset of routing instances.
See Configuring the AS Number on page 102. routingTo view this statement in the configuration.
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autonomous-system
independent-domain
autonomous-system
139
bfd-liveness-detection
Syntax
bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } holddown-interval milliseconds; local-address ip-address; minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-ttl number; multiplier number; neighbor address; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static route destination-prefix], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static route destination-prefix qualified-next-hop (interface-name | address)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static route destination-prefix], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static route destination-prefix qualified-next-hop (interface-name | address)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static route destination-prefix], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static route destination-prefix qualified-next-hop (interface-name | address)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options static route destination-prefix], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options static route destination-prefix qualified-next-hop (interface-name | address)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static route destination-prefix], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static route destination-prefix qualified-next-hop (interface-name | address)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static route destination-prefix qualified-next-hop (interface-name | address)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static route destination-prefix], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name static route destination-prefix], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name static route destination-prefix qualified-next-hop (interface-name | address)], [edit routing-options static route destination-prefix], [edit routing-options static route destination-prefix qualified-next-hop (interface-name | address)]
Hierarchy Level
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bfd-liveness-detection
Release Information
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. detection-time threshold and transmit-interval threshold options introduced in JUNOS Release 8.2. local-address statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.2. minimum-receive-ttl statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.2. Support for logical routers introduced in JUNOS Release 8.3. holddown-interval statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.5. no-adaptation statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Support for IPv6 static routes introduced in JUNOS Release 9.1. Configure bidirectional failure detection timers for static routes.
Description
bfd-liveness-detection
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Options
Forwarding Detection (BFD) protocol session detection time adapts to a value equal to or greater than the threshold, a single trap and a single system log message are sent.
holddown-interval millisecondsConfigure an interval specifying how long a BFD
session must remain up before a state change notification is sent. Range: 0 through 255,000 Default: 0
minimum-interval millisecondsConfigure the minimum intervals at which the local
router transmits a hello packet and then expects to receive a reply from the neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. Range: 1 through 255,000
minimum-receive-interval millisecondsConfigure the minimum interval at which the
local router expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. Range: 1 through 255,000
multiplier numberConfigure number of hello packets not received by the neighbor
that causes the originating interface to be declared down. Range: 1 through 255 Default: 3
versionConfigure the BFD protocol version to detect. Range: 1 or automatic Default: automatic (autodetect the BFD protocol version) local-address ip-addressEnable a multihop BFD session and configure the source
We recommend that you not disable BFD adaptation unless it is preferable not to have BFD adaptation enabled in your network.
transmit-interval threshold millisecondsConfigure a threshold. When the BFD session
transmit interval adapts to a value greater than the threshold, a single trap and a single system log message are sent. The interval threshold must be greater than the minimum transmit interval. Range: 0 through 4,294,967,295
transmit-interval minimum-interval millisecondsConfigure the minimum interval at
which the local router transmits hello packets to a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session.
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bfd-liveness-detection
See Configuring Bidirectional Forwarding Detection on page 71. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
brief
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(brief | full); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure all AS numbers from all contributing paths to be included in the aggregate or generated routes path.
briefInclude only the longest common leading sequences from the contributing
AS paths. If this results in AS numbers being omitted from the aggregate route, the BGP ATOMIC_ATTRIBUTE path attribute is included with the aggregate route.
full
See Configuring Aggregate Routes on page 78 and Configuring Generated Routes on page 86. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. aggregate, generate
color
See
preference
brief
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community
Syntax Hierarchy Level
community ([ community-ids ] | no-advertise | no-export | no-export-subconfed | none); [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Associate BGP community information with a static, aggregate, or generated route.
community-idsOne or more community identifiers. The community-ids format varies
according to the type of attribute that you use. The BGP community attribute format is as-number:community-value:
through 65,535.
0 through 65,535. For more information about BGP community attributes, see the Configuring the Extended Communities Attribute section in the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. For specifying the BGP community attribute only, you also can specify community-ids as one of the following well-known community names defined in RFC 1997:
no-advertiseRoutes containing this community name are not advertised to other BGP peers. no-exportRoutes containing this community name are not advertised outside a BGP confederation boundary. no-export-subconfedRoutes containing this community name are not advertised
to external BGP peers, including peers in other members ASs inside a BGP confederation.
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community
noneExplicitly exclude BGP community information with a static route. Include this option when configuring an individual route in the route portion to override a community option specified in the defaults portion.
NOTE: Extended community attributes are not supported at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level. You must configure extended communities at the [edit policy-options] hierarchy level. For information about configuring extended communities, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
Usage Guidelines
See Configuring Static Routes on page 51, Configuring Aggregate Routes on page 78, and Configuring Generated Routes on page 86. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. aggregate, generate, static
confederation
Syntax Hierarchy Level
confederation confederation-autonomous-system members [ autonomous-systems ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the routers confederation AS number.
autonomous-systemAS numbers of the confederation members.
See Configuring AS Confederation Members on page 103. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
confederation
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destination-networks
Syntax Hierarchy Level
destination-networks prefix; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name], [edit routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the IPv4 prefix range for the destination network by including the destination-networks statement. Only tunnels within the specified IPv4 prefix range can be created.
prefixDestination prefix of network.
See Configuring a Dynamic Tunnel on page 114. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
disable
Syntax Hierarchy Level
disable; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options graceful-restart], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options graceful-restart], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options graceful-restart], [edit routing-options graceful-restart]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Disable graceful restart. See Configuring Graceful Restart on page 113. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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destination-networks
discard
Syntax Hierarchy Level
discard; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Do not forward packets addressed to this destination. Instead, drop the packets, do not send ICMP unreachable messages to the packets originators, and install a reject route for this destination into the routing table. When an aggregate route becomes active, it is installed in the routing table with a reject next hop, which means that ICMP unreachable messages are sent. See Configuring Aggregate Routes on page 78 and Configuring Generated Routes on page 86. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. aggregate, generate
Default
Usage Guidelines
discard
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dynamic-tunnels
Syntax
dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name { destination-networks prefix; source-address address; tunnel-type type-of-tunnel; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure a dynamic tunnel between two PE routers.
tunnel-nameName of the dynamic tunnel.
See Configuring a Dynamic Tunnel on page 114. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
export
Syntax Hierarchy Level
export [ policy--names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options forwarding-table], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options forwarding-table], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options forwarding-table], [edit routing-options forwarding-table]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Apply one or more policies to routes being exported from the routing table into the forwarding table.
policy-nameName of one or more policies.
See Configuring Per-Packet Load Balancing on page 109 and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
148
dynamic-tunnels
export-rib
Syntax Hierarchy Level
export-rib routing-table-name; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib-group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options passive group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib-group group-name], [edit routing-options passive group-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Name of the routing table from which the JUNOS software should export routing information.
routing-table-nameRouting table group name.
See Creating Routing Table Groups on page 104. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. import-rib, passive
export-rib
149
fate-sharing
Syntax
fate-sharing { group group-name; cost value; from address <to address>; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify a backup path in case the primary path becomes unusable. You specify one or more objects within a group. The objects can be a LAN interface, a router ID, or a point-to-point link. Sequence is insignificant. Changing the fate-sharing database does not affect existing established LSP until the next CSPF reoptimization. The fate-sharing database does affect fast-reroute detour path computations.
Options
32 characters long and can contain letters, digits, periods (.) and hyphens (-). You can define up to 512 groups.
cost valueCost assigned to the group.
See the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
150
fate-sharing
filter
Syntax
filter { input filter-name; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Name of the routing table from which the JUNOS software should export routing information.
input filter-nameForwarding table filter name.
See Applying a Filter to a Forwarding Table on page 99. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
filter
151
flow
Syntax
flow { route name { match { match-conditions; } then { actions; } } validation { traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } } } [edit routing-options]
See Configuring a Flow Route on page 95. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
152
flow
forwarding-cache
Syntax
forwarding-cache { threshold suppress value <reuse value>; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options multicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options multicast], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options multicast], [edit routing-options multicast]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure multicast forwarding cache limits. The threshold statement is explained separately. See Configuring Multicast Forwarding Cache Limits on page 109. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
forwarding-table
Syntax
forwarding-table { export [ policy--names ]; (indirect-next-hop | no-indirect-next-hop); unicast-reverse-path (active-paths | feasible-paths); } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure information about the routers forwarding table. The statement is explained separately. See Configuring Per-Packet Load Balancing on page 109. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
full
See
brief
forwarding-cache
153
generate
Syntax
generate { defaults { generate-options; } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; generate-options; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name], [edit routing-options], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure generated routes, which are used as routes of last resort.
generate-optionsAdditional information about generated routes, which is included
with the route when it is installed in the routing table. Specify zero or more of the following options in generate-options. Each option is explained separately.
(active | passive); as-path <as-path> <origin (egp | igp | incomplete)> <atomic-aggregate> <aggregator as-number in-address>; community [ community-ids ]; discard; (brief | full); (metric | metric2 | metric3 | metric4) value <type type>; (preference | preference2 | color | color2) preference <type type>; tag string;
defaultsSpecify global generated route options. These options only set default
attributes inherited by all newly created generated routes. These are treated as global defaults and apply to all the generated routes you configure in the generate statement. This part of the generate statement is optional.
route destination-prefixConfigure a non-default generated route:
defaultFor the default route to the destination. This is equivalent to specifying an IP address of 0.0.0.0/0.
154
generate
destination-prefix/prefix-length/destination-prefix is the network portion of the IP address, and prefix-length is the destination prefix length.
See Configuring Generated Routes on page 86. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
graceful-restart
Syntax
graceful-restart { disable; restart-duration seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure graceful restart. The statements are explained separately. See Configuring Graceful Restart on page 113 and the JUNOS High Availability Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
graceful-restart
155
import
Syntax Hierarchy Level
import [ policy-names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options resolution rib], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options resolution rib], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options resolution rib], [edit routing-options resolution rib]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify one or more import policies to use for route resolution. The statements are explained separately. See Configuring Route Resolution on page 116. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
import-policy
Syntax Hierarchy Level
import-policy [ policy-names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib-group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options passive group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib-group group-name], [edit routing-options passive group-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Apply one or more policies to routes imported into the routing table group. The import-policy statement complements the import-rib statement and cannot be used unless you first specify the routing tables to which routes are being imported.
policy-nameName of one or more policies.
See Creating Routing Table Groups on page 104. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. export-rib, passive
156
import
import-rib
Syntax Hierarchy Level
import-rib [ routing-table--names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib-group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib-group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib-group group-name], [edit routing-options rib-group group-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Name of the routing table into which the JUNOS software should import routing information. The first routing table name you enter is the primary routing table. Any additional names you enter identify secondary routing tables. When a protocol imports routes, it imports them into the primary and any secondary routing tables. If the primary route is deleted, the secondary route also is deleted. For IPv4 import routing tables, the primary routing table must be inet.0 or routing-instance-name.inet.0. For IPv6 import routing tables, the primary routing table must be inet6.0.
routing-table-namesName of one or more routing tables.
See Creating Routing Table Groups on page 104. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. export-rib, passive
independent-domain
Syntax Hierarchy Level
independent-domain; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options autonomous-system autonomous-system], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options autonomous-system autonomous-system],
Release Information Description Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure an independent AS domain. See Configuring an Independent AS Domain on page 251. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. autonomous-system
import-rib
157
indirect-next-hop
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(indirect-next-hop | no-indirect-next-hop); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options forwarding-table], [edit routing-options forwarding-table]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.2. Enable indirectly connected next hops for route convergence.
NOTE: When virtual private LAN service (VPLS) is configured on the router, the indirect-next-hop statement is not supported.
See Enabling an Indirect Next Hop on page 117. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
input
Syntax Hierarchy Level
input filter-name; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name filter], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name filter]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Name of the input filter.
filter-nameName of the input filter.
See Applying a Filter to a Forwarding Table on page 99. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
158
indirect-next-hop
install
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(install | no-install); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)] [edit routing-options static (defaults | route)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure whether the JUNOS software installs all static routes into the forwarding table. Even if you configure a route so it is not installed in the forwarding table, the route is still eligible to be exported from the routing table to other protocols.
install installExplicitly install all static routes into the forwarding table. no-installDo not install the route into the forwarding table, even if it is the route
Default Options
See Configuring Static Routes on page 51. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. static
install
159
instance-export
Syntax Hierarchy Level
instance-export [ policy--names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Apply one or more policies to routes being exported from a routing instance.
policy-namesName of one or more export policies.
See Configuring Policy-Based Export for Routing Instances on page 241 and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
instance-import
Syntax Hierarchy Level
instance-import [ policy--names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Apply one or more policies to routes being imported into a routing instance.
policy-namesName of one or more import policies.
See Configuring Policy-Based Export for Routing Instances on page 241 and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
160
instance-export
interface
See the following sections:
interface (Multicast via Static Routes) on page 161 interface (Multicast Scoping) on page 162
interface interface-name { disable; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options multicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options multicast], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options multicast], [edit routing-options multicast]
Hierarchy Level
NOTE: You cannot enable multicast traffic on an interface using the enable statement and configure PIM on the same interface simultaneously.
Options
interface-nameName of the interface on which to enable multicast traffic. Specify the interface-name to enable multicast traffic on the interface. disableDisable multicast traffic previously enabled.
See Enabling Multicast on an Interface on page 108. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
161
interface [ interface-names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options multicast scope scope-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options multicast scope scope-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options multicast scope scope-name], [edit routing-options multicast scope scope-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the set of interfaces for multicast scoping.
interface-namesNames of the interfaces on which to configure scoping. Specify the
full interface name, including the physical and logical address components. To configure all interfaces, you can specify all. For details about specifying interfaces, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
NOTE: You cannot apply a scoping policy to a specific routing instance. All scoping policies are applied to all routing instances. However, you can apply the scope statement to a specific routing instance.
See Configuring Multicast Scoping on page 107. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. multicast
162
interface-routes
Syntax
interface-routes { family (inet | inet6) { export { lan; point-to-point; } } rib-group group-name; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Associate a routing table group with the routers interfaces and specify routing table groups into which interface routes are imported.
inetSpecify the IPv4 address family. inet6Specify the IPv6 address family. lanExport LAN routes. point-to-pointExport point-to-point routes.
Options
See Configuring How Interface Routes Are Imported into Routing Tables on page 106. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. passive
interface-routes
163
lsp-next-hop
Syntax
lsp-next-hop lsp-name { metric metric; preference preference; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static route destination-prefix], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options static route destination-prefix], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static route destination-prefix] [edit routing-options static route destination-prefix]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify an LSP as the next hop for a static route, and configure an independent metric or preference on that next-hop LSP.
lsp-nameName of the next-hop LSP. metricMetric value.
Options
Range: 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1). Range: 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1) Default: 5
See Specifying an LSP as the Next Hop for a Static Route on page 59. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
164
lsp-next-hop
martians
Syntax
martians { destination-prefix match-type <allow>; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name], [edit routing-options], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name]
Hierarchy Level
disallowed.
destination-prefixDestination route you are configuring:
destination-prefix/prefix-lengthdestination-prefix is the network portion of the IP address, and prefix-length is the destination prefix length. defaultDefault route to use when routing packets that do not match a network
or host in the routing table. This is equivalent to specifying the IP address 0.0.0.0/0.
match-typeCriteria that the destination must match:
exactExactly match the routes mask length. longerThe routes mask length is greater than the specified mask length. orlongerThe routes mask length is equal to or greater than the specified mask
length.
through destination-prefixThe route matches the first prefix, the route matches
the second prefix for the number of bits in the route, and the number of bits in the route is less than or equal to the number of bits in the second prefix.
upto prefix-lengthThe routes mask length falls between the two destination
martians
165
routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
maximum-paths
Syntax Hierarchy Level
maximum-paths path-limit <log-only | threshold value log-interval seconds>; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.0. Configure a limit for the number of routes installed in a routing table based upon the route path.
path-limitMaximum number of routes. If this limit is reached, a warning is triggered
Options
and additional routes are rejected. Range: 1 through 4,294,967,295 Default: None
log-only(Optional) Sets the route limit as an advisory limit. An advisory limit triggers
NOTE: When the number or routes reaches the threshold value, routes are still installed into the routing table while warning messages are sent. When the number or routes reaches the path-limit value, then additional routes are rejected.
See Configuring Route Limits for Routing Tables on page 251. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
166
maximum-paths
maximum-prefixes
Syntax Hierarchy Level
maximum-prefixes prefix-limit <log-only | threshold value log-interval seconds>; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.0. Configure a limit for the number of routes installed in a routing table based upon the route prefix.
prefix-limitMaximum number of route prefixes. If this limit is reached, a warning
Options
is triggered and any additional routes are rejected. Range: 1 through 4,294,967,295 Default: None
log-only(Optional) Sets the prefix limit as an advisory limit. An advisory limit triggers
NOTE: When the number or routes reaches the threshold value, routes are still installed into the routing table while warning messages are sent. When the number or routes reaches the prefix-limit value, then additional routes are rejected.
See Configuring Route Limits for Routing Tables on page 251. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
maximum-prefixes
167
med-igp-update-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level Release Information Description
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0 Configure a timer for how long to delay updates for the multiple-exit discriminator (MED) path attribute for BGP groups and peers configured with the metric-out igp offset delay-med-update statement. The timer delays MED updates for the interval configured unless the MED is lower than the previously advertised attribute or another attribute associated with the route has changed or if the BGP peer is responding to a refresh route request. 10 minutes
minutesInterval to delay MED updates.
Range: 10 through 600 See Configuring a Timer to Delay Multiple Exit Discriminator IGP Updates on page 122. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. metric-out
168
med-igp-update-interval
metric
See the following sections:
metric (Aggregate, Generated, or Static Route) on page 169 metric (Qualified Next Hop on Static Route) on page 170
(metric | metric2 | metric3 | metric4) metric <type type>; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Metric value for an aggregate, generated, or static route. You can specify up to four metric values, starting with metric (for the first metric value) and continuing with metric2, metric3, and metric4.
metricMetric value.
Options
Range: 1 through 16
Usage Guidelines
See Specifying the Route Metric on page 64, Specifying the Route Metric on page 81, and Specifying the Route Metric on page 89. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. aggregate, generate, static
169
metric metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options static route destination-prefix qualified-next-hop], [edit routing-options static route destination-prefix qualified-next-hop]
Release Information Description Options Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Metric value for a static route.
metricMetric value.
See Specifying an Independent Preference for a Static Route on page 55. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. qualified-next-hop, static
170
multicast
Syntax
multicast { forwarding-cache { threshold suppress value <reuse value>; } interface interface-name { enable; } scope scope-name { interface [ interface-names ]; prefix destination-prefix; } ssm-groups { address; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure generic multicast properties.
NOTE: You cannot apply a scoping policy to a specific routing instance. All scoping policies are applied to all routing instances. However, you can apply the scope statement to a specific routing instance.
The statements are explained separately in this chapter. See Configuring Multicast Scoping on page 107 and Configuring Additional Source-Specific Multicast Groups on page 108. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
no-install
See
install
multicast
171
no-readvertise
See
readvertise
no-retain
See
retain
nonstop-routing
Syntax Hierarchy Level
nonstop-routing; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.4. For routing platforms with two Routing Engines, configure a master Routing Engine to switch over gracefully to a backup Routing Engine and to preserve routing protocol information. disabled See Enabling Nonstop Routing on page 118. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. JUNOS High Availability Configuration Guide
172
no-readvertise
options
Syntax
options { syslog (level level | upto level); } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the types of system logging messages sent about the routing protocols process to the system message logging file. These messages are also displayed on the system console. You can log messages at a particular level, or up to and including a particular level.
level levelSeverity of the message. It can be one or more of the following levels, in
Options
emergencyPanic or other conditions that cause the system to become unusable. alertConditions that should be corrected immediately, such as a corrupted
system database.
criticalCritical conditions, such as hard drive errors. errorStandard error conditions. warningSystem warning messages. noticeConditions that are not error conditions, but might warrant special handling. infoInformational messages. debugSoftware debugging messages.
See Configuring Logging for the Routing Protocol Process on page 116. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
syslog in the JUNOS System Basics Configuration Guide
options
173
p2mp-lsp-next-hop
Syntax
p2mp-lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static route destination-prefix], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options static route destination-prefix], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static route destination-prefix]. [edit routing-options static route destination-prefix]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify a point-to-multipoint LSP as the next hop for a static route, and configure an independent metric or preference on that next-hop LSP.
metricMetric value.
Options
See Specifying an LSP as the Next Hop for a Static Route on page 59. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
passive
See
active
174
p2mp-lsp-next-hop
policy
Syntax Hierarchy Level
policy policy-name; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate) (defaults | route)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Associate a routing policy when configuring an aggregate or generated routes destination prefix in the routes part of the aggregate or generate statement. This provides the equivalent of an import routing policy filter for the destination prefix. That is, each potential contributor to an aggregate route, along with any aggregate options, is passed through the policy filter. The policy then can accept or reject the route as a contributor to the aggregate route and, if the contributor is accepted, the policy can modify the default preferences. The contributor with the numerically smallest prefix becomes the most preferred, or primary, contributor. A rejected contributor still can contribute to a less specific aggregate route. If you do not specify a policy filter, all candidate routes contribute to an aggregate route.
policy-nameName of a routing policy.
See Configuring Aggregate Routes on page 78 and Configuring Generated Routes on page 86. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. aggregate, generate
policy
175
ppm
Syntax
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.2 (M120, M320, MX-series, T-series, and TX Matrix routing platforms only) Distribute packet processing management (PPM) to the Packet Forwarding Engine.
disabled delegate-processingDistribute PPM to the Packet Forwarding Engine.
See Enabling Distributed Periodic Packet Management on page 121 routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
176
ppm
preference
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(preference | preference2 | color | color2) preference <type type>; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Preference value for a static, aggregated, or generated route. You also can specify a secondary preference value (preference2), as well as colors, which are even finer-grained preference values (color and color2).
preferencePreference value. A lower number indicates a more preferred route.
Options
Range: 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1) Default: 5 (for static routes), 130 (for aggregate and generated routes)
Range: 1 through 16
Usage Guidelines
See Configuring Static Routes on page 51, Configuring Aggregate Routes on page 78, and Configuring Generated Routes on page 86. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. aggregate, generate, static
preference
177
prefix
Syntax Hierarchy Level
prefix destination-prefix; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options multicast scope scope-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options multicast scope scope-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options multicast scope scope-name], [edit routing-options multicast scope scope-name]
Release Information Description Options Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the prefix for multicast scopes.
destination-prefixAddress range for the multicast scope.
See Configuring Multicast Scoping on page 107. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. multicast
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prefix
qualified-next-hop
Syntax
qualified-next-hop (address | interface-name) { interface interface-name; metric metric; preference preference; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static route destination-prefix], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib inet6.0 static route destination-prefix], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options static route destination-prefix], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static route destination-prefix], [edit routing-options rib inet6.0 static route destination-prefix], [edit routing-options static route destination-prefix]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure an independent metric or preference on a static route.
addressIPv4, IPv6, or ISO network address of the next hop. For an unnumbered
or preference for a static route. To configure an unnumbered Ethernet interface as the next-hop interface for a static route, specify qualified-next-hop interface-name, where interface-name is the name of the unnumbered Ethernet interface.
metricMetric value.
See Specifying an Independent Preference for a Static Route on page 55. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
qualified-next-hop
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readvertise
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(readvertise | no-readvertise); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options static (defaults | route)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure whether static routes are eligible to be readvertised by routing protocols:
readvertiseReadvertise static routes. no-readvertiseMark a static route as being ineligible for readvertisement; include the no-readvertise option when configuring the route.
readvertise
See Configuring Static Routes on page 51. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. static
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readvertise
resolution
Syntax
resolution { rib routing-table-name { import [ policy-names ]; resolution-ribs [ routing-table-names ]; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure route resolution. The statements are explained separately. See Configuring Route Resolution on page 116. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
resolution-ribs
Syntax Hierarchy Level
resolution-ribs [ routing-table-names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options resolution rib], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options resolution rib], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options resolution rib], [edit routing-options resolution rib]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify one or more routing tables to use for route resolution. The statements are explained separately. See Configuring Route Resolution on page 116. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
resolution
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resolve
Syntax Hierarchy Level
resolve; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options static (defaults | route)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure statically configured routes to be resolved to a next hop that is not directly connected. The route is resolved through the inet.0 and inet.3 routing tables. See Specifying When the Route Can Be Resolved to a Prefix That Is Not Directly Connected on page 70. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. static
Usage Guidelines
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resolve
restart-duration
Syntax Hierarchy Level
restart-duration seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options graceful-restart], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options graceful-restart], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options graceful-restart], [edit routing-options graceful-restart]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the restart timer.
restart-duration secondsConfigure the time period for the restart to last.
See Configuring Graceful Restart on page 113. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
restart-duration
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retain
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(retain | no-retain); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name static (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options static (defaults | route)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure statically configured routes to be deleted from or retained in the forwarding table when the routing protocol process shuts down normally:
retainHave a static route remain in the forwarding table when the routing
protocol process shuts down normally. Doing this greatly reduces the time required to restart a system that has a large number of routes in its routing table.
no-retain
See Configuring Static Routes on page 51. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. static
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retain
rib
See the following sections:
retain
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rib (General)
Syntax
rib routing-table-name { static { defaults { static-options; } rib-group group-name; route destination-prefix { next-hop; static-options; } } aggregate { defaults { ... aggregate-options ... } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; ... aggregate-options ... } generate { defaults { generate-options; } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; generate-options; } } martians { destination-prefix match-type <allow>; } } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Create a routing table. Explicitly creating a routing table with the routing-table-name statement is optional if you are not adding any static, martian, aggregate, or generated routes to the routing table and if you also are creating a routing table group. Simply including the passive statement to declare that a routing table is part of a routing table group is sufficient to create it.
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rib (General)
NOTE: The IPv4 multicast routing table (inet.1) and the IPv6 multicast routing table (inet6.1) are not supported for this statement.
Default
If you do not specify a routing table name with the routing-table-name statement, the software uses the default routing tables, which are inet.0 for unicast routes and inet.1 for the multicast cache.
routing-table-nameName of the routing table, in the following format: protocol [.identifier]
Options
protocol is the protocol family. It can be inet6 for the IPv6 family, inet for the IPv4 family, iso for the ISO protocol family, or instance-name.iso.0 for a ISO
routing instance.
identifier is a positive integer that specifies the instance of the routing table.
Default: inet.0
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Creating Routing Tables on page 49. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
rib routing-table-name { import [ policy-names ]; resolution-ribs [ routing-table-names ]; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options resolution], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options resolution], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options resolution], [edit routing-options resolution]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify routing table name for route resolution. The statements are explained separately. See Configuring Route Resolution on page 116. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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rib-group
Syntax Hierarchy Level
rib-group group-name; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options interface-routes], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options interface-routes], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name static], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options static], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options interface-routes], [edit routing-options interface-routes], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name static], [edit routing-options static]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure which routing table groups interface routes are imported into.
group-nameName of the routing table group. The name must start with a letter and
can include letters, numbers, and hyphens. It generally does not make sense to specify more than a single routing table group.
Usage Guidelines
See Configuring How Interface Routes Are Imported into Routing Tables on page 106 and Creating Routing Table Groups on page 104. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. interface-routes, rib-groups
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rib-group
rib-groups
Syntax
rib-groups { group-name { import-policy [ policy-names ]; import-rib [ group-names ]; export-rib group-name; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Group one or more routing tables to form a routing table group. A routing protocol can import routes into all the routing tables in the group and can export routes from a single routing table. Each routing table group must contain one or more routing tables that the JUNOS software uses when importing routes (specified in the import-rib statement) and optionally can contain one routing table group that the JUNOS software uses when exporting routes to the routing protocols (specified in the export-rib statement).
Options
group-nameName of the routing table group. The name must start with a letter and
can include letters, numbers, and hyphens. The remaining statements are explained separately.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Creating Routing Table Groups on page 104. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. rib-group
rib-groups
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route-distinguisher-id
Syntax Hierarchy Level
route-distinguisher-id address; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure a route distinguisher identifier for a routing instance, specifying an IP address. If a route distinguisher is configured for a particular routing instance, that value supersedes the route distinguisher configured by this statement.
addressIP address.
See Configuring a Route Distinguisher on page 114. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
route-record
Syntax Hierarchy Level
Release Information Description Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Export the AS path and routing information to the traffic sampling process. See Configuring Route Recording for Flow Aggregation on page 104. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide
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route-distinguisher-id
router-id
Syntax Hierarchy Level
router-id address; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the routers IP address.
NOTE: We strongly recommend that you configure the router identifier under the [routing-options] hierarchy level to avoid unpredictable behavior if the interface address on a loopback interface changes.
Default: Address of the first interface encountered by the JUNOS software. See Configuring the Router Identifier on page 103. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
routing-options
Syntax Hierarchy Level
routing-options { ... } [edit], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure protocol-independent routing properties. See Protocol-Independent Routing Properties Overview on page 43. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
router-id
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scope
Syntax
scope scope-name { interface [ interface-names ]; prefix destination-prefix; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options multicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options multicast], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options multicast], [edit routing-options multicast]
Hierarchy Level
See Configuring Multicast Scoping on page 107. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. multicast
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scope
source-address
Syntax Hierarchy Level
source-address address; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name, [edit logical-systems logical-system-namerouting-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name, [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name], [edit routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specifies the source address for the GRE tunnels. The source address specifies the address used as the source for the local tunnel endpoint. This address can be any local address on the router (typically the router ID or the loopback address).
addressName of the source address.
See Configuring a Dynamic Tunnel on page 114. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
source-routing
Syntax
Hierarchy Level Release Information Description Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
Statement for IPv6 introduced in JUNOS Release 8.2. Statement for IPv4 introduced in JUNOS Release 8.5. Enable source routing. See Enabling Source Routing on page 122. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
source-address
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ssm-groups
Syntax
ssm-groups { address; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options multicast] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options multicast], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options multicast], [edit routing-options multicast]
Hierarchy Level
Release Information Description Options Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure additional SSM groups.
addressAddress range of the additional SSM group.
See Configuring Additional Source-Specific Multicast Groups on page 108. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. multicast
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ssm-groups
static
Syntax
static { defaults { static-options; } rib-group group-name; route destination-prefix } bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } <local-address ip-address>; minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-ttl number; multiplier number; neighbor address; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } next-hop address; next-hop options; qualified-next-hop address { metric metric; preference preference; } static-options; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure static routes to be installed in the routing table. You can specify any number of routes within a single static statement, and you can specify any number of static options in the configuration.
defaultsSpecify global static route options. These options only set default attributes
Options
inherited by all newly created static routes. These are treated as global defaults
static
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and apply to all the static routes you configure in the static statement. This part of the static statement is optional.
route destination-prefixDestination of the static route.
defaultsFor the default route to the destination. This is equivalent to specifying an IP address of 0.0.0.0/0. destination-prefix/prefix-lengthdestination-prefix is the network portion of the IP address, and prefix-length is the destination prefix length. next-hop addressReach the next-hop router by specifying an IP address, an
ISO.
next-hop optionsAdditional information for how to manage forwarding of packets
discardDo not forward packets addressed to this destination. Instead, drop the packets, do not send ICMP unreachable messages to the packets originators, and install a reject route for this destination into the routing table. iso-netReach the next-hop router by specifying an ISO NSAP. next-table routing-table-nameName of the next routing table to the destination. receiveInstall a receive route for this destination into the routing table. rejectDo not forward packets addressed to this destination. Instead, drop the packets, send ICMP unreachable messages to the packets originators, and install a reject route for this destination into the routing table.
which is included with the route when it is installed in the routing table.
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static
You can specify one or more of the following in static-options. Each of the options is explained separately.
(active | passive); as-path <as-path> <origin (egp | igp | incomplete)> <atomic-aggregate> <aggregator as-number in-address>; community [ community-ids ]; (install | no-install); (metric | metric2 | metric3 | metric4) value <type type>; (preference | preference2 | color | color2) preference <type type>; (readvertise | no-readvertise); (resolve | no-resolve); (no-retain | retain); tag string;
See Configuring Static Routes on page 51. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
static
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tag
Syntax Hierarchy Level
tag string; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)], [edit routing-options rib routing-table-name (aggregate | generate | static) (defaults | route)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Associate an OSPF tag with a static, aggregate, or generated route.
stringOSPF tag string.
See Configuring Static Routes on page 51, Configuring Aggregate Routes on page 78, and Configuring Generated Routes on page 86. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. aggregate, generate, static
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tag
threshold
Syntax Hierarchy Level
threshold suppress value <reuse value>; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options multicast forwarding-cache], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options multicast forwarding-cache], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options multicast forwarding-cache], [edit routing-options multicast forwarding-cache]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the suppression and reuse thresholds for multicast forwarding cache limits.
suppress valueValue at which to begin suppressing new multicast forwarding cache entries. This value is mandatory. This number should be greater than the reuse
See Configuring Multicast Forwarding Cache Limits on page 109. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
threshold
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traceoptions
Syntax
traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options], [edit routing-options flow]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Define tracing operations that track all routing protocol functionality in the router. To specify more than one tracing operation, include multiple flag statements.
Default Options
If you do not include this statement, no global tracing operations are performed.
disable(Optional) Disable the tracing operation. You can use this option to disable
a single operation when you have defined a broad group of tracing operations, such as all.
file filenameName of the file to receive the output of the tracing operation. Enclose the name within quotation marks. All files are placed in the directory /var/log.
We recommend that you place global routing protocol tracing output in the file routing-log.
files number(Optional) Maximum number of trace files. When a trace file named trace-file reaches its maximum size, it is renamed trace-file.0, then trace-file.1,
and so on, until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum number of files, you also must specify a maximum file size with the size option. Range: 2 through 1000 files Default: 2 files
flag flagTracing operation to perform. To specify more than one tracing operation, include multiple flag statements. These are the global routing protocol tracing
options:
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traceoptions
flashFlash processing generalAll normal operations and routing table changes (a combination of the normal and route trace operations) indirectIndirect next-hop add/change/delete kernelKernel communication normalAll normal operations nsr-synchronizationNonstop-routing synchronization parseConfiguration parsing policyRouting policy operations and actions regex-parseRegular-expression parsing routeRouting table changes stateState transitions taskInterface transactions and processing timerTimer usage
flag-modifier(Optional) Modifier for the tracing flag. You can specify one or more
of these modifiers:
no-world-readable(Optional) Prevent any user from reading the log file. size size(Optional) Maximum size of each trace file, in kilobytes (KB), megabytes (MB), or gigabytes (GB). When a trace file named trace-file reaches this size, it is renamed trace-file.0. When the trace-file again reaches its maximum size, trace-file.0 is renamed trace-file.1 and trace-file is renamed trace-file.0. This
renaming scheme continues until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum file size, you also must specify a maximum number of trace files with the files option. Syntax: xk to specify KB, xm to specify MB, or xg to specify GB Range: 10 KB through the maximum file size supported on your system Default: 1 MB
world-readable(Optional) Allow any user to read the log file.
traceoptions
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See Tracing Global Routing Protocol Operations on page 119. routing and traceTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-control and trace-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
tunnel-type
Syntax Hierarchy Level
tunnel-type type; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-namerouting-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name, [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name], [edit routing-options dynamic-tunnels tunnel-name
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the type of tunnel to be dynamically created. The only valid value is gre (for GRE tunnels).
typeTunnel type.
See Configuring a Dynamic Tunnel on page 114. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
unicast-reverse-path
Syntax Hierarchy Level
unicast-reverse-path (active-paths | feasible-paths); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options forwarding-table], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name instance-type name routing-options forwarding-table], [edit routing-options forwarding-table]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for routing instances added in JUNOS Release 8.3. Control the operation of unicast reverse-path-forwarding check.
active-pathsConsider only active paths during the unicast reverse-path check. feasible-pathsConsider all feasible paths during the unicast reverse-path check.
Usage Guidelines
See Configuring Unicast Reverse-Path-Forwarding Check on page 112 and the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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tunnel-type
Part 3
Routing Instances
Routing Instances Overview on page 205 Routing Instances Configuration Guidelines on page 207 Summary of Routing Instances Configuration Statements on page 253
Routing Instances
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Routing Instances
Chapter 8
[edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols]
A routing instance is a collection of routing tables, interfaces, and routing protocol parameters. The set of interfaces belongs to the routing tables, and the routing protocol parameters control the information in the routing tables. You can configure six types of routing instances: forwarding, Layer 2 virtual private network (VPN), nonforwarding, VPN routing and forwarding (VRF), virtual router, and virtual private LAN service (VPLS). Each routing instance has a unique name and a corresponding IP unicast table. For example, if you configure a routing instance with the name my-instance, the corresponding IP unicast table is my-instance.inet.0. All routes for my-instance are installed into my-instance.inet.0.
NOTE: The default routing instance, master, refers to the main inet.0 routing table. The master routing instance is reserved and cannot be specified as a routing instance. Configure global routing options and protocols for the master instance by including statements at the [edit protocols] and [edit routing-options] hierarchy levels. Routes are installed into the master routing instance inet.0 by default, unless a routing instance is specified. Multiple instances of BGP, OSPF, and RIP are used for Layer 3 VPN implementation. The multiple instances of BGP, OSPF, and RIP keep routing information for different VPNs separate. The VRF instance advertises routes from the customer edge (CE) router to the provider edge (PE) router and advertises routes from the PE router to the CE router. Each VPN receives only routing information belonging to that VPN. Forwarding instances are used to implement filter-based forwarding for Common Access Layer applications.
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PIM instances are used to implement multicast over VPN applications. Nonforwarding instances of IS-IS and OSPF can be used to separate a very large network into smaller administrative entities. Instead of configuring a large number of filters, nonforwarding instances can be used to filter routes, thereby instantiating policy. Nonforwarding instances can be used to reduce the amount of routing information advertised throughout all components of a network. Routing information associated with a particular instance can be announced where required, instead of being advertised to the whole network. Layer 2 VPN instances are used for Layer 2 VPN implementation. Virtual router instances are similar to a VPN routing and forwarding instance type, but used for non-VPN-related applications. There are no VRF import, VRF export, VRF target, or route distinguisher requirements for this instance type. Use the VPLS routing instance type for point-to-multipoint LAN implementations between a set of sites in a VPN.
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Chapter 9
[edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols]
NOTE: The default routing instance, master, refers to the main inet.0 routing table. The master routing instance is reserved and cannot be specified as a routing instance.
Routing tables Interfaces that belong to these routing tables Routing option configurations
ForwardingUse this routing instance type for filter-based forwarding applications. For this instance type, there is no one-to-one mapping between an interface and a routing instance. All interfaces belong to the default instance inet.0. Layer2-control(MX-series routers only) Use this routing instance type for RSTP or MSTP in customer edge interfaces of a VPLS routing instance. This instance type cannot be used if the customer edge interface is multihomed to two provider edge interfaces. If the customer edge interface is multihomed to two provider edge interfaces, use the default BPDU tunneling. Layer 2 VPNUse this routing instance type for Layer 2 virtual private network (VPN) implementations.
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NonforwardingUse this routing instance type when a separation of routing table information is required. There is no corresponding forwarding table. All routes are installed into the default forwarding table. IS-IS instances are strictly nonforwarding instance types. Virtual routerSimilar to a VPN routing and forwarding instance type, but used for non-VPN-related applications. There are no virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) import, VRF export, VRF target, or route distinguisher requirements for this instance type. Virtual switch(MX-series routers only) Use the virtual switch instance type to group one or more Layer 2 bridge domains. A bridge domain consists of a set of ports that share the same flooding or broadcast characteristics. Each virtual switch represents a Layer 2 network. You can optionally configure a virtual switch to support Integrating Routing and Bridging (IRB), which facilitates simultaneous Layer 2 bridging and Layer 3 IP routing on the same interface. You can also configure Layer 2 control protocols to provide loop resolution. Protocols supported include the Spanning Tree Protocol, the Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol, and the Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol. VPLSUse the virtual private local-area network service (VPLS) routing instance type for point-to-multipoint LAN implementations between a set of sites in a VPN. VRFUse the VPN routing and forwarding routing (VRF) instance type for Layer 3 VPN implementations. This routing instance type has a VPN routing table as well as a corresponding VPN forwarding table. For this instance type, there is a one-to-one mapping between an interface and a routing instance. Each VRF instance corresponds with a forwarding table. Routes on an interface go into the corresponding forwarding table.
For more detailed information about configuring VPNs and Layer 2 VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide. For more detailed information about configuring virtual switches and Layer 2 services on MX-series routers, see the JUNOS MX-series Layer 2 Configuration Guide. This chapter describes the following tasks for configuring routing instances:
Configuring Routing Instances on page 209 Routing Instances Minimum Configuration on page 213 Configuring Multiple Instances of BGP on page 219 Configuring Multiple Instances of IS-IS on page 220 Configuring Multiple Instances of LDP on page 225 Configuring Multiple Instances of MSDP on page 226 Configuring Multiple Instances of OSPF on page 226 Configuring Multiple Instances of PIM on page 229 Configuring Multiple Instances of RIP on page 230 Configuring an Instance on page 231 Configuring VPNs on page 232
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Configuring a Virtual Switch on page 232 Configuring an Instance Type on page 233 Configuring a Route Distinguisher on page 236 Configuring Filter-Based Forwarding on page 237 Configuring Class-of-Service-Based Forwarding on page 239 Configuring Secondary VRF Import and Export Policy on page 240 Configuring Policy-Based Export for Routing Instances on page 241 Configuring a VRF Table Label on page 245 Configuring a VRF Target on page 245 Configuring an OSPF Domain ID on page 246 Configuring Route Limits for Routing Tables on page 251 Configuring an Independent AS Domain on page 251
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protocols { bgp { ... bgp-configuration ... } isis { ... isis-configuration ... } l2vpn { ... l2vpn-configuration ... } ldp { ... ldp-configuration ... } msdp { ... msdp-configuration ... } mstp { ... mstp-configuration ... } ospf { domain-id domain-id; domain-vpn-tag number; route-type-community (iana | vendor); ... ospf-configuration ... } ospf3 { domain-id domain-id; domain-vpn-tag number; route-type-community (iana | vendor); ... ospf3-configuration ... } pim { ... pim-configuration ... } rip { ... rip-configuration ... } ripng { ... ripng-configuration ... } rstp { ... rstp-configuration ... } vpls { ... vpls-configuration ... } } routing-options { aggregate { defaults { ... aggregate-options ... } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; ... aggregate-options ... }
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} auto-export { (disable | enable); family { inet { multicast { (disable | enable); rib-group rib-group; } unicast { (disable | enable); rib-group rib-group; } } } traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } } autonomous-system autonomous-system <loops number> { independent-domain; } confederation confederation-autonomous-system members autonomous-system; fate-sharing { group group-name; cost value; from address [to address]; } forwarding-table { export [ policy-names ]; (indirect-next-hop | no-indirect-next-hop); } generate { defaults { generate-options; } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; generate-options; } } instance-export [ policy-names ]; instance-import [ policy-names ]; interface-routes { rib-group group-name; } martians { destination-prefix match-type <allow>; } maximum-paths path-limit <log-only | threshold value log-interval seconds>; maximum-prefixes prefix-limit <log-only | threshold value log-interval seconds>; multicast { scope scope-name { interface interface-name;
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prefix destination-prefix; } ssm-groups { addresses; } } options { syslog (level level | upto level); } rib routing-table-name { aggregate { defaults { ... aggregate-options ... } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; ... aggregate-options ... } } generate { defaults { generate-options; } route destination-prefix { policy policy-name; generate-options; } } martians { destination-prefix match-type <allow>; } static { defaults { static-options; } rib-group group-name; route destination-prefix { lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } next-hop; p2mp-lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } qualified-next-hop { interface interface-name; metric metric; preference preference; } static-options; } } } route-record;
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router-id address; static { defaults { static-options; } rib-group group-name; route destination-prefix { lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } next-hop; p2mp-lsp-next-hop { metric metric; preference preference; } qualified-next-hop { interface interface-name; metric metric; preference preference; } static-options; } } traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } } } }
BGP on page 214 IS-IS on page 214 Layer 2 VPN on page 215 LDP on page 215 MSDP on page 216 Multiprotocol BGP-Based Multicast VPNs on page 216 OSPF on page 217
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OSPFv3 on page 217 PIM on page 218 RIP on page 218 VPLS on page 219
BGP
To configure a routing instance for BGP, you must include at least the following statements in the configuration.
[edit] routing-instances { routing-instance-name { interface interface-name; instance-type (forwarding | l2vpn | no-forwarding | virtual-router | vpls | vrf); route-distinguisher (as-number:number | ip-address:number); vrf-import [ policy-names ]; vrf-export [ policy-names ]; protocols { bgp { bgp configuration; } } } }
For more information about the BGP configuration statements, see BGP Configuration Guidelines on page 641. For more information about configuring VPNs, see the JUNOS System Configuration Guide.
IS-IS
To configure a routing instance for IS-IS, you must include at least the following statements in the configuration:
[edit] routing-instances { routing-instance-name { interface interface-name; instance-type (forwarding | l2vpn | no-forwarding | virtual-router | vpls | vrf); route-distinguisher (as-number:number | ip-address:number); vrf-import [ policy-names ]; vrf-export [ policy-names ]; protocols { isis { ... isis configuration ... } } } }
For more information about the IS-IS configuration statements, see IS-IS Configuration Guidelines on page 299.
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Layer 2 VPN
To create a routing instance for Layer 2 VPN, you must include at least the following statements in the configuration:
[edit] routing-instances { routing-instance-name { instance-type l2vpn; interface interface-name; route-distinguisher (as-number:number | ip-address:number); vrf-import [ policy-names ]; vrf-export [ policy-names ]; protocols { l2vpn { ... l2vpn-configuration ... } } } }
For more information about configuring Layer 2 VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
LDP
To create a routing instance for LDP, you must include at least the following statements in the configuration:
[edit] routing-instances { routing-instance-name { instance-type (forwarding | l2vpn | no-forwarding | virtual-router | vpls | vrf); interface interface-name; route-distinguisher (as-number:number | ip-address:number); vrf-import [ policy-names ]; vrf-export [ policy-names ]; protocols { ldp { ... ldp-configuration ... } } } }
For more information about configuring LDP, see the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide. LDP routing instances are used to support LDP over VPNs. For more information about configuring multicast over VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
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MSDP
To create a routing instance for MSDP, you must include at least the following statements in the configuration:
[edit] routing-instances { routing-instance-name { instance-type (forwarding | l2vpn | no-forwarding | virtual-router | vpls | vrf); interface interface-name; route-distinguisher (as-number:number | ip-address:number); vrf-import [ policy-names ]; vrf-export [ policy-names ]; protocols { msdp { ... msdp-configuration ... } } } }
For more information about configuring MSDP, see the JUNOS Multicast Protocols Configuration Guide.
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For more information about Multiprotocol BGP-based Multicast VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide and the JUNOS Multicast Protocols Configuration Guide.
OSPF
To configure a routing instance for OSPF, you must include at least the following statements in the configuration:
[edit] routing-instances { routing-instance-name { interface interface-name; instance-type (forwarding | l2vpn | no-forwarding | virtual-router | vpls | vrf); route-distinguisher (as-number:number | ip-address:number); vrf-import [ policy-names ]; vrf-export [ policy-names ]; protocols { ospf { ... ospf-configuration ... } } } }
NOTE: You can configure a logical interface under only one routing instance. For more information about the OSPF configuration statements, see OSPF Configuration Guidelines on page 413.
OSPFv3
To configure a routing instance for OSPFv3, you must include at least the following statements in the configuration:
[edit] routing-instances { routing-instance-name { interface interface-name; instance-type (no-forwarding | vrf); vrf-export [ policy-names ]; vrf-import [ policy-names ]; protocols { ospf3 { ... ospf3-configuration ...
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} } } }
NOTE: You can configure a logical interface under only one routing instance.
NOTE: OSPFv3 supports the no-forwarding and vrf routing instance types only. For more information about the OSPF configuration statements, see OSPF Configuration Guidelines on page 413.
PIM
To create a routing instance for PIM, you must include at least the following statements in the configuration:
[edit] routing-instances { routing-instance-name { instance-type (forwarding | l2vpn | no-forwarding | virtual-router | vpls | vrf); interface interface-name; route-distinguisher (as-number:number | ip-address:number); vrf-import [ policy-names ]; vrf-export [ policy-names ]; protocols { pim { ... pim-configuration ... } } } }
For more information about configuring PIM, see the JUNOS Multicast Protocols Configuration Guide. PIM routing instances are used to support multicast over VPNs. For more detailed information about configuring multicast over VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
RIP
RIP instances are supported only for VPN routing and forwarding (VRF) instance types. This instance type provides support for Layer 3 VPNs. To configure a routing instance for RIP, you must include at least the following statements in the configuration:
[edit] routing-instances { routing-instance-name {
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interface interface-name; instance-type vrf; route-distinguisher (as-number:number | ip-address:number); vrf-import [ policy-names ]; vrf-export [ policy-names ]; protocols { rip { ... rip-configuration ... } } } }
For more information about the RIP configuration statements, see RIP Configuration Guidelines on page 521. For more information about configuring VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
VPLS
To create a routing instance for virtual private LAN services (VPLS), you must include at least the following statements in the configuration:
[edit] routing-instances { routing-instance-name { instance-type vpls; interface interface-name; route-distinguisher (as-number:number | ip-address:number); vrf-import [ policy-names ]; vrf-export [ policy-names ]; protocols { vpls { ... vpls configuration ... } } } }
For more information about configuring VPLS, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide. For a detailed VPLS example configuration, see the JUNOS Feature Guide.
[edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols]
Multiple instances of BGP are primarily used for Layer 3 VPN support. Currently, EBGP (nonmultihop) peers are supported under the routing-instances hierarchy. EBGP peering is established over one of the interfaces configured under
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the routing-instances hierarchy. Routes learned from the EBGP peer are added to the instance-name.inet.0 table by default. You can configure import and export policies to control the flow of information into and out of the instance routing table. For Layer 3 VPN support, configure BGP on the provider edge (PE) router to receive routes from the customer edge (CE) router and to send the instances routes to the CE router if necessary. You can use multiple instances of BGP to maintain separate per-site forwarding tables for keeping VPN traffic separate on the PE router. For more detailed information about configuring VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide. You can configure import and export policies that allow the service provider to control and rate-limit traffic to and from the customer.
You can configure an EBGP multihop session for a VRF routing instance. Also, you can set up the EBGP peer between the PE and CE routers by using the loopback address of the CE router instead of the interface addresses.
NOTE: BGP route reflection is not supported for VRF routing instances.
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Configure the IS-IS default instance at the [edit protocols isis] or [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis] hierarchy levels with the statements needed for your network so that routes are installed in inet.0 and in the forwarding table. Make sure to include the routing table group. Configure an IS-IS routing instance for each additional IS-IS routing entity, configuring the following items:
2.
Interfaces Routing options IS-IS protocol statements belonging to that entity Routing table group
3.
Configure a routing table group to install routes from the routing instance into the inet.0 routing table. You can do this in two ways:
Create a common routing table group so that either one of two conditions is configured:
Routes from the routing instances are installed in inet.0 and therefore installed in the forwarding table. Routes from one router in a routing instance are forwarded to another router in the same routing instance.
Create a routing table group with just the routing table from one instance and inet.0 to keep the routes from going to other instances.
4.
Create an export policy to export routes with a specific tag and to use that tag to export routes back into the instances. For more information, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
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voice_policy
other_policy
so-2/2/2.0 1 so-4/2/2.0
Backbone 3
so-5/2/2.0
1460
so-3/2/2.0 2
other_policy Site C
voice_policy Site D
Sites A and D belong to the voice_policy routing instance. Sites B and C belong to the other_policy instance. Router 1 and Router 3 at the edge of the backbone connect the routing instances. Each runs a separate IS-IS instance (one per entity). Router 1 runs three IS-IS instances: one each for Site A (voice_policy), Site C (other_policy), and the backbone, otherwise known as the default instance. Router 3 also runs three IS-IS instances: one each for Site B (other_policy), Site D (voice_policy), and the backbone (default instance). When Router 1 runs the IS-IS instances, the following occur:
Routes from the default instance routing table are placed in the voice_policy and other_policy instance routing tables. Routes from the voice_policy routing instance are placed in the default instance routing table. Routes from the other_policy routing instance are placed in the default instance routing table. Routes from the voice_policy routing instance do not enter the other_policy instance routing table. Routes from the other_policy routing instance do not enter the voice_policy instance routing table.
Configuring Router 1
The following sections describe how to configure Router 1 in the backbone entity with multiple routing instances.
Configure the routing instances for voice-policy and other-policy. Use all routes learned from the routing tables in the routing table group common. Export routes tagged as belonging to the routing instance.
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[edit] routing-instances { voice-policy { interface so-2/2/2.0; protocols { isis { rib-group voice_to_inet; export filter-on-voice-policy; interface so-2/2/2.0 { level 2 metric 20; } } } } } other-policy { interface so-4/2/2.0; protocols { isis { rib-group other_to_inet; export filter-on-other-policy; interface so-4/2/2.0 { level 2 metric 20; } } } }
Configure the routing table group inet_to_voice_and_other to share routes with the inet.0 (in the backbone entity), voice-policy.inet.0, and other-policy.inet.0 routing tables:
[edit] routing-options { rib-groups { inet_to_voice_and_other { import-rib [ inet.0 voice-policy.inet.0 other-policy.inet.0 ]; } } }
Configure the routing table group voice_to_inet to share routes with the inet.0 (in the backbone entity) and voice-policy.inet.0 routing tables:
[edit] routing-options { rib-groups { voice_to_inet { import-rib [ voice-policy.inet.0 inet.0]; } } }
Configure the routing table group other_to_inet to share routes with the inet.0 (in the backbone entity) and other-policy.inet.0 routing tables:
[edit]
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Configure the default IS-IS instance so that the routes learned from the routing instances are installed in inet.0 and the tagged routes are exported from voice-policy and other-policy:
[edit] protocols { isis { export apply-tag; rib-group inet_to_voice_and_other; interface so-1/0/0.0 { level 2 metric 20; } interface fxp0.0 { disable; } interface lo0.0 { passive; } } }
Configure routing policy for the routes learned from the routing instances:
[edit] policy-options { policy-statement apply-tag { term voice-policy { from instance voice-policy; then { tag 10; accept; } } term other-policy { from instance other-policy; then { tag 12; accept; } } } policy-statement filter-on-voice-policy { from { tag 10; protocol isis; } then { accept;
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The configuration for Router 3 is the same as for Router 1 except that the interface names might differ. In this topology, the interface so-5/2/2.0 belongs to other-policy, and so-3/2/2.0 belongs to voice-policy.
[edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols]
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For more information about configuring LDP, see the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide. For more information about configuring LDP over VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
[edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols]
For more information about configuring MSDP, see the JUNOS Multicast Protocols Configuration Guide. For more information about configuring multicast over VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
Configure the OSPF or OSPFv3 default instance at the [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)] and [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)] hierarchy levels with the statements needed for your network so that routes are installed in inet.0 and in the forwarding table. Make sure to include the routing table group. Configure an OSPF or OSPFv3 routing instance for each additional OSPF or OSPFv3 routing entity, configuring the following:
2.
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3. 4.
Configure a routing table group to install routes from the default route table, inet.0, into a routing instances route table. Configure a routing table group to install routes from a routing instance into the default route table, inet.0.
NOTE: Nonforwarding routing instances do not have forwarding tables that correspond to their routing tables. Create an export policy to export routes with a specific tag and to use that tag to export routes back into the instances. For more information, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
5.
voice_policy
other_policy
so-2/2/2.0 1 so-4/2/2.0
Backbone 3
so-5/2/2.0
1460
so-3/2/2.0 2
other_policy Site C
voice_policy Site D
Sites A and D belong to the voice_policy routing instance. Sites B and C belong to the other_policy instance. Router 1 and Router 3 at the edge of the backbone connect the routing instances. Each runs a separate OSPF or OSPFv3 instance (one per entity).
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Router 1 runs three OSPF or OSPFv3 instances: one each for Site A (voice_policy), Site C (other_policy), and the backbone, otherwise known as the default instance. Router 3 also runs three OSPF or OSPFv3 instances: one each for Site B (other_policy), Site D (voice_policy), and the backbone (default instance). When Router 1 runs the OSPF or OSPFv3 instances, the following occur:
Routes from the default instance routing table are placed in the voice_policy and other_policy instance routing tables. Routes from the voice_policy routing instance are placed in the default instance routing table. Routes from the other_policy routing instance are placed in the default instance routing table. Routes from the voice_policy routing instance do not enter the other_policy instance routing table. Routes from the other_policy routing instance do not enter the voice_policy instance routing table.
Configuring Router 1
The following sections describe how to configure Router 1 in the backbone entity with multiple routing instances.
Configure the routing table group inet_to_voice_and_others to take routes from inet.0 (default routing table) and place them in the voice-policy.inet.0 and other-policy.inet.0 routing tables:
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Configure the routing table group voice_to_inet to take routes from voice-policy.inet.0 and place them in the inet.0 default routing table:
[edit] routing-options { rib-groups { voice_to_inet { import-rib [ inet.0 voice-policy.inet.0 ]; } } }
Configure the routing table group other_to_inet to take routes from other-policy.inet.0 and place them in the inet.0 default routing table:
[edit] routing-options { rib-groups { other_to_inet { import-rib [ inet.0 other-policy.inet.0 ]; } } }
The configuration for Router 3 is the same as for Router 1 except that the interface names might differ. In this topology, the interface so-5/2/2.0 belongs to other-policy, and so-3/2/2.0 belongs to voice-policy.
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[edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols]
For more information about configuring PIM, see the JUNOS Multicast Protocols Configuration Guide. For more information about configuring multicast over VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
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[edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols]
Configuring an Instance
You can create multiple instances of BGP, IS-IS, OSPF, OSPFv3, RIP, and static routes. For information about how to configure a virtual switch, see Configuring a Virtual Switch on page 232. You can include the statements at the following hierarchy levels:
[edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols]
A set of routing tables A set of interfaces that belong to these routing tables A set of routing option configurations
Each routing instance has a unique name and a corresponding IP unicast table. For example, if you configure a routing instance with the name my-instance, its corresponding IP unicast table will be my-instance.inet.0. All routes for my-instance are installed into my-instance.inet.0. Configure global routing options and protocols for the default instance by including statements. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. Routes are installed into the default routing instance inet.0 by default, unless a routing instance is specified. For details about specifying interfaces, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide. To configure a routing instance, include the following statements:
routing-instances { routing-instance-name { interface interface-name; instance-type (forwarding | layer2-control | l2vpn | no-forwarding | virtual-router | virtual-switch | vpls | vrf); no-vrf-advertise; route-distinguisher (as-number:number | ip-address:number); vrf-import [ policy-names ]; vrf-export [ policy-names ];
Configuring an Instance
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vrf-table-label; protocols { bgp { ... bgp-configuration ... } isis { isis-configuration; } l2vpn { l2vpn-configuration; } ldp { ... ldp-configuration ... } msdp { msdp-configuration; } ospf { domain-id domain-id; domain-vpn-tag number; route-type-community (iana | vendor); ospf-configuration; } ospf3 { domain-id domain-id; domain-vpn-tag number; route-type-community (iana | vendor); ospf3-configuration; } pim { pim-configuration; } rip { rip-configuration; } ripng { ripng-configuration; } vpls { vpls-configuration; } } } }
Configuring VPNs
To configure virtual private networks (VPNs), see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
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Configuring VPNs
ForwardingUse this routing instance type for filter-based forwarding applications. For this instance type, there is no one-to-one mapping between an interface and a routing instance. All interfaces belong to the default instance inet.0. Layer 2 VPNUse this routing instance type for Layer 2 VPN implementations. Layer2-controlUse this routing instance type for RSTP or MSTP in customer edge interfaces of a VPLS routing instance. This instance type cannot be used if the customer edge interface is multihomed to two provider edge interfaces. If the customer edge interface is multihomed to two provider edge interfaces, use the default BPDU tunneling. For more information about configure a layer2control instance type, see the JUNOS MX-series Layer 2 Configuration Guide. NonforwardingUse this routing instance type when a separation of routing table information is required. There is no corresponding forwarding table. All routes are installed into the default forwarding table. IS-IS instances are strictly nonforwarding instance types. Virtual routerThis routing instance is similar to a VPN routing and forwarding instance type, but used for non-VPN-related applications. There are no VRF import, VRF export, VRF target, or route distinguisher requirements for this instance type. Virtual switch(MX-series routers only) Use the virtual switch instance type to group one or more Layer 2 bridge domains. A bridge domain consists of a set of ports that share the same flooding or broadcast characteristics. Each virtual switch represents a Layer 2 network. You can optionally configure a virtual switch to support Integrating Routing and Bridging (IRB), which facilitates simultaneous Layer 2 bridging and Layer 3 IP routing on the same interface. You can also configure Layer 2 control protocols to provide loop resolution. Protocols supported include the Spanning Tree Protocol, the Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol, and the Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol. For more information about configuring a virtual switch instance type, see the JUNOS MX-series Layer 2 Configuration Guide. VPLSUse this routing instance type for point-to-multipoint LAN implementations between a set of sites in a VPN. VRFUse this routing instance type for Layer 3 VPN implementations. For this instance type, there is a one-to-one mapping between an interface and a routing instance. Each VRF instance corresponds with a forwarding table. Routes on an interface go into the corresponding forwarding table.
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} }
For more information about configuring Layer 2 VPNs, Layer 3 VPNs, and VPLS, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide. For more information about configuring the types of routing instances, see the following sections:
Configuring a VRF Routing Instance on page 234 Configuring a Non-VPN VRF Routing Instance on page 235 Configuring a VPLS Routing Instance on page 236
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ospf3 { domain-id domain-id; domain-vpn-tag number; route-type-community (iana | vendor); ... ospf3-configuration ... } pim { ... pim-configuration ... } rip { ... rip-configuration ... } vpls { ... vpls-configuration ... } } } }
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domain-vpn-tag number; route-type-community (iana | vendor); ... ospf3-configuration ... } pim { ... pim-configuration ... } rip { ... rip-configuration ... } } } }
For more detailed information about configuring VPLS and Layer 2 VPN, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide and the JUNOS Feature Guide.
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routers for the same VPN, if you use a unique route distinguisher, you can determine the CE router from which a route originated. To configure a route distinguisher, include the route-distinguisher statement:
routing-instances routing-instance-name { route-distinguisher (as-number:number | ip-address:number); }
The route distinguisher is a 6-byte value that you can specify in one of the following formats:
as-number:number, where as-number is your assigned AS number and number is any 2-byte or 4-byte value. The AS number can be in the range from 1 through 4,294,967,295. If the AS number is a 2-byte value, the administrative number is a 4-byte value. If the AS number is 4-byte value, the administrative number is a 2-byte value.
NOTE: Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.1, the numeric range for AS numbers has been extended to provide BGP support for 4-byte AS numbers, as defined in RFC 4893, BGP support for Four-octet AS Number Space. The JUNOS software continues to support 2-byte AS numbers. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.2, you can also configure a 4-byte AS number using the AS-dot notation format of two integer values joined by a period: <16-bit high-order value in decimal>.<16-bit low-order value in decimal>. For example, the 4-byte AS number of 65,546 in plain-number format is represented as 1.10 in the AS-dot notation format.
ip-address:number, where ip-address is an IP address in your assigned prefix range (a 4-byte value) and number is any 2-byte value. The IP address can be in the
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customers. You can use filter-based forwarding when the common access layer is implemented using a combination of Layer 2 switches and a single router. With filter-based forwarding, all packets received on an interface are considered. Each packet passes through a filter that has match conditions. If the match conditions are met for a filter and you have created a routing instance, filter-based forwarding is applied to a packet. The packet is forwarded based on the next hop specified in the routing instance. For static routes, the next hop can be a specific LSP. For more information about configuring LSPs, see the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide.
NOTE: Source-class usage filter matching and unicast reverse-path forwarding checks are not supported on an interface configured with filter-based forwarding (FBF). To configure filter-based forwarding, perform the following tasks:
Create a match filter on an ingress router. To specify a match filter, include the filter filter-name statement at the [edit firewall] hierarchy level. For more information about creating a match filter for packet forwarding, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. A packet that passes through the filter is compared against a set of rules to classify it and to determine its membership in a set. Once classified, the packet is forwarded to a routing table specified in the accept action in the filter description language. The routing table then forwards the packet to the next hop that corresponds to the destination address entry in the table. Create routing instances that specify the routing table(s) to which a packet is forwarded, and the destination to which the packet is forwarded at the [edit routing-instances] or [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances] hierarchy levels. For example:
[edit] routing-instances { routing-table-name1 { instance-type forwarding; routing-options { static { route 0.0.0.0/0 nexthop 10.0.0.1; } } } routing-table-name2 { instance-type forwarding; routing-options { static { route 0.0.0.0/0 nexthop 10.0.0.2; } } } }
Create a routing table group that adds interface routes to the forwarding routing instances used in filter-based forwarding (FBF), as well as to the default routing
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instance inet.0. This part of the configuration resolves the routes installed in the routing instances to directly connected next hops on that interface. Create the routing table group at the [edit routing-options] or [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options] hierarchy levels. For IPv4, the following configuration installs interface routes into the default routing instance inet.0, as well as two forwarding routing instancesrouting-table-name1.inet.0 and routing-table-name2.inet.0:
[edit] routing-options { interface-routes { rib-group inet group-name; } rib-groups { group-name { import-rib [ inet.0 routing-table-name1.inet.0 routing-table-name2.inet.0 ]; } } }
NOTE: Specify inet.0 as one of the routing instances that the interface routes will be imported into. If the default instance inet.0 is not specified, interface routes will not be imported into the default routing instance.
Create a routing policy at the [edit policy-options] or [edit logical-systems logical-system-name policy-options] hierarchy levels to limit the configuration so that routes matching the route filter will be subject to the CoS next-hop mapping specified in my-cos-map:
[edit] policy-options { policy-statement my-cos-forwarding { from { route-filter ...; } then { cos-next-hop-map my-cos-map; } } }
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2.
Create a CoS next-hop map. To specify a CoS next-hop map, include the cos-next-hop-map statement at the [edit class-of-service] hierarchy level. For more information about creating a CoS next-hop map, see the JUNOS Class of Service Configuration Guide. Specify the exporting of the routes to the forwarding table at the [edit routing-options] or [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options] hierarchy levels:
[edit] routing-options { forwarding-table { export my-cos-forwarding; } }
3.
4.
Specify a static route that has multiple next hops for load balancing at the [edit routing-options] or [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options] hierarchy levels:
[edit] routing-options { static { route 12.1.1.1/32 { next-hop [ 3.1.1.2 3.1.1.4 3.1.1.6 3.1.1.8 ]; } } }
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For more information about configuring VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
Overlapping VPNsVPN configurations in which more than one VRF has the same route target Nonforwarding instancesMultilevel IGPs using multiple routing instances
NOTE: The instance-export and instance-import statements are not valid for VRF instances. The auto-export statement is valid for VRF and non-VRF instances. The instance-import statement automatically enables auto-export for non-VRF instances.
For detailed information about configuring overlapping VPNs and nonforwarding instances, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide. For sample configurations, see the following sections:
Example: Configuring Policy-Based Export for an Overlapping VPN on page 241 Example: Configuring Policy-Based Export for a Nonforwarding Instance on page 243
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This section describes how to configure Router PE1 in the backbone entity for this overlapping VPN by means of policy-based export.
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static { route 1.1.3.1/32 next-hop fe-1/1/0.0; route 1.1.3.2/32 next-hop fe-1/1/0.0; } } VPN-B { instance-type vrf; interface fe-1/0/2.0; route-distinguisher 10.255.14.175:9; vrf-export B-out; vrf-import B-in; routing-options { auto-export; static { route 1.1.2.1/32 next-hop fe-1/0/2.0; route 1.1.2.2/32 next-hop fe-1/0/2.0; } } } } }
Configuring Router PE2
The configuration for Router PE2 is the same as that for Router PE1; however, the interface names might differ.
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voice { instance-type no-forwarding; interface t3-0/1/0.0; routing-options { instance-import voice-import; auto-export; } protocols { ospf { export accept; area 0.0.0.0 { interface all; } } } } } }
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term b { then reject; } } voice-import { term a { from { instance master; protocol ospf; tag 11; } } term b { then reject; } } } }
For more information about configuring VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
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} } }
Within a hub-and-spoke configuration, you can configure a PE router not to advertise VPN routes from the primary (hub) instance. Instead, these routes are advertised from the secondary (downstream) instance. You can do this without configuring routing table groups, by using the no-vrf-advertise statement.
NOTE: This statement does not prevent the exportation of VPN routes to other VRFs on the same router by configuring the [edit routing-options auto-export] statement. To prevent advertising VPN routes from the primary instance, include the no-vrf-advertise statement:
routing-instances { routing-instance-name { no-vrf-advertise; } }
For more information about configuring VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
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Without the domain IDs, there is no way to identify which domain the routes originated from after the OSPF or OSPFv3 routes are distributed into BGP routes and advertised across the BGP VPN backbone. Distinguishing which OSPF or OSPFv3 domain a route originated from allows classification of routes as Type 3 LSAs or Type 5 LSAs. To configure a domain ID, perform the following tasks:
1. 2. 3. 4.
Specify a domain ID in the BGP extended community ID. Set a route type. Configure a VRF export policy to explicitly attach the outbound extended community ID to outbound routes. Define a community with members that possess the community ID.
For more information about configuring export policies, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. This extended community ID can then be carried across the BGP VPN backbone. When the route is redistributed back as an OSPF or OSPFv3 route on the PE router and advertised to the CE near the destination, the domain ID identifies which domain the route originated from. The routing instance checks incoming routes for the domain ID. The route is then propagated as either a Type 3 LSA or Type 5 LSA. When a PE router receives a route, it redistributes and advertises the route as either a Type 3 LSA or a Type 5 LSA, depending on the following:
If the receiving PE router sees a Type 3 route with a matching domain ID, the route is redistributed and advertised as a Type 3 LSA. If the receiving PE router sees a Type 3 route without a domain ID (the extended attribute field of the routes BGP update does not include a domain ID), the route is redistributed and advertised as a Type 3 LSA. If the receiving PE router sees a Type 3 route with a non-matching domain ID, the route is redistributed and advertised as a Type 5 LSA. If the receiving PE router sees a Type 3 route with a domain ID, but the router does not have a domain ID configured, the route is redistributed and advertised as a Type 5 LSA. If the receiving PE router sees a Type 5 route, the route is redistributed and advertised as a Type 5 LSA, regardless of the domain ID.
On the local PE router, the prefix of the directly connected PE/CE interface is an active direct route. This route is also an OSPF or OSPFv3 route. In the VRF export policy, the direct prefix is exported to advertise the route to the remote PE. This route is injected as an AS-External-LSA, much as when a direct route is exported into OSPF or OSPFv3. Domain ID ensures that an originated summary LSA arrives at the remote PE as a summary LSA. Domain ID does not translate AS-external-LSAs into summary LSAs.
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To configure an OSPF or OSPFv3 domain ID match condition for incoming Layer 3 VPN routes going into a routing instance, include the domain-id statement:
(ospf | ospf3) { domain-id domain-id; }
[edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)]
If the router ID is not configured in the routing instance, the router ID is derived from an interface address belonging to the routing instance. You can set a VPN tag for the OSPF or OSPFv3 external routes generated by the PE router. This prevents looping when a domain ID is used as an alternate route preference. By default, this tag is automatically calculated and needs no configuration. To configure the domain VPN tag for Type 5 LSAs, include the domain-vpn-tag number statement:
(ospf | ospf3) { domain-vpn-tag number; }
[edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)]
The range is from 1 through 4,294,967,295. If you set VPN tags manually, you must set the same value for all PE routers in the VPN. To set the route type, include the route-type-community statement:
routing-instances routing-instance-name { protocols { (ospf | ospf3) { route-type-community (iana | vendor); } } }
[edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)]
The domain-id setting in the routing instance is for a match on inbound Layer 3 VPN routes. A VRF export policy must be explicitly set for the outbound extended
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community domain-id attribute. You must configure an export policy to attach the domain ID to outgoing routes. To configure an export policy to attach the domain ID and route distinguisher to the extended community ID on outbound routes, include the community statement:
policy-statement policy-name { term term-name { from protocol (ospf | ospf3); then { community add community-name; accept; } } term b { then reject; } } community community-name members [ target:target-id domain-id:domain-id];
[edit policy-options policy-statement policy-name term term-name then] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name policy-options policy-statement policy-name term term-name then]
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route-type-community vendor; export vrf_import_routes; area 0.0.0.0 { interface ge-0/1/0.0; } } } } } policy-options { policy-statement vrf_export_routes { term a { from protocol ospf; then { community add export_target; accept; } } term b { then reject; } } community export_target members [ target:1:100 domain-id:1.1.1.1:0 ]; }
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. Specify the log-only option to generate warning messages only (an advisory limit). Specify the threshold option to generate warnings before the limit is reached. Specify the log-interval option to configure the minimum time interval between log messages. There are two modes for route limits: advisory and mandatory. An advisory limit triggers warnings. A mandatory limit rejects additional routes after the limit is reached.
NOTE: Application of a route limit may result in unpredictable dynamic routing protocol behavior. For example, when the limit is reached and routes are rejected, BGP may not reinstall the rejected routes after the number of routes drops back below the limit. BGP sessions may need to be cleared. For more information about configuring VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
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to have a single, coherent interior routing plan and presents a consistent picture of what destinations are reachable through it. Configuring an independent domain allows you to keep the AS paths of the independent domain from being shared with the AS path and AS path attributes of other domains, including the master routing instance domain. If you are using BGP on the router, you must configure an AS number. To configure an independent domain, include the independent-domain statement:
independent-domain;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. There is a limit of 16 ASs for each domain.
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Chapter 10
description
Syntax Hierarchy Level Release Information Description
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Provide a text description for the routing instance. If the text includes one or more spaces, enclose it in quotation marks (" "). Any descriptive text you include is displayed in the output of the show route instance detail command and has no effect on the operation of the routing instance. See Configuring Routing Instances on page 209. interfaceTo view this statement in the configuration. interface-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
forwarding-options
See
description
253
instance-type
Syntax
instance-type (forwarding | l2vpn | layer2-control | no-forwarding | virtual-router | virtual-switch | vpls | vrf); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. virtual-switch and layer2-control options introduced in JUNOS Release 8.4. Define the type of routing instance. no-forwarding
forwardingProvide support for filter-based forwarding, where interfaces are not
associated with instances. All interfaces belong to the default instance. Other instances are used for populating RPD learned routes. See Configuring Filter-Based Forwarding on page 237.
l2vpnProvide support for Layer 2 VPNs. For more detailed information about
edge interfaces of a VPLS routing instance. For more detailed information about configuring RSTP and MSTP, see the JUNOS MX-series Layer 2 Configuration Guide.
no-forwardingThis is the default routing instance. Do not create a corresponding
forwarding instance.
virtual-routerSimilar to a VPN routing and forwarding instance type, but used for
non-VPN-related applications. There are no VRF import, VRF export, VRF target, or route distinguisher requirements for this instance type.
virtual-switch(MX-series routers only) Provide support for Layer 2 bridging. Use to
group one or more bridge domains to represent a Layer 2 network. For more detailed information about configuring a virtual switch, see the JUNOS MX-series Layer 2 Configuration Guide.
vplsVirtual private local-area network (LAN) service. Use this routing instance type
for point-to-multipoint LAN implementations between a set of sites in a VPN. For more information about configuring VPLS, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
vrfVPN routing and forwarding instance. Provides support for Layer 3 VPNs, where
interface routes for each instance go into the corresponding forwarding table only. For more information about configuring VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
Usage Guidelines
See Configuring an Instance on page 231 and the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
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instance-type
routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
interface
Syntax Hierarchy Level
interface interface-name; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Identify the logical, private interface between the provider edge (PE) router and the customer edge (CE) router on the PE side.
interface-nameName of the interface.
See Configuring an Instance on page 231. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
no-vrf-advertise
Syntax Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Prevent advertising VPN routes from a VRF instance to remote PEs. See Configuring a VRF Target on page 245. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
interface
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protocols
Syntax
protocols { bgp { ... bgp-configuration ... } isis { ... isis-configuration ... } ldp { ... ldp-configuration ... } msdp { ... msdp-configuration ... } mstp { ... mstp-configuration ... } ospf { domain-id domain-id; domain-vpn-tag number; route-type-community (iana | vendor); ... ospf-configuration ... } ospf3 { domain-id domain-id; domain-vpn-tag number; route-type-community (iana | vendor); ... ospf3-configuration ... } pim { ... pim-configuration ... } rip { ... rip-configuration ... } ripng { ... ripng-configuration ... } rstp { rstp-configuration; } vstp { vstp configuration; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name]
Hierarchy Level
Release Information
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for RIPng introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0.
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protocols
Description
Specify the protocol for a routing instance. You can configure multiple instances of the following supported protocols: BGP, IS-IS, LDP, MSDP, OSPF, OSPFv3, PIM, RIP, and RIPng.
protocols
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Options
bgpSpecify the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) for a routing instance. For a
description of the BGP configuration statements, see BGP Configuration Guidelines on page 641.
isisSpecify the Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) protocol for a
routing instance. For a description of the IS-IS configuration statements, see IS-IS Configuration Guidelines on page 299.
ldpSpecify the Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) for a routing instance. For more
information about configuring LDP, see the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide.
msdpSpecify the Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) for a routing instance.
For more information about configuring MSDP, see the JUNOS Multicast Protocols Configuration Guide.
mstpSpecify the Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (MSTP) for a virtual swtich routing
instance. For more information about configuring MSTP, see the JUNOS MX-series Layer 2 Configuration Guide.
ospfSpecify the Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) protocol for a routing instance.
For a description of the OSPF configuration statements, see OSPF Configuration Guidelines on page 413.
ospf3Specify the Open Shortest Path First version 3 (OSPFv3)protocol for a routing
instance. For a description of the OSPFv3 configuration statements, see OSPF Configuration Guidelines on page 413.
NOTE: OSPFv3 supports the no-forwarding and vrf routing instance types only.
pimSpecify the Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) protocol for a routing instance.
For more information about configuring PIM, see the JUNOS Multicast Protocols Configuration Guide.
ripSpecify the Routing Information Protocol (RIP) for a routing instance. For a
description of the RIP configuration statements, see RIP Configuration Guidelines on page 521.
ripngSpecify the Routing Information Protocol next generation (RIPng) for a routing
instance. For a description of the RIPng configuration statements, see RIPng Configuration Guidelines on page 559.
rstpSpecify the Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP) for a virtual switch routing
instance. For information about configuring RSTP, see the JUNOS MX-series Layer 2 Configuration Guide.
vstpSpecify the VLAN Spanning Tree Protocol (VSTP) for a virtual switch routing
instance. for information about configuring VSTP, see the JUNOS MX-series Layer 2 Configuration Guide.
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protocols
Usage Guidelines
SeeConfiguring Multiple Instances of BGP on page 219, Configuring Multiple Instances of IS-IS on page 220, Configuring Multiple Instances of LDP on page 225, Configuring Multiple Instances of MSDP on page 226, Configuring Multiple Instances of OSPF on page 226, Configuring Multiple Instances of PIM on page 229, and Configuring Multiple Instances of RIP on page 230. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
route-distinguisher
Syntax Hierarchy Level
route-distinguisher (as-number:number | ip-address:number); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. An identifier attached to a route, enabling you to distinguish to which VPN the route belongs. Each routing instance must have a unique route distinguisher associated with it. The route distinguisher is used to place bounds around a VPN so that the same IP address prefixes can be used in different VPNs without having them overlap. If the instance type is vrf, the route-distinguisher statement is required.
as-number:numberas-number is an assigned AS number and number is any 2-byte
Options
for 4-byte value. The AS number can be from 1 through 4,294,967,295. If the AS number is a 2-byte value, the administrative number is a 4-byte value. If the AS number is 4-byte value, the administrative number is a 2-byte value.
NOTE: Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.1, the numeric range for AS numbers has been extended to provide BGP support for 4-byte AS numbers, as defined in RFC 4893, BGP Support for Four-octet AS Number Space. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.2, you can also configure a 4-byte AS number using the AS-dot notation format of two integer values joined by a period: <16-bit high-order value in decimal>.<16-bit low-order value in decimal>. For example, the 4-byte AS number of 65,546 in plain-number format is represented as 1.10 in the AS-dot notation format.
ip-address:numberip-address is an IP address in your assigned prefix range (a 4-byte value) and number is any 2-byte value.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring a Route Distinguisher on page 236. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
route-distinguisher
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routing-instances
Syntax Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure an additional routing entity for a router. You can create multiple instances of BGP, IS-IS, OSPF, OSPFv3, and RIP for a router. Routing instances are disabled for the router.
routing-instance-nameName of the routing instance, a maximum of 128 characters.
Default Options
A routing instance name can contain letters, numbers, and hyphens. The remaining statements are explained separately.
NOTE: Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.0, you can no longer specify a routing-instance name of default or include special characters within the name of a routing instance.
Usage Guidelines
See Routing Instances Configuration Guidelines on page 207 and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
routing-options
See
routing-options
260
routing-instances
vrf-export
Syntax Hierarchy Level
vrf-export [ policy-names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Define which routes will be exported from a local instance tableinstance-name.inet.0to a remote PE router. Specify one or more policy names. If the instance-type is vrf, vrf-export is a required statement. The default action is to reject.
policy-namesSpecify one or more policy names.
Default
See Configuring Secondary VRF Import and Export Policy on page 240. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
vrf-import
Syntax Hierarchy Level
vrf-import [ policy-names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. How routes are imported into the local PE router's VPN routing tableinstance-name.inet.0from the remote PE router. If the instance-type is vrf, vrf-import is a required statement. The default action is to accept.
policy-namesSpecify one or more policy names.
Default
See Configuring Secondary VRF Import and Export Policy on page 240. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
vrf-export
261
vrf-table-label
Syntax Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable mapping of the inner label of a packet to a specific VRF, thereby allowing the examination of the encapsulated IP header. All routes in the VRF configured with this option are advertised with the label allocated per VRF.
See Configuring a VRF Table Label on page 245. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
vrf-target
Syntax
vrf-target { community; import community; export community; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure a single policy for import and a single policy for export to replace the per-VRF policies for every community.
communityCommunity name. importSpecifies the allowed communities to accept from neighbors. exportSpecifies the allowed communities to send to neighbors.
Options
See Configuring a VRF Target on page 245. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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vrf-table-label
Part 4
Multitopology Routing
Multitopology Routing Overview on page 265 Configuring Multitopology Routing on page 269 Summary of Multitopology Routing Configuration Statements on page 281
Multitopology Routing
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264
Multitopology Routing
Chapter 11
Routing Table Naming Conventions for Multitopology Routing on page 265 Routing Protocol Support for Multitopology Routing on page 266 Filter-Based Forwarding Support on page 266 Multitopology Routing Standards on page 267
The routing instance string is included only if the instance is not the master. The logical system string is included only if the logical system identifier has a value other than 0 (zero). Each routing table for a topology includes a colon (:) before the topology name that also separates the routing-instance name from the topology name. protocol is the protocol family, which can be inet or inet6. identifier is a positive integer that specifies the instance of the routing table. Table 10 on page 265 shows specific examples of routing tables for various topologies.
Table 10: Examples of Routing Tables for Custom Topologies
Name of Routing Table
:voice.inet.0 :voice.inet6.0
Description Master instance, voice topology, unicast IPv4 routes Master instance, voice topology, unicast IPv6 routes
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Description Master instance, voice topology, ingress label-switched paths (LSPs) Logical system private, voice topology, unicast IPv4 routes Virtual-router customer-A, voice topology, unicast IPV4 routes Virtual-router customer-B, voice topology, ingress LSPs Virtual-router customer-A, voice topology, unicast carrier-of-carriers IPV4 routes
NOTE: Multitopology Routing is also supported on logical systems and the virtual router routing instance. No other routing instance type is supported on Multitopology Routing. For more information about configuring logical systems, see Logical System Overview on page 125. For more information about configuring routing instances see, Routing Instances Configuration Guidelines on page 207. For more information about configure a virtual router instance, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
266
additional firewall filters that match traffic for such values as the IP precedence field or the Differentiated Services code point (DSCP).
267
268
Chapter 12
Configuring Topologies on page 269 Configuring Multitopology Routing in OSPF on page 270 Configuring Multitopology Routing in Static Routes on page 276 Configuring Multitopology Routing in BGP on page 277 BGP Route Resolution in Multitopology Routing on page 277 Configuring Filter-Based Forwarding for Multitopology Routing on page 278
Configuring Topologies
For Multitopology Routing (MTR) to run on the router, you need to configure one or more topologies. For each topology, you specify a string value, such as voice, that defines the type of traffic, as well as an interface family, such as IPv4. In addition, a default topology is automatically created. You can also enable a topology for IPv4 multicast traffic. Each topology that you configure creates a new routing table and populates it with direct routes from the topology. For more information about the naming conventions for routing tables for topologies, see Routing Table Naming Conventions for Multitopology Routing on page 265. To configure a custom topology, include the following statements at the [edit routing options] hierarchy level:
[edit routing-options] topologies { family (inet | inet6) { topology topology-name; } }
Include the family inet statement to specify IPv4 traffic. Include the family inet6 statement to specify IPv6 traffic. Include the topology topology-name statement to create a topology. For topology-name, specify a name for the topology in the form of a string. Typically, you would specify a name that describes the type of traffic, such as video. You can also specify
Configuring Topologies
269
ipv4-multicast to create a topology for IPv4 multicast traffic. A default topology is also
automatically created.
Configuring Topologies and SPF Options for MT-OSPF on page 270 Configuring a Prefix Export Limit for MT-OSPF on page 272 Configuring a Topology to Appear Overloaded on page 272 Configuring Interface Properties for MT-OSPF on page 272 Disabling MT-OSPF on an OSPF Interface on page 273 Disabling MT-OSPF on a Virtual Link on page 273 Advertising MPLS Label-Switched Paths into MT-OSPF on page 274 Configuring Other MT-OSPF Properties on page 275
270
For name, include the name of a topology that you configured under the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level to create the topology. Use ipv4-multicast for IPv4 multicast traffic. You must first enable this topology under the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level.
topology-id number is the topology identifier. The range for topology-id number is from 32 through 127 for any topology you create, except for the default and IPv4 multicast topologies. The identifier for those topologies is predefined and cannot be modified.
NOTE: Multitopology Routing is not currently supported for OSPF version 3 (OSPFv3). You can configure SPF options for each topology. The values you configure for each of the following options override the default or globally configured values.
The delay in the time between the detection of a topology change and when the SPF algorithm actually runs The maximum number of times that the SPF algorithm can run in succession before the hold-down timer begins The time to hold down, or wait, before running another SPF calculation after the SPF algorithm has run in succession the configured maximum number of times
To configure the SPF delay, include the delay statement when specifying the spf-options statement:
delay milliseconds;
By default, the SPF algorithm runs 200 milliseconds after the detection of a topology change. The range that you can configure is from 50 through 8000 milliseconds. To configure the maximum number of times that the SPF algorithm can run in succession, include the rapid-runs statement when specifying the spf-options statement:
rapid-runs number;
The default number of SPF calculations that can occur in succession is 3. The range that you can configure is from 1 through 5. Each SPF algorithm is run after the configured SPF delay. When the maximum number of SPF calculations occurs, the hold-down timer begins. Any subsequent SPF calculation is not run until the hold-down timer expires. To configure the SPF hold-down timer, include the holddown statement when specifying the spf-options statement:
holddown milliseconds;
The default is 5000 milliseconds, and the range that you can configure is from 2000 through 20,000 milliseconds. Use the hold-down timer to hold down, or wait, before running any subsequent SPF calculations after the SPF algorithm runs for the
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configured maximum number of times. If the network stabilizes during the hold-down period and the SPF algorithm does not need to run again, the system reverts to the configured values for the delay and rapid-runs statements.
The number that you can configure for each topology is from 0 through 4,294,967,295.
All OSPF interfaces have a cost, which is a routing metric that is used in the link-state calculation. Routes with lower total path metrics are preferred over those with higher path metrics. The default value for the OSPF metric for an interface is 1. You can modify the default value for an OSPF interface and configure a topology-specific metric for that interface. The topology-specific metric applies to routes advertised
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from the interface that belong only to that topology. The range that you can configure is from 1 through 65,535. You can also configure any interface that belongs to one or more topologies to advertise the direct interface addresses without actually running OSPF on that interface. By default, OSPF must be configured on an interface for direct interface addresses to be advertised as interior routes. Include the passive statement at the [edit protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name] hierarchy level:
[edit protocols ospf] area area-id { interface interface-name { passive; topology name; } }
NOTE: If you configure an interface with the passive statement, it applies to all the topologies to which the interface belongs. You cannot configure an interface as passive for only one specific topology and have it remain active for any other topologies to which it belongs.
You cannot disable an interface in the default topology and have it remain active in any other configured topologies.
NOTE: If you disable OSPF on an interface by including the disable statement at the [edit protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name] hierarchy level, the interface is disabled for all topologies, including the default topology.
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that are in the default topology. You can disable a virtual link for a configured topology, but not for a default topology. Include the disable statement at the [edit
protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link neighbor-id router-id transit-area area-id topology name] hierarchy level: [edit protocols ospf] area area-id { virtual-link neighbor-id router-id transit-area area-id { topology (ipv4-multicast | name) { disable; } } }
NOTE: If you disable the virtual link by including the disable statement at the [edit protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link neighbor-id router-id transit-area area-id] hierarchy level, you disable the virtual link for all topologies, including the default topology. You cannot disable the virtual link only in the default topology.
Use the label-switched path metric defined under OSPFv2. Use the label-switched path metric configured for the label-switched path under MPLS. If you do not configure any of the above, use the default OSPFv2 metric of 1.
In addition, the default value of the topology-specific metric is the same as the default metric calculated by OSPF or configured for the MPLS LSPs. You can also override this value by configuring a specific metric for the topology. For more information about configuring a topology-specific metric, see Configuring Interface Properties for MT-OSPF on page 272. To disable a topology on LSPs and configure a label-switched path metric for OSPFv2, include the following statements at the [edit protocols ospf] hierarchy level:
[edit protocols ospf] area area-id { label-switched-path name; metric metric; topology (ipv4-multicast | name) { disable;
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} } }
NOTE: You cannot disable an MPLS LSP only on the default topology and have it remain enabled on other topologies. For more information about advertising label-switched paths, see the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide.
Disable not-so-stubby-area (NSSA) support on an autonomous-system border router (ASBR) Modify the preference value for OSPF internal routes Modify the default preference value for OSPF external routes Modify the reference-bandwidth value Enable graceful restart
To disable exporting Type 7 LSAs into LSAs, include the no-nssa-abr statement. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
[edit protocols ospf] no-nssa-abr;
By default, internal OSPF routes have a preference value of 10, and external OSPF routes have a preference value of 150. To modify the preference values for all topologies, include the preference statement (for internal routes) or the external-preference statement (for external routes):
[edit protocols ospf] external-preference preference; preference preference;
For a complete list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. You can configure a preference value of from 0 through 255 for each statement. The reference bandwidth is used to calculate the default cost of a route using the following formula:
cost = reference-bandwidth / bandwidth
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The default value for the reference bandwidth is 100 Mbps (which you specify as 100,000,000), which gives a metric of 1 for any bandwidth that is 100 Mbps or greater. To modify the default value, Include the reference-bandwidth statement:
[edit protocols ospf] reference-bandwidth;
The range that you can specify is from 9,600 through 1,000,000,000. For a complete list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: You can specify topology-specific metrics for routes advertised from an interface. For more information, see Configuring Interface Properties for MT-OSPF on page 272. Graceful restart enables a restarting router and its neighbors to continue forwarding packets without disrupting network performance. Because neighboring routers assist in the restart (these neighbors are called helper routers), the restarting router can quickly resume full operation without recalculating algorithms. Graceful restart is disabled by default. You can globally configure graceful restart for all routing protocols at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level. To configure graceful restart parameters specifically for OSPF, include the graceful-restart statement at the [edit protocols ospf] hierarchy level. For more information about how to configure graceful restart, see the JUNOS High Availability Configuration Guide.
instance string is included only if the instance is not the master. The logical system string is included only if the logical system identifier has a value other than 0 (zero). Each routing table for a topology includes a colon (:) before the topology name that also separates the routing instance name from the topology name. protocol is the protocol family, which can be inet or inet6. identifier is a positive integer that specifies
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the instance of the routing table. When you create a topology for an instance (master or virtual-router), a new routing table is created within the instance for that topology. For more detailed information about routing table naming conventions for Multitopology Routing, see Routing Table Naming Conventions for Multitopology Routing on page 265. For route destination-prefix, specify the destination of the route in the following way: network/mask-length, where network is the network portion of the IP address and mask-length is the destination prefix length. You can specify an IPv4 or IPv6 address. You can optionally specify how to reach the destination by including the next-hop statement. In addition, you can specify static-options, which defines additional information about static routes that is included with the route when it is installed in the routing table. For more information about specific static options you can optionally configure, see Specifying Static Route Options on page 62.
Multitopology Routing in BGP is also supported for BGP groups and BGP peers. To configure for a BGP group, include the family (inet | inet6) unicast topology name community target identifier statement at the [edit protocols bgp group group-name] hierarchy level. To configure for a BGP peer, include the family (inet | inet6) unicast topology name community target identifier statement at the [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address] hierarchy level.
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cannot perform secondary route resolution. Multitopology Routing in BGP provides support for secondary routes to resolve to an independent set of next hops. When Multitopology Routing in BGP resolves a route against the inet.0 routing table, a forwarding state is generated to match the topologies for which you configured a BGP import policy.
To configure the family address type, specify family inet to filter IPv4 packets or family inet6 to filter IPv6 packets. To configure the filter name, include the filter filter-name statement. The filter name can contain letters, numbers, and hyphens (-) and can be up to 64 characters long. To include spaces in the name, enclose the entire name in quotation marks ( ). Each filter consists of one or more terms. To configure a term, include the term term-name statement. The term name can contain letters, numbers, and hyphens (-) and can be up to 255 characters long. To include spaces in the name, enclose the entire name in quotation marks ( ). Each term name must be unique within a filter. Include the forwarding-class class statement to define the forwarding class against which to match the incoming packets. You can configure the following types of forwarding classes: assured-forwarding, expedited-forwarding, best-effort, and network-control.
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You can specify multiple terms in a filter, effectively chaining together a series of match-action operations to apply to the packets on an interface. Firewall filter terms are evaluated in the order in which you specify them in the configuration. To reorder terms, use the configuration mode insert command. For example, the command insert term up before term start places the term up before the term start. Use the topology statement to specify that packets that match the specified forwarding class be directed to the specified topology. For a topology in the master instance, include the topology name statement, where name is the name of the topology. For a topology in a nonmaster instance, include the routing-instance routing-instance-name topology topology-name statement, where routing-instance-name is the name of the routing instance and topology-name is the name of the topology. For a topology in a nonmaster logical-system, include the logical-system logical-system-name topology topology-name statement, where logical-system-name is the name of the logical system and topology-name is the name of the topology. For a topology in a nonmaster instance within a nonmaster logical system, include the logical-system logical-system-name routing-instance routing-instance-name topology topology-name statement, where logical-system-name is the name of the logical system, routing-instance-name is the name of the routing instance configured within the logical system, and topology-name is the name of the topology. You must apply the filter to an ingress interface. Include the following statements to apply the filter to an interface:
[edit interfaces interface-name] unit number { family (inet | inet6) { filter { input filter-name { } } }
For more detailed information about how to configure firewall filters, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
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Chapter 13
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community
Syntax
community { target identifier; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp family (inet | inet6) unicast topology name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) unicast topology name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet6) unicast topology name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family (inet | inet6) unicast topology name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) unicast topology name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet6) unicast topology name], [edit protocols bgp family (inet | inet6) unicast topology name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) unicast topology name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet6) unicast topology name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family (inet | inet6) unicast topology name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) unicast topology name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet6) topology name]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure the community to identify the multitopology routes. BGP uses the target community identifier to install the routes it learns in the appropriate Multitopology Routing tables.
target identifierConfigure the destination to which the route is going.
See Configuring Multitopology Routing in BGP on page 277. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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community
rib
Syntax
rib routing-table-name { static { route destination-prefix { next-hop; } static-options; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Hierarchy Level
Statement support for Multitopology Routing introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure a static route to install routes in the routing table for a specific topology.
routing-table-nameName of the routing table for a topology. Use the following format: logical-system-name/routing-instance-name:topology-name.protocol.identifier. Include
the routing instance string only if the instance is not the master. The logical system string is included only if the logical system identifier has a value other than 0 (zero). Each routing table for a topology includes a colon (:) before the topology name. protocol is the protocol family, which can be inet or inet6. identifier is the positive integer that specifies the instance of the routing table. For example, to install IPv6 routes to the routing table for a topology named voice in the master instance, include :voice.inet6.0. The remaining statements are explained separately in the Summary of Protocol-Independent Routing Properties Configuration Statements chapter.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Configuring Multitopology Routing in Static Routes on page 276. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. static
rib
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topologies
Syntax
topologies { family (inet | inet6) { topology topology-name; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options], [edit routing-options]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure a topology for Multitopology Routing. Each topology creates a new routing table that is populated with direct routes from the topology.
familyConfigure the type of family address type. inetIPv4 inet6IPv6
Options
See Configuring Topologies on page 269. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. topology (Multitopology Routing)
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topologies
topology
topology (Filter-Based Forwarding) on page 286 topology (Multitopology Routing) on page 287 topology (OSPF) on page 288 topology (OSPF Interface) on page 289
topologies
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topology topology-name; [edit firewall family (inet | inet6) filter filter-name term term-name [edit firewall family (inet | inet6) filter filter-name term term-name logical-system-name], [edit firewall family (inet | inet6) filter filter-name term term-name logical-system-name routing-instance routing-instance-name], [edit firewall family (inet | inet6) filter filter-name term term-name routing-instance-name] then], then logical-system then logical-system then routing-instance
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure a topology for filter-based forwarding for Multitopology Routing. The firewall filter you apply to the ingress interface is used to look up traffic against the configured topology, and, if a route matches the conditions you configure for the term, the route is accepted and added to the to the routing table for the specific topology. There are multiple ways to configure a topology for filter-based forwarding, depending on the type of instance or logical system you want to specify for the forwarding class. See Options for more information.
NOTE: The options for logical system and routing instance precede the topology statement with the then statement.
Options
topology-nameName of a topology against which you want to match traffic. logical-system logical-system-name topology topology-nameFor a nonmaster logical
system, specify the name of the logical system and a topology name configured for a nonmaster logical system.
routing-instance routing-instance-name topology topology-nameFor a nonmaster routing
instance, specify the name of the routing instance and a topology name configured for a nonmaster routing instance.
logical-system logical-system-name routing-instance routing-instance-name topology topology-nameFor a nonmaster routing instance configured within a nonmaster
logical system, specify the name of the logical system, the name of the routing instance, and a topology name configured for a nonmaster routing instance within a nonmaster logical system.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Configuring Filter-Based Forwarding for Multitopology Routing on page 278. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide
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topology topology-name; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name topologies family (inet | inet6)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name topologies family (inet | inet6)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name topologies family (inet | inet6)], [edit routing-options topologies family (inet | inet6)]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure the name of a topology configured to run Multitopology Routing.
topology-nameName of the topology. Include a string value that describes the type of traffic, such as voice or video. For IPv4 multicast traffic, include ipv4-multicast
as the name.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Configuring Topologies on page 269. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. topologies
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topology (OSPF)
Syntax
topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name) { topology-id number; spf-options { delay milliseconds; holddown milliseconds; rapid-runs number; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf], [edit protocols ospf], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Enable a topology for OSPF Multitopology Routing. You must first configure one or more topologies under the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level.
defaultName of the default topology. This topology is automatically created and all routes that correspond to it are automatically added to the inet.0 routing table.
Options
You can modify certain default parameters, such as for the shortest-path-first (SPF) algorithm.
ipv4-multicastName of the topology for IPv4 multicast traffic. nameName of a topology you configured under the [edit routing-options] hierarchy
level to create a topology for a specific type of traffic, such a voice or video.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring Topologies and SPF Options for MT-OSPF on page 270. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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topology (OSPF)
topology (ipv4-multicast | name) { metric metric; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure interface-specific properties for MT-OSPF, including topology-specific metric values for an interface. The default value of the topology metric is the same as the default metric value calculated by OSPF or the value configured for the OSPF metric.
ipv4-multicastName of the topology for IPv4 multicast traffic. nameName of a topology created under the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level. metric metricCost of a route from an OSPF interface. You can specify a metric value
Default
Options
for a topology that is different from the value specified for the interface. Range: 1 through 65,535 Default: 1
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring Interface Properties for MT-OSPF on page 272. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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topology-id
Syntax Hierarchy Level
topology-id number; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf topology name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf topology name], [edit protocols ospf topology name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf topology name]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure a topology identifier for a topology enabled for OSPF. The default identifier for the default topology is 0, and the default identifier for the topology for IPv4 multicast traffic is 1. These identifiers are predefined and cannot be modified.
numberthe integer value used to identify the topology.
Range: 32 through 127 See Configuring Topologies and SPF Options for MT-OSPF on page 270. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. topology (OSPF)
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topology-id
Part 5
IS-IS Overview on page 293 IS-IS Configuration Guidelines on page 299 Summary of IS-IS Configuration Statements on page 337 ES-IS Overview on page 389 ES-IS Configuration Guidelines on page 391 Summary of ES-IS Configuration Statements on page 397 OSPF Overview on page 403 OSPF Configuration Guidelines on page 413 Summary of OSPF Configuration Statements on page 453 RIP Overview on page 519 RIP Configuration Guidelines on page 521 Summary of RIP Configuration Statements on page 535 RIPng Overview on page 557 RIPng Configuration Guidelines on page 559 Summary of RIPng Configuration Statements on page 567 ICMP Router Discovery Overview on page 583 ICMP Router Discovery Configuration Guidelines on page 585 Summary of ICMP Router Discovery Configuration Statements on page 589 Neighbor Discovery Overview on page 599 Neighbor Discovery Configuration Guidelines on page 601 Summary of Neighbor Discovery Router Advertisement Configuration Statements on page 609 Secure Neighbor Discovery Configuration Guidelines on page 621 Summary of Secure Neighbor Discovery Configuration Statements on page 625
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Chapter 14
IS-IS Overview
The Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) protocol is an interior gateway protocol (IGP) that uses link-state information to make routing decisions. IS-IS is a link-state IGP that uses the shortest path first (SPF) algorithm to determine routes. IS-IS evaluates the topology changes and determines whether to perform a full SPF recalculation or a partial route calculation (PRC). This protocol originally was developed for routing International Organization for Standardization (ISO) Connectionless Network Protocol (CLNP) packets.
NOTE: Because IS-IS uses ISO addresses, the configuration of the Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) and Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) implementations of IS-IS is identical. This chapter discusses the following topics that provide background information about IS-IS:
IS-IS Standards on page 293 IS-IS Terminology on page 294 ISO Network Addresses on page 295 IS-IS Packets on page 296 Persistent Route Reachability on page 296 IS-IS Extensions to Support Traffic Engineering on page 296 IS-IS Extensions to Support Route Tagging on page 297
IS-IS Standards
IS-IS is defined in the following documents:
ISO 8473, Protocol for providing the connectionless-mode network services ISO 9542, End System to Intermediate System Routing Exchange Protocol for Use in Conjunction with the Protocol for the Provision of the Connectionless-mode Network Service ISO 10589, Intermediate System to Intermediate System Routing Exchange Protocol for Use in Conjunction with the Protocol for the Provision of the Connectionless-mode Network Service
IS-IS Standards
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RFC 1195, Use of OSI IS-IS for Routing in TCP/IP and Dual Environments RFC 2763, Dynamic Hostname Exchange Mechanism for IS-IS RFC 2966, Domain-wide Prefix Distribution with Two-Level IS-IS RFC 2973, IS-IS Mesh Groups RFC 3373, Three-Way Handshake for IS-IS Point-to-Point Adjacencies RFC 3567, IS-IS Cryptographic Authentication RFC 3784, Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) Extensions for Traffic Engineering RFC 3787, Recommendations for Interoperable IP Networks Using Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) RFC 3847, Restart Signaling for Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) RFC 4205, Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) Extensions in Support of Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) RFC 5120, M-ISIS: Multi Topology (MT) Routing in Intermediate System to Intermediate Systems (IS-ISs) RFC 5130, A Policy Control Mechanism in IS-IS Using Administrative Tags Internet draft draft-ietf-bfd-base-05.txt, Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (except for the transmission of echo packets) Internet draft draft-ietf-isis-igp-p2p-over-lan-06.txt, Point-to-point operation over LAN in link-state routing protocols (expires October 2006) Internet draft draft-ietf-isis-ipv6-06.txt, Routing IPv6 with IS-IS Internet draft draft-ietf-isis-wg-255adj-02.txt, Maintaining more than 255 circuits in IS-IS
To access Internet Requests for Comments (RFCs) and drafts, go to the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Web site at http://www.ietf.org.
IS-IS Terminology
An IS-IS network is a single autonomous system (AS), also called a routing domain, that consists of end systems and intermediate systems. End systems are network entities that send and receive packets. Intermediate systems send and receive packets and relay (forward) packets. (Intermediate system is the Open System Interconnection [OSI] term for a router.) ISO packets are called network protocol data units (PDUs). In IS-IS, a single AS can be divided into smaller groups called areas. Routing between areas is organized hierarchically, allowing a domain to be administratively divided into smaller areas. This organization is accomplished by configuring Level 1 and Level 2 intermediate systems. Level 1 systems route within an area; when the destination is outside an area, they route toward a Level 2 system. Level 2 intermediate systems route between areas and toward other ASs.
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IS-IS Terminology
The first portion of the address is the area number, which is a variable number from 1 through 13 bytes. The first byte of the area number (49) is the authority and format indicator (AFI). The next bytes are the assigned domain (area) identifier, which can be from 0 through 12 bytes. In the examples above, the area identifier is 0001. The next six bytes form the system identifier. The system identifier can be any six bytes that are unique throughout the entire domain. The system identifier commonly is the media access control (MAC) address (as in the first example, 00a0.c96b.c490) or the IP address expressed in binary-coded decimal (BCD) (as in the second example, 2081.9716.9018, which corresponds to IP address 208.197.169.18). The last byte (00) is the n-selector.
NOTE: The system identifier cannot be 0000.0000.0000. All 0s is an illegal setting and the adjacency will not form with this setting. To provide help with IS-IS debugging, the JUNOS software supports dynamic mapping of ISO system identifiers to the hostname. Each system can be configured with a hostname, which allows the system identifier-to-hostname mapping to be carried in a dynamic hostname type length value (TLV) in IS-IS link-state protocol data units (LSPs). This permits ISs in the routing domain to learn about the ISO system identifier of a particular IS.
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IS-IS Packets
IS-IS uses the following protocol data units (PDUs) to exchange protocol information:
IS-IS hello (IIH) PDUsBroadcast to discover the identity of neighboring IS-IS systems and to determine whether the neighbors are Level 1 or Level 2 intermediate systems. Link-state PDUs (LSPs)Contain information about the state of adjacencies to neighboring IS-IS systems. LSPs are flooded periodically throughout an area. Complete sequence number PDUs (CSNPs)Contain a complete list of all LSPs in the IS-IS database. CSNPs are sent periodically on all links, and the receiving systems use the information in the CSNP to update and synchronize their LSP databases. The designated router multicasts CSNPs on broadcast links in place of sending explicit acknowledgments for each LSP. Partial sequence number PDUs (PSNPs)Multicast by a receiver when it detects that it is missing an LSP; that is, when its LSP database is out of date. The receiver sends a PSNP to the system that transmitted the CSNP, effectively requesting that the missing LSP be transmitted. That router, in turn, forwards the missing LSP to the requesting router.
NOTE: Whenever possible, use IS-IS IGP shortcuts instead of traffic engineering shortcuts. The traffic engineering extensions are defined in Internet draft draft-isis-traffic-traffic-02, IS-IS Extensions for Traffic Engineering.
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IS-IS Packets
lsp-path-name] hierarchy level must match the router ID of the egress router for the
LSP to function as a direct link to the egress router and to be used as input to IS-IS SPF calculations. When used in this way, LSPs are no different than Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) and Frame Relay virtual circuits (VCs), except that LSPs carry only IPv4 traffic.
NOTE: Route tagging does not work when IS-IS traffic engineering is disabled.
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holddown milliseconds; rapid-runs number; } topologies { ipv4-multicast; ipv6-multicast; ipv6-unicast; } traffic-engineering { disable; ignore-lsp-metrics; family inet; shortcuts { multicast-rpf-routes; } } family inet6; shortcuts; } } traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } interface (all | interface-name) { disable; bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; multiplier number; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } checksum; csnp-interval (seconds | disable); hello-padding (adaptive | loose | strict); ldp-synchronization { disable; hold-time seconds; } lsp-interval milliseconds; mesh-group (value | blocked); no-adjacency-down-notification; no-ipv4-multicast; no-ipv6-multicast; no-ipv6-unicast; no-unicast-topology; passive; point-to-point;
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level level-number { disable; hello-authentication-key key; hello-authentication-type authentication; hello-interval seconds; hold-time seconds; ipv4-multicast-metric number; ipv6-multicast-metric number; ipv6-unicast-metric number; metric metric; passive; priority number; te-metric metric; } } } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. By default, IS-IS is enabled for Level 1 and Level 2 routers on all interfaces on which an International Standards Organization (ISO) address is configured. This chapter discusses the following topics that provide information about configuring IS-IS:
Minimum IS-IS Configuration on page 302 Configuring IS-IS Authentication on page 303 Configuring Interface-Specific Properties on page 304 Enabling Checksum on page 305 Configuring the CSNP Interval on page 306 Configuring Mesh Groups on page 306 Modifying the Interface Metric on page 306 Modifying the Maximum Number of Areas Advertised on page 307 Enabling Wide Metrics for Traffic Engineering on page 307 Configuring Route Preferences on page 308 Configuring a Prefix Export Limit on page 308 Configuring IS-IS Levels on an Interface on page 308 Modifying the LSP Interval on page 313 Configuring Label Distribution Protocol Synchronization on page 313 Modifying the LSP Lifetime on page 314 Advertising Label-Switched Paths into IS-IS on page 314 Configuring the Router to Appear Overloaded on page 315 Configuring SPF Options for IS-IS on page 316 Configuring Graceful Restart on page 317
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IS-IS and Multipoint Configurations on page 317 Configuring Point-to-Point Interfaces on page 317 Configuring IS-IS Traffic Engineering Attributes on page 318 Configuring the BFD Protocol on page 320 Configuring Loose Authentication Check on page 323 Disabling Adjacency Hold-Down Timers on page 323 Configuring Hello Packet Padding on page 323 Configuring Support for Connectionless Network Services on page 324 Disabling IS-IS on page 326 Disabling IPv4 Routing on page 327 Disabling IPv6 Routing on page 327 Configuring IS-IS Routing Policy on page 328 Configuring IS-IS Multicast Topologies on page 330 Configuring IS-IS IPv6 Unicast Topologies on page 332 Installing a Default Route to the Nearest Level 1/Level 2 Router on page 333 Tracing IS-IS Protocol Traffic on page 333
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NOTE: To create the IS-IS interface, you must also configure IS-IS at the [edit protocols isis interface interface-name] hierarchy level. If you want the JUNOS software to create IS-IS interfaces automatically, include the interface all option at the [edit protocols isis] hierarchy level.
Simple authenticationUses a text password that is included in the transmitted packet. The receiving router uses an authentication key (password) to verify the packet. Simple authentication is included for compatibility with existing IS-IS implementations. However, we recommend that you do not use this authentication method because it is insecure (the text can be "sniffed" ).
HMAC-MD5 authenticationUses an iterated cryptographic hash function. The receiving router uses an authentication key (password) to verify the packet.
You can also configure more fine-grained authentication for hello packets. To do this, see Configuring Authentication for Hello Packets on page 310. To enable authentication and specify an authentication method, include the authentication-type statement, specifying the simple or md5 authentication type:
authentication-type authentication;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To configure a password, include the authentication-key statement. The authentication password for all routers in a domain must be the same.
authentication-key key;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. The password can contain up to 255 characters. If you include spaces, enclose all characters in quotation marks (" ").
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If you are using the JUNOS IS-IS software with another implementation of IS-IS, the other implementation must be configured to use the same password for the domain, the area, and all interfaces that are shared with a JUNOS implementation. Authentication of hello packets, partial sequence number PDU (PSNP), and complete sequence number PDU (CSNP) may be suppressed to enable interoperability with the routing software of different vendors. Different vendors handle authentication in various ways, and suppressing authentication for different PDU types may be the simplest way to allow compatibility within the same network. To configure IS-IS to generate authenticated packets, but not to check the authentication on received packets, include the no-authentication-check statement:
no-authentication-check;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
NOTE: The authentication and the no-authentication statements must be configured at the same hierarchy level. Configuring authentication at the interface hierarchy level and configuring no-authentication at the isis hierarchy level has no effect.
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minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; version (1 | automatic); } checksum; csnp-interval (seconds | disable); ldp-synchronization { disable; hold-time seconds; } lsp-interval milliseconds; mesh-group (value | blocked); no-ipv4-multicast; no-ipv6-multicast; no-ipv6-unicast; no-unicast-topology; passive; point-to-point; level level-number { disable; hello-authentication-type authentication; hello-authentication-key key; hello-interval seconds; hold-time seconds; ipv4-multicast-metric number; ipv6-multicast-metric number; ipv6-unicast-metric number; metric metric; passive; priority number; te-metric metric; } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. For interface-name, specify the full interface name, including the physical and logical address components. To configure all interfaces, specify the interface name as all. For information about configuring interfaces, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
Enabling Checksum
You can enable checksum for packets on a per-interface basis. To enable checksum, include the checksum statement:
checksum;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
Enabling Checksum
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The time can range from 1 through 65,535 seconds. To configure the interface not to send any CSN packets, specify the disable option:
csnp-interval disable;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
To prevent an interface in the mesh group from flooding link-state PDUs, configure blocking on that interface:
mesh-group blocked;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
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reference-bandwidth is the reference bandwidth. If the reference bandwidth is not configured, all interfaces have a default metric of 10 (with the exception of the lo0
interface, which has a default metric of 0). To modify the reference bandwidth, include the reference-bandwidth statement:
reference-bandwidth reference-bandwidth;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. For example, if you set the reference bandwidth to 1 Gbps (that is, reference-bandwidth is set to 1,000,000,000), a 100-Mbps interface has a default metric of 10. For more information about IS-IS route metrics, see Modifying the IS-IS Metric on page 312.
The range that you can configure is from 3 through 36, and the default is 3. This value is included in the Maximum Address Area field of the IS-IS common PDU header included in all outgoing PDUs.
NOTE: The maximum number areas you can advertise is restricted to 36 to ensure that the IIH PDUs have enough space to include other type, length, and value (TLV) fields, such as the Authentication and IPv4 and IPv6 Interface Address TLVs. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you an configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. The preference value can range from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1).
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You can specify a number range from 0 through 4,294,967,295.
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You can configure one Level 1 routing process and one Level 2 routing process on each interface, and you can configure the two levels differently. To configure an area, include the level statement:
level level-number { disable; hello-authentication-key key; hello-authentication-type authentication; hello-interval seconds; hold-time seconds; ipv4-multicast-metric number; ipv6-multicast-metric number; ipv6-unicast-metric number; metric metric; passive; priority number; te-metric metric; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. The statements within the level statement allow you to perform the following tasks when configuring the following optional level-specific properties:
Disabling IS-IS on a Level on page 309 Advertising Interface Addresses Without Running IS-IS on page 310 Configuring Authentication for Hello Packets on page 310 Modifying the Hello Interval on page 311 Modifying the Hold-Time Value on page 311 Modifying the IS-IS Metric on page 312 Modifying the Traffic Engineering Metric on page 312 Configuring the Priority for Becoming the Designated Router on page 312 Configuring the Router to Advertise Without Running IS-IS on page 313
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Enabling IS-IS on an interface (by including the interface statement at the [edit protocols isis] hierarchy level), disabling it (by including the disable statement), and
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not actually having IS-IS run on an interface (by including the passive statement) are mutually exclusive states.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Enabling IS-IS on an interface (by including the interface statement at the [edit protocols isis] hierarchy level), disabling it (by including the disable statement), and not actually having IS-IS run on an interface (by including the passive statement) are mutually exclusive states.
NOTE: If neither passive mode nor family ISO are configured on the IS-IS interface, then the router treats the interface as not being operational and no direct IPv4/IPv6 routes are exported into IS-IS.
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CAUTION: If no authentication is configured for Level 1on a point-to-point link with both levels enabled, the hello packets are sent without any password, regardless of the Level 2 authentication configurations. By default, hello authentication is not configured on an interface. However, if IS-IS authentication is configured, the hello packets are authenticated using the IS-IS authentication type and password. To enable hello authentication for an IS-IS level on an interface and define the password, include the hello-authentication-type and hello-authentication-key statements:
hello-authentication-type (md5 | simple); hello-authentication-key password;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
The hello interval range is from 1 through 20,000 seconds. You can send out hello packets in sub-second intervals. To send out hello packets every 333 milliseconds, set the hello-interval value to 1. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. For more information about IS-IS interface metrics, see Modifying the Interface Metric on page 306.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To disable the transmission of all link-state PDU packets, set the interval to 0.
To disable synchronization, include the disable statement. To configure the time period to advertise the maximum cost metric for a link that is not fully operational, include the hold-time statement.
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NOTE: When an interface has been in the holddown state for more than three minutes, a system log message with a warning level is sent. This message appears in both the messages file and the trace file. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary section for these statements.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. The time can range from 350 through 65,535 seconds. The linkstate PDU refresh interval is derived from the link-state PDU lifetime and is equal to the lifetime minus 317 seconds.
Use the label-switched path metric defined under IS-IS. Use the label-switched path metric configured for the label-switched path under MPLS. If you do not configure any of the above, use the default IS-IS metric of 10.
To advertise label-switched paths, include the label-switched-path statement, with a specified level and metric:
label-switched-path name level level metric metric;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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NOTE: Before a single-hop label-switched path between a multiaccess link can be announced as up and used in SPF calculations, you must configure a label-switched path in both directions between two label-switched routers. For more information about advertising label-switched paths, see the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide.
To advertise maximum link metrics in NLRIs instead of setting the overload bit, include the advertise-high-metrics option when specifying the overload statement:
advertise-high-metrics;
To specify the number of seconds at which overload is reset, include the timeout option when specifying the overload statement:
overload timeout seconds;
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
The delay in the time between the detection of a topology change and when the SPF algorithm actually runs. The maximum number of times that the SPF algorithm can run in succession before the hold-down timer begins. The time to hold down, or wait, before running another SPF calculation after the SPF algorithm has run in succession the configured maximum number of times.
To configure the SPF delay, include the delay statement when specifying the spf-options statement:
delay milliseconds;
By default, the SPF algorithm runs 200 milliseconds after the detection of a topology change. The range that you can configure is from 50 through 1000 milliseconds. To configure the maximum number of times that the SPF algorithm can run in succession, include the rapid-runs statement when specifying the spf-options statement:
rapid-runs number;
The default number of SPF calculations that can occur in succession is 3. The range that you can configure is from 1 through 5. Each SPF algorithm is run after the configured SPF delay. When the maximum number of SPF calculations occurs, the hold-down timer begins. Any subsequent SPF calculation is not run until the hold-down timer expires. To configure the SPF hold-down timer, include the holddown statement when specifying the spf-options statement:
holddown milliseconds;
The default is 5000 milliseconds, and the range that you can configure is from 2000 through 10,000 milliseconds. Use the hold-down timer to hold down, or wait, before running any subsequent SPF calculations after the SPF algorithm runs for the configured maximum number of times. If the network stabilizes during the hold-down period and the SPF algorithm does not need to run again, the system reverts to the configured values for the delay and rapid-runs statements.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To disable graceful restart for IS-IS, specify the disable statement. Helper mode is enabled by default. To disable the graceful restart helper capability, specify the helper-disable statement. To configure a time period for complete restart, specify the restart-duration statement. You can specify a number between 1 and 3600. The default value is 90 seconds.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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Configuring IS-IS to Use IGP Shortcuts on page 318 Configuring IS-IS to Ignore the Metric of RSVP Label-Switched Paths on page 319 Disabling IS-IS Support for Traffic Engineering on page 320 Installing IPv4 Routes into the Multicast Routing Table on page 320
When configuring traffic engineering support, you can also configure IS-IS to use metric values greater than 63, as described in Enabling Wide Metrics for Traffic Engineering on page 307.
NOTE: Whenever possible, use IS-IS IGP shortcuts instead of traffic engineering shortcuts. If you enable IS-IS traffic engineering shortcuts and if there is a label-switched path to a point along the path to that prefix, IS-IS installs the prefix in the inet.3 routing table and uses the label-switched path as a next hop. The net result is that for BGP egress routers for which there is no label-switched path (LSP), BGP automatically uses an LSP along the path to reach the egress router. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.3, IS-IS traffic engineering shortcuts support IPv6 routes. LSPs to be used for shortcuts continue to be signaled using IPv4. However, by default, shortcut routes calculated through IPv6 routes are added to the inet6.3 routing table. The default behavior is for only BGP to use LSPs in its calculations. If you configure MPLS so that both BGP and interior gateway protocols use LSPs for forwarding traffic, shortcut routes calculated through IPv6 are added to the inet6.0 routing table. RSVP LSPs with a higher preference than IS-IS routes are not considered during the computation of traffic engineering shortcuts. To configure IS-IS so that it uses label-switched paths as shortcuts when installing information in the inet.3 or inet6.3 routing table, include the following statements:
traffic-engineering { family inet { shortcuts; multicast-rpf-routes; }
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For IPv4 traffic, include the inet statement. For IPv6 traffic, include the inet6 statement. To ignore the metric of RSVP LSPs in shortcut decisions, include the ignore-lsp-metrics statement:
traffic-engineering { ignore-lsp-metrics; }
This option avoids mutual dependency between IS-IS and RSVP, eliminating the time period when the RSVP metric used for shortcuts is not up to date. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. Because the inet.3 routing table is present only on ingress routers, you can configure label-switched path shortcuts only on these routers. For more information about configuring label-switched paths and MPLS, see the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. For more information about configuring label-switched paths and MPLS, see the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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a higher value if the adjacency fails, or a neighbor can negotiate a higher value for a timer than the configured.
NOTE: BFD for IS-IS with IPv6 is not supported. For IPv6, BFD supports only IPv6 static routes and OSPFv3. To enable failure detection, include the bfd-liveness-detection statement:
bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; version (1 | automatic); }
To specify the threshold for the adaptation of the detection time, include the threshold statement:
detection-time { threshold milliseconds; }
When the BFD session detection time adapts to a value equal to or higher than the threshold, a single trap and a system log message are sent. To specify the minimum transmit and receive intervals for failure detection, include the minimum-interval statement:
minimum-interval milliseconds;
This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router transmits hellos packets as well as the minimum interval at which the router expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. You can configure a number in the range from 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. You can also specify the minimum transmit and receive intervals separately
NOTE: Specifying an interval less than 300 milliseconds can cause undesired BFD flapping. To specify only the minimum receive interval for failure detection, include the minimum-receive-interval statement:
minimum-receive-interval milliseconds;
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This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. You can configure a number in the range of 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. To specify the number of hello packets not received by the neighbor that causes the originating interface to be declared down, include the multiplier statement:
multiplier number;
The default is 3, and you can configure a value in the range from 1 through 225. To specify the minimum transmit interval for failure detection, include the transmit-interval minimum-interval statement:
transmit-interval { minimum-interval milliseconds; }
This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router transmits hello packets to the neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. You can configure a value in the range from 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. To specify the threshold for detecting the adaptation of the transmit interval, include the threshold statement:
transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; }
The threshold value must be greater than the minimum transmit interval. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.0, you can specify that the BFD sessions not adapt to changing network conditions. To disable BFD adaptation, include the no-adaptation statement:
no-adaptation;
NOTE: We recommend that you not disable BFD adaptation unless it is preferable not to have BFD adaptation enabled in your network. To specify the BFD version used for detection, include the version statement:
version (1 | automatic);
The default is to have the version detected automatically. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
Adaptive padding. On point-to-point connections, the hello packets are padded from the initial detection of a new neighbor until the neighbor verifies the adjacency as Up in the adjacency state TLV. If the neighbor does not support the adjacency state TLV, then padding continues. On LAN connections, padding starts from the initial detection of a new neighbor until there is at least one active adjacency on the interface. Adaptive padding has more overhead than loose padding and is able to detect MTU asymmetry from one side of the connection. This one-sided detection may result in generation of extra LSPs that are flooded
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throughout the network. Specify the adaptive option to configure enough padding to establish an adjacency to neighbors.
Loose padding (the default). The hello packet is padded from the initial detection of a new neighbor until the adjacency transitions to the Up state. Loose padding may not be able to detect certain situations such as asymmetrical MTUs between the routers. Specify the loose option to configure enough padding to initialize an adjacency to neighbors. Strict padding. Padding is done on all interface types and for all adjacency states, and is continuous. Strict padding has the most overhead. The advantage is that strict padding detects MTU issues on both sides of a link. Specify the strict option to configure padding to allow all adjacency states with neighbors.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary sections for this statement.
NOTE: CLNS is supported for the J-series Services Router only. To enable IS-IS to exchange CLNS routes, include the clns-routing statement:
clns-routing;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You can configure a pure CLNS network by disabling IPv4 and IPv6 for IS-IS. To disable IPv4, include the no-ipv4-routing statement:
no-ipv4-routing;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary section for these statements. You can export BGP routes into Layer 2 IS-IS by configuring an export policy and applying the policy to IS-IS. You can export BGP routes from a specific VRF instance into IS-IS by configuring and applying an export policy at the [edit routing-instance instance-name protocols isis] hierarchy level. ES-IS routes from one routing instance cannot be exported into a Layer 1 IS-IS area of another routing instance.
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To configure an export policy to export BGP routes into IS-IS, include the policy-statement statement:
policy-statement policy-name { from { protocol bgp; family iso; } then { accept; } }
To apply an export policy, include the export statement at the [edit protocols isis] hierarchy level:
export policy-name;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for these statements. For more information on policy configuration, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. You can also export routes from protocols other than BGP into IS-IS. ES-IS routes are exported to IS-IS by default. You can export ES-IS routes into IS-IS by configuring a routing policy. For information on CLNS, see the J-series Services Router Advanced WAN Access Configuration Guide.
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isis { traceoptions { file isis size 5m world-readable; flag error; } export dist-static; no-ipv6-routing; no-ipv4-routing; clns-routing; interface fe-0/0/1.0; interface t1-0/2/1.0; interface fxp0.0 { disable; } interface lo0.0; } }
Disabling IS-IS
To disable IS-IS on the router without removing the IS-IS configuration statements from the configuration, include the disable statement:
isis { disable; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To reenable IS-IS, remove the disable statement from the configuration:
[edit protocols]
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Disabling IS-IS
Router does not advertise the NLPID for IPv4 in JUNOS software 0th link-state PDU fragment. Router does not advertise any IPv4 prefixes in JUNOS software link-state PDUs. Router does not advertise the NLPID for IPv4 in JUNOS software hello packets. Router does not advertise any IPv4 addresses in JUNOS software hello packets. Router does not calculate any IPv4 routes.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To re-enable IS-IS, remove the no-ipv4-routing statement from the configuration:
[edit protocols] user@host# delete isis no-ipv4-routing
Router does not advertise the NLPID for IPv6 in JUNOS software 0th link-state PDU fragment. Router does not advertise any IPv6 prefixes in JUNOS software link-state PDUs. Router does not advertise the NLPID for IPv6 in JUNOS software hello packets. Router does not advertise any IPv6 addresses in JUNOS software hello packets. Router does not calculate any IPv6 routes.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To re-enable IS-IS, remove the disable statement from the configuration:
[edit protocols] user@host# delete isis no-ipv6-routing
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: For IS-IS, you cannot apply routing policies that affect how routes are imported into the routing table; doing so with a link-state protocol can easily lead to an inconsistent topology database.
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export usc-hosts-only; } }
Define a policy that takes Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) routes from the Edu community and places them into IS-IS with a metric of 14. Apply the policy to routes exported from the routing table into IS-IS:
protocols { isis { export edu-to-isis; } } policy-options { community Edu members 666:5; policy-statement edu-to-isis { from { protocol bgp; community Edu; } to protocol isis; then metric 14; } }
Define a policy that rejects all IS-IS Level 1 routes so that none are exported into IS-IS:
policy-options { policy-statement level1 { term first { from level 1; then reject; } then accept; } } protocols { isis { export level1; interface fxp0; } }
Define a routing policy to export IS-IS Level 1 internal-only routes into Level 2:
[edit] protocols { isis { export L1-L2; } } policy-statement L1-L2 { term one { from { level 1;
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external; } then reject; } term two { from level 1; to level 2; then accept; } }
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ipv4-multicast;
To configure the multicast metric for an alternate multicast topology, include the ipv4-multicast-metric statement:
ipv4-multicast-metric number;
To exclude an interface from the multicast topology for IS-IS, include the no-ipv4-multicast statement:
no-ipv4-multicast;
To enable an alternate IPv6 multicast topology for IS-IS, include the ipv6-multicast statement:
ipv6-multicast;
To configure the multicast metric for an alternate IPv6 multicast topology, include the ipv6-multicast-metric statement:
ipv6-multicast-metric number;
To exclude an interface from the IPv6 multicast topology for IS-IS, include the no-ipv6-multicast statement:
no-ipv6-multicast;
To exclude an interface from the IPv4 unicast topologies for IS-IS, include the no-unicast-topology statement:
no-unicast-topology;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
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metric 15; multicast-metric 12; } level 2 { metric 20; multicast-metric 23; } } isis so-2/0/0.0 { no-multicast; level 1 metric 14; level 2 metric 23; } isis fxp0.0 { disable; } } }
To configure a metric for an alternate IPv6 unicast topology, include the ipv6-unicast-metric statement:
isis { interface interface-name { level level-number { ipv6-unicast-metric number; } } }
To exclude an interface from the IPv6 unicast topologies for IS-IS, include the no-ipv6-unicast statement:
isis { interface interface-name { no-ipv6-unicast;
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} }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You can specify the following IS-ISspecific trace options in the IS-IS flag statement:
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generalGeneral events helloHello packets lspLink-state PDU (LSP) packets lsp-generationLink-state PDU generation packets normalNormal events packetsAll IS-IS protocol packets policyPolicy processing psnPartial sequence number PDU (PSNP) packets routeRouting information spfShortest-path-first (SPF) calculations stateState transitions taskRouting protocol task processing timerRouting protocol timer processing
You can optionally specify one or more of the following flag modifiers:
NOTE: Use the trace flags detail and all with caution. These flags may cause the CPU to become very busy.
For information about tracing and global tracing options, see Tracing Global Routing Protocol Operations on page 119.
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Trace only unusual or abnormal operations to the file routing-log, and trace detailed information about all IS-IS packets to the file isis-log:
[edit] routing-options { traceoptions { file routing-log; } } protocols { isis { traceoptions { file isis-log size 10k files 5; flag csn detail; flag hello detail; flag lsp detail; flag psn detail; } } }
IS-IS LSP packets that contain errors are discarded by default. To log these errors, specify the error tracing operation:
[edit] protocols { isis { traceoptions { file isis-log; flag error; } } }
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Chapter 16
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authentication-key
Syntax Hierarchy Level
authentication-key key; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit protocols isis level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Authentication key (password). Neighboring routers use the password to verify the authenticity of packets sent from this interface. For the key to work, you also must include the authentication-type statement. All routers must use the same password. If you are using the JUNOS IS-IS software with another implementation of IS-IS, the other implementation must be configured to use the same password for the domain, the area, and all interfaces adjacent to the Juniper router.
Default
If you do not include this statement and the authentication-type statement, IS-IS authentication is disabled.
keyAuthentication password. The password can be up to 1024 characters long.
Options
Characters can include any ASCII strings. If you include spaces, enclose all characters in quotation marks (" ").
See Configuring IS-IS Authentication on page 303. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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authentication-key
authentication-type
Syntax Hierarchy Level
authentication-type authentication; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit protocols isis level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable authentication and specify the authentication scheme for IS-IS. If you enable authentication, you must specify a password by including the authentication-key statement. If you do not include this statement and the authentication-key statement, IS-IS authentication is disabled. authenticationAuthentication scheme:
Default
Options
the transmitted packet, making this method of authentication relatively insecure. We recommend that you not use this authentication method.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Configuring IS-IS Authentication on page 303. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. authentication-key, no-authentication-check
authentication-type
339
bfd-liveness-detection
Syntax
bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; version (1 | automatic); } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name]
Hierarchy Level
Release Information
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. detection-time threshold and transmit-interval threshold options added in JUNOS Release 8.2. Support for logical systems introduced in JUNOS Release 8.3. no-adaptation statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure bidirectional failure detection timers.
detection-time threshold millisecondsConfigure a threshold. When the BFD session
Description Options
detection time adapts to a value equal to or greater than the threshold, a single trap and a single system log message are sent.
minimum-interval millisecondsConfigure the minimum intervals at which the local
router transmits a hello packet and then expects to receive a reply from the neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. Range: 1 through 255,000
minimum-receive-interval millisecondsConfigure only the minimum interval at which
the local router expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. Range: 1 through 255,000
multiplier numberConfigure the number hello packets not received by a neighbor
that causes the originating interface to be declared down. Range: 1 through 255 Default: 3
340
bfd-liveness-detection
We recommend that you not disable BFD adaptation unless it is preferable not to have BFD adaptation enabled in your network.
transmit-interval threshold millisecondsConfigure a threshold. When the BFD session
transmit interval adapts to a value greater than the threshold, a single trap and a single system log message are sent. The interval threshold must be greater than the minimum transmit interval. Range: 0 through 4,294,967,295
transmit-interval minimum-interval millisecondsConfigure only the minimum interval
at which the router sends hello packets to a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. Range: 1 through 255,000
versionSpecify the BFD version to detect. Range: 1 (BFD version 1), or automatic (autodetection) Default: automatic
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring the BFD Protocol on page 320. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
checksum
Syntax Hierarchy Level
checksum; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable checksum for packets on this interface. Checksum cannot be enabled with MD5 hello authentication on the same interface. See Enabling Checksum on page 305. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
checksum
341
clns-routing
Syntax Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable IS-IS to exchange CLNS routes.
See Configuring Support for Connectionless Network Services on page 324. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. J-series Services Router Advanced WAN Access Configuration Guide
csnp-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
csnp-interval (seconds | disable); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the interval between complete sequence number (CSN) packets on a LAN interface.
disableDo not send CSN packets on this interface. secondsNumber of seconds between the sending of CSN packets.
Options
See Configuring the CSNP Interval on page 306. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
342
clns-routing
disable
See the following sections:
csnp-interval
343
disable (IS-IS)
Syntax Hierarchy Level
disable; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis traffic-engineering], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis traffic-engineering], [edit protocols isis], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit protocols isis traffic-engineering], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis traffic-engineering]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Disable IS-IS on the router, on an interface, or on a level. At the [edit protocols isis traffic-engineering] hierarchy level, disable IS-IS support for traffic engineering. Enabling IS-IS on an interface (by including the interface statement at the [edit protocols isis] or the [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis] hierarchy level), disabling it (by including the disable statement), and not actually having IS-IS run on an interface (by including the passive statement) are mutually exclusive states.
Default
IS-IS is enabled for Level 1 and Level 2 routers on all interfaces on which an International Organization of Standardization (ISO) protocol family is enabled. IS-IS support for traffic engineering is enabled.
Usage Guidelines
See IS-IS Overview on page 293, Disabling IS-IS Support for Traffic Engineering on page 320, and Disabling IS-IS on page 326. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
344
disable (IS-IS)
disable; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name]
Statement introduced in Release 7.5. Disable the Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) for IS-IS. See Configuring Label Distribution Protocol Synchronization on page 313. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
export
Syntax Hierarchy Level
export [ policy-names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Apply one or more policies to routes being exported from the routing table into IS-IS.
policy-namesName of one or more policies.
See Configuring IS-IS Routing Policy on page 328 and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. J-series Services Router Advanced WAN Access Configuration Guide
345
external-preference
Syntax Hierarchy Level
external-preference preference; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit protocols isis level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the preference of external routes.
preferencePreference value.
Range: 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1) Default: 15 (for Level 1 internal routes), 18 (for Level 2 internal routes), 160 (for Level 1 external routes), 165 (for Level 2 external routes)
See Configuring Route Preferences on page 308. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. preference
346
external-preference
family
Syntax
family inet { shortcuts { multicast-rpf-routes; } } family inet6 { shortcuts; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis traffic-engineering], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis traffic-engineering] [edit protocols isis traffic-engineering], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis traffic-engineering],
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Configure the address family for traffic engineering IS-IS interior gateway protocol (IGP) shortcuts. Support for IPv6 for IGP shortcuts introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3.
inetIPv4 address family inet6IPv6 address family
Options
See Configuring IS-IS to Use IGP Shortcuts on page 318. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
family
347
graceful-restart
Syntax
graceful-restart { disable; helper-disable; restart-duration seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure graceful restart for IS-IS.
disableDisable graceful restart. helper-disableDisable graceful restart helper capability. Helper mode is enabled by
default.
restart-duration secondsConfigure the time period for the restart to last, in seconds.
See Configuring Graceful Restart on page 113 and Configuring Graceful Restart on page 317. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
348
graceful-restart
hello-authentication-key
Syntax Hierarchy Level
hello-authentication-key password; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name level number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level number], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name level number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Authentication key (password) for hello packets. Neighboring routers use the password to verify the authenticity of packets sent from an interface. For the key to work, you also must include the hello-authentication-type statement. By default, hello authentication is not configured on an interface. However, if IS-IS authentication is configured, the hello packets are authenticated using the IS-IS authentication type and password.
passwordAuthentication password. The password can be up to 255 characters.
Default
Options
Characters can include any ASCII strings. If you include spaces, enclose all characters in quotation marks (" " ).
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Configuring Authentication for Hello Packets on page 310. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. authentication-key, authentication-type, hello-authentication-type
hello-authentication-key
349
hello-authentication-type
Syntax Hierarchy Level
hello-authentication-type (md5 | simple); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name level number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level number], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name level number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable authentication on an interface for hello packets. If you enable authentication on hello packets, you must specify a password by including the hello-authentication-key statement. By default, hello authentication is not configured on an interface. However, if IS-IS authentication is configured, the hello packets are authenticated using the IS-IS authentication type and password.
md5Specifies Message Digest 5 as the packet verification type. simpleSpecifies simple authentication as the packet verification type.
Default
Options
See Configuring Authentication for Hello Packets on page 310. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. authentication-key, authentication-type, hello-authentication-key
350
hello-authentication-type
hello-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
hello-interval seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Frequency at which the router sends hello packets out of an interface, in seconds.
secondsFrequency of transmission for hello packets.
Range: 1 through 20,000 seconds Default: 3 seconds (for designated intersystem [DIS] routers), 9 seconds (for non-DIS routers)
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Modifying the Hello Interval on page 311. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. hold-time
hello-interval
351
hello-padding
Syntax Hierarchy Level
hello-padding (adaptive | loose | strict); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.0. Configure padding on hello packets to accommodate asymmetrical maximum transfer units (MTUs) from different hosts.
adaptiveConfigure padding until state of neighbor adjacency is up. looseConfigure padding until state of adjacency is initialized. strictConfigure padding for all adjacency states.
Options
See Configuring Hello Packet Padding on page 323. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
352
hello-padding
hold-time
See the following sections:
hold-time (IS-IS)
Syntax Hierarchy Level
hold-time seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Set the length of time a neighbor considers this router to be operative (up) after receiving a hello packet. If the neighbor does not receiver another hello packet within the specified time, it marks this router as inoperative (down). The hold time itself is advertised in the hello packets.
secondsHold-time value, in seconds.
Options
Range: 3 through 65,535 seconds. Specify 1 to send out hello packets every 333 milliseconds. Default: 9 seconds (for DIS routers), 27 seconds (for non-DIS routers; three times the default hello interval)
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Modifying the Hold-Time Value on page 311. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. hello-interval
hold-time (IS-IS)
353
hold-time seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name ldp-synchronization], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name ldp-synchronization], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name ldp-synchronization], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name ldp-synchronization]
Statement introduced in Release 7.5. Configure the time period to advertise the maximum cost metric for a link that is not fully operational.
secondsHold-time value, in seconds.
Options
See Configuring Label Distribution Protocol Synchronization on page 313. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
ignore-attached-bit
Syntax Hierarchy Level
ignore-attached-bit; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Ignore the attached bit on IS-IS Level 1 routers. Configuring this statement allows the router to ignore the attached bit on incoming Level 1 LSPs. If the attached bit is ignored, no default route, which points to the router which has set the attached bit, will be installed. The ignore-attached-bit statement is disabled by default. See Installing a Default Route to the Nearest Level 1/Level 2 Router on page 333. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
354
ignore-lsp-metrics
Syntax Hierarchy Level
ignore-lsp-metrics; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis traffic-engineering], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis traffic-engineering], [edit protocols isis traffic-engineering], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis traffic-engineering]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.0. Ignore the metrics for RSVP label-switched paths in IS-IS traffic engineering shortcut calculations or when you configure LDP over RSVP label-switched paths. See Configuring IS-IS to Use IGP Shortcuts on page 318 and Configuring IS-IS to Ignore the Metric of RSVP Label-Switched Paths on page 319. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. shortcuts and JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide
Usage Guidelines
ignore-lsp-metrics
355
interface
Syntax
interface (all | interface-name) { disable; bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; } checksum; csnp-interval (seconds | disable); hello-padding (adaptive | loose | strict); ldp-synchronization { disable; hold-time seconds; } lsp-interval milliseconds; mesh-group (value | blocked); no-adjacency-down-notification; no-ipv4-multicast; no-ipv6-multicast; no-ipv6-unicast; no-unicast-topology; passive; point-to-point; level level-number { disable; hello-authentication-type authentication; hello-authentication-key key; hello-interval seconds; hold-time seconds; ipv4-multicast-metric number; ipv6-multicast-metric number; ipv6-unicast-metric number; metric metric; passive; priority number; te-metric metric; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis],
Hierarchy Level
356
interface
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure interface-specific IS-IS properties. To configure more than one interface, include the interface statement multiple times. Enabling IS-IS on an interface (by including the interface statement at the [edit protocols isis] or the [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis] hierarchy level), disabling it (by including the disable statement), and not actually having IS-IS run on an interface (by including the passive statement) are mutually exclusive states.
Options
allHave the JUNOS software create IS-IS interfaces automatically. interface-nameName of an interface. Specify the full interface name, including the
physical and logical address components. For details about specifying interfaces, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide and the JUNOS Services Interfaces Configuration Guide. The remaining statements are explained separately.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring Interface-Specific Properties on page 304. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
ipv4-multicast
Syntax Hierarchy Level
ipv4-multicast; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis topologies], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis topologies], [edit protocols isis topologies], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis topologies]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure alternate IPv4 multicast topologies. Multicast topologies are disabled. See Configuring IS-IS Multicast Topologies on page 330. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
ipv4-multicast
357
ipv4-multicast-metric
Syntax Hierarchy Level
ipv4-multicast-metric metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the multicast topology metric value for the level.
metricMetric value.
Range: 0 through 16,777,215 See Configuring IS-IS Multicast Topologies on page 330. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
ipv6-multicast
Syntax Hierarchy Level
ipv6-multicast; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis topologies], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis topologies], [edit protocols isis topologies], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis topologies]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure alternate IPv6 multicast topologies. Multicast topologies are disabled. See Configuring IS-IS Multicast Topologies on page 330. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
358
ipv4-multicast-metric
ipv6-multicast-metric
Syntax Hierarchy Level
ipv6-multicast-metric metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the IPv6 alternate multicast topology metric value for the level.
metricMetric value.
Range: 0 through 16,777,215 See Configuring IS-IS Multicast Topologies on page 330. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
ipv6-unicast
Syntax Hierarchy Level
ipv6-unicast; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis topologies], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis topologies], [edit protocols isis topologies], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis topologies]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure alternate IPv6 unicast topologies. IPv6 unicast topologies are disabled. See Configuring IS-IS IPv6 Unicast Topologies on page 332. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
ipv6-multicast-metric
359
ipv6-unicast-metric
Syntax Hierarchy Level
ipv6-unicast-metric metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the IPv6 unicast topology metric value for the level.
metricMetric value.
Range: 0 through 16,777,215 See Configuring IS-IS IPv6 Unicast Topologies on page 332. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
isis
Syntax Hierarchy Level
isis { ... } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols], [edit protocols], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable IS-IS routing on the router or for a routing instance. The isis statement is the one statement you must include in the configuration to run IS-IS on the router or in a routing instance.
IS-IS is disabled on the router. See Minimum IS-IS Configuration on page 302. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
360
ipv6-unicast-metric
label-switched-path
Syntax Hierarchy Level
label-switched-path name level level-number metric metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Advertise label-switched paths into IS-IS as point-to-point links. The label-switched path is advertised in the appropriate IS-IS levels as a point-to-point link and contains a local address and a remote address.
nameIdentifies the label-switched path. level-numberIS-IS level number.
Options
Values: 1 or 2
metricMetric value.
Range: 1 through 63, or 1 through 16,777,215 (if you have configured wide metrics) Default: 0 (for lo0), 10 (for all other interfaces)
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Advertising Label-Switched Paths into IS-IS on page 314. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
label-switched-path
361
ldp-synchronization
Syntax
ldp-synchronization { disable; hold-time seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced in Release 7.5. Enable synchronization by advertising the maximum cost metric until LDP is operational on the link. The statements are explained separately. See Configuring Label Distribution Protocol Synchronization with the IGP on page 438. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
362
ldp-synchronization
level
See the following sections:
level (Global IS-IS) on page 363 level (IS-IS Interfaces) on page 364
level level-number { authentication-key key; authentication-type type; external-preference preference; no-csnp-authentication; no-hello-authentication; no-psnp-authentication; preference preference; wide-metrics-only; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the global-level properties.
level-numberIS-IS level number.
See Configuring Route Preferences on page 308. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
363
level level-number { disable; hello-authentication-key key; hello-authentication-type authentication; hello-interval seconds hold-time seconds; ipv4-multicast-metric number; ipv6-unicast-metric number; metric metric; passive; priority number; te-metric metric; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the IS-IS level. You can configure one instance of Level 1 routing and one instance of Level 2 routing on each interface, and you can configure the two levels differently.
level-numberIS-IS level number.
Options
Values: 1 or 2 Default: The router operates as both a Level 1 and Level 2 router. The remaining statements are explained separately.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring IS-IS Levels on an Interface on page 308. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
364
loose-authentication-check
Syntax Hierarchy Level
loose-authentication-check; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Allow the use of MD5 authentication without requiring network-wide deployment. See Configuring Loose Authentication Check on page 323. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
lsp-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
lsp-interval milliseconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the link-state PDU (LSP) interval time.
millisecondsNumber of milliseconds between the sending of LSPs. Specifying a
value of 0 blocks all LSP transmission. Range: 0 through 1000 milliseconds Default: 100 milliseconds
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Modifying the LSP Interval on page 313. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
loose-authentication-check
365
lsp-lifetime
Syntax Hierarchy Level
lsp-lifetime seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. How long an LSP originating from the router should persist in the network. The router sends LSPs often enough so that the LSP lifetime never expires.
secondsLSP lifetime, in seconds.
Options
See Modifying the LSP Lifetime on page 314. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
max-areas
Syntax Hierarchy Level
max-areas number; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis] [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis],
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.1. Modify the maximum number of IS-IS areas advertised.
numberMaximum number of areas to include in the IS-IS hello (IIH) PDUs and
See Modifying the Maximum Number of Areas Advertised on page 307. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
366
lsp-lifetime
mesh-group
Syntax Hierarchy Level
mesh-group (value | blocked); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure an interface to be part of a mesh group, which is a set of fully connected nodes.
valueNumber that identifies the mesh group.
Options
Range: 1 through 4,294,967,295 (32 bits are allocated to identify a mesh group)
blockedConfigure the interface so that it does not flood LSP packets.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring Mesh Groups on page 306. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
mesh-group
367
metric
Syntax Hierarchy Level
metric metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Metric value for the level.
metricMetric value.
Range: 1 through 63, or 1 through 16,777,215 (if you have configured wide metrics) Default: 10 (for all interfaces except lo0), 0 (for the lo0 interface)
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Modifying the IS-IS Metric on page 312. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. te-metric, wide-metrics-only
multicast-rpf-routes
Syntax Hierarchy Level
multicast-rpf-routes; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis traffic-engineering famly inet shortcuts], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances traffic-engineering family inet shortcuts], [edit protocols isis traffic-engineering famly inet shortcuts], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis traffic-engineering family inet shortcuts]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Install IPv4 routes into the multicast routing table for RPF checks. See Installing IPv4 Routes into the Multicast Routing Table on page 320. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
368
metric
no-adjacency-holddown
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-adjacency-holddown; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.0. Disable hold-down timer for IS-IS adjacencies. See Disabling Adjacency Hold-Down Timers on page 323. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
no-authentication-check
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-authentication-check; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Generate authenticated packets, check the authentication on received packets, but do not reject packets that cannot be authenticated. See Configuring IS-IS Authentication on page 303. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. csnp-interval, hello-authentication-type
no-adjacency-holddown
369
no-csnp-authentication
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-csnp-authentication; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit protocols isis level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number]
Release Information Description Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Suppress authentication check on complete sequence number PDU (CSNP) packets. See Configuring IS-IS Authentication on page 303. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. csnp-interval
no-hello-authentication
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-hello-authentication; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit protocols isis level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number]
Release Information Description Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Suppress authentication check on complete sequence number hello packets. See Configuring IS-IS Authentication on page 303. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. hello-authentication-type
370
no-csnp-authentication
no-ipv4-multicast
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-ipv4-multicast; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Exclude an interface from the IPv4 multicast topologies. Multicast topologies are disabled. See Configuring IS-IS Multicast Topologies on page 330. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
no-ipv4-routing
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-ipv4-routing; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Disable Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) routing. See Disabling IPv4 Routing on page 327. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
no-ipv4-multicast
371
no-ipv6-multicast
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-ipv6-multicast; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Exclude an interface from the IPv6 multicast topologies. Multicast topologies are disabled. See Configuring IS-IS Multicast Topologies on page 330. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
no-ipv6-routing
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-ipv6-routing; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Disable Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) routing. See Disabling IPv6 Routing on page 327. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
372
no-ipv6-multicast
no-ipv6-unicast
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-ipv6-unicast; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Exclude an interface from the IPv6 unicast topologies. IPv6 unicast topologies are disabled. See Configuring IS-IS IPv6 Unicast Topologies on page 332. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
no-psnp-authentication
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-psnp-authentication; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit protocols isis level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Suppress authentication check on partial sequence number PDU (PSNP) packets. See Configuring IS-IS Authentication on page 303. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
no-ipv6-unicast
373
no-unicast-topology
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-unicast-topology; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Exclude an interface from the IPv4 unicast topologies. IPv4 unicast topologies are disabled. See Configuring IS-IS Multicast Topologies on page 330. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
374
no-unicast-topology
overload
Syntax
overload { advertise-high-metrics; timeout seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the local router so that it appears to be overloaded. You might want to do this when you want the router to participate in IS-IS routing, but do not want it to be used for transit traffic. Note that traffic to immediately attached interfaces continues to transit the router. You can also advertise maximum link metrics in NLRIs instead of setting the overload bit.
NOTE: If the time elapsed after the IS-IS instance is enabled is less than the specified timeout, overload mode is set.
Options
See Configuring the Router to Appear Overloaded on page 315. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
overload
375
passive
Syntax Hierarchy Level
passive; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Advertise the direct interface addresses on an interface or into a level on the interface without actually running IS-IS on that interface or level. This statement effectively prevents IS-IS from running on the interface. To enable IS-IS on an interface, include the interface statement at the [edit protocols isis] or the [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis] hierarchy level, To disable it, include the disable statement at those hierarchy levels. The three states are mutually exclusive.
See Advertising Interface Addresses Without Running IS-IS on page 310. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
376
passive
point-to-point
Syntax Hierarchy Level
point-to-point; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure an IS-IS interface to behave like a point-to-point connection. See Configuring Point-to-Point Interfaces on page 317. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
preference
Syntax Hierarchy Level
preference preference; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit protocols isis level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the preference of internal routes.
preferencePreference value.
Range: 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1) Default: 15 (for Level 1 internal routes), 18 (for Level 2 internal routes), 160 (for Level 1 external routes), 165 (for Level 2 external routes)
See Configuring Route Preferences on page 308. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. external-preference
point-to-point
377
prefix-export-limit
Syntax Hierarchy Level
prefix-export-limit number; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit protocols isis level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure a limit to the number of prefixes exported into IS-IS.
numberPrefix limit.
Range: 0 through 4,294,967,295 See Configuring a Prefix Export Limit on page 308. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
priority
Syntax Hierarchy Level
priority number; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. The interfaces priority for becoming the designated router. The interface with the highest priority value becomes that levels designated router. The priority value is meaningful only on a multiaccess network. It has no meaning on a point-to-point interface.
Options
numberPriority value.
See Configuring the Priority for Becoming the Designated Router on page 312. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
378
prefix-export-limit
reference-bandwidth
Syntax Hierarchy Level
reference-bandwidth reference-bandwidth; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Set the reference bandwidth used in calculating the default interface cost. The cost is calculated using the following formula:
cost = reference-bandwidth/bandwidth
Options
See Modifying the Interface Metric on page 306. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
reference-bandwidth
379
rib-group
Syntax
rib-group { inet group-name; inet6 group-name; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Install routes learned from IS-IS routing instances into routing tables in the IS-IS routing table group. You can install IPv4 routes or IPv6 routes. Support for IPv6 routing table groups in IS-IS enables IPv6 routes that are learned from IS-IS routing instances to be installed into other routing tables defined in an IS-IS routing table group.
Options
group-nameName of the routing table group. inetInstall IPv4 IS-IS routes. inet6Install IPv6 IS-IS routes.
Usage Guidelines
See Creating Routing Table Groups on page 104, Configuring How Interface Routes Are Imported into Routing Tables on page 106, IS-IS Configuration Guidelines on page 299, and Configuring BGP Routing Table Groups on page 686. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
380
rib-group
shortcuts
Syntax
shortcuts { multicast-rpf-routes; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis traffic-engineering family (inet | inet6)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis traffic-engineering family (inet | inet6)], [edit protocols isis traffic-engineeringfamily (inet | inet6)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis traffic-engineeringfamily (inet | inet6]
Hierarchy Level
Release Information
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. The family statement and support for IPv6 routes for IS-IS traffic engineering shortcuts introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Configure IS-IS to use MPLS label-switched paths (LSPs) as next hops if possible when installing routing information into the inet.3 or inet6.3 routing table. The remaining statement is explained separately. See Configuring IS-IS to Use IGP Shortcuts on page 318. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
Description
shortcuts
381
spf-options
Syntax
spf-options { delay milliseconds; holddown milliseconds; rapid-runs number; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.5. Configure options for running the shortest-path-first (SPF) algorithm. You can configure a delay for when to run the SPF algorithm after a network topology change is detected, the maximum number of times the SPF algorithm can run in succession, and a holddown interval after SPF algorithm runs the maximum number of times.
delay millisecondsTime interval between the detection of a topology change and
Options
when the SPF algorithm runs. Range: 50 through 1000 milliseconds Default: 200 milliseconds
holddown millisecondsTime interval to hold down, or wait before a subsequent SPF
algorithm runs after the SPF algorithm has run the configured maximum number of times in succession. Range: 2000 through 10,000 milliseconds Default: 5000 milliseconds
rapid-runs numberMaximum number of times the SPF algorithm can run in
succession. After the maximum is reached, the holddown interval begins. Range: 1 through 5 Default: 3
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring SPF Options for IS-IS on page 316. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
382
spf-options
te-metric
Syntax Hierarchy Level
te-metric metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis interface interface-name level level-number]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Metric value used by traffic engineering for information injected into the traffic engineering database. The value of the traffic engineering metric does not affect normal IS-IS forwarding.
metricMetric value.
Options
See Modifying the IS-IS Metric on page 312. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. metric, wide-metrics-only
te-metric
383
topologies
Syntax
topologies { ipv4-multicast; ipv6-multicast; ipv6-unicast; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure alternate IS-IS topologies. The statements are explained separately in this chapter. See Configuring IS-IS Multicast Topologies on page 330. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
384
topologies
traceoptions
Syntax
traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure IS-IS protocol-level tracing options. To specify more than one tracing operation, include multiple flag statements.
Default
The default IS-IS protocol-level tracing options are those inherited from the routing protocols traceoptions statement included at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level.
disable(Optional) Disable the tracing operation. You can use this option to disable
Options
a single operation when you have defined a broad group of tracing operations, such as all.
file filenameName of the file to receive the output of the tracing operation. Enclose the name within quotation marks. All files are placed in the directory /var/log. We recommend that you place IS-IS tracing output in the file isis-log. files number(Optional) Maximum number of trace files. When a trace file named trace-file reaches its maximum size, it is renamed trace-file.0, then trace-file.1,
and so on, until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum number of files, you also must specify a maximum file size with the size option. Range: 2 through 1000 files Default: 10 files
flagTracing operation to perform. To specify more than one flag, include multiple flag statements. IS-IS Tracing Flags
csnComplete sequence number PDU (CSNP) packets errorErrored IS-IS packets graceful-restartGraceful restart operation helloHello packets
traceoptions
385
lspLink-state PDU packets lsp-generationLink-state PDU generation packets packetsAll IS-IS protocol packets psnPartial sequence number PDU (PSNP) packets spfShortest-path-first calculations
allAll tracing operations generalA combination of the normal and route trace operations normalAll normal operations, including adjacency changes
Default: If you do not specify this option, only unusual or abnormal operations are traced.
policyPolicy operations and actions routeRouting table changes stateState transitions taskInterface transactions and processing timerTimer usage
flag-modifier(Optional) Modifier for the tracing flag. You can specify one or more
of these modifiers:
no-world-readable(Optional) Prevent any user from reading the log file. size size(Optional) Maximum size of each trace file, in kilobytes (KB), megabytes (MB), or gigabytes (GB). When a trace file named trace-file reaches this size, it is renamed trace-file.0. When the trace-file again reaches its maximum size, trace-file.0 is renamed trace-file.1 and trace-file is renamed trace-file.0. This
renaming scheme continues until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum file size, you also must specify a maximum number of trace files with the files option. Syntax: xk to specify KB, xm to specify MB, or xg to specify GB Range: 10 KB through the maximum file size supported on your system Default: 128 KB
386
traceoptions
See Tracing IS-IS Protocol Traffic on page 333. routing and traceTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-control and trace-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
traffic-engineering
Syntax
traffic-engineering { disable; family inet6 { shortcuts; } family inet; shortcuts { multicast-rpf-routes; } } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis], [edit protocols isis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the family statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Configure traffic engineering properties for IS-IS. The remaining statements are explained separately.
IS-IS traffic engineering support is enabled. See Configuring IS-IS Traffic Engineering Attributes on page 318. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
traffic-engineering
387
wide-metrics-only
Syntax Hierarchy Level
wide-metrics-only; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number], [edit protocols isis level level-number], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols isis level level-number]
Release Information Description Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure IS-IS to generate metric values greater than 63 on a per IS-IS level basis. See Enabling Wide Metrics for Traffic Engineering on page 307. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. te-metric
388
wide-metrics-only
Chapter 17
ES-IS Overview
End System-to-Intermediate System (ES-IS) is a protocol that resolves Layer 3 ISO network service access points (NSAP) to Layer 2 addresses. ES-IS has an equivalent role as Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) in Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4).
NOTE: ES-IS configuration is supported for the J-series Services Router only.
Overview
Connectionless Network Services (CLNS) is a Layer 3 protocol similar to IPv4. CLNS uses network service access points (NSAPs) to address end systems and intermediate systems. ES-IS provides the basic interaction between CLNS hosts (end systems) and routers (intermediate systems). ES-IS allows hosts to advertise NSAP addresses to other routers and hosts attached to the network. Those routers can then advertise the address to the rest of the network using Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS). Routers use ES-IS to advertise their network entity title (NET) to hosts and routers attached to that network. ES-IS routes are exported to Layer 1 Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) by default. You can also export ES-IS routes into Layer 2 IS-IS by configuring a routing policy. ES-IS generates and receives end system hello (ESH) hello messages when the protocol is configured on an interface. ES-IS is a resolution protocol that allows a network to be fully ISO integrated at both the network and data layer. For more information on CLNS, see Configuring Support for Connectionless Network Services on page 324 and the J-series Services Router Advanced WAN Access Configuration Guide.
Overview
389
390
Overview
Chapter 18
391
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary section for these statements. This chapter discusses the following topics that provide information about configuring ES-IS:
Minimum ES-IS Configuration on page 392 Configuring ES-IS on an Interface on page 392 Configuring the Hello Interval on page 393 Configuring the End System Configuration Timer on page 393 Configuring Graceful Restart for ES-IS on page 393 Configuring the Preference on page 394 Tracing ES-IS Protocol Traffic on page 394
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary section for the esis statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary section for the esis statement. ES-IS protocol is enabled automatically if the IS-IS protocol is configured and enabled. ES-IS does not need to be explicitly configured if IS-IS is enabled. If an interface is not configured as an ISO family interface, ES-IS will not run on it.
392
Specify the interface statement to configure an interface to send and receive hello messages. Specify the disable statement to stop sending or receiving ES-IS packets on the interface.
The default value is 60 seconds. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
The default value is 180 seconds. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To disable graceful restart for ES-IS, specify the disable statement. To configure a time limit for restart completion, specify the restart-duration statement. You can specify a number between 1 and 3600. The default value is 180 seconds.
393
NOTE: Graceful restart is enabled automatically for ES-IS if graceful restart is configured globally at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You can specify the following ES-ISspecific trace options in the ES-IS flag statement:
allEverything errorErrored packets eshEnd-system hello packets generalGeneral events graceful-restartGraceful restart events ishIntermediate-System hello packets normalNormal events policyPolicy processing routeRouting information stateState transitions taskRouting protocol task processing timerRouting protocol timer processing
You can optionally specify one or more of the following flag modifiers:
394
NOTE: Use the trace flags detail and all with caution. These flags may cause the CPU to become very busy.
395
396
Chapter 19
disable
Syntax Hierarchy Level
disable; [edit protocols esis], [edit protocols esis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols esis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols esis interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Disable ES-IS globally or on an interface. See Minimum ES-IS Configuration on page 392. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
disable
397
esct
Syntax Hierarchy Level
esct seconds; [edit protocols esis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols esis interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the ES-IS end system configuration timer.
secondsHow often a system reports its availability to other systems.
Default: 180 seconds See Configuring the End System Configuration Timer on page 393. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
esis
Syntax Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable ES-IS. The remaining statements are explained separately. See Minimum ES-IS Configuration on page 392. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
398
esct
graceful-restart
Syntax
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure graceful restart for ES-IS.
disableDisable graceful restart. restart-duration secondsConfigure the time period for the restart to last.
See Configuring Graceful Restart for ES-IS on page 393. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
hello-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
hello-interval seconds; [edit protocols esis interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols esis interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the ES-IS hello interval.
secondsTime interval between hello messages.
Default: 60 seconds See Configuring the Hello Interval on page 393. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
graceful-restart
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interface
Syntax Hierarchy Level
interface (interface-name | all); [edit protocols esis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols esis]
See Configuring ES-IS on an Interface on page 392. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
preference
Syntax Hierarchy Level
preference preference; [edit protocols esis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols esis]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the ES-IS preference value.
preferencePreference value.
See Configuring the Preference on page 394. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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interface
traceoptions
Syntax
traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } [edit protocols esis], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols esis]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure ES-IS protocol-level tracing options. To specify more than one tracing operation, include multiple flag statements.
Default
The default ES-IS protocol-level tracing options are those inherited from the routing protocols traceoptions statement included at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level.
disable(Optional) Disable the tracing operation. You can use this option to disable
Options
a single operation when you have defined a broad group of tracing operations, such as all.
file filenameName of the file to receive the output of the tracing operation. Enclose the name within quotation marks. All files are placed in the directory /var/log. We recommend that you place ES-IS tracing output in the file esis-log. files number(Optional) Maximum number of trace files. When a trace file named trace-file reaches its maximum size, it is renamed trace-file.0, then trace-file.1,
and so on, until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum number of files, you also must specify a maximum file size with the size option. Range: 2 through 1000 files Default: 2 files
flagTracing operation to perform. To specify more than one flag, include multiple flag statements. ES-IS Tracing Flags
errorErrored ES-IS packets eshEnd-System hello packets graceful-restartGraceful restart events ishIntermediate-System hello packets
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allAll tracing operations generalA combination of the normal and route trace operations normalAll normal operations, including adjacency changes
Default: If you do not specify this option, only unusual or abnormal operations are traced.
policyPolicy operations and actions routeRouting table changes stateState transitions taskInterface transactions and processing timerTimer usage
flag-modifier(Optional) Modifier for the tracing flag. You can specify one or more
of these modifiers:
no-world-readable(Optional) Prevent any user from reading the log file. size size(Optional) Maximum size of each trace file, in kilobytes (KB), megabytes (MB), or gigabytes (GB). When a trace file named trace-file reaches this size, it is renamed trace-file.0. When the trace-file again reaches its maximum size, trace-file.0 is renamed trace-file.1 and trace-file is renamed trace-file.0. This
renaming scheme continues until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum file size, you also must specify a maximum number of trace files with the files option. Syntax: xk to specify KB, xm to specify MB, or xg to specify GB Range: 10 KB through the maximum file size supported on your system Default: Default: 1 MB
world-readable(Optional) Allow any user to read the log file.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Tracing ES-IS Protocol Traffic on page 394. routing and traceTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-control and trace-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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traceoptions
Chapter 20
OSPF Overview
The Open Shortest Path First version 2 (OSPF) protocol is an interior gateway protocol (IGP) that routes packets within a single autonomous system (AS). OSPF uses link-state information to make routing decisions. In this document, the term OSPF refers to both OSPFv2 and OSPFv3. This chapter discusses the following topics that provide background information about OSPF:
OSPF Protocol Overview on page 403 OSPF Standards on page 405 OSPF Area Terminology on page 406 OSPF Routing Algorithm on page 407 OSPF Packets on page 408 External Metrics on page 411 Designated Router on page 411 OSPF Extensions to Support Traffic Engineering on page 411
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interfaces become unavailable, and calculates new loop-free routes quickly and with a minimum of routing overhead traffic. Each interface running OSPF is assigned a cost, which is a unitless number based on factors such as throughput, round-trip time, and reliability, which are used to determine how easy or difficult it is to reach a destination. If two or more routes to a destination have the same cost, OSPF distributes traffic equally among the routes, a process that is called load balancing. Each router maintains a database that describes the topology of the AS. Each OSPF router has an identical topological database so that all routers in the area have a consistent view of the network. All routers maintain summarized topologies of other areas within an AS. Each router distributes information about its local state by flooding link-state advertisements throughout the AS. When the AS topology changes, OSPF ensures that the contents of all routers topological databases converge quickly. All OSPF protocol exchanges can be authenticated. This means that only trusted routers can participate in the ASs routing. A variety of authentication schemes can be used; a single authentication scheme is configured for each area, which enables some areas to use stricter authentication than others. Externally derived routing data (for example, routes learned from BGP) is passed transparently throughout the AS. This externally derived data is kept separate from the OSPF link-state data. Each external route can be tagged by the advertising router, enabling the passing of additional information between routers on the boundaries of the AS.
NOTE: By default, the JUNOS software is compatible with RFC 1583, OSPF Version 2. Beginning with JUNOS 8.5, you can disable compatibility with RFC 1583 by including the no-rfc-1583 statement.
OSPF Version 3
OSPFv3 is a modified version of OSPF that supports Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) addressing. OSPFv3 differs from OSPFv2 in the following ways:
All neighbor ID information is based on a 32-bit router ID. The protocol runs per link rather than per subnet. Router and network link-state advertisements (LSAs) do not carry prefix information. Two new LSA types are included: link-LSA and intra-area-prefix-LSA. Flooding scopes are as follows:
Link-local Area AS
Link-local addresses are used for all neighbor exchanges except virtual links.
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Authentication is removed; the IPv6 authentication header relies on the IP layer. The packet format has changed as follows:
Version number 2 is now version number 3. The db option field has been expanded to 24 bits. Authentication information has been removed. Hello messages do not have address information. Two new option bits are included: R and V6.
Type 3 summary LSAs have been renamed inter-area-prefix-LSAs. Type 4 summary LSAs have been renamed inter-area-router-LSAs.
OSPF Standards
OSPF and OSPFv3 are defined in the following documents:
RFC 1793, Extending OSPF to Support Demand Circuits RFC 2328, OSPF Version 2 RFC 2370, The OSPF Opaque LSA Option RFC 2740, OSPF for IPv6 RFC 3101, The OSPF Not-So-Stubby Area (NSSA) Option RFC 3509, Alternative Implementations of OSPF Area Border Routers RFC 3623, OSPF Graceful Restart RFC 3630, Traffic Engineering (TE) Extensions to OSPF Version 2 RFC 4203, OSPF Extensions in Support of Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) (only interface switching) RFC 4552, Authentication/Confidentiality for OSPFv3 RFC 4576, Using a Link State Advertisement (LSA) Options Bit to Prevent Looping in BGP/MPLS Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) RFC 4577, OSPF as the Provider/Customer Edge Protocol for BGP/MPLS IP Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) RFC 5185, OSPF Multi-Area Adjacency Internet draft draft-ietf-katz-ward-bfd-00.txt, Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (except the transmission of echo packets) (expires January 2005) Internet draft draft-ietf-isis-igp-p2p-over-lan-03.txt, Point-to-point operation over LAN in link-state routing protocols (expires February 2004) Internet draft draft-ospf-alt-06.txt, Support of address families in OSPFv3 (expires April 2008)
To access Internet RFCs and drafts, go to the IETF Web site at http://www.ietf.org.
OSPF Standards
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Areas on page 406 Area Border Routers on page 406 Backbone Areas on page 406 AS Boundary Routers on page 407 Stub Areas on page 407 Not-So-Stubby Areas on page 407 Transit Areas on page 407
Areas
An area is a set of networks and hosts within an AS that have been administratively grouped together. We recommend that you configure an area as a collection of contiguous IP subnetted networks. Routers that are wholly within an area are called internal routers. All interfaces on internal routers are directly connected to networks within the area. The topology of an area is hidden from the rest of the AS, thus significantly reducing routing traffic in the AS. Also, routing within the area is determined only by the areas topology, providing the area with some protection from bad routing data. All routers within an area have identical topological databases.
Backbone Areas
An OSPF backbone area consists of all networks in area ID 0.0.0.0, their attached routers, and all area border routers. The backbone itself does not have any area border routers. The backbone distributes routing information between areas. The backbone is simply another area, so the terminology and rules of areas apply: a router that is directly connected to the backbone is an internal router on the backbone, and the backbones topology is hidden from the other areas in the AS. The routers that make up the backbone must be physically contiguous. If they are not, you must configure virtual links to create the appearance of backbone connectivity. You can create virtual links between any two area border routers that have an interface to a common nonbackbone area. OSPF treats two routers joined by a virtual link as if they were connected to an unnumbered point-to-point network.
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AS Boundary Routers
Routers that exchange routing information with routers in other ASs are called AS boundary routers. They advertise externally learned routes throughout the AS. Any router in the ASan internal router, an area border router, or a backbone routercan be an AS boundary router. Every router within the AS knows the path to the AS boundary routers.
Stub Areas
Stub areas are areas through which or into which AS external advertisements are not flooded. You might want to create stub areas when much of the topological database consists of AS external advertisements. Doing so reduces the size of the topological databases and therefore the amount of memory required on the internal routers in the stub area. When an area border router is configured for a stub area, the router automatically advertises a default route in place of the external routes that are not being advertised within the stub area so that routers in the stub area can reach destinations outside the area. The following restrictions apply to stub areas: you cannot create a virtual link through a stub area, and a stub area cannot contain an AS boundary router.
Not-So-Stubby Areas
An OSPF stub area has no external routes in it, so you cannot redistribute from another protocol into a stub area. A not-so-stubby area (NSSA) allows external routes to be flooded within the area. These routes are then leaked into other areas. However, external routes from other areas still do not enter the NSSA.
Transit Areas
Transit areas are used to pass traffic from one adjacent area to the backbone (or to another area if the backbone is more than two hops away from an area). The traffic does not originate in, nor is it destined for, the transit area.
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On broadcast or nonbroadcast multiaccess networks (physical networks that support the attachment of more than two routers), the OSPF hello protocol elects a designated router for the network. This router is responsible for sending link-state advertisements that describe the network, which reduces the amount of network traffic and the size of the routers topological databases. The router then attempts to form adjacencies with some of its newly acquired neighbors. (On multiaccess networks, only the designated router and backup designated router form adjacencies with other routers.) Adjacencies determine the distribution of routing protocol packets: routing protocol packets are sent and received only on adjacencies, and topological database updates are sent only along adjacencies. When adjacencies have been established, pairs of adjacent routers synchronize their topological databases. A router sends LSA packets to advertise its state periodically and when the routers state changes. These packets include information about the routers adjacencies, which allows detection of nonoperational routers. Using a reliable algorithm, the router floods LSAs throughout the area, which ensures that all routers in an area have exactly the same topological database. Each router uses the information in its topological database to calculate a shortest-path tree, with itself as the root. The router then uses this tree to route network traffic. The description of the SPF algorithm up to this point has explained how the algorithm works within a single area (intra-area routing). For internal routers to be able to route to destinations outside the area (interarea routing), the area border routers must inject additional routing information into the area. Because the area border routers are connected to the backbone, they have access to complete topological data about the backbone. They use this information to calculate paths to all destinations outside its area and then advertise these paths to the areas internal routers. AS boundary routers flood information about external ASs throughout the AS, except to stub areas. Area border routers are responsible for advertising the paths to all AS boundary routers.
OSPF Packets
This section contains the following topics:
OSPF Packet Header on page 409 Hello Packets on page 409 Database Description Packets on page 410 Link-State Request Packets on page 410 Link-State Update Packets on page 410 Link-State Acknowledgment Packets on page 410 Link-State Advertisement Packet Types on page 410
There also are several types of link-state advertisement packets, which are discussed in Link-State Advertisement Packet Types on page 410.
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OSPF Packets
Version numberThe current OSPF version number. This can be either 2 or 3. TypeType of OSPF packet. Packet lengthLength of the packet, in bytes, including the header. Router IDIP address of the router from which the packet originated. Area IDIdentifier of the area in which the packet is traveling. Each OSPF packet is associated with a single area. Packets traveling over a virtual link are labeled with the backbone area ID, 0.0.0.0. You configure the area ID with the area statements. ChecksumFletcher checksum. AuthenticationAuthentication scheme and authentication information. You configure authentication with the authentication statement. This is valid for OSPFv2 only.
Hello Packets
Routers periodically send hello packets on all interfaces, including virtual links, to establish and maintain neighbor relationships. Hello packets are multicast on physical networks that have a multicast or broadcast capability, which enables dynamic discovery of neighboring routers. (On nonbroadcast networks, dynamic neighbor discovery is not possible, so you must configure all neighbors statically using the neighbor statement.) Hello packets consist of the OSPF header plus the following fields:
Network maskNetwork mask associated with the interface. Hello intervalHow often the router sends hello packets. All routers on a shared network must use the same hello interval. You configure this interval with the hello-interval statement. OptionsOptional capabilities of the router. Router priorityThe routers priority to become the designated router. You can configure this value with the priority statement. Router dead intervalHow long the router waits without receiving any OSPF packets from a router before declaring that router to be down. All routers on a shared network must use the same router dead interval. You can configure this value with the dead-interval statement. Designated routerIP address of the designated router. Backup designated routerIP address of the backup designated router. NeighborIP addresses of the routers from which valid hello packets have been received within the time specified by the router dead interval.
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Number of advertisementsNumber of link-state advertisements included in this packet. Link-state advertisementsThe link-state advertisements themselves.
Router link advertisementsAre sent by all routers to describe the state and cost of the routers links to the area. These link-state advertisements are flooded throughout a single area only. Network link advertisementsAre sent by designated routers to describe all the routers attached to the network. These link-state advertisements are flooded throughout a single area only. Summary link advertisementsAre sent by area border routers to describe the routes that they know about in other areas. There are two types of summary
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OSPF Packets
link advertisements: those used when the destination is an IP network, and those used when the destination is an AS boundary router. Summary link advertisements describe interarea routes; that is, routes to destinations outside the area but within the AS. These link-state advertisements are flooded throughout the advertisements associated areas.
AS external link advertisementAre sent by AS boundary routers to describe external routes that they know about. These link-state advertisements are flooded throughout the AS (except for stub areas).
Each link-state advertisement type describes a portion of the OSPF routing domain. All link-state advertisements are flooded throughout the AS. Each link-state advertisement packet begins with a common 20-byte header.
External Metrics
When OSPF exports route information from external ASs, it includes a cost, or external metric, in the route. There are two types of external metrics: Type 1 and Type 2. Type 1 external metrics are equivalent to the link-state metric; that is, the cost of the route used in the internal AS. Type 2 external metrics are greater than the cost of any path internal to the AS.
Designated Router
Each multiaccess network has a designated router, which performs two main functions:
Originate network link advertisements on behalf of the network. Establish adjacencies with all routers on the network, thus participating in the synchronizing of the link-state databases.
The OSPF hello protocol elects a designated router for the network based on the priorities advertised by all the routers. In general, when an interface first becomes functional, it checks whether the network currently has a designated router. If there is one, the router accepts that designated router regardless of its own router priority. Otherwise, if the router has the highest priority on the network, it becomes the designated router. If router priorities tie, the router with the highest router ID (which is typically the routers IP address) is chosen as the designated router.
External Metrics
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NOTE: Whenever possible, use IS-IS IGP shortcuts instead of traffic engineering shortcuts.
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Chapter 21
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flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } area area-id { area-range network/mask-length <restrict> <exact> <override-metric metric>; interface interface-name { demand-circuit; disable; ipsec-sa <sa-name>; secondary; authentication { md5 key-id { key [ key-values ]; } simple-password key-id; } bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; multiplier number; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } dead-interval seconds; hello-interval seconds; interface-type type; ldp-synchronization { disable; hold-time seconds; } metric metric; neighbor address <eligible>; network-summary-export [ policy-names ]; network-summary-import [policy-names ]; passive { traffic-engineering { remote-node-id address; } } poll-interval seconds; priority number; retransmit-interval seconds; te-metric metric; transit-delay seconds; } label-switched-path name metric metric; nssa { area-range network/mask-length <restrict> <exact> <override-metric metric>; default-lsa { default-metric metric;
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metric-type type; type-7; } (no-summaries | summaries); } peer-interface interface-name { disable; dead-interval seconds; hello-interval seconds; retransmit-interval seconds; transit-delay seconds; } sham-link-remote address { demand-circuit; ipsec-sa name; metric metric; } } stub <default-metric metric> <summaries | no-summaries>; virtual-link neighbor-id router-id transit-area area-id { disable; ipsec-sa <sa-name>; authentication { md5 key-id { key [ key-values ]; } simple-password key-id; } dead-interval seconds; hello-interval seconds; retransmit-interval seconds; transit-delay seconds; } } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. To configure OSPF version 3 (OSPFv3), you include the following statements:
protocols { ospf3 { disable; export [ policy-names ]; external-preference preference; graceful-restart { disable; helper-disable; notify-duration seconds; restart-duration seconds; } import [ policy-names ]; overload { timeout seconds; }
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preference preference; prefix-export-limit; reference-bandwidth reference-bandwidth; realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast); rib-group group-name; spf-options { delay milliseconds; holddown milliseconds; rapid-runs number; } traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } area area-id { area-range network/mask-length <restrict> <exact> <override-metric metric>; interface interface-name { bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; multiplier number; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } disable; dead-interval seconds; hello-interval seconds; ipsec-sa name; metric metric; passive { traffic-engineering { remote-node-id address; } } priority number; retransmit-interval seconds; transit-delay seconds; } inter-area-prefix-export policy-name; inter-area-prefix-import policy-name; nssa { area-range network/mask-length <restrict> <exact> <override-metric metric>; default-lsa { default-metric metric; metric-type type; type-7; } (no-summaries | summaries); }
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stub <default-metric metric> <summaries | no-summaries>; virtual-link neighbor-id router-id transit-area area-id { disable; dead-interval seconds; hello-interval seconds; ipsec-sa name; retransmit-interval seconds; transit-delay seconds; } } } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. For a detailed OSPFv3 example configuration, see the JUNOS Feature Guide. By default, OSPFv2 and OSPFv3 are disabled.
NOTE: In this manual, the term OSPF refers to both OSPFv2 and OSPFv3. This chapter describes the following tasks for configuring OSPF:
Minimum OSPF Configuration on page 418 Configuring the Backbone Area and Other Areas on page 418 Disabling NSSA Support on an ASBR ABR on page 422 Disabling Compatibility with RFC 1583 on page 423 Configuring OSPF on Router Interfaces on page 423 Configuring Multiarea Adjacency in OSPFv2 on page 426 Configuring Multiple Address Families for OSPFv3 on page 427 Configuring Authentication for OSPFv2 on page 427 Configuring Authentication for OSPFv3 on page 431 Configuring a Prefix Export Limit on page 431 Configuring the Priority for Becoming the Designated Router on page 432 Configuring Route Summarization on page 432 Modifying the Interface Metric on page 433 Configuring Route Preferences on page 433 Configuring OSPF Timers on page 434 Configuring the BFD Protocol on page 436 Configuring Label Distribution Protocol Synchronization with the IGP on page 438 Configuring Graceful Restart on page 439 Configuring SPF Options for OSPF on page 439 Advertising Interface Addresses Without Running OSPF on page 440
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Configuring OSPF Passive Traffic Engineering Mode on page 441 Advertising Label-Switched Paths into OSPF on page 442 Configuring the Router to Appear Overloaded on page 442 Enabling OSPF Traffic Engineering Support on page 443 Modifying the Traffic Engineering Metric on page 445 Configuring OSPF Routing Policy on page 445 Configuring OSPF Routing Table Groups on page 449 Configuring a Sham Link on page 449 Configuring a Peer Interface on page 449 Tracing OSPF Protocol Traffic on page 450
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
NOTE: When you configure OSPFv2 on an interface, you must also include the family inet statement at the [edit interfaces interface-name unit logical-unit-number] hierarchy level. When you configure OSPFv3 on an interface, you must also include the family inet6 statement at the [edit interfaces interface-name unit logical-unit-number] hierarchy level. For more information about the family inet statement, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
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the size of the topological databases that OSPF routers must maintain. If you do this, the AS must contain a single backbone area and optionally can contain any number of nonbackbone areas. The routers that make up the backbone must be physically contiguous. If they are not, you must configure virtual links to create the appearance of connectivity. You also can configure stub areas, which are areas through which AS external advertisements are not flooded, and not-so-stubby areas (NSSAs), which allow external routes to be flooded within an area. The JUNOS software supports active backbone detection. Active backbone detection is implemented to verify that area border routers are connected to the backbone. If the connection to the backbone area is lost, then the routers default metric is not advertised, effectively rerouting traffic through another area border router with a valid connection to the backbone. Active backbone detection enables transit through an area border router with no active backbone connection. An area border router advertises to other routers that it is an area border router even if the connection to the backbone is down, so that the neighbors can consider it for interarea routes. To configure areas, you can perform the following tasks:
Configuring the Backbone Area on page 419 Configuring a Nonbackbone Area on page 419 Configuring a Stub Area on page 420 Configuring a Not-So-Stubby Area on page 420 Configuring an OSPF Virtual Link on page 421
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for the statement.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for the statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To inject a default route with a specified metric value into the area, include the default-metric option and a metric value. The default route matches any destination that is not explicitly reachable from within the area. To have the stub areas not advertise summary routes into the stub area, include the no-summaries option. Only the default route is advertised, and only if you include the default-metric option. The default route injected into the not-so-stubby area (NSSA) is a Type 3 LSA. You must include the stub statement when configuring all routers that are in the stub area.
NOTE: Beginning with JUNOS Release 8.5, a router-identifier interface that is not configured to run OSPF is no longer advertised as a stub network in OSPF link-state advertisements. For more information about how to configure a router identifier, see Configuring the Router Identifier on page 103.
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(ospf | ospf3) { area area-id { nssa { area-range network/mask-length <restrict> <exact> <override-metric metric>; default-lsa { default-metric metric; metric-type type; type-7; } (no-summaries | summaries); } } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. By default, a default route is not advertised. To advertise a default route with the specified metric within the area, include the default-metric statement. You can configure this option only on area border routers. To prevent an ABR from advertising summary routes into an NSSA, include the no-summaries statement. If you include the default-metric option in addition to the no-summaries statement, only the default route is advertised. The default route is a Type 3 LSA injected into the NSSA. To flood summary LSAs into the NSSA area, include the summaries statement. When summaries is configured (which is the default if the no-summaries statement is not specified), a Type 7 LSA is sent. To define the type of metric, include the metric-type statement. To aggregate external routes learned within the area when a route is advertised to other areas, include one or more area-range statements. If you also include the restrict option, the aggregate is not advertised, effectively creating a route filter. All external routes learned within the area that do not fall into the range of one of the prefixes are advertised individually to other areas. To restrict an exact area range, include the exact option. For an example, you can suppress the exact 0/0 prefix from being advertised from a NSSA area into the backbone area by including both the exact and restrict options. To override the metric for the IP address range and configure a specific metric value, include the override-metric option.
To configure an OSPFv3 virtual link, include the virtual-link statement when configuring the backbone area (area 0):
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Specify the router ID (as an IPv4 address) of the router at the other end of the virtual link. This router must be an area border router that is physically connected to the backbone. Also, specify the number of the area through which the virtual link transits. For the virtual connection to work, you also must configure a link to the backbone area on the remote area border router (the router at the other end of the LSP).
You must also configure an OSPF virtual link on the remote area border router:
[edit protocols ospf] area 0.0.0.0 { virtual-link neighbor-id 192.168.0.5 transit-area 1.1.1.1; }
NOTE: Type 7 LSAs are not exported into an NSSA if there is only one NSSA and backbone area connected to the ABR. To disable exporting Type 7 LSAs into NSSAs, include the no-nssa-abr statement:
no-nssa-abr;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: When you configure OSPFv2 on an interface, you must also include the family inet statement at the [edit interfaces interface-name unit logical-unit-number] hierarchy level. When you configure OSPFv3 on an interface, you must also include the family inet6 statement at the [edit interfaces interface-name unit logical-unit-number] hierarchy level. For more information about the family inet statement, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.2, you can configure OSPFv3 to support address families other than unicast IPv6. For more information, see Configuring Multiple Address Families for OSPFv3 on page 427. To configure OSPF on an interface, you can perform the following tasks:
Configuring an Interface on a Broadcast or Point-to-Point Network on page 423 Configuring an Interface on a Point-to-Multipoint Network on page 424 Configuring an Interface on a Nonbroadcast, Multiaccess Network on page 424 Configuring an OSPF Demand Circuit Interface on page 425
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Specify the interface by IP address or interface name for OSPFv2, or only the interface name for OSPFv3. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.3, an OSPF point-to-point interface supports an Ethernet interface without a subnet. For more information about interface names, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Specify the interface by IP address or interface name. For more information about interface names, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide. To configure multiple neighbors, include a neighbor statement for each neighbor.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. Specify the interface by IP address or interface name. For more information about interface names, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
NOTE: For nonbroadcast interfaces, specify the IP address of the nonbroadcast interface as the interface-name. To configure multiple neighbors, include a neighbor statement for each neighbor. OSPF routers normally discover their neighbors dynamically by listening to the broadcast or multicast hello packets on the network. Because an NBMA network does not support broadcast (or multicast), the router cannot discover its neighbors dynamically, so you must configure all the neighbors statically. Do this by including the neighbor statement and specifying the IP address of each neighboring router in the address option. To configure multiple neighbors, include multiple neighbor statements. If the neighbor is allowed to become the designated router, include the eligible keyword. By default, the router sends hello packets out the interface every 120 seconds before it establishes adjacency with a neighbor. To modify this interval, include the poll-interval statement.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. A demand-circuit interface automatically negotiates demand-circuit connection with its OSPF neighbor. If the neighbor does not support demand circuits, then no demand circuit connection is established.
Any logical interface not configured as a secondary interface for an area is treated as a primary interface for that area. A logical interface can be configured as primary interface only for one area. For any other area for which you configure the interface, you must configure it as a secondary interface.
NOTE: You cannot configure the secondary statement with the interface all statement. You also cannot configure as secondary an interface by its IP address. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure the statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You configure each realm independently. We recommend that you configure an area and at least one interface for each realm. These are the default import and export routing tables for each of the four address families:
IPv6 unicast: inet6.0 IPv6 multicast: inet6.2 IPv4 unicast: inet.0 IPv4 mulcast: inet.2
With the exception of virtual links, all configuration supported for the default IPv6 unicast family is supported for the address families that have to be configured as realms.
NOTE: You can configure IPsec authentication together with either MD5 or simple authentication.
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To enable IPsec authentication for an OSPFv2 interface, include the ipsec-sa name statement for a specific interface:
interface interface-name ipsec-sa name;
To enable IPsec authentication for a remote sham link, include the ispec-sa name statement for the remote end point of the sham link:
sham-link-remote address ipsec-sa name;
NOTE: If a Layer 3 VPN configuration has multiple sham links with the same remote endpoint IP address, you must configure the same IPsec security association for all the remote endpoints. You configure a Layer 3 VPN at the [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name instance-type] hierarchy level. For more information about Layer 3 VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide. To enable IPsec authentication for a virtual link, include the ipsec-sa name statement for a specific virtual link:
virtual-link neighbor-id router-id transit-area area-id ipsec-sa name;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. You specify the IPsec authentication name by including the ipsec-sa name statement where name is the name of the IPsec security association. You configure the actual IPsec authentication separately. Only manual security associations (SAs) are supported for OSPFv2 authentication using IPsec. Dynamic IKE SAs are not supported. For more information about IPsec, see the JUNOS System Basics Configuration Guide, the JUNOS Services Interfaces Configuration Guide, and the JUNOS Feature Guide. The following restrictions also apply to IPsec authentication for OSPFv2:
Only IPsec transport mode is supported. Tunnel mode is not supported. Because only bidirectional manual SAs are supported, all OSPFv2 peers must be configured with the same IPsec SA. You configure a manual bidirectional SA at the [edit security ipsec] hierarchy level. You must also configure the same IPsec SA for all virtual links with the same remote endpoint address, for all neighbors on OSPF nonbroadcast multiaccess (NBMA) or point-to-multipoint (P2MP) links, and for every subnet that is part of a broadcast link. OSPFv2 peer interfaces are not supported.
Simple authentication uses a text password that is included in the transmitted packet. The receiving router uses an authentication key (password) to verify the packet. The MD5 algorithm creates an encoded checksum that is included in the transmitted packet. The receiving router uses an authentication key (password) to verify the packet.
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For MD5 authentication to work, both the receiving and transmitting routers must have the same MD5 key. Define an MD5 key for each interface. If MD5 is enabled on an interface, that interface accepts routing updates only if MD5 authentication succeeds; otherwise, updates are rejected. The key ID can be set to any value between 0 and 255, with a default value of 0. The router only accepts OSPFv2 packets sent using the same key ID that is defined for that interface. To enable authentication and specify an authentication method as well as a key (password) for an OSPF interface or virtual link, include the authentication statement:
authentication { md5 key { key [ key-values ] { start-time time; } } simple-password key; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. The simple key (password) can be from 1 through 8 characters long. Each MD5 key is identified by a key identifier. The MD5 key value can be from 1 through 16 characters long. Characters can include ASCII strings. If you include spaces, enclose all characters in quotation marks (" "). A simple password and MD5 key are mutually exclusive. You can configure only one simple password. However, you can configure multiple MD5 keys. As part of your security measures, you can change MD5 keys. You can do this by configuring multiple MD5 keys, each with a unique key ID, and setting the date and time to switch to the new key. Each unique MD5 key has a unique ID. The ID is used by the receiver of the OSPF packet to determine which key to use for authentication. The key identifier, which is required for MD5 authentication, specifies the identifier associated with the MD5 key. The start time specifies when to start using the MD5 key. This is optional. The start-time option enables you to configure a smooth transition mechanism for multiple keys. The start time is relevant for transmission but not for receiving OSPF packets. See the following sections:
Example: Configuring IPsec Authentication for an OSPFv2 Interface on page 429 Example: Configuring a Transition of MD5 Keys on page 430 Example: Configuring MD5 Authentication on page 430
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Set the same passwords and transition dates and times on all the routers in the area so that OSPF adjacencies remain active.
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md5 3 key "$9$6gBqCtOW87YgJEcyKW8Vb" start-time 2002-11-19.10:00; # SECRET-DATA md5 2 key "$9$DJHkP5T3/A0Uj6A0Irl"; # SECRET-DATA } } reference-bandwidth 4g; traceoptions { file ospf size 5m world-readable; flag error; } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. You specify the IPsec authentication name by including the name option. You configure the actual IPsec authentication separately. For more information on IPsec, see the JUNOS System Basics Configuration Guide and the JUNOS Services Interfaces Configuration Guide.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can include this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. All routes that match the specified area range are filtered at the area boundary, and the summary is advertised in their place. If you specify the restrict option, the routes are filtered but no summary is advertised. If you specify the exact option,
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summarization of a route is advertised only when an exact match is made with the configured summary range. To override the metric for the IP address range and configure a specific metric value, include the override-metric option. If you specify the override-metric option, the dynamically computed metric for the IP address range is overridden by the specified value.
you specify as 100,000,000), which gives a metric of 1 for any bandwidth that is 100 Mbps or greater. To modify the metric for routes advertised from an interface, include the metric statement:
(ospf | ospf3) { area area-id interface interface-name { metric metric; } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. For example, if you set the reference bandwidth to 1 Gbps (that is, reference-bandwidth is set to 1,000,000,000), a 100-Mbps interface has a default metric of 10. By default, the loopback interface (lo0) metric is 0. No bandwidth is associated with the loopback interface.
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lowest preference value is selected. For more information about route preferences, see Route Preferences on page 6. By default, internal OSPF routes have a preference value of 10, and external OSPF routes have a value of 150. To change the preference values, include the preference statement (for internal routes) or the external-preference statement (for external routes):
(ospf | ospf3) { external-preference preference; preference preference; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. The preference can be a value from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1).
Modifying the Hello Interval on page 434 Controlling the LSA Retransmission Interval on page 435 Modifying the Router Dead Interval on page 435 Specifying the Transit Delay on page 436
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. On nonbroadcast networks, the router sends hello packets every 120 seconds until active neighbors are detected by default. This interval is long enough to minimize the bandwidth required on slow WAN links. To modify this interval, include the poll-interval statement:
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poll-interval seconds;
NOTE: The poll-interval statement is valid for OSPFv2 only. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Once the router detects an active neighbor, the hello packet interval changes from the time specified in the poll-interval statement to the time specified in the hello-interval statement.
NOTE: You must configure LSA retransmit intervals to be equal or greater than 3 seconds to avoid triggering a retransmit trap because the JUNOS software delays LSA acknowledgments by up to 2 seconds. By default, the router waits 5 seconds for an acknowledgment before retransmitting the link-state advertisement. To modify this interval, include the retransmit-interval statement:
retransmit-interval seconds;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: BFD is supported for OSPFv3 beginning with JUNOS Release 9.3. To enable failure detection, include the bfd-liveness-detection statement:
bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; version (1 | automatic); }
To specify the threshold for the adaptation of the detection time, include the threshold statement:
detection-time { threshold milliseconds;
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When the BFD protocol session detection time adapts to a value equal to or greater than the threshold, a single trap and a single system message are sent. To specify the minimum transmit and receive intervals for failure detection, include the minimum-interval statement:
minimum-interval milliseconds;
This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router transmits hello packets as well as the minimum interval at which the router expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. You can configure a number in the range from 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. You can also specify the minimum transmit and receive intervals separately.
NOTE: Specifying an interval less than 300 ms can cause undesired BFD flapping. To specify only the minimum receive interval for failure detection, include the minimum-receive-interval statement:
minimum-receive-interval milliseconds;
This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router expects to receive a hello packet from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. You can configure a number in the range from 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. To specify the number of hello packets not received by a neighbor that causes the originating interface to be declared down, include the multiplier statement:
multiplier number;
The default is 3, and you can configure a value in the range from 1 through 255. To specify only the minimum transmit interval for failure detection, include the transmit-interval minimum-interval statement:
transmit-interval { minimum-interval milliseconds; }
This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router transmits hello packets to the neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. You can configure a value in the range from 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. To specify the threshold for detecting the adaptation of the transmit interval, include the threshold statement:
transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; }
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Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.0, you can configure BFD sessions not to adapt to changing network conditions. To disable BFD adaptation, include the no-adaptation statement:
no-adaptation;
NOTE: We recommend that you not disable BFD adaptation unless it is preferable not to have BFD adaptation enabled in your network. To specify the BFD version used for detection, include the version statement:
version (1 | automatic);
The default is to have the version detected automatically. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see bfd-liveness-detection.
To disable synchronization, include the disable statement. To configure the time period to advertise the maximum cost metric for a link that is not fully operational, include the hold-time statement.
NOTE: If you do not configure the hold-time statement, the hold-time value will default to infinity. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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NOTE: On a broadcast link with a single neighbor, when the neighbor initiates an OSPFv3 graceful restart operation, the restart might be terminated at the point when the local router assumes the role of a helper. A change in the LSA is considered a topology change, which terminates the neighbor's restart operation. Graceful restart is disabled by default. You can globally enable graceful restart for all routing protocols at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level. To configure graceful restart parameters specifically for OSPF, include the graceful-restart statement:
(ospf | ospf3) { graceful-restart { disable; helper-disable; notify-duration seconds; restart-duration seconds; } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To disable graceful restart, specify the disable statement. To configure a time period for complete reacquisition of OSPF neighbors, specify the restart-duration statement. To configure a time period for sending out purged grace LSAs over all interfaces, specify the notify-duration statement. Helper mode is enabled by default. To disable the graceful restart helper capability, specify the helper-disable statement. The grace period interval for OSPF graceful restart is determined as equal to or smaller than the sum of the notify-duration time interval and the restart-duration time interval. The grace period is the number of seconds that the router's neighbors continue to advertise the router as fully adjacent, regardless of the connection state between the router and its neighbors.
The delay in the time between the detection of a topology change and when the SPF algorithm actually runs.
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The maximum number of times that the SPF algorithm can run in succession before the hold-down timer begins. The time to hold down, or wait, before running another SPF calculation after the SPF algorithm has run in succession the configured maximum number of times.
To configure the SPF delay, include the delay statement when specifying the spf-options statement:
delay milliseconds;
By default, the SPF algorithm runs 200 milliseconds after the detection of a topology change. The range that you can configure is from 50 through 8000 milliseconds. To configure the maximum number of times that the SPF algorithm can run in succession, include the rapid-runs statement when specifying the spf-options statement:
rapid-runs number;
The default number of SPF calculations that can occur in succession is 3. The range that you can configure is from 1 through 5. Each SPF algorithm is run after the configured SPF delay. When the maximum number of SPF calculations occurs, the hold-down timer begins. Any subsequent SPF calculation is not run until the hold-down timer expires. To configure the SPF hold-down timer, include the holddown statement when specifying the spf-options statement:
holddown milliseconds;
The default is 5000 milliseconds, and the range that you can configure is from 2000 through 20,000 milliseconds. Use the hold-down timer to hold down, or wait, before running any subsequent SPF calculations after the SPF algorithm runs for the configured maximum number of times. If the network stabilizes during the holddown period and the SPF algorithm does not need to run again, the system reverts to the configured values for the delay and rapid-runs statements.
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passive { } } } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Point-to-point interfaces differ from multipoint in that only one OSPF adjacency is possible. (A LAN, for instance, can have multiple addresses and can run OSPF on each subnet simultaneously.) As such, when you configure a numbered point-to-point interface to OSPF by name, multiple OSPF interfaces are created. One, which is unnumbered, is the interface on which the protocol is run. An additional OSPF interface is created for each address configured on the interface, if any, which is automatically marked as passive. For OSPFv3, one OSPF-specific interface must be created per interface name configured under OSPFv3. OSPFv3 does not allow interfaces to be configured by IP address. Enabling OSPF on an interface (by including the interface statement), disabling it (by including the disable statement), and not actually having OSPF run on an interface (by including the passive statement) are mutually exclusive states. You can also configure interfaces in OSPF passive traffic engineering mode. For more information, see Configuring OSPF Passive Traffic Engineering Mode on page 441 and the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide.
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For more information, see the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide.
Use the label-switched path metric defined under OSPFv2. Use the label-switched path metric configured for the label-switched path under MPLS. If you do not configure any of the above, use the default OSPFv2 metric of 1.
To advertise LSPs, include the label-switched-path statement, with a specified name and metric:
label-switched-path name metric metric;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: If you want an LSP that is announced into OSPFv2 to be used in SPF calculations, there must be a reverse link (that is, a link from the tail end of the LSP to the head end). You can accomplish this by configuring an LSP in the reverse direction and also announcing it in OSPFv2. For more information about advertising label-switched paths, see the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide.
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to a metric of 0xFFFF. The stub router links are advertised with the actual cost of the interfaces corresponding to the stub. This causes the transit traffic to avoid the overloaded router and take paths around the router. However, the overloaded routers own links are still accessible. To mark the router as overloaded, include the overload statement:
(ospf | ospf3) { overload; }
To specify the number of seconds at which overload is reset, include the timeout option when specifying the overload statement:
(ospf | ospf3) { overload timeout <seconds>; }
The time can be a value from 60 through 1800 seconds. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
NOTE: Whenever possible, use OSPF IGP shortcuts instead of traffic engineering shortcuts. By default, traffic engineering support is disabled. To enable it, include the traffic-engineering statement:
traffic-engineering { advertise-unnumbered-interfaces; multicast-rpf-routes; no-topology; shortcuts { ignore-lsp-metrics; lsp-metric-into-summary; } }
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To disable the dissemination of the link-state topology information, include the no-topology statement. To use LSPs as next hops, specify the shortcuts statement. When traffic engineering is enabled for OSPF, the SPF algorithm takes into account the various LSPs configured under MPLS. These routes are installed into the primary routing table, inet.0. To advertise the LSP metric for a prefix in a summary LSA, specify the lsp-metric-into-summary statement. To ignore RSVP LSP metrics in OSPF traffic engineering shortcut calculations, specify the ignore-lsp-metrics statement. You can configure OSPF to install routes with regular IP next hops (no LSPs as next hops) into the inet.2 routing table for a reverse-path-forwarding (RPF) check. The inet.2 routing table consists of unicast routes used for multicast RPF lookup. RPF is an antispoofing mechanism used to check if the packet is coming in on an interface that is also sending data back to the packet source. To install routes for multicast RPF checks into the inet.2 routing table, include the multicast-rpf-routes statement.
NOTE: You must enable OSPF traffic engineering shortcuts to use the multicast-rpf-routes statement. You must not allow LSP advertisement into OSPF when configuring the multicast-rpf-routes statement. In some scenarios, you might want to advertise the link-local identifier in the link-local TE link-state advertisement packets. To advertise unnumbered interfaces in a traffic-engineering environment, include the advertise-unnumbered-interfaces statement.
NOTE: The advertise-unnumbered-interfaces statement has no effect on your configuration if Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) can signal unnumbered interfaces, as defined in RFC 3477, Signalling Unnumbered Links in Resource Reservation Protocol - Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE). You do not need to configure this statement in this situation. For more information about configuring LSPs and MPLS, see the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. OSPF import policy allows users to define policy to prevent adding OSPF routes to the routing table. This filtering happens when OSPF installs the route in the routing
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table. You can filter the routes, but not LSA flooding. The import policy can filter on any attribute of the OSPF route. To filter OSPF routes from being added to the routing table, include the import statement:
(ospf | ospf3) { import [ policy-names ]; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To apply an import routing policy for OSPFv2 that affects which routes learned from an area are used to generate network-summary LSAs, include the network-summary-import [ policy-names] statement:
ospf area area-id { network-summary-import [ policy-names ]; }
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To apply an export routing policy for OSPFv3 that affects which interarea prefix LSAs are flooded into an area, include the inter-area-prefix-export [ policy-names ] statement:
ospf3 area area-id { inter-area-prefix-export [ policy-names ]; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To apply an import routing policy for OSPFv3 that affects which routes learned from an area are used to generate interarea prefix LSAs, include the inter-area-prefix-import [ policy-names ] statement:
ospf3 area area-id { inter-area-prefix-import [ policy-names ]; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
Summary discard routes have a default priority of low. Local routes that are not added to the routing table are assigned a priority of low. External routes that are rejected by import policy and thus are not added to the routing table are assigned a priority of low.
To specify a priority for prefixes included in an import policy, include the priority (high | medium | low) statement at the [edit policy-options policy statement
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policy-statement-name term term-name then] or [edit policy-options policy-statement policy-statement-name then] hierarchy level.
Any available match criteria applicable to OSPF routes can be used to determine the priority. Two of the most commonly used match criteria for OSPF are the route-filter and tag statements. For more information about configuring routing policy and match conditions, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
Example: Configure a Route Filter Policy to Specify Priority for Prefixes Learned Through OSPF
Configure an import routing policy, ospf-import, that enables you to specify a priority for specific prefixes learned through OSPF. Routes associated with these prefixes are installed in the routing table in the order of the prefixes specified priority. Routes matching 200.3.0.0/16 orlonger are installed first because they have a priority of high. Routes matching 200.2.0.0/16 orlonger are installed next because they have a priority of medium. Routes matching 200.1.0.0/16 orlonger are installed last because they have a priority of low. To apply the import policy to OSPF, include the import ospf-import statement at the [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)] hierarchy level. For a complete list of hierarchy levels at which the import statement can be configured, see the configuration statement summary for that statement.
policy-options { policy-statement ospf-import { term t1 { from { route-filter 200.1.0.0/16 orlonger; } then { priority low; accept; } } term t2 { from { route-filter 200.2.0.0/16 orlonger; } then { priority medium { accept; } } tern t3 { from { route-filter 200.3.0.0/16 orlonger; } then { priority high; accept; } } } }
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
To configure the local endpoint address, specify the local option. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To configure the remote endpoint address, include the sham-link-remote statement.
sham-link-remote address { ipsec-sa name; demand-circuit; metric metric; }
To configure the OSPF interface as a demand circuit, include the demand-circuit statement. To configure the remote endpoint metric value, include the metric statement. To configure IPsec authentication for the remote endpoint of a sham link, include the ipsec-sa name statement.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To disable the peer interface, specify the disable statement. To modify the peer interface dead interval, specify the dead-interval statement. To modify how often the router sends hello packets out of the peer interface, specify the hello-interval statement. To modify how often the peer interface retransmits the link-state advertisement, specify the retransmit-interval statement. To specify the approximate transit delay to use to age update packets, include the transit-delay statement. For more information about configuring GMPLS, see the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You can specify the following OSPF-specific trace flags in the OSPF traceoptions statement:
errorOSPF error packets eventOSPF state transitions floodingLink-state flooding packets generalGeneral events graceful-restartGraceful-restart events. helloHello packets, which are used to establish neighbor adjacencies and to
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lsa-updateLink-state updates packets, which are used in synchronizing the OSPF topological database normalNormal events on-demandTrace demand circuit extensions packetsAll OSPF packets packet-dumpDump the contents of selected packet types policyPolicy processing spfShortest path first (SPF) calculations stateState transitions taskRouting protocol task processing timerRouting protocol timer processing
NOTE: Use the trace flags detail and all with caution. These flags may cause the CPU to become very busy.
For general information about tracing and global tracing options, see Tracing Global Routing Protocol Operations on page 119.
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} } }
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Chapter 22
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area
Syntax Hierarchy Level
area area-id; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Specify the area identifier for this router to use when participating in OSPF routing. All routers in an area must use the same area identifier to establish adjacencies. Specify multiple area statements to configure the router as an area border router. An area border router does not automatically summarize routes between areas; use the area-range statement to configure route summarization. By definition, an area border router must be connected to the backbone area either through a physical link or through a virtual link. To create a virtual link, use the virtual-link statement. To specify that the router is directly connected to the OSPF and OSPFv3 backbone, include the area 0.0.0.0 statement. All routers on the backbone must be contiguous. If they are not, use the virtual-link statement to create the appearance of connectivity to the backbone.
Options
the area number as a simple integer or an IP address. Area number 0.0.0.0 is reserved for the OSPF and OSPFv3 backbone area.
Usage Guidelines
See Configuring the Backbone Area and Other Areas on page 418 and Configuring Multiple Address Families for OSPFv3 on page 427. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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area
area-range
Syntax Hierarchy Level
area-range network/mask-length <restrict> <exact> <override-metric metric>; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. (Area border routers only) For an area, summarize a range of IP addresses when sending summary link advertisements (within an area). To summarize multiple ranges, include multiple area-range statements. For an NSSA, summarize a range of IP addresses when sending NSSA LSAs. The specified prefixes are used to aggregate external routes learned within the area when the routes are advertised to other areas. To specify multiple prefixes, include multiple area-range statements. All external routes learned within the area that do not fall into one of the prefixes are advertised individually to other areas.
Default
By default, area border routers do not summarize routes being sent from one area to other areas, but rather send all routes explicitly.
networkIP address. You can specify one or more IP addresses. mask-lengthNumber of significant bits in the network mask. restrict(Optional) Do not advertise the configured summary. This hides all routes
Options
that are contained within the summary, effectively creating a route filter.
exact(Optional) Summarization of a route is advertised only when an exact match
area-range
455
Usage Guidelines
See Configuring Route Summarization on page 432 and Configuring a Not-So-Stubby Area on page 420. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
authentication
Syntax
authentication { md5 key-identifier { key key-value start-time YYYY-MM-DD.HH:MM } simple-password key; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link], [edit protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure an authentication key (password). Neighboring routers use the password to verify the authenticity of packets sent from this interface. All routers that are connected to the same IP subnet must use the same authentication scheme and password.
The statements are explained separately. See Configuring Authentication for OSPFv2 on page 427. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
456
authentication
bfd-liveness-detection
Syntax
bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; version (1 | automatic); } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name]
Hierarchy Level
Release Information
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. detection-time threshold and transmit-interval threshold options added in JUNOS Release 8.2. Support for logical routers introduced in JUNOS Release 8.3. no-adaptation statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Support for OSPFv3 introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Configure bidirectional failure detection timers.
detection-time threshold millisecondsConfigure a threshold. When the BFD session
Description Options
detection time adapts to a value equal to or greater than the threshold, a single trap and a single system log message are sent.
minimum-interval millisecondsConfigure the minimum intervals at which the local
router transmits a hello packet and then expects to receive a reply from the neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. Range: 1 through 255,000 milliseconds
bfd-liveness-detection
457
the router expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. Range: 1 through 255,000 milliseconds
multiplier numberConfigure the number of hello packets not received by a neighbor
that causes the originating interface to be declared down. Range: 1 through 255 Default: 3
no-adaptationSpecify that BFD sessions should not adapt to changing network
conditions. We recommend that you not disable BFD adaptation unless it is preferable not to have BFD adaptation enabled in your network.
transmit-interval threshold millisecondsConfigure a threshold. When the BFD session
transmit interval adapts to a value greater than the threshold, a single trap and a single system log message are sent. The interval threshold must be greater than the minimum transmit interval. Range: 0 through 4,294,967,295
transmit-interval minimum-interval millisecondsConfigure the minimum interval at
which the router transmits hello packets to a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. Range: 1 through 255,000
versionSpecify the BFD version to detect. Range: 1 (BFD version 1) or automatic (autodetect version) Default: automatic
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring the BFD Protocol on page 436. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
458
bfd-liveness-detection
dead-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
dead-interval seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id peer-interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf area area-id peer-interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Specify how long OSPF waits before declaring that a neighboring router is unavailable. This is an interval during which the router receives no hello packets from the neighbor.
secondsInterval to wait.
Options
Range: 1 through 65,535 seconds Default: 40 seconds (four times the hello interval)
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Modifying the Router Dead Interval on page 435. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. hello-interval
dead-interval
459
default-lsa
Syntax
default-lsa { default-metric metric; metric-type type; type-7; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. On area border routers only, for an NSSA, inject a default LSA with a specified metric value into the area. The default route matches any destination that is not explicitly reachable from within the area. The statements are explained separately. See Configuring a Not-So-Stubby Area on page 420. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. nssa, stub
460
default-lsa
default-metric
Syntax Hierarchy Level
default-metric metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id stub], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id stub], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id stub], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id stub], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id stub], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id stub], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id stub], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id stub]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. On area border routers only, for a stub area, inject a default route with a specified metric value into the area. The default route matches any destination that is not explicitly reachable from within the area.
metricMetric value.
Range: 1 through 16,777,215 See Configuring a Stub Area on page 420. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. nssa, stub
default-metric
461
demand-circuit
Syntax Hierarchy Level
demand-circuit; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id sham-link-remote], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id sham-link-remote], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Configure an interface as a demand circuit. See Configuring an OSPF Demand Circuit Interface on page 425 and Configuring a Sham Link on page 449. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
462
demand-circuit
disable
See the following sections:
disable; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced in Release 7.5. Disable the Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) for OSPF. See Configuring Label Distribution Protocol Synchronization with the IGP on page 438. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
463
disable (OSPF)
Syntax Hierarchy Level
disable; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) virtual-link], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) virtual-link], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instances protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) virtual-link], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) virtual-link], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Disable OSPF, an OSPF interface, or an OSPF virtual link. The configured object is enabled (operational) unless explicitly disabled. See Minimum OSPF Configuration on page 418. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
464
disable (OSPF)
domain-id
Syntax Hierarchy Level
domain-id domain-id; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify a domain ID for a route. The domain ID identifies the OSPFv2 domain from which the route originated.
domain-idIP address.
Options
Default: If the router ID is not configured in the routing instance, the router ID is derived from an interface address belonging to the routing instance.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring an OSPF Domain ID on page 246. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
domain-vpn-tag
Syntax Hierarchy Level
domain-vpn-tag number; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Set a virtual private network (VPN) tag for OSPFv2 external routes generated by the provider edge (PE) router.
numberVPN tag.
See Configuring an OSPF Domain ID on page 246. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
domain-id
465
export
Syntax Hierarchy Level
export [ policy--names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Apply one or more policies to routes being exported from the routing table into OSPF.
policy-namesName of one or more policies.
See Configuring OSPF Routing Policy on page 445 and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
466
export
external-preference
Syntax Hierarchy Level
external-preference preference; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ip4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast } ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Set the route preference for OSPF external routes.
preferencePreference value.
See Configuring Route Preferences on page 433. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. preference
external-preference
467
graceful-restart
Syntax
graceful-restart { disable; helper-disable; notify-duration seconds; restart-duration seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure graceful restart for OSPF.
disableDisable graceful restart for OSPF. notify-duration secondsEstimated time to send out purged grace LSAs over all the
default.
Usage Guidelines
See Configuring Graceful Restart on page 439 and the JUNOS High Availability Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
468
graceful-restart
hello-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
hello-interval seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id peer-interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf area area-id peer-interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Specify how often the router sends hello packets out the interface. The hello interval must be the same for all routers on a shared logical IP network.
secondsTime between hello packets, in seconds.
Options
Range: 1 through 255 seconds Default: 10 seconds; 120 seconds (nonbroadcast networks)
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Modifying the Hello Interval on page 434. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. dead-interval
hello-interval
469
hold-time
Syntax Hierarchy Level
hold-time seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced in Release 7.5. Configure the time period to advertise the maximum cost metric for a link that is not fully operational.
secondsHold-time value.
Options
See Configuring Label Distribution Protocol Synchronization with the IGP on page 438. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
ignore-lsp-metrics
Syntax Hierarchy Level
ignore-lsp-metrics; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf traffic-engineering shortcuts], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf traffic-engineering shortcuts], [edit protocols ospf traffic-engineering shortcuts], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf traffic-engineering shortcuts]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 7.5. Ignore RSVP LSP metrics in OSPF traffic engineering shortcut calculations. See Enabling OSPF Traffic Engineering Support on page 443. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
470
hold-time
import
Syntax Hierarchy Level
import [ policy--names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Filter OSPF routes from being added to the routing table.
policy-namesName of one or more policies.
See Configuring OSPF Routing Policy on page 445 and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
import
471
inter-area-prefix-export
Syntax Hierarchy Level
inter-area-prefix-export [ policy-names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ip4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id [edit protocols ospf3 area area-id], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-muticast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.1. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Apply an export policy for OSPFv3 to specify which interarea prefix link-state advertisements (LSAs) are flooded into an area.
policy-nameName of a policy configured at the [edit policy-options policy-statement policy-name term term-name] hierarchy level.
Options
See Configuring Import and Export Policies for Network Summaries on page 446. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. inter-area-prefix-import,JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide
472
inter-area-prefix-export
inter-area-prefix-import
Syntax Hierarchy Level
inter-area-prefix-import [ policy-names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id], [edit protocols ospf3 area area-id], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ip4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.1. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Apply an import policy for OSPFv3 to specify which routes learned from an area are used to generate interarea prefixes into other areas.
policy-nameName of a policy configured at the [edit policy-options policy-statement policy-name term term-name] hierarchy level.
Options
See Configuring Import and Export Policies for Network Summaries on page 446. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. inter-area-prefix-export, JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide
inter-area-prefix-import
473
interface
Syntax
interface interface-name { disable; authentication key <key-id identifier>; bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; } dead-interval seconds; demand-circuit; hello-interval seconds; ipsec-sa name; interface-type type; ldp-synchronization { disable; hold-time seconds; } metric metric; neighbor address <eligible>; passive; poll-interval seconds; priority number; retransmit-interval seconds; te-metric metric; topology (ipv4-multicast | name) { metric metric; } transit-delay seconds; transmit-interval seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id]
Hierarchy Level
474
interface
Release Information
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the topology statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Enable OSPF routing on a router interface. You must include at least one interface statement in the configuration to enable OSPF on the router.
Description
Options
interface-nameName of the interface. To configure all interfaces, you can specify all. For details about specifying interfaces, see interface naming in the JUNOS
NOTE: For nonbroadcast interfaces, specify the IP address of the nonbroadcast interface as interface-name. The remaining statements are explained separately.
Usage Guidelines
See Minimum OSPF Configuration on page 418, Configuring an Interface on a Broadcast or Point-to-Point Network on page 423, Configuring Interface Properties for MT-OSPF on page 272, and Configuring Multiple Address Families for OSPFv3 on page 427. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. neighbor
interface
475
interface-type
Syntax Hierarchy Level
interface-type (nbma | p2mp | p2p); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the type of interface. By default, the software chooses the correct interface type based on the type of physical interface. Therefore, you should never have to set the interface type. The exception to this is for NBMA interfaces, which default to an interface type of point-to-multipoint. To have these interfaces explicitly run in NBMA mode, configure the nbma interface type, using the IP address of the local ATM interface. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.3, a point-to-point interface supports an Ethernet interface without a subnet. For more information about configuring interfaces, see the JUNOS Software Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
Default
The software chooses the correct interface type based on the type of physical interface.
nbmaNonbroadcast multiaccess (NBMA) interface. p2mpPoint-to-multipoint interface. p2pPoint-to-point interface.
Options
See Configuring an Interface on a Broadcast or Point-to-Point Network on page 423. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
476
interface-type
ipsec-sa
Syntax Hierarchy Level
ipsec-sa name; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id sham-link-remote address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id sham-link-remote address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name]
Release Information
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for OSPFv2 authentication added in JUNOS Release 8.3. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Apply IPsec authentication to an OSPF interface or virtual link or to an OSPFv2 remote sham link.
nameName of the IPsec authentication scheme.
Description
See Configuring Authentication for OSPFv2 on page 427 and Configuring Authentication for OSPFv3 on page 431. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. JUNOS System Basics Configuration Guide, JUNOS Services Interfaces Configuration Guide, and JUNOS Feature Guide
ipsec-sa
477
label-switched-path
Syntax Hierarchy Level
label-switched-path name metric metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id], [edit protocols ospf area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Advertise label-switched paths into OSPF as point-to-point links. The label-switched path is advertised in the appropriate OSPF levels as a point-to-point link and contains a local address and a remote address.
Options
See Advertising Label-Switched Paths into OSPF on page 442. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
478
label-switched-path
ldp-synchronization
Syntax
ldp-synchronization { disable; hold-time seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm ipv4-unicast area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm ipv4-unicast area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf3 realm ipv4-unicast area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm ipv4-unicast area area-id interface interface-name]
Hierarchy Level
Release Information
Statement introduced in Release 7.5. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Only the ipv4-unicast option is supported with this statement. Enable synchronization by advertising the maximum cost metric until LDP is operational on the link. The statements are explained separately. See Configuring Label Distribution Protocol Synchronization with the IGP on page 438. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
Description
ldp-synchronization
479
lsp-metric-into-summary
Syntax Hierarchy Level
lsp-metric-into-summary; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf traffic-engineering shortcuts], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf traffic-engineering shortcuts], [edit protocols ospf traffic-engineering shortcuts], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf traffic-engineering shortcuts]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Advertise the LSP metric in summary LSAs. See Enabling OSPF Traffic Engineering Support on page 443. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
480
lsp-metric-into-summary
md5
Syntax
md5 key-identifier { key key-values; start-time time; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name authentication], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link authentication], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name authentication], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link authentication], [edit protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name authentication], [edit protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link authentication], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name authentication], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link authentication]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure an MD5 authentication key (password).
key-idMD5 key identifier.
16 characters long. You can specify more than one key value within the list. Characters can include ASCII strings. If you include spaces, enclose all characters in quotation marks (" ").
timeMD5 start time.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring Authentication for OSPFv2 on page 427. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
md5
481
metric
Syntax Hierarchy Level
metric metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name topology (ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id sham-link-remote], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name topology (ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name topology (ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id sham-link-remote], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name topology (ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name]
Release Information
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for Multitopology Routing introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Specify the cost of an OSPF interface. The cost is a routing metric that is used in the link-state calculation. To set the cost of routes exported into OSPF, configure the appropriate routing policy.
Description
Options
See Modifying the Interface Metric on page 433, Configuring a Sham Link on page 449 and Configuring Interface Properties for MT-OSPF on page 272. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
482
metric
metric-type
Syntax Hierarchy Level
metric-type type; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)] area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)] area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)] area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit routing-instances routing-instances protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)] area area-id nssa default-lsa]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Specify the external metric type for the default LSA.
typeMetric type.
Range: 1 or 2 See Configuring a Not-So-Stubby Area on page 420. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
metric-type
483
neighbor
Syntax Hierarchy Level
neighbor address <eligible>; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. For nonbroadcast interfaces only, specify neighboring routers. On a nonbroadcast interface, you must specify neighbors explicitly because OSPF does not send broadcast packets to dynamically discover their neighbors. To specify multiple neighbors, include multiple neighbor statements.
addressIP address of a neighboring router. eligible(Optional) Allow the neighbor to become a designated router.
Options
Default: If you omit this option, the neighbor is not considered eligible to become a designated router.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring an Interface on a Nonbroadcast, Multiaccess Network on page 424. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
484
neighbor
network-summary-export
Syntax Hierarchy Level
network-summary-export policy-name; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id], [edit protocols ospf area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.1. Apply an export policy that specifies which network-summary link-state advertisements (LSAs) are flooded into an OSPFv2 area.
policy-nameName of a policy configured at the [edit policy-options policy-statement policy-name term term-name] hierarchy level.
Options
See Configuring Import and Export Policies for Network Summaries on page 446. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide
network-summary-import
Syntax Hierarchy Level
network-summary-import policy-name; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id], [edit protocols ospf area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.1. Apply an import policy to specify which routes learned from an OSPFv2 area are used to generate network-summary LSAs to other areas.
policy-nameName of a policy configured at the [edit policy-options policy-statement policy-name term term-name] hierarchy level.
Options
See Configuring Import and Export Policies for Network Summaries on page 446. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide
network-summary-export
485
no-nssa-abr
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-nssa-abr; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 7.6. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Disable exporting Type 7 LSAs into NSSAs for an autonomous system border router (ASBR) area border router (ABR). See Disabling NSSA Support on an ASBR ABR on page 422. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
486
no-nssa-abr
no-rfc-1583
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-rfc-1583; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.5. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Disable compatibility with RFC 1583, OSPF Version 2. If the same external destination is advertised by AS boundary routers that belong to different OSPF areas, disabling compatibility with RFC 1583 can prevent routing loops. Compatibility with RFC 1583 is enabled by default. See Disabling Compatibility with RFC 1583 on page 423 routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-control-levelTo add this statement to the configuration.
no-summaries
See
summaries
no-rfc-1583
487
nssa
Syntax
nssa { area-range network/mask-length <restrict> <exact> <override-metric metric>; default-lsa { default-metric metric; metric-type type; type-7; } (no-summaries | summaries); } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Configure a not-so-stubby area (NSSA). An NSSA allows external routes to be flooded within the area. These routes are then leaked into other areas. You cannot configure an area as being both a stub area and an NSSA.
The statements are explained separately in this chapter. See Configuring a Not-So-Stubby Area on page 420. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. stub
488
nssa
ospf
Syntax Hierarchy Level
ospf { ... } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols], [edit protocols], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable OSPF routing on the router. You must include the ospf statement to enable OSPF on the router.
OSPF is disabled on the router. See Minimum OSPF Configuration on page 418. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
ospf3
Syntax Hierarchy Level
ospf3 { ... } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols], [edit protocols], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable OSPFv3 routing on the router. You must include the ospf statement to enable OSPFv3.
OSPFv3 is disabled. See Minimum OSPF Configuration on page 418. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
ospf
489
overload
Syntax
overload { timeout seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)] [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)],
Hierarchy Level
Release Information
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for Multitopology Routing introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Configure the local router so that it appears to be overloaded. You might do this when you want the router to participate in OSPF routing, but do not want it to be used for transit traffic. Note that traffic destined to immediately attached interfaces continues to reach the router.
timeout seconds(Optional) Number of seconds at which the overloading is reset. If
Description
Options
no timeout interval is specified, the router will remain in overload state until the overload statement is deleted or a timeout is set. Range: 60 through 1800 seconds Default: 0 seconds
Usage Guidelines
See Configuring the Router to Appear Overloaded on page 442 and Configuring a Topology to Appear Overloaded on page 272. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
490
overload
passive
Syntax
passive { traffic-engineering { remote-node-id address; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name]
Hierarchy Level
Release Information
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. traffic-engineering and remote-node-id address statements introduced in JUNOS Release 8.0. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Advertise the direct interface addresses on an interface without actually running OSPF on that interface. A passive interface is one for which the address information is advertised as an internal route in OSPF, but on which the protocol does not run. To configure an interface in OSPF passive traffic engineering mode, include the traffic-engineering statement. Configuring OSPF passive traffic engineering mode enables the dynamic discovery of OSPF AS boundary routers. Enable OSPF on an interface by including the interface statement at the [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id] or the [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id] hierarchy levels. Disable it by including the disable statement, To prevent OSPF from running on an interface, include the passive statement. These three states are mutually exclusive.
Description
Usage Guidelines
See Advertising Interface Addresses Without Running OSPF on page 440 and Configuring OSPF Passive Traffic Engineering Mode on page 441. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
passive
491
peer-interface
Syntax
peer-interface interface-name { disable; dead-interval seconds; hello-interval seconds; retransmit-interval seconds; transit-delay seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id], [edit protocols ospf area area-id]
Hierarchy Level
See Configuring a Peer Interface on page 449. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
492
peer-interface
poll-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
poll-interval seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. For nonbroadcast interfaces only, specify how often the router sends hello packets out of the interface before it establishes adjacency with a neighbor.
secondsFrequency at which to send hello packets.
Options
See Configuring an Interface on a Nonbroadcast, Multiaccess Network on page 424. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
poll-interval
493
preference
Syntax Hierarchy Level
preference preference; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Set the route preference for OSPF internal routes.
preferencePreference value.
See Configuring Route Preferences on page 433. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. external-preference
494
preference
prefix-export-limit
Syntax Hierarchy Level
prefix-export-limit number; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)]
Release Information
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for Multitopology Routing introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Configure a limit to the number of prefixes exported into OSPF.
numberPrefix limit.
Description Options
See Configuring a Prefix Export Limit on page 431 and Configuring a Prefix Export Limit for MT-OSPF on page 272. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
prefix-export-limit
495
priority
Syntax Hierarchy Level
priority number; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)] area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)] area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)] area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)] area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Specify the routers priority for becoming the designated router. The router that has the highest priority value on the logical IP network or subnet becomes the networks designated router. You must configure at least one router on each logical IP network or subnet to be the designated router. You also should specify a routers priority for becoming the designated router on point-to-point interfaces.
numberRouters priority for becoming the designed router. A priority value of 0
Options
means that the router never will become the designated router. A value of 1 means that the router has the least chance of becoming a designated router. Range: 0 through 255 Default: 128
Usage Guidelines
See Designated Router on page 411 and Configuring the Priority for Becoming the Designated Router on page 432. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
496
priority
realm
Syntax
realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-unicast) { area area-id { interface interface-name; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3], [edit protocols ospf3], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Configure OSPFv3 to advertise address families other than unicast IPv6. The JUNOS software maps each address family you configure to a separate realm with its own set of neighbors and link-state database.
ipv4-unicastConfigure a realm for IPv4 unicast routes. ipv4-multicastConfigure a realm for IPv4 multicast routes. ipv6-multicastConfigure a realm for IPv6 multicast routes.
Options
See Configuring Multiple Address Families for OSPFv3 on page 427. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
realm
497
reference-bandwidth
Syntax Hierarchy Level
reference-bandwidth reference-bandwidth; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Set the reference bandwidth used in calculating the default interface cost. The cost is calculated using the following formula:
cost = ref-bandwidth/bandwidth
See Modifying the Interface Metric on page 433. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
498
reference-bandwidth
retransmit-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
retransmit-interval seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id peer-interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf area area-id peer-interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Specify how long the router waits to receive a link-state acknowledgment packet before retransmitting link-state advertisements to an interfaces neighbors.
secondsInterval to wait.
Options
NOTE: You must configure LSA retransmit intervals to be equal to or greater than 3 seconds to avoid triggering a retransmit trap, because the JUNOS software delays LSA acknowledgments by up to 2 seconds.
See Controlling the LSA Retransmission Interval on page 435. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
retransmit-interval
499
rib-group
Syntax Hierarchy Level
rib-group group-name; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Install routes learned from OSPF routing instances into routing tables in the OSPF routing table group.
group-nameName of the routing table group.
See Creating Routing Table Groups on page 104, Configuring How Interface Routes Are Imported into Routing Tables on page 106, and Configuring BGP Routing Table Groups on page 686. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. interface-routes, rib-group
500
rib-group
route-type-community
Syntax Hierarchy Level
route-type-community (iana | vendor); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify an extended community value to encode the OSPF route type. Each extended community is coded as an eight-octet value. This statement sets the most significant bit to either an IANA or vendor-specific route type.
ianaEncode a route type with the value 0x0306. This is the default value. vendorEncode the route type with the value 0x8000.
Options
See Configuring an OSPF Domain ID on page 246. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
secondary
Syntax Hierarchy Level
secondary; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Configure an interface to belong to another OSPF area. A logical interface can be configured as primary interface only for one area. For any other area for which you configure the interface, you must configure it as a secondary interface. See Configuring Multiarea Adjacency in OSPFv2 on page 426. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. interface
route-type-community
501
sham-link
Syntax
sham-link { local address; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the local endpoint of a sham link.
local addressLocal endpoint address.
See Configuring a Sham Link on page 449. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration
sham-link-remote
Syntax
sham-link-remote address { demand-circuit; ipsec-sa name; metric metric; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for ipsec-sa statement added in JUNOS Release 8.3. Configure the remote endpoint of a sham link. The statements are explained separately. See Configuring a Sham Link on page 449 and Configuring Authentication for OSPFv2 on page 427. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
502
sham-link
shortcuts
Syntax Hierarchy Level
shortcuts; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf traffic-engineering], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf traffic-engineering], [edit protocols ospf traffic-engineering], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf traffic-engineering]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure OSPFv2 to use MPLS label-switched paths (LSPs) as next hops if possible when installing routing information into the inet.3 routing table. See Enabling OSPF Traffic Engineering Support on page 443. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
simple-password
Syntax Hierarchy Level
simple-password key; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name authentication], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link authentication], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name authentication], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link authentication], [edit protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name authentication], [edit protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link authentication], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name authentication], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link authentication]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure a simple authentication key (password).
key-idSimple key identifier.
See Configuring Authentication for OSPFv2 on page 427. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
shortcuts
503
spf-options
Syntax
spf-options { delay milliseconds; holddown milliseconds; rapid-runs number; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf topology (default | ipv4-multicast | name)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)]
Hierarchy Level
Release Information
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.5. Support for Multitopology Routing introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Configure options for running the shortest-path-first (SPF) algorithm. You can configure a delay for when to run the SPF algorithm after a network topology change is detected, the maximum number of times the SPF algorithm can run in succession, and a hold-down interval after the SPF algorithm runs the maximum number of times.
delay millisecondsTime interval between the detection of a topology change and
Description
Options
when the SPF algorithm runs. Range: 50 through 8000 milliseconds Default: 200 milliseconds
holddown millisecondsTime interval to hold down, or wait before a subsequent SPF
algorithm runs after the SPF algorithm has run the configured maximum number of times in succession. Range: 2000 through 20,000 milliseconds Default: 5000 milliseconds
rapid-runs numberMaximum number of times the SPF algorithm can run in
succession. After the maximum is reached, the holddown interval begins. Range: 1 through 5
504
spf-options
Default: 3
Usage Guidelines
See Configuring SPF Options for OSPF on page 439 and Configuring Topologies and SPF Options for MT-OSPF on page 270. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
stub
Syntax Hierarchy Level
stub <default-metric metric> <(no-summaries | summaries)>; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Specify that this area not be flooded with AS external link-state advertisements. You must include the stub statement when configuring all routers that are in the stub area. The backbone cannot be configured as a stub area. You cannot configure an area as being both a stub area and an NSSA.
Options
into the area. The default route matches any destination that is not explicitly reachable from within the area. Range: 1 through 16,777,215
no-summaries(Optional) Do not advertise routes into the stub area. If you include the default-metric option, only the default route is advertised. summaries(Optional) Flood summary LSAs into the stub area.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Configuring a Stub Area on page 420. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. nssa
stub
505
summaries
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(summaries | no-summaries); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)] area area-id nssa], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Configure whether area border routers advertise summary routes into an NSSA:
summariesFlood summary LSAs into the NSSA. no-summariesPrevent area border routers from advertising summaries into an NSSA. If default-metric is configured for an NSSA, a Type 3 LSA is injected into the area by default.
See Configuring a Not-So-Stubby Area on page 420. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. nssa, stub
506
summaries
te-metric
Syntax Hierarchy Level
te-metric metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Metric value used by traffic engineering for information injected into the traffic engineering database. The value of the traffic engineering metric does not affect normal OSPF forwarding.
metricMetric value.
Options
See Modifying the Traffic Engineering Metric on page 445. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
te-metric
507
traceoptions
Syntax
traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Configure OSPF protocol-level tracing options. To specify more than one tracing operation, include multiple flag statements.
Default
The default OSPF protocol-level tracing options are those inherited from the routing protocols traceoptions statement included at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level.
disable(Optional) Disable the tracing operation. You can use this option to disable
Options
a single operation when you have defined a broad group of tracing operations, such as all.
file filenameName of the file to receive the output of the tracing operation. Enclose the name within quotation marks. All files are placed in the directory /var/log. We recommend that you place OSPF tracing output in the file ospf-log. files number(Optional) Maximum number of trace files. When a trace file named trace-file reaches its maximum size, it is renamed trace-file.0, then trace-file.1,
and so on, until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum number of files, you also must specify a maximum file size with the size option. Range: 2 through 1000 files Default: 10 files
flagTracing operation to perform. To specify more than one tracing operation, include multiple flag statements.
508
traceoptions
errorOSPF and OSPFv3 error packets. eventOSPF and OSPFv3 state transitions. floodingLink-state flooding packets. graceful-restartGraceful-restart events. helloHello packets, which are used to establish neighbor adjacencies and to
lsa-updateLink-state updates packets, which are used in synchronizing the OSPF topological database. packetsAll OSPF packets. packet-dumpDump the contents of selected packet types. spfShortest-path-first (SPF) calculations.
allAll tracing operations. generalA combination of the normal and route trace operations. normalAll normal operations.
Default: If you do not specify this option, only unusual or abnormal operations are traced.
policyPolicy operations and actions. routeRouting table changes. stateState transitions. taskInterface transactions and processing. timerTimer usage.
flag-modifier(Optional) Modifier for the tracing flag. You can specify one or more
of these modifiers:
traceoptions
509
detailProvide detailed trace information. receivePackets being received. sendPackets being transmitted.
no-world-readable(Optional) Prevent any user from reading the log file. size size(Optional) Maximum size of each trace file, in kilobytes (KB), megabytes (MB), or gigabytes (GB). When a trace file named trace-file reaches this size, it is renamed trace-file.0. When the trace-file again reaches its maximum size, trace-file.0 is renamed trace-file.1 and trace-file is renamed trace-file.0. This
renaming scheme continues until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum file size, you also must specify a maximum number of trace files with the files option. Syntax: xk to specify KB, xm to specify MB, or xg to specify GB Range: 10 KB through the maximum file size supported on your system Default: 128 KB
world-readable(Optional) Allow any user to read the log file.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Tracing OSPF Protocol Traffic on page 450. routing and traceTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-control and trace-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
510
traceoptions
traffic-engineering
See the following sections:
traceoptions
511
traffic-engineering (OSPF)
Syntax
traffic-engineering { advertise-unnumbered-interfaces; multicast-rpf-routes; no-topology; shortcuts { ignore-lsp-metrics; lsp-metric-into-summary; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf], [edit protocols ospf], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf]
Hierarchy Level
Release Information
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. multicast-rpf-routes option introduced in JUNOS Release 7.5. advertise-unnumbered-interfaces option introduced in JUNOS Release 8.5. Enable the OSPF traffic engineering features. Traffic engineering support is disabled.
advertise-unnumbered-interfaces(Optional) Include the link-local identifier in the
link-local TE link-state advertisement. You do not need to include this statement if the Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) is able to signal unnumbered interfaces as defined in RFC 3477.
multicast-rpf-routes(Optional) Install routes for multicast RPF checks into the inet.2
routing table.
no-topology(Optional) Disable the dissemination of the link-state topology
information.
shortcuts(Optional) Use label-switched paths as next hops, if label-switched paths
See Enabling OSPF Traffic Engineering Support on page 443. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
512
traffic-engineering (OSPF)
traffic-engineering { remote-note-id address; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name passive], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name passive], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name passive], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name passive], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name passive], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name passive], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name passive], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name passive]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.0. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Configure an interface in OSPF passive traffic engineering mode to enable dynamic discovery of OSPF AS boundary routers. OSPF passive TE mode is disabled.
remote-node-id addressThe IP address at the far end of the inter-AS link.
See Configuring OSPF Passive Traffic Engineering Mode on page 441. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide
513
transit-delay
Syntax Hierarchy Level
transit-delay seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf area area-id peer-interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols ospf area area-id peer-interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id virtual-link], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast)] area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id virtual-link], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Set the estimated time required to transmit a link-state update on the interface. When calculating this time, make sure to account for transmission and propagation delays. You should never have to modify the transit delay time.
Options
See Specifying the Transit Delay on page 436. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
514
transit-delay
transmit-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
transmit-interval milliseconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Set the interval at which OSPF packets are transmitted on an interface.
millisecondsTransmission interval, in milliseconds.
See Controlling the LSA Retransmission Interval on page 435. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
transmit-interval
515
type-7
Syntax Hierarchy Level
type-7; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id nssa default-lsa], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf3 realm (ipv4-unicast | ipv4-multicast | ipv6-multicast) area area-id nssa default-lsa]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for the realm statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Flood Type 7 default LSAs if the no-summaries statement is configured. By default, when the no-summaries statement is configured, a Type 3 LSA is injected into NSSA areas for JUNOS Release 5.0 and later. To support backward compatibility with earlier JUNOS releases, include the type-7 statement. This statement enables NSSA ABRs to advertise a Type 7 default LSA into the NSSA if you have also included the no-summaries statement in the configuration.
See Configuring a Not-So-Stubby Area on page 420. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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type-7
virtual-link
Syntax
virtual-link neighbor-id router-id transit-area area-id { disable; authentication key <key-id identifier>; dead-interval seconds; hello-interval seconds; ipsec-sa name; retransmit-interval seconds; transit-delay seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id], [edit protocols (ospf | ospf3) area area-id], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ospf area area-id]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. For backbones only, create a virtual link to use in place of an actual physical link. All area border routers and other routers on the backbone must be contiguous. If this is not possible and there is a break in OSPF connectivity, use virtual links to create connectivity to the OSPF backbone. When configuring virtual links, you must configure links on the two routers that form the end points of the link, and both these two routers must be area border routers. You cannot configure links through stub areas.
neighbor-id router-idIP address of the router at the remote end of the virtual link. transit-area area-idArea identifier of the area through which the virtual link transits.
Options
Virtual links are not allowed to transit the backbone area. The remaining statements are explained separately.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring an OSPF Virtual Link on page 421. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
virtual-link
517
518
virtual-link
Chapter 23
RIP Overview
The Routing Information Protocol (RIP) is an interior gateway protocol (IGP) that uses a distance-vector algorithm to determine the best route to a destination, using the hop count as the metric. This chapter discusses the following topics that provide background information about RIP:
RIP Overview on page 519 RIP Standards on page 520 RIP Packets on page 520
RIP Overview
The RIP IGP uses the Bellman-Ford, or distance-vector, algorithm to determine the best route to a destination. RIP uses the hop count as the metric. RIP allows hosts and routers to exchange information for computing routes through an IP-based network. RIP is intended to be used as an IGP in reasonably homogeneous networks of moderate size. The JUNOS software supports RIP versions 1 and 2.
NOTE: RIP is not supported for multipoint interfaces. RIP version 1 packets contain the minimal information necessary to route packets through a network. However, this version of RIP does not support authentication or subnetting. RIP uses User Datagram Protocol (UDP) port 520. RIP has the following architectural limitations:
The longest network path cannot exceed 15 hops (assuming that each network, or hop, has a cost of 1). RIP depends on counting to infinity to resolve certain unusual situationsWhen the network consists of several hundred routers, and when a routing loop has formed, the amount of time and network bandwidth required to resolve a next hop might be great.
RIP Overview
519
RIP uses only a fixed metric to select a route. Other IGPs use additional parameters, such as measured delay, reliability, and load.
RIP Standards
RIP is defined in the following documents:
RFC 1058, Routing Information Protocol RFC 2082, RIP-2 MD-5 Authentication RFC 2453, RIP Version 2
To access Internet Requests for Comments (RFCs) and drafts, go to the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Web site at http://www.ietf.org.
RIP Packets
RIP packets contain the following fields:
CommandIndicates whether the packet is a request or response message. Request messages seek information for the routers routing table. Response messages are sent periodically and also when a request message is received. Periodic response messages are called update messages. Update messages contain the command and version fields and 25 destinations (by default), each of which includes the destination IP address and the metric to reach that destination. Version numberVersion of RIP that the originating router is running. Address family identifierAddress family used by the originating router. The family is always IP. AddressIP address included in the packet. MetricValue of the metric advertised for the address. MaskMask associated with the IP address (RIP version 2 only). Next hopIP address of the next-hop router (RIP version 2 only).
520
RIP Standards
Chapter 24
521
metric-out metric; preference number; route-timeout seconds; update-interval seconds; neighbor neighbor-name { authentication-key password; authentication-type type; bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; multiplier number; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); } (check-zero | no-check-zero); import [ policy-names ]; message-size number; metric-in metric; metric-out metric; receive receive-options; route-timeout seconds; send send-options; update-interval seconds; } } } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. By default, RIP is disabled. To have a router exchange routes with other routers, you must configure RIP groups and neighbors. RIP routes received from routers not configured as RIP neighbors are ignored. Likewise, RIP routes are advertised only to routers configured as RIP neighbors, with an appropriate RIP export policy applied. This chapter discusses the following topics:
Minimum RIP Configuration on page 523 Defining RIP Global Properties on page 523 Defining RIP Neighbor Properties on page 524 Configuring Authentication on page 524 Modifying the Incoming Metric on page 525 Configuring RIP Timers on page 525 Configuring the Number of Route Entries in an Update Message on page 526
522
Accepting Packets Whose Reserved Fields Are Nonzero on page 526 Configuring Update Messages on page 527 Configuring Routing Table Groups on page 527 Applying Import Policy on page 527 Configuring Group-Specific Properties on page 527 Configuring Graceful Restart on page 529 Configuring the BFD Protocol on page 530 Disabling Strict Address Check on page 532 Tracing RIP Protocol Traffic on page 532 Example: Configuring RIP on page 533
NOTE: When you configure RIP on an interface, you must also include the family inet statement at the [edit interfaces interface-name unit logical-unit-number] hierarchy level. For more information about the family inet statement, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
523
message-size number; metric-in metric; receive receive-options; rib-group group-name; send send-options;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
Configuring Authentication
You can configure the router to authenticate RIP route queries. By default, authentication is disabled. You can use the following authentication method:
Simple authenticationUses a text password that is included in the transmitted packet. The receiving router uses an authentication key (password) to verify the packet. MD5 authenticationCreates an encoded checksum that is included in the transmitted packet. The receiving router uses an authentication key (password) to verify the packets MD5 checksum.
524
To enable authentication and specify an authentication method and password, include the authentication-key and authentication-type statements:
authentication-key password; authentication-type type;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. The password can be up to 16 contiguous characters and can include any ASCII strings.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You can set a route timeout interval. If a route is not refreshed after being installed into the routing table by the specified time interval, the route is removed from the routing table. To configure the route timeout for RIP, include the route-timeout statement:
525
route-timeout seconds; seconds can be a value from 30 through 360. The default value is 180 seconds.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You can set an update time interval to periodically send out routes learned by RIP to neighbors. To configure the update time interval, include the update-interval statement:
update-interval seconds; seconds can be a value from 10 through 60. The default value is 30 seconds.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement
NOTE: To ensure interoperability with routers from other vendors, do not change the default number of route entries in a RIP update message.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
526
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. For more information about creating policies, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
527
bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; version (0 | 1 | automatic); } export [ policy-names ]; preference number; metric-out metric; neighbor neighbor-options; }
Applying Export Policy on page 528 Controlling Route Preference on page 529 Modifying the Outgoing Metric on page 529
To configure export policy globally for all RIP neighbors, include the export statement. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You can define one or more export policies. If no routes match the policies, the local router does not export any routes to its neighbors. Export policies override any metric values determined through calculations involving the metric-in and metric-out values.
NOTE: The export policy on RIP does not support manipulating routing information of the next hop. For more information about creating policies, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
528
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
preference can be a value from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1).
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
529
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To disable graceful restart for RIP, specify the disable statement. To configure a time period for the restart to finish, specify the restart-time statement.
NOTE: To enable BFD for RIP, both sides of the connection must receive an update message from the peer. By default, RIP does not export any routes. Therefore you must enable update messages to be sent by configuring an export policy for routes before a BFD session is triggered. To enable failure detection, include the bfd-liveness-detection statement:
bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; multiplier number; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } version (1 | automatic); }
To specify the threshold for the adaptation of the detection time, include the threshold statement:
detection-time { threshold milliseconds; }
When the BFD session detection time adapts to a value equal to or higher than the threshold, a single trap and a system log message are sent. To specify the minimum transmit and receive interval for failure detection, include the minimum-interval statement:
530
minimum-interval milliseconds;
This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router transmits hello packets as well as the minimum interval at which the router expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. You can configure a value in the range from 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. You can also specify the minimum transmit and receive intervals separately.
NOTE: Specifying an interval less than 300 ms can cause undesired BFD flapping. To specify only the minimum receive intervals for failure detection, include the minimum-receive-interval statement:
minimum-receive-interval milliseconds;
This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. You can configure a value in the range from 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. To specify the number of hello packets not received by a neighbor that causes the originating interface to be declared down, include the multiplier statement:
multiplier number;
The default is 3, and you can configure a value in the range from 1 through 255. To specify only the minimum transmit interval for failure detection, include the minimum-interval statement:
transmit-interval { minimum-interval milliseconds; }
This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router transmits hello packets to the neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. You can configure a value in the range from 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. To specify the threshold for detecting the adaptation of the transmit interval, include the threshold statement:
transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; }
The threshold value must be greater than the transmit interval. To specify the BFD version used for detection, include the version statement:
version (1 | automatic);
531
Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.0, you can configure BFD sessions not to adapt to changing network conditions. To disable BFD adaptation, include the no-adaptation statement:
no-adaptation;
NOTE: We recommend that you not disable BFD adaptation unless it is preferable not to have BFD adaptation enabled in your network. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You can specify the following RIP-specific options in the RIP traceoptions statement:
authTrace RIP authentication. errorTrace RIP errors. expirationTrace RIP route expiration processing.
532
holddownTrace RIP hold-down processing. packetsTrace all RIP packets. requestTrace RIP information packets. triggerTrace RIP triggered updates. updateTrace RIP update packets.
NOTE: Use the trace flags detail and all with caution. These flags may cause the CPU to become very busy.
For general information about tracing and global tracing options, see Tracing Global Routing Protocol Operations on page 119.
533
} } at-1/1/0 { unit 0 { family inet; } } at-1/1/0 { unit 42 { family inet; } } at-1/1/1 { unit 42 { family inet; } } } policy-statement redist-direct { from protocol direct; then accept; } [edit protocols rip] metric-in 3; receive both; group wan { metric-out 2; export redist-direct; neighbor so-0/0/0.0; neighbor at-1/1/0.0; neighbor at-1/1/0.42; neighbor at-1/1/1.42 { receive version-2; } } group local { neighbor ge-2/3/0.0 { metric-in 1; send broadcast; } }
534
Chapter 25
any-sender
Syntax Hierarchy Level
any-sender; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.0. Disable strict sender address checks. See Disabling Strict Address Check on page 532. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
any-sender
535
authentication-key
Syntax Hierarchy Level
authentication-key password; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols rip], [edit protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Require authentication for RIP route queries received on an interface.
passwordAuthentication password. If the password does not match, the packet is
rejected. The password can be from 1 through 16 contiguous characters long and can include any ASCII strings.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring Authentication on page 524. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
536
authentication-key
authentication-type
Syntax Hierarchy Level
authentication-type type; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols rip], [edit protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the type of authentication for RIP route queries received on an interface. If you do not include this statement and the authentication-key statement, RIP authentication is disabled.
typeAuthentication type:
Options
md5Use the MD5 algorithm to create an encoded checksum of the packet. The encoded checksum is included in the transmitted packet. The receiving router uses the authentication key to verify the packet, discarding it if the digest does not match. This algorithm provides a more secure authentication scheme. noneDisable authentication. If none is configured, the configured authentication
key is ignored.
packet, which makes this method of authentication relatively insecure. The password can be from 1 through 16 contiguous letters or digits long.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Configuring Authentication on page 524. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. authentication-key
authentication-type
537
bfd-liveness-detection
Syntax
bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; no-adaptation; version (1 | automatic); } [edit protocols rip group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name] [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Hierarchy Level
Release Information
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.0. detection-time threshold and transmit-interval threshold options introduced in JUNOS Release 8.2. Support for logical routers introduced in JUNOS Release 8.3. no-adaptation statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure bidirectional failure detection timers.
detection-time threshold millisecondsConfigure a threshold. When the BFD session
Description Options
detection time adapts to a value equal to or greater than the threshold, a single trap and a single system log message are sent.
minimum-interval millisecondsConfigure the minimum intervals at which the local
router transmits a hello packet and then expects to receive a reply from the neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. Range: 1 through 255,000 milliseconds
minimum-receive-interval millisecondsConfigure only the minimum interval at which
the local router expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. Range: 1 through 255,000 milliseconds
multiplier numberConfigure the number of hello packets not received by a neighbor
that causes the originating interface to be declared down. Range: 1 through 255 Default: 3
538
bfd-liveness-detection
We recommend that you not disable BFD adaptation unless it is preferable not to have BFD adaptation enabled in your network.
transmit-interval threshold millisecondsConfigure a threshold. When the BFD session
transmit interval adapts to a value greater than the threshold, a single trap and a single system log message are sent. The interval threshold must be greater than the minimum transmit interval. Range: 0 through 4,294,967,295
transmit-interval minimum-interval millisecondsConfigure only a minimum interval
at which the local router transmits hello packets to a neighbor. Range: 1 through 255,000
versionSpecify the BFD version to detect. Range: (BFD version 1), or automatic (autodetect the version) Default: automatic
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring the BFD Protocol on page 530. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
bfd-liveness-detection
539
check-zero
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(check-zero | no-check-zero); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols rip], [edit protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Check whether the reserved fields in a RIP packet are zero:
fields and version 2 packets that have nonzero values in the fields that must be zero. This default behavior implements the RIP version 1 and version 2 specifications.
fields or RIP version 2 packets with nonzero values in the fields that must be zero. This is in spite of the fact that they are being sent in violation of the specifications in RFC 1058 and RFC 2453.
Default Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
check-zero
See Accepting Packets Whose Reserved Fields Are Nonzero on page 526. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
540
check-zero
export
Syntax Hierarchy Level
export [ policy-names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name], [edit protocols rip group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Apply a policy to routes being exported to the neighbors.
policy-namesName of one or more policies.
See Applying Export Policy on page 528 and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. import
graceful-restart
Syntax
graceful-restart { disable; restart-time seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit protocols rip]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure graceful restart for RIP.
disableDisables graceful restart for RIP. secondsEstimated time for the restart to finish, in seconds.
See Configuring Graceful Restart on page 113 and Configuring Graceful Restart on page 529. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
export
541
group
Syntax
group group-name { bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; version (0 | 1 | automatic); } preference number; metric-out metric; export policy; route-timeout seconds; update-interval seconds; neighbor neighbor-name { authentication-key password; authentication-type type; bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; version (0 | 1 | automatic); } (check-zero | no-check-zero); import policy-name; number; metric-in metric; metric-out metric; receive receive-options; route-timeout seconds; send send-options; update-interval seconds; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip],
Hierarchy Level
542
group
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure a set of RIP neighbors that share an export policy and metric. The export policy and metric govern what routes to advertise to neighbors in a given group.
group-nameName of a group, up to 16 characters long.
Options
See Configuring Group-Specific Properties on page 527. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
holddown
Syntax Hierarchy Level
holddown seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit protocols rip], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the time period the expired route is retained in the routing table before being removed.
secondsEstimated time to wait before making updates to the routing table.
Options
See Configuring RIP Timers on page 525. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
holddown
543
import
Syntax Hierarchy Level
import [ policy-names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols rip], [edit protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Apply one or more policies to routes being imported into the local router from the neighbors.
policy-namesName of one or more policies.
See Applying Import Policy on page 527 and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. export
544
import
message-size
Syntax Hierarchy Level
message-size number; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols rip], [edit protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Number of route entries to be included in every RIP update message. To ensure interoperability with other vendors equipment, use the standard of 25 route entries per message.
numberNumber of route entries per update message.
Options
See Configuring the Number of Route Entries in an Update Message on page 526. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
message-size
545
metric-in
Syntax Hierarchy Level
metric-in metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols rip], [edit protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Metric to add to incoming routes when advertising into RIP routes that were learned from other protocols. Use this statement to configure the router to prefer RIP routes learned through a specific neighbor.
metricMetric value.
Options
See Modifying the Incoming Metric on page 525. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
546
metric-in
metric-out
Syntax Hierarchy Level
metric-out metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Metric value to add to routes transmitted to the neighbor. Use this statement to control how other routers prefer RIP routes sent from this neighbor.
metricMetric value.
Options
See Modifying the Outgoing Metric on page 529. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
metric-out
547
neighbor
Syntax
neighbor neighbor-name { authentication-key password; authentication-type type; bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; version (0 | 1 | automatic); } (check-zero | no-check-zero); import policy-name; message-size number; metric-in metric; metric-out metric; receive receive-options; route-timeout seconds; send send-options; update-interval seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name], [edit protocols rip group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure neighbor-specific RIP parameters, thereby overriding the defaults set for the router.
neighbor-nameName of an interface over which a router communicates to its
Options
See Defining RIP Neighbor Properties on page 524. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
548
neighbor
no-check-zero
See
check-zero
preference
Syntax Hierarchy Level
preference preference; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name], [edit protocols rip group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Preference of external routes learned by RIP as compared to those learned from other routing protocols.
preferencePreference value. A lower value indicates a more preferred route.
Options
See Controlling Route Preference on page 529. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
no-check-zero
549
receive
Syntax Hierarchy Level
receive receive-options; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols rip], [edit protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure RIP receive options.
receive-optionsOne of the following:
bothAccept both RIP version 1 and version 2 packets. noneDo not receive RIP packets. version-1Accept only RIP version 1 packets. version-2Accept only RIP version 2 packets.
Default: both
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Configuring Update Messages on page 527. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. send
550
receive
rib-group
Syntax Hierarchy Level
rib-group group-name; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit protocols rip], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Install RIP routes into multiple routing tables by configuring a routing table group.
group-nameName of the routing table group.
See Configuring Routing Table Groups on page 527. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
rip
Syntax Hierarchy Level
rip {...} [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols], [edit protocols], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable RIP routing on the router. RIP is disabled on the router. See Minimum RIP Configuration on page 523. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
rib-group
551
route-timeout
Syntax Hierarchy Level
route-timeout seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit protocols rip], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name], [edit protocols rip group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 7.6. Configure the route timeout interval for RIP.
secondsEstimated time to wait before making updates to the routing table.
See Configuring RIP Timers on page 525. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
552
route-timeout
send
Syntax Hierarchy Level
send send-options; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols rip], [edit protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure RIP send options.
send-optionsOne of the following:
broadcastBroadcast RIP version 2 packets (RIP version 1 compatible). multicastMulticast RIP version 2 packets. This is the default. noneDo not send RIP updates. version-1Broadcast RIP version 1 packets.
Default: multicast
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Configuring Update Messages on page 527. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. receive
send
553
traceoptions
Syntax
traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit protocols rip], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Set RIP protocol-level tracing options. The default RIP protocol-level trace options are inherited from the global traceoptions statement.
disable(Optional) Disable the tracing operation. One use of this option is to disable
Options
a single operation when you have defined a broad group of tracing operations, such as all.
file filenameName of the file to receive the output of the tracing operation. Enclose
the name in quotation marks. We recommend that you place RIP tracing output in the file /var/log/rip-log.
files number(Optional) Maximum number of trace files. When a trace file named trace-file reaches its maximum size, it is renamed trace-file.0, then trace-file.1,
and so on, until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum number of files, you must also specify a maximum file size with the size option. Range: 2 through 1000 files Default: 1 trace file only
flagTracing operation to perform. To specify more than one tracing operation, include multiple flag statements. These are the RIP-specific tracing options:
authRIP authentication errorRIP errors expirationRIP route expiration processing hold-downRIP hold-down processing packetsAll RIP packets requestRIP information packets such as request, poll, and poll entry packets
554
traceoptions
allAll tracing operations generalA combination of the normal and route trace operations normalAll normal operations
Default: If you do not specify this option, only unusual or abnormal operations are traced.
policyPolicy operations and actions routeRouting table changes stateState transitions taskInterface transactions and processing timerTimer usage
flag-modifier(Optional) Modifier for the tracing flag. You can specify one or more
of these modifiers:
detailProvide detailed trace information receivePackets being received receive-detailProvide detailed trace information for packets being received sendPackets being transmitted send-detailProvide detailed trace information for packets being transmitted
no-world-readable(Optional) Prevent any user from reading the log file. size size(Optional) Maximum size of each trace file, in kilobytes (KB) or megabytes (MB). When a trace file named trace-file reaches this size, it is renamed trace-file.0. When the trace-file again reaches its maximum size, trace-file.0 is renamed trace-file.1 and trace-file is renamed trace-file.0. This renaming scheme continues
until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum file size, you must also specify a maximum number of trace files with the files option. Syntax: xk to specify KB, xm to specify MB, or xg to specify GB Range: 10 KB through the maximum file size supported on your system Default: 1 MB
world-readable(Optional) Allow any user to read the log file.
traceoptions
555
See Tracing RIP Protocol Traffic on page 532. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
update-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
update-interval seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols rip], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip], [edit protocols rip], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols rip]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 7.6. Configure an update time interval to periodically send out routes learned by RIP to neighbors.
secondsEstimated time to wait before making updates to the routing table.
Options
See Configuring RIP Timers on page 525. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
556
update-interval
Chapter 26
RIPng Overview
The Routing Information Protocol next generation (RIPng) is an interior gateway protocol (IGP) that uses a distance-vector algorithm to determine the best route to a destination, using the hop count as the metric. RIPng is a routing protocol that exchanges routing information used to compute routes and is intended for Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6)-based networks. This chapter discusses the following topics that provide background information about RIPng:
RIPng Overview on page 557 RIPng Standards on page 558 RIPng Packets on page 558
RIPng Overview
The RIPng IGP uses the Bellman-Ford distance-vector algorithm to determine the best route to a destination. RIPng uses the hop count as the metric. RIPng allows hosts and routers to exchange information for computing routes through an IP-based network. RIPng is intended to act as an IGP for moderately-sized autonomous systems (ASs). The JUNOS software implementation of RIPng is similar to RIPv2. However, RIPng is a distinct routing protocol from RIPv2 and has the following differences:
RIPng does not need to implement authentication on packets. There is no support for multiple instances of RIPng. There is no support for RIPng routing table groups.
RIPng is a User Datagram Protocol (UDP)-based protocol and uses UDP port 521. RIPng has the following architectural limitations:
The longest network path cannot exceed 15 hops (assuming that each network, or hop, has a cost of 1). RIPng depends on counting to infinity to resolve certain unusual situations. When the network consists of several hundred routers, and when a routing loop has formed, the amount of time and network bandwidth required to resolve a next hop might be great.
RIPng Overview
557
RIPng uses only a fixed metric to select a route. Other IGPs use additional parameters, such as measured delay, reliability, and load.
RIPng Standards
RIPng is defined in the following documents:
RFC 2080, RIPng for IPv6 RFC 2081, RIPng Protocol Applicability Statement
To access Internet Requests for Comments (RFCs) and drafts, go to the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Web site at http://www.ietf.org.
RIPng Packets
A RIPng packet header contains the following fields:
CommandIndicates whether the packet is a request or response message. Request messages seek information for the routers routing table. Response messages are sent periodically or when a request message is received. Periodic response messages are called update messages. Update messages contain the command and version fields and a set of destinations and metrics. Version numberSpecifies the version of RIPng that the originating router is running. This is currently set to Version 1.
The rest of the RIPng packet contains a list of routing table entries that contain the following fields:
Destination prefix128-bit IPv6 address prefix for the destination. Prefix lengthNumber of significant bits in the prefix. MetricValue of the metric advertised for the address. Route tagA route attribute that must be advertised and redistributed with the route. Primarily, the route tag distinguishes external RIPng routes from internal RIPng routes in cases where routes must be redistributed across an exterior gateway protocol (EGP).
558
RIPng Standards
Chapter 27
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. By default, RIPng is disabled.
559
NOTE: By default, RIPng routes are not redistributed. You must configure export policy needs to redistribute RIPng routes. To have a router exchange routes with other routers, you must configure RIPng groups and neighbors. RIPng routes received from routers not configured as RIPng neighbors are ignored. Likewise, RIPng routes are advertised only to routers configured as RIPng neighbors. This chapter discusses the following topics that provide information for configuring and monitoring RIPng: For a configuration example, see Example: Configuring RIPng on page 566.
Minimum RIPng Configuration on page 560 Defining RIPng Global Properties on page 561 Defining RIPng Neighbor Properties on page 561 Modifying the Incoming Metric on page 561 Configuring RIPng Timers on page 562 Configuring Update Messages on page 562 Applying Import Policy on page 563 Configuring Group-Specific Properties on page 563 Configuring Graceful Restart on page 565 Tracing RIPng Protocol Traffic on page 565 Example: Configuring RIPng on page 566
560
NOTE: When you configure RIPng on an interface, you must also include the family inet statement at the [edit interfaces interface-name unit logical-unit-number] hierarchy level.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
unreachable. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
561
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You can set a route timeout interval. If a route is not refreshed after being installed into the routing table by the specified time interval, the route is removed from the routing table. To configure the route timeout for RIPng, include the route-timeout statement:
route-timeout seconds; seconds can be a value from 30 through 360. The default value is 180 seconds.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You can set an update time interval to periodically send out routes learned by RIPng to neighbors. To configure the update time interval, include the update-interval statement:
update-interval seconds; seconds can be a value from 10 through 60. The default value is 30 seconds.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
562
To enable the sending and receiving of update messages, include the receive and send statements:
receive; send;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. Each group must contain at least one neighbor. You should create a group for each export policy that you have. For information about configuring neighbors, see Defining RIPng Global Properties on page 561. This section discusses the following tasks:
Applying Export Policy on page 564 Controlling Route Preference on page 564 Modifying the Outgoing Metric on page 564
563
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You can define one or more export policies. If no routes match the policies, the local router does not export any routes to its neighbors. Export policies override any metric values determined through calculations involving the metric-in and metric-out values.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
preference can be a value from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1).
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
564
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To disable graceful restart for RIPng, specify the disable statement. To configure a time period for the restart to finish, specify the restart-time statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You can specify the following RIPng-specific options in the RIPng traceoptions statement:
allTrace everything. errorTrace RIPng errors. expirationTrace RIPng route expiration processing. generalTrace general events. holddownTrace RIPng hold-down processing. normalTrace normal events. packetsTrace all RIPng packets. policyTrace policy processing. requestTrace RIPng information packets. routeTrace routing information. stateTrace state transitions.
565
taskTrace routing protocol task processing. timerTrace routing protocol timer processing. triggerTrace RIPng triggered updates. updateTrace RIPng update packets.
NOTE: Use the trace flags detail and all with caution. These flags may cause the CPU to become very busy.
566
Chapter 28
export
Syntax Hierarchy Level
export [ policy-names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng group group-name], [edit protocols ripng group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name]
Release Information Description Options Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Apply a policy or list of policies to routes being exported to the neighbors.
policy-namesName of one or more policies.
See Applying Export Policy on page 564. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. import
export
567
graceful-restart
Syntax
graceful-restart { disable; restart-time seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng], [edit protocols ripng], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure graceful restart for RIPng.
disableDisables graceful restart for RIPng. secondsEstimated time period for the restart to finish.
See Configuring Graceful Restart on page 113 and Configuring Graceful Restart on page 565. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
568
graceful-restart
group
Syntax
group group-name { export [ policy-names ]; metric-out metric; preference number; route-timeout seconds; update-interval seconds; neighbor neighbor-name { import policy-name; metric-in metric; receive <none>; route-timeout seconds; send <none>; update-interval seconds; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng], [edit protocols ripng], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure a set of RIPng neighbors that share an export policy and metric. The export policy and metric govern what routes to advertise to neighbors in a given group.
group-nameName of a group, up to 16 characters long.
Options
See Configuring Group-Specific Properties on page 563. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
group
569
holddown
Syntax Hierarchy Level
holddown seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng], [edit protocols ripng], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure the time period the expired route is retained in the routing table before being removed.
secondsEstimated time to wait before making updates to the routing table.
Options
See Configuring RIPng Timers on page 562. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
570
holddown
import
Syntax Hierarchy Level
import [ policy-names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols ripng], [edit protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Apply one or more policies to routes being imported into the local router from the neighbors.
policy-namesName of one or more policies.
See Applying Import Policy on page 563. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. export
import
571
metric-in
Syntax Hierarchy Level
metric-in metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols ripng], [edit protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Metric to add to incoming routes when advertising into RIPng routes that were learned from other protocols. Use this statement to configure the router to prefer RIPng routes learned through a specific neighbor.
metricMetric value.
Options
See Modifying the Incoming Metric on page 561. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
572
metric-in
metric-out
Syntax Hierarchy Level
metric-out metric; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Metric value to add to routes transmitted to the neighbor. Use this statement to control how other routers prefer RIPng routes sent from this neighbor.
metricMetric value.
Options
See Modifying the Outgoing Metric on page 564. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
metric-out
573
neighbor
Syntax
neighbor neighbor-name { import [ policy-names ]; metric-in metric; receive <none>; route-timeout seconds; send <none>; update-interval seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng group group-name], [edit protocols ripng group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure neighbor-specific RIPng parameters, thereby overriding the defaults set for the router.
neighbor-nameName of an interface over which a router communicates to its
Options
See Defining RIPng Neighbor Properties on page 561. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
574
neighbor
preference
Syntax Hierarchy Level
preference preference; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng group group-name], [edit protocols ripng group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Preference of external routes learned by RIPng as compared to those learned from other routing protocols.
preferencePreference value. A lower value indicates a more preferred route.
Options
See Controlling Route Preference on page 564. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
preference
575
receive
Syntax Hierarchy Level
receive <none>; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols ripng], [edit protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Release Information Description Options Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Enable or disable receiving of update messages.
none(Optional) Disable receiving update messages.
Default: Enabled by default. See Configuring Update Messages on page 562. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. send
576
receive
ripng
Syntax Hierarchy Level
ripng {...} [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols], [edit protocols], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Enable RIPng routing on the router. RIPng is disabled on the router. See Minimum RIPng Configuration on page 560. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
route-timeout
Syntax Hierarchy Level
route-timeout seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng], [edit protocols ripng], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 7.6. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure the route timeout interval for RIP.
secondsEstimated time to wait before making updates to the routing table.
See Configuring RIPng Timers on page 562. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
ripng
577
send
Syntax Hierarchy Level
send <none>; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols ripng], [edit protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instances-name protocols ripng], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Release Information Description Options Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Enable or disable sending of update messages.
none(Optional) Disable sending of update messages.
Default: Enabled by default. See Configuring Update Messages on page 562. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. receive
578
send
traceoptions
Syntax
traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng], [edit protocols ripng], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Set RIPng protocol-level tracing options. The default RIPng protocol-level trace options are inherited from the global traceoptions statement.
disable(Optional) Disable the tracing operation. One use of this option is to disable
Options
a single operation when you have defined a broad group of tracing operations, such as all.
file filenameName of the file to receive the output of the tracing operation. Enclose
the name in quotation marks. We recommend that you place RIPng tracing output in the file /var/log/ripng-log.
files number(Optional) Maximum number of trace files. When a trace file named trace-file reaches its maximum size, it is renamed trace-file.0, then trace-file.1,
and so on, until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum number of files, you must also specify a maximum file size with the size option. Range: 2 through 1000 files Default: 1 trace file only
flag flagTracing operation to perform. To specify more than one tracing operation, include multiple flag statements. The following are the RIPngspecific tracing
options:
errorRIPng errors expirationRIPng route expiration processing holddownRIPng hold-down processing packetsAll RIPng packets
traceoptions
579
requestRIPng information packets such as request, poll, and poll entry packets triggerRIPng triggered updates updateRIPng update packets
allAll tracing operations generalA combination of the normal and route trace operations normalAll normal operations
Default: If you do not specify this option, only unusual or abnormal operations are traced.
policyPolicy operations and actions routeRouting table changes stateState transitions taskInterface transactions and processing timerTimer usage
flag-modifier(Optional) Modifier for the tracing flag. You can specify one or more
of these modifiers:
detailProvide detailed trace information receivePackets being received receive-detailProvide detailed trace information for packets being received sendPackets being transmitted send-detailProvide detailed trace information for packets being transmitted
no-world-readable(Optional) Disallow any user to read the log file. size size(Optional) Maximum size of each trace file, in kilobytes (KB), megabytes (MB), or gigabytes (GB). When a trace file named trace-file reaches this size, it is renamed trace-file.0. When the trace-file again reaches its maximum size, trace-file.0 is renamed trace-file.1 and trace-file is renamed trace-file.0. This
renaming scheme continues until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum file size, you must also specify a maximum number of trace files with the files option. Syntax: xk to specify KB, xm to specify MB, or xg to specify GB Range: 10 KB through the maximum file size supported on your system Default: 1 MB
580
traceoptions
See Tracing RIPng Protocol Traffic on page 565. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
update-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
update-interval seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols ripng], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng], [edit protocols ripng], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols ripng]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 7.6. Support for routing instances introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure an update time interval to periodically send out routes learned by RIP to neighbors.
secondsEstimated time to wait before making updates to the routing table.
Options
See Configuring RIP Timers on page 525. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
update-interval
581
582
update-interval
Chapter 29
ICMP Router Discovery Standards on page 583 Operation of a Router Discovery Server on page 583 Router Advertisement Messages on page 584
583
In addition to containing the router addresses, these packets also announce the existence of the server itself. The server can either transmit broadcast or multicast router advertisement packets. Multicast packets are sent to 224.0.0.1, which is the all-hosts multicast address. When packets are sent to the all-hosts multicast address, or when an interface is configured for the limited-broadcast address 255.255.255.255, all IP addresses configured on the physical interface are included in the router advertisement. When the packets are being sent to a network or subnet broadcast address, only the address associated with that network or subnet is included in the router advertisement. When the routing protocol process first starts on the server router, the server sends router advertisement packets every few seconds. Then, the server sends these packets less frequently, commonly every 10 minutes. The server responds to route solicitation packets it receives from a client. The response is sent unicast unless a router advertisement packet is due to be sent out momentarily.
NOTE: The JUNOS software does not support the ICMP router solicitation message with the source address as 0.0.0.0.
584
Chapter 30
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. By default, router discovery is disabled. This chapter describes the following tasks for configuring ICMP router discovery:
Minimum Router Discovery Server Configuration on page 586 Configuring the Addresses to Include in Router Advertisements on page 586 Configuring the Frequency of Router Advertisements on page 587 Modifying the Router Advertisement Lifetime on page 587 Tracing ICMP Protocol Traffic on page 587
585
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: When you configure ICMP on an interface, you must also include the family inet statement at the [edit interfaces interface-name unit logical-unit-number] hierarchy level. For more information about the family inet statement, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. Specify the IP address of the router, and optionally specify the following information about the router:
Whether the server should include this address in its router advertisementsBy default, the address is advertised. To disable this function, include the ignore statement. Whether the server should broadcast or multicast router advertisementsBy default, advertisements are multicast if the router supports IP multicast; otherwise, they are broadcast. To modify the default functionality, include the broadcast or multicast statement. Preference of the address to become the default routerIn the priority statement, a higher value for number indicates that the address has a greater preference for becoming the default router. The default value is 0, which means that the address has the least chance of becoming the default router. If the router at this address should never become the default router, include the ineligible statement. To modify the preference, include the preference statement. number can be a value in the range from 0 through 0x80000000. The default is 0.
586
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. You can specify the following ICMP-specific options in the ICMP flag statement:
errorTrace error packets. infoTrace information packets. routerdiscoveryTrace all ICMP packets. redirectTrace redirect packets.
587
allTrace everything. generalTrace general events. normalTrace normal events. policyTrace policy processing. routeTrace routing information. stateTrace state transitions. taskTrace routing protocol task processing. timerTrace routing protocol timer processing.
NOTE: Use the trace flags detail and all with caution. These flags may cause the CPU to become very busy.
For general information about tracing and global tracing options, see Tracing Global Routing Protocol Operations on page 119.
588
Chapter 31
address
Syntax
address address { (advertise | ignore); (broadcast | multicast); (priority number | ineligible); } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-discovery], [edit protocols router-discovery]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. IP addresses to include in router advertisement packets.
addressIP address. To specify more than one address, specify multiple addresses or include multiple address statements.
See Configuring the Addresses to Include in Router Advertisements on page 586. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
address
589
advertise
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(advertise | ignore); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-discovery address address], [edit protocols router-discovery address address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify whether the server should advertise the IP address in its router advertisement packets:
advertiseAdvertise the IP address in its router advertisement packets. ignoreDo not advertise the IP addresses in router advertisement packets.
advertise
See Configuring the Addresses to Include in Router Advertisements on page 586. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
broadcast
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(broadcast | multicast); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-discovery address address], [edit protocols router-discovery address address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify when the server should include the IP addresses in router advertisement packets. On the same physical interfaces, some addresses might be included only in multicast packets, while others might be included only in broadcast packets. If you specify broadcast, the server includes the addresses in router advertisement packets only if the packets are broadcast.
Default
multicast if the router supports IP multicast; broadcast if the router does not support
IP multicast.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Configuring the Addresses to Include in Router Advertisements on page 586. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. multicast
590
advertise
disable
Syntax Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Disable router discovery. The configured object is enabled (operational) unless explicitly disabled. See Minimum Router Discovery Server Configuration on page 586. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
ignore
See
advertise
ineligible
See
priority
disable
591
interface
Syntax
interface interface-name { min-advertisement-interval seconds; max-advertisement-interval seconds; lifetime seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-discovery], [edit protocols router-discovery]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify physical interfaces on which to configure timers for router advertisement messages.
interface-nameName of an interface. Specify the full interface name, including the physical and logical address components. To configure all interfaces, specify all.
Options
For details about specifying interfaces, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide. The remaining statements are explained separately.
Usage Guidelines
See Configuring the Frequency of Router Advertisements on page 587 and Modifying the Router Advertisement Lifetime on page 587. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
592
interface
lifetime
Syntax Hierarchy Level
lifetime seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-discovery interface interface-name], [edit protocols router-discovery interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. How long the addresses sent by the server in its router advertisement packets are valid. This time must be long enough so that another router advertisement packet is sent before the lifetime has expired. The lifetime value is placed in the advertisement lifetime field of the router advertisement packet.
secondsLifetime value. A value of 0 indicates that one or more addresses are no
Options
longer valid. Range: 3,max-advertisement-interval value through 2 hours, 30 minutes (9000 seconds), specified in seconds Default: 1800 seconds (30 minutes; three times the default max-advertisement-interval value)
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Modifying the Router Advertisement Lifetime on page 587. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. max-advertisement-interval
lifetime
593
max-advertisement-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
max-advertisement-interval seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-discovery interface interface-name], [edit protocols router-discovery interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Maximum time the router waits before sending periodic router advertisement packets out the interface. These packets are broadcast or multicast, depending on how the address corresponding to this physical interface is configured.
secondsMaximum time between router advertisement packets.
Options
See Configuring the Frequency of Router Advertisements on page 587. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. broadcast, lifetime, min-advertisement-interval, multicast
min-advertisement-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
min-advertisement-interval seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-discovery interface interface-name], [edit protocols router-discovery interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Minimum time the router waits before sending router advertisement packets out the interface in response to route solicitation packets it receives from a client. These packets are broadcast or multicast, depending on how the address corresponding to this physical interface is configured.
secondsMinimum time between router advertisement packets.
Options
Range: 3 seconds through 1800 seconds Default: 400 seconds (0.75 times the default max-advertisement-interval value)
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Configuring the Frequency of Router Advertisements on page 587. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. broadcast, max-advertisement-interval, multicast
594
max-advertisement-interval
multicast
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(multicast | broadcast); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-discovery address address], [edit protocols router-discovery address address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify when the server should include the IP addresses in router advertisement packets. On the same physical interfaces, some addresses might be included only in multicast packets, while others might be included only in broadcast packets. If you specify multicast, the server includes the addresses in router advertisement packets only if the packets are multicast. If the router supports IP multicast, and if the interface supports IP multicast, multicast is the default. Otherwise, the addresses are included in broadcast router advertisement packets. If the router does not support IP multicast, the addresses are not included.
Default
multicast if the router supports IP multicast; broadcast if the router does not support
IP multicast.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Configuring the Addresses to Include in Router Advertisements on page 586. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. broadcast
multicast
595
priority
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(priority number | ineligible); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-discovery address address], [edit protocols router-discovery address address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Preference of the address to become a default router. This preference is set relative to the preferences of other router addresses on the same subnet.
ineligibleAddress can never become the default router. priority numberPreference of the addresses for becoming the default router. A higher
Options
value indicates that the address has a greater preference for becoming the default router. Range: 0 through 0x80000000 Default: 0 (This address has the least chance of becoming the default router.)
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring the Addresses to Include in Router Advertisements on page 586. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
router-discovery
Syntax Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable ICMP router discovery (server mode) on the router. Router discovery is disabled on the router. See Minimum Router Discovery Server Configuration on page 586. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
596
priority
traceoptions
Syntax
traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-discovery], [edit protocols router-discovery]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure ICMP protocol-level tracing options. To specify more than one tracing operation, include multiple flag statements.
Default
The default ICMP protocol-level tracing options are inherited from the routing protocols traceoptions statement included at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level.
disable(Optional) Disable the tracing operation. One use of this option is to disable
Options
a single operation when you have defined a broad group of tracing operations, such as all.
file filenameName of the file to receive the output of the tracing operation. Enclose the name within quotation marks. All files are placed in the directory /var/log. We recommend that you place ICMP tracing output in the file icmp-log. files number(Optional) Maximum number of trace files. When a trace file named trace-file reaches its maximum size, it is renamed trace-file.0, then trace-file.1,
and so on, until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum number of files, you also must specify a maximum file size with the size option. Range: 2 through 1000 files Default: 2 files
flag flagTracing operation to perform. To specify more than one tracing operation, include multiple flag statements. These are the ICMP-specific tracing options:
errorErrored ICMP packets infoICMP information packets packetsAll packets router-discoveryAll ICMP packets redirectICMP redirect packets
traceoptions
597
allAll tracing operations generalA combination of the normal and route trace operations normalAll normal operations
Default: If you do not specify this option, only unusual or abnormal operations are traced.
policyPolicy operations and actions routeRouting table changes stateState transitions taskInterface transactions and processing timerTimer usage
flag-modifier(Optional) Modifier for the tracing flag. You can specify one or more
of these modifiers:
detailProvide detailed trace information receivePackets being received sendPackets being transmitted
no-world-readable(Optional) Prevent any user from reading the log file. size size(Optional) Maximum size of each trace file, in kilobytes (KB), megabytes (MB), or gigabytes (GB). When a trace file named trace-file reaches this size, it is renamed trace-file.0. When the trace-file again reaches its maximum size, trace-file.0 is renamed trace-file.1 and trace-file is renamed trace-file.0. This
renaming scheme continues until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum file size, you also must specify a maximum number of trace files with the files option. Syntax: xk to specify KB, xm to specify MB, or xg to specify GB Range: 10 KB through the maximum file size supported on your system Default: 1 MB
world-readable(Optional) Allow any user to read the log file.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Tracing ICMP Protocol Traffic on page 587. routing and traceTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-control and trace-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
598
traceoptions
Chapter 32
RFC 2461, Neighbor Discovery for IP Version 6 RFC 2462, IPv6 Stateless Address Autoconfiguration
599
RFC 2463, Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMPv6) for the Internet Protocol Version 6 Specification
To access Internet Requests for Comments (RFCs) and drafts, go to the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Web site at http://www.ietf.org.
Router Discovery
Router advertisements can contain a list of prefixes. These prefixes are used for address autoconfiguration, to maintain a database of onlink (on the same data link) prefixes, and for duplication address detection. If a node is onlink, the router forwards packets to that node. If the node is not onlink, the packets are sent to the next router for consideration. For IPv6, each prefix in the prefix list can contain a prefix length, a valid lifetime for the prefix, a preferred lifetime for the prefix, an onlink flag, and an autoconfiguration flag. This information enables address autoconfiguration and the setting of link parameters such as maximum transmission unit (MTU) size and hop limit.
Address Resolution
For IPv6, ICMPv6 neighbor discovery replaces ARP for resolving network addresses to link-level addresses. Neighbor discovery also handles changes in link-layer addresses, inbound load balancing, anycast addresses, and proxy advertisements. Nodes requesting the link-layer address of a target node multicast a neighbor solicitation message with the target address. The target sends back a neighbor advertisement message containing its link-layer address. Neighbor solicitation and advertisement messages are used for detecting duplicate unicast addresses on the same link. Autoconfiguration of an IP address depends on whether there is a duplicate address on that link. Duplicate address detection is a requirement for autoconfiguration. Neighbor solicitation and advertisement messages are also used for neighbor unreachability detection. Neighbor unreachability detection involves detecting the presence of a target node on a given link.
Redirect
Redirect messages are sent to inform a host of a better next-hop router to a particular destination or an onlink neighbor. This is similar to ICMPv4 redirect.
600
Router Discovery
Chapter 33
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. This chapter describes the following tasks for configuring and monitoring neighbor discovery router advertisement messages:
Minimum Neighbor Discovery Configuration on page 602 Configuring Router Advertisement on an Interface on page 602 Configuring the Hop Limit on page 603 Modifying the Default Router Lifetime on page 603 Enabling Stateful Autoconfiguration on page 603
601
Configuring the Frequency of Router Advertisements on page 604 Modifying the Reachable Time Limit on page 604 Modifying the Frequency of Neighbor Solicitation Messages on page 604 Configuring Prefix Information on page 605 Tracing Router Advertisement Traffic on page 606
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
NOTE: When you configure neighbor discovery router advertisement on an interface, you must also include the family inet6 statement at the [edit interfaces interface-name unit logical-unit-number] hierarchy level. For more information about the family inet6 statement, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Specify the interface name in the following format:
physical<:channel>.logical
For more information about interface names, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
NOTE: JUNOS enters the Neighbor Discovery Protocol packets into the routing platform cache, even if there is no known route to the source.
602
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. The default hop limit is 64.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. By default, the default router lifetime is three times the maximum advertisement interval. For more information about the maximum advertisement interval, see Configuring the Frequency of Router Advertisements on page 604.
To set the other stateful configuration field and enable autoconfiguration of other types of information, include the other-stateful-configuration statement:
603
other-stateful-configuration;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. By default, the maximum advertisement interval is 600 seconds and the minimum advertisement interval is one-third the maximum interval, or 200 seconds.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. By default, the reachable time period is 0 milliseconds.
604
retransmit-timer milliseconds;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. By default, the retransmit timer is 0 milliseconds.
Setting the Prefix for Onlink Determination on page 605 Setting the Prefix for Stateless Address Autoconfiguration on page 605 Configuring the Preferred Lifetime on page 606 Configuring the Valid Lifetime on page 606
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
605
autonomous;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. If you set the preferred lifetime to 0xffffffff, the lifetime is infinite. The preferred lifetime value must never exceed the valid lifetime value.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. If you set the valid lifetime to 0xffffffff, the lifetime is infinite. The valid lifetime value must never be smaller than the preferred lifetime value.
606
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: Use the trace flags detail and all with caution. These flags may cause the CPU to become very busy.
607
608
Chapter 34
autonomous
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(autonomous | no-autonomous); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name prefix prefix], [edit protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name prefix prefix]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify whether prefixes in the router advertisement messages are used for stateless address autoconfiguration:
autonomousUse prefixes for address autoconfiguration. no-autonomousDo not use prefixes for address autoconfiguration.
autonomous
See Setting the Prefix for Stateless Address Autoconfiguration on page 605. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
autonomous
609
current-hop-limit
Syntax Hierarchy Level
current-hop-limit number; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name], [edit protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Default value placed in the hop count field of the IP header for outgoing packets.
numberHop limit. A value of 0 means the limit is unspecified by this router.
See Configuring the Hop Limit on page 603. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
default-lifetime
Syntax Hierarchy Level
default-lifetime seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name], [edit protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Lifetime associated with a default router.
secondsDefault lifetime. A value of 0 means this router is not the default router.
Range: Maximum advertisement interval value through 9000 seconds Default: Three times the maximum advertisement interval value
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Modifying the Default Router Lifetime on page 603. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. max-advertisement-interval
610
current-hop-limit
interface
Syntax
interface interface-name { current-hop-limit number; default-lifetime seconds; (managed-configuration | no-managed-configuration); max-advertisement-interval seconds; min-advertisement-interval seconds; (other-stateful-configuration | no-other-stateful-configuration); prefix prefix { (autonomous | no-autonomous); (on-link | no-on-link); preferred-lifetime seconds; valid-lifetime seconds; } reachable-time milliseconds; retransmit-timer milliseconds; traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <detail> <disable>; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement], [edit protocols router-advertisement]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure router advertisement properties on an interface. To configure more than one interface, include the interface statement multiple times.
interface-nameName of an interface. Specify the full interface name, including the
Options
physical and logical address components. The remaining statements are explained separately.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring Router Advertisement on an Interface on page 602. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
interface
611
managed-configuration
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(managed-configuration | no-managed-configuration); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name], [edit protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify whether to enable the host to use a stateful autoconfiguration protocol for address autoconfiguration, along with any stateless autoconfiguration already configured:
managed-configurationEnable host to use stateful autoconfiguration. no-managed-configurationDisable host from using stateful autoconfiguration.
The configured object is disabled unless explicitly enabled. See Enabling Stateful Autoconfiguration on page 603. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
max-advertisement-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
max-advertisement-interval seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name], [edit protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Maximum interval between each router advertisement message.
secondsMaximum interval.
See Configuring the Frequency of Router Advertisements on page 604. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. min-advertisement-interval
612
managed-configuration
min-advertisement-interval
Syntax Hierarchy Level
min-advertisement-interval seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name], [edit protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Minimum interval between each router advertisement message.
secondsMinimum interval.
Range: 3 seconds through three-quarter times the maximum advertisement interval value Default: One-third the maximum advertisement interval value
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Configuring the Frequency of Router Advertisements on page 604. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. max-advertisement-interval
no-autonomous
See
autonomous
no-managed-configuration
See
managed-configuration
no-on-link
See
on-link
no-other-stateful-configuration
See
other-stateful-configuration
min-advertisement-interval
613
on-link
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(on-link | no-on-link); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name prefix prefix], [edit protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name prefix prefix]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify whether to enable prefixes to be used for onlink determination:
no-on-linkDisable prefixes from being used for onlink determination. on-linkEnable prefixes to be used for onlink determination.
The configured object is enabled unless explicitly disabled. See Configuring Prefix Information on page 605. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
other-stateful-configuration
Syntax Hierarchy Level
(other-stateful-configuration | no-other-stateful-configuration); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name], [edit protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify whether to enable autoconfiguration of other nonaddress-related information:
nonaddress-related information.
information.
Default Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
The configured object is disabled unless explicitly enabled. See Enabling Stateful Autoconfiguration on page 603. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
614
on-link
preferred-lifetime
Syntax Hierarchy Level
preferred-lifetime seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name prefix prefix], [edit protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name prefix prefix]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify how long the prefix generated by stateless autoconfiguration remains preferred.
secondsPreferred lifetime, in seconds. If you set the preferred lifetime to 0xffffffff,
Options
the lifetime is infinite. The preferred lifetime is never greater than the valid lifetime. Default: 604,800 seconds
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
SeeConfiguring the Preferred Lifetime on page 606. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. valid-lifetime
prefix
Syntax
prefix prefix { (autonomous | no-autonomous); (on-link | no-on-link); preferred-lifetime seconds; valid-lifetime seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name], [edit protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure prefix properties in router advertisement messages.
prefixPrefix name.
See Configuring Prefix Information on page 605. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
preferred-lifetime
615
reachable-time
Syntax Hierarchy Level
reachable-time milliseconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name], [edit protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. A length of time that a node considers a neighbor reachable until another reachability confirmation is received from that neighbor.
millisecondsReachability time limit.
Options
See Modifying the Reachable Time Limit on page 604. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
retransmit-timer
Syntax Hierarchy Level
retransmit-timer milliseconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name], [edit protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Retransmission frequency of neighbor solicitation messages.
millisecondsRetransmission frequency.
Default: 0 milliseconds See Modifying the Frequency of Neighbor Solicitation Messages on page 604. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
616
reachable-time
router-advertisement
Syntax Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable router advertisement. The statements are explained separately. See Configuring Router Advertisement on an Interface on page 602. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
router-advertisement
617
traceoptions
Syntax
traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement], [edit protocols router-advertisement]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify router advertisement protocol-level tracing options. The default trace options are inherited from the global traceoptions statement.
disable(Optional) Disable the tracing operation. One use of this option is to disable
a single operation when you have defined a broad group of tracing operations, such as all.
file filenameName of the file to receive the output of the tracing operation. Enclose
the name in quotation marks. We recommend that you place router advertisement tracing output in the file /var/log/router-advertisement-log.
files number(Optional) Maximum number of trace files. When a trace file named trace-file reaches its maximum size, it is renamed trace-file.0, then trace-file.1,
and so on, until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum number of files, you must also specify a maximum file size with the size option. Range: 2 through 1000 files Default: 1 trace file only
flag flagTracing operation to perform. To specify more than one tracing operation, include multiple flag statements. The following are the router
errorRouter advertisement errors expirationRouter advertisement route expiration processing holddownRouter advertisement hold-down processing packetsAll router advertisement packets requestRouter advertisement information packets such as request, poll, and
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allAll tracing operations generalA combination of the normal and route trace operations normalAll normal operations.
Default: If you do not specify this option, only unusual or abnormal operations are traced.
policyPolicy operations and actions routeRouting table changes stateState transitions taskInterface transactions and processing timerTimer usage
flag-modifier(Optional) Modifier for the tracing flag. You can specify one or more
of these modifiers:
detailProvide detailed trace information receivePackets being received receive-detailProvide detailed trace information for packets being received sendPackets being transmitted send-detailProvide detailed trace information for packets being transmitted
no-world-readable(Optional) Prevent any user from reading the log file. size size(Optional) Maximum size of each trace file, in kilobytes (KB) or megabytes (MB). When a trace file named trace-file reaches this size, it is renamed trace-file.0. When the trace-file again reaches its maximum size, trace-file.0 is renamed trace-file.1 and trace-file is renamed trace-file.0. This renaming scheme continues
until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum file size, you must also specify a maximum number of trace files with the files option. Syntax: xk to specify KB, xm to specify MB, or xg to specify GB Range: 10 KB through the maximum file size supported on your system Default: 1 MB
world-readable(Optional) Allow any user to read the log file.
Usage Guidelines
traceoptions
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routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
valid-lifetime
Syntax Hierarchy Level
valid-lifetime seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name prefix prefix], [edit protocols router-advertisement interface interface-name prefix prefix]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. How long the prefix remains valid for onlink determination.
secondsValid lifetime, in seconds. If you set the valid lifetime to 0xffffffff, the lifetime
See Configuring the Valid Lifetime on page 606. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. preferred-lifetime
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valid-lifetime
Chapter 35
621
This chapter discusses the following topics that describe how to configure Secure Neighbor Discovery:
Enabling Secure Neighbor Discovery on page 622 Configuring Cryptographic Address Parameters on page 622 Configuring Timestamp Parameters on page 623 Tracing Secure Neighbor Discovery Traffic on page 624
Specify default to send and receive both secure and unsecured Neighbor Discovery Protocol packets. To configure SEND to accept secured NDP messages only and to drop unsecured ones. specify secure-messages-only.
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For information about how to configure parameters for cryptographic addresses, see the following sections:
Specifying the Pathname for the Key File on page 623 Specifying the RSA Key Length on page 623
For a complete list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a complete list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
Use the new-peer-window seconds statement to specify the maximum allowable difference in the amount of time between the timestamp of a SEND message from a new peer and when it can be accepted. The default is 300 seconds.
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Use the known-peer-window seconds statement to specify the expected interval between subsequent incoming SEND messages. The default is 1 second. A message from a known peer that arrives after the specified interval is discarded. Use the clock drift value statement to specify a fractional value of 100 for the allowable drift in time between the synchronization of peers. The default is 0.01, or 1 percent.
You can specify the following flag options with the Secure Neighbor Discovery traceoptions statement:
allAll tracing operations. configurationAll configuration events. cryptographic-addressCryptographically generated address events. protocolAll protocol processing events. rsaRSA events.
For a complete list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement hierarchy section for this statement.
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Chapter 36
cryptographic-address
Syntax
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Configure parameters for cryptographically generated addresses for Secure Neighbor Discovery. The remaining statements are explained separately. See Configuring Cryptographic Address Parameters on page 622. routing levelTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
cryptographic-address
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key-length
Syntax Hierarchy Level Release Information Description
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Specify the length of the RSA key used to generate the private-key pair for the cryptographic address. 1024
numberRSA key length.
Range: 1024 through 2048 See Specifying the RSA Key Length on page 623. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
key-pair
Syntax Hierarchy Level Release Information Description
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Specify the directory path of the public-private key file generated for the cryptographic address.
pathnameDirectory path of the public-private key file. The default location of the file is /var/etc/rsa_key directory.
Options
See Specifying the Pathname for the Key File on page 623. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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key-length
neighbor-discovery
Syntax
neighbor-discovery { secure { security-level { (default | secure-messages-only); } cryptographic-address { key-length number; key-pair pathname; } timestamp { clock-drift number; known-peer-window number; new-peer-window number; } traceoptions { file filename <match> <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag; no-remote-trace <file filename> <flag flag>; } } } [edit protocols]
Hierarchy Level Release Information Description Default Options Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Enable Secure Neighbor Discovery. Disabled The remaining statements are explained separately. See Enabling Secure Neighbor Discovery on page 622. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
neighbor-discovery
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secure
Syntax
secure { security-level (default | secure-messages-only): cryptographic-address { key-length number; key-pair pathname; security-parameter number; } timestamp { clock-drift number; known-peer-window seconds; new-peer-window seconds; } traceoptions { file filename <match> <size size> <files number> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag; no-remote-trace <file filename> <flag flag>: } } [edit protocols neighbor-discovery]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Configure parameters for Secure Neighbor Discovery. The remaining statements are explained separately. See Configuring Cryptographic Address Parameters on page 622, Configuring Timestamp Parameters on page 623, and Tracing Secure Neighbor Discovery Traffic on page 624. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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secure
security-level
Syntax
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Configure the type of security mode for Secure Neighbor Discovery.
defaultAccept and transmit both secure and unsecured messages. secure-messages-onlyAccept secure messages only. Discard unsecured messages.
See Enabling Secure Neighbor Discovery on page 622. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
security-level
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timestamp
Syntax
timestamp { clock-drift value; known-peer-window seconds; new-peer-window seconds; } [edit protocols neighbor-discovery secure]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Configure timestamp options, which are used to ensure that solicitation and redirect messages are not being replayed.
clock-drift valueSpecify the allowable drift in time between the synchronization of peers. For value, specify a fractional value of 100.
Options
Default: 0.01
known-peer-window secondsSpecify the expected interval in seconds between Secure
the timestamp of a Secure Neighbor Discovery message from a new peer and when it can be accepted. Default: 300 seconds
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring Timestamp Parameters on page 623. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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timestamp
traceoptions
Syntax
traceoptions { file filename <files number> <match> <size size> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; flag flag; no-remote-trace <file filename> <files number > <match> <size size> <world-readable | no-world-readable>; <flag flag>; } [edit protocols neighbor-discovery secure]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Configure tracing operations for Secure Neighbor Discovery events. To specify more than one tracing operation, include multiple flag statements.
file filenameName of the file to receive the tracing operation. Enclose the name within quotation marks. All files are placed in the directory /var/log. files number(Optional) Maximum number of trace files. When a trace file named trace-file reaches its maximum size, it is renamed trace-file.0, then trace-file.1 and
Options
so on, until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then the oldest trace file is overwritten.
NOTE: If you specify a maximum number of files, you must also specify a maximum file size with the size option. Range: 2 through 1000 files Default: 10 files
flagTracing operation to perform. To specify more than one tracing operation, include multiple flag statements.
allAll tracing operations. configurationAll configuration events. cryptographic-addressCryptographically generated address events. protocolAll protocol processing events. rsaRSA events.
match(Optional) Specify a regular expression to match the output of the trace file
traceoptions
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size size(Optional) Maximum size of each trace file, in kilobytes (KB) or megabytes (MB). When a trace file named trace-file reaches this size, it is renamed trace-file.0. When the trace-file again reaches its maximum size, trace-file.0 is renamed trace-file.1, and trace-file is renamed trace-file.0. This renaming scheme continues
until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then the oldest trace file is overwritten.
world-readable(Optional) Allow any user to read this log file.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Tracing Secure Neighbor Discovery Traffic on page 624. routing and traceTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-control and trace-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
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traceoptions
Part 6
BGP
BGP Overview on page 635 BGP Configuration Guidelines on page 641 Summary of BGP Configuration Statements on page 709
BGP
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BGP
Chapter 37
BGP Overview
The Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) is an exterior gateway protocol (EGP) that is used to exchange routing information among routers in different autonomous systems (ASs). BGP routing information includes the complete route to each destination. BGP uses the routing information to maintain a database of network reachability information, which it exchanges with other BGP systems. BGP uses the network reachability information to construct a graph of AS connectivity, thus allowing BGP to remove routing loops and enforce policy decisions at the AS level. Multiprotocol BGP (MBGP) extensions enable BGP to support Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6). MBGP defines the attributes MP_REACH_NLRI and MP_UNREACH_NLRI, which are used to carry IPv6 reachability information. Network layer reachability information (NLRI) update messages carry IPv6 address prefixes of feasible routes. BGP allows for policy-based routing. You can use routing policies to choose among multiple paths to a destination and to control the redistribution of routing information. BGP uses the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) as its transport protocol, using port 179 for establishing connections. Running over a reliable transport protocol eliminates the need for BGP to implement update fragmentation, retransmission, acknowledgment, and sequencing. The JUNOS routing protocol software supports BGP version 4. This version of BGP adds support for classless interdomain routing (CIDR), which eliminates the concept of network classes. Instead of assuming which bits of an address represent the network by looking at the first octet, CIDR allows you to explicitly specify the number of bits in the network address, thus providing a means to decrease the size of the routing tables. BGP version 4 also supports aggregation of routes, including the aggregation of AS paths. This chapter discusses the following topics that provide background information about BGP:
BGP Standards on page 636 Autonomous Systems on page 636 AS Paths and Attributes on page 637 External and Internal BGP on page 637 BGP Routes on page 638 BGP Messages on page 638
635
BGP Standards
The JUNOS software supports BGP version 4 and several extensions to the protocol, which are defined in the following documents:
RFC 1772, Application of the Border Gateway Protocol in the Internet RFC 1965, Autonomous System Confederations for BGP RFC 1966, BGP Route Reflection: An Alternative to Full-Mesh IBGP RFC 1997, BGP Communities Attribute RFC 2270, Using a Dedicated AS for Sites Homed to a Single Provider RFC 2283, Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP-4 RFC 2385, Protection of BGP Sessions via the TCP MD5 Signature Option RFC 2439, BGP Route Flap Damping RFC 2545, Use of BGP-4 Multiprotocol Extensions for IPv6 Inter-Domain Routing RFC 2796, BGP Route Reflection RFC 2858, Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP-4 RFC 2918, Route Refresh Capability for BGP-4 RFC 3065, Autonomous System Confederations for BGP RFC 3107, Carrying Label Information in BGP-4 RFC 3392, Capabilities Advertisement with BGP-4 RFC 4271, A Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4) RFC 4724, Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP RFC 4781, Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP with MPLS RFC 4893, BGP Support for Four-octet AS Number Space Internet draft draft-ietf-ppvpn-rfc2547bis-00.txt, BGP/MPLS VPNs (expires January 2002) Internet draft draft-kato-bgp-ipv6-link-local-00.txt, BGP4+ Peering Using IPv6 Link-local Address (expires April 2002) Internet draft draft-ietf-ngtrans-bgp-tunnel-04.txt, Connecting IPv6 Islands across IPv4 Clouds with BGP (only MP-BGP over IPv4 Approach) (expires July 2002) Internet draft draft-ietf-idr-flow-spec-00.txt, Dissemination of Flow Specification Rules
To access Internet Requests for Comments (RFCs) and drafts, go to the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Web site at http://www.ietf.org.
Autonomous Systems
An autonomous system (AS) is a set of routers that are under a single technical administration and normally use a single interior gateway protocol and a common set of metrics to propagate routing information within the set of routers. To other
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BGP Standards
ASs, an AS appears to have a single, coherent interior routing plan and presents a consistent picture of what destinations are reachable through it.
A BGP system shares network reachability information with adjacent BGP systems, which are referred to as neighbors or peers. BGP systems are arranged into groups. In an internal BGP group, all peers in the groupcalled internal peersare in the same AS. Internal peers can be anywhere in the local AS and do not have to be directly connected to each other. Internal groups use routes from an IGP to resolve forwarding addresses. They also propagate external routes among all other internal routers running internal BGP, computing the next hop by taking the BGP next hop received with the route and resolving it using information from one of the interior gateway protocols. In an external BGP group, the peers in the groupcalled external peersare in different ASs and normally share a subnet. In an external group, the next hop is
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computed with respect to the interface that is shared between the external peer and the local router.
BGP Routes
A BGP route consists of the following:
A destination, described as an IP address prefix. Information that describes the path to the destination, including the following:
AS path, which is a list of numbers of the ASs that a route passes through to reach the local router. The first number in the path is that of the last AS in the paththe AS closest to the local router. The last number in the path is the AS farthest from the local router, which is generally the origin of the path. Path attributes, which contain additional information about the AS path that is used in routing policy.
BGP peers advertise routes to each other in update messages. BGP stores its routes in the JUNOS software routing table. The routing table stores the following information about BGP routes:
Routing information learned from update messages received from peers Local routing information that the BGP system selects by applying local policies to routes received in update messages Information that the BGP system selects to advertise to its BGP peers in the update messages it sends
For each prefix in the routing table, the routing protocol process selects a single best path, called the active path. The algorithm for determining the active path is described in How the Active Route Is Determined on page 7.
BGP Messages
BGP systems send four types of messages:
All BGP messages have the same fixed-size header, which contains a marker field indicating the total length of the message and a type field indicating the message type.
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BGP Routes
Open Messages
After a TCP connection is established between two BGP systems, they exchange BGP open messages to create a BGP connection between them. Once the connection is established, the two systems can exchange BGP messages and data traffic. Open messages consist of the BGP header plus the following fields:
VersionThe current BGP version number is 4. Local AS numberYou configure this by including the autonomous-system statement at the [edit routing-options] or [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options] hierarchy levels. Hold timeProposed hold-time value. You configure the local hold time with the BGP hold-time statement. BGP identifierIP address of the BGP system. This address is determined when the system starts up and is the same for every local interface and every BGP peer. You can configure the BGP identifier with the router-id statement at the [edit routing-options] or [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options] hierarchy levels. By default, BGP uses the IP address of the first interface it finds in the router. Parameter field length and the parameter itselfThese are optional fields.
Update Messages
BGP systems send update messages to exchange network reachability information. BGP systems use this information to construct a graph that describes the relationships among all known ASs. Update messages consist of the BGP header plus the following optional fields:
Unfeasible routes lengthLength of the field that lists the routes being withdrawn from service because they are no longer deemed reachable Withdrawn routesIP address prefixes for the routes being withdrawn from service Total path attribute lengthLength of the field that lists the path attributes for a feasible route to a destination Path attributesProperties of the routes, including the path origin, the multiple exit discriminator (MED), the originating systems preference for the route, and information about aggregation, communities, confederations, and route reflection Network layer reachability information (NLRI)IP address prefixes of feasible routes being advertised in the update message
Keepalive Messages
BGP systems exchange keepalive messages to determine whether a link or host has failed or is no longer available. Keepalive messages are exchanged often enough so that the hold timer does not expire. These messages consist only of the BGP header.
BGP Messages
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Notification Messages
BGP systems send notification messages when an error condition is detected. After the message is sent, the BGP session and the TCP connection between the BGP systems are closed. Notification messages consist of the BGP header plus the error code and subcode, and data that describes the error.
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BGP Messages
Chapter 38
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. For a list of global BGP statements, see Defining BGP Global Properties on page 645. For a list of group-specific statements, see Defining Group Properties on page 650. For a list of peer-specific statements, see Defining Peer Properties on page 652.
NOTE: Changing configuration statements that affect BGP peerings, such as enabling or disabling remove-private or renaming a BGP group, resets the BGP sessions. Changes that affect BGP peerings should only be made when resetting a BGP session is acceptable. Many of the global BGP, group-specific, and peer-specific statements are identical. For statements that you can configure at more than one level in the hierarchy, the more-specific statement overrides the less-specific statement. That is, a group-specific statement overrides a global BGP statement, and a peer-specific statement overrides a global BGP or group-specific statement. By default, BGP is disabled.
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Minimum BGP Configuration on page 643 Enabling BGP on page 644 Modifying the Hold-Time Value on page 658 Configuring MTU Discovery on page 659 Configuring Graceful Restart on page 659 Advertising an Explicit Null Label on page 659 Configuring Aggregate Labels for VPNs on page 660 Configuring Authentication on page 660 Applying IPsec Security Association on page 662 Opening a Peer Connection Passively on page 663 Configuring the Local IP Address on page 663 Configuring the Multiple Exit Discriminator Metric on page 663 Controlling the Aggregator Path Attribute on page 667 Configuring an EBGP Multihop Session on page 667 Configuring a Single-Hop EBGP Peer to Accept a Remote Next Hop on page 667 Configuring the BGP Local Preference on page 669 Controlling Route Preference on page 669 Configuring Routing Table Path Selection on page 671 Configuring BGP to Select Multiple BGP Paths on page 672 Configuring a Local AS on page 673 Removing Private AS Numbers from AS Paths on page 675 Configuring Route Reflection on page 676 Enabling Route Flap Damping on page 681 Enabling Multiprotocol BGP on page 682 Enabling BGP to Carry Flow-Specification Routes on page 687 Enabling BGP to Carry Connectionless Network Services Routes on page 689 Enabling Route Target Filtering on page 693 Configuring Prefix-Based Outbound Route Filtering on page 694 Enabling Layer 2 VPN and VPLS Signaling on page 695 Configuring BGP Routing Policy on page 696 Configuring EBGP Peering Using IPv6 Link-Local Address on page 700 Configuring IPv6 BGP Routes over IPv4 Transport on page 701 Configuring BGP to Log System Log Messages on page 702 Describing BGP Router Configuration on page 702 Blocking Nonpeer TCP Connection Attempts on page 702 Applying BGP Export Policy to VRF Routes on page 703
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Enabling Next-Hop Reachability Information on page 703 Configuring the BFD Protocol on page 703 Configuring the Segment Size for TCP on page 706 Tracing BGP Protocol Traffic on page 706
Configure a BGP group and type and allow all BGP systems to be peers:
[edit] routing-options { autonomous-system autonomous-system; } protocols { bgp { group group-name { type type; peer-as autonomous-system; all; } } }
NOTE: When you configure BGP on an interface, you must also include the family inet statement at the [edit interfaces interface-name unit logical-unit-number] hierarchy level. For more information about the family inet statement, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
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Enabling BGP
To enable BGP on the router, perform the following tasks:
Specifying the Local Routers AS Number on page 644 Defining an AS Confederation and Its Members on page 644 Assigning a BGP Identifier on page 645 Defining BGP Global Properties on page 645 Defining BGP Groups and Peers on page 647 Examples: Enabling BGP on page 654
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. You must specify an AS number to enable BGP. For more information about configuring the AS number, see Configuring the AS Number on page 102.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Defining an AS confederation and its members is optional. For more information about configuring confederations, see Configuring AS Confederation Members on page 103.
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Enabling BGP
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Assigning a BGP identifier is optional. For more information, see Configuring the Router Identifier on page 103.
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explicit-null { connected-only; } accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } resolve-vpn; rib inet.3; rib-group group-name; } } route-target { advertise-default; external-paths number; accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> } } signaling { accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> } }
} export [ policy-names ]; graceful-restart { disable; restart-time seconds; stale-routes-time seconds; } hold-time seconds; import [ policy-names ]; include-mp-next-hop; ipsec-sa ipsec-sa; keep (all | none); local-address address; local-as autonomous-system <private>; local-preference local-preference; log-updown; metric-out (metric | minimum-igp <offset> | igp <offset>); multihop <ttl-value>;
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Enabling BGP
no-advertise-peer-as; no-aggregator-id; no-client-reflect; out-delay seconds; passive; path-selection { (always-compare-med | cisco-non-deterministic | external-router-id); med-plus-igp { igp-multiplier number; med-multiplier number; } } peer-as autonomous-system; preference preference; remove-private; tcp-mss segment-size; traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } vpn-apply-export;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. You must configure BGP global properties to enable BGP.
Defining a Group with Static Peers on page 647 Defining a Group with Dynamic Peers on page 649 Defining the Group Type on page 649 Specifying the Peers AS Number on page 650 Defining Group Properties on page 650 Defining Peer Properties on page 652
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statements. The peers on at least one side of each BGP connection must be configured statically. The peer neighbors address can be either an IPv6 or IPv4 address.
group group-name { peer-as autonomous-system; type type; neighbor address; # One "neighbor" statement for each peer }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. As the number of external BGP (EBGP) groups increases, the ability to support a large number of BGP sessions may become a scaling issue. The preferred way to configure a large number of BGP neighbors is to configure a few groups consisting of multiple neighbors per group. Supporting fewer EBGP groups generally scales better than supporting a large number of EBGP groups. This becomes more evident in the case of hundreds of EBGP groups when compared with a few EBGP groups with multiple peers in each group. The following examples illustrate this point. For sample configurations, see the following sections:
Example: Defining a Large Number of Groups with Static Peers on page 648 Example: Defining a Small Number of Groups with Static Peers for Better Scalability on page 649
Example: Defining a Large Number of Groups with Static Peers Enable BGP and define three EBGP groups that recognize BGP systems in AS 56, AS 57, and AS 58 as peers:
[edit] routing-options { autonomous-system 23; } protocols { bgp { group G1 { type external; peer-as 56; neighbor 10.0.0.1; } group G2 { type external; peer-as 57; neighbor 10.0.10.1; } group G3 { type external; peer-as 58; neighbor 10.0.20.1; } } }
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Enabling BGP
Example: Defining a Small Number of Groups with Static Peers for Better Scalability For improved scalability, configure only one EBGP group consisting of the three BGP neighbors:
[edit] routing-options { autonomous-system 23; } protocols { bgp { group G { type external; neighbor 10.0.0.1 { peer-as 56; } neighbor 10.0.10.1 { peer-as 57; } neighbor 10.0.20.1 { peer-as 58; } } } }
NOTE: You cannot define a BGP group with dynamic peers with authentication enabled. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
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To configure an IBGP group, which allows intra-AS BGP routing, include the following form of the type statement:
type internal;
To configure an EBGP group, which allows inter-AS BGP routing, include the following form of the type statement:
type external;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. For autonomous-system, you can specify a number of 1 through 4,294,967,295 in plain-number format. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.1, the range for autonomous system (AS) numbers is extended to provide BGP support for 4-byte AS numbers as defined in RFC 4893, BGP Support for Four-octet AS Number Space. The JUNOS software continues to support 2-byte AS numbers. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.2, you can also configure a 4-byte AS number using the AS-dot notation format of two integer values joined by a period: <16-bit high-order value in decimal>.<16-bit low-order value in decimal>. For example, the 4-byte AS number of 65,546 in plain-number format is represented as 1.10 in the AS-dot notation format. You can specify a value in the range from 0.0 through 65535.65535 in AS-dot notation format. For EBGP, the peer is in another AS, so the AS number you specify in the peer-as statement must be different from the local routers AS number, which you specify in the autonomous-system statement. For IBGP, the peer is in the same AS, so the two AS numbers that you specify in the autonomous-system and peer-as statements must be the same. For more information about configuring the AS number of the local router, see Configuring the AS Number on page 102.
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Enabling BGP
authentication-algorithm algorithm; authentication-key key; authentication-key-chain key-chain; cluster cluster-identifier; damping; description text-description; export [ policy-names ]; family { (inet | inet6 | inet-vpn | inet6-vpn | inet-mpvn | inet6mvpn | l2-vpn) { (any | flow | multicast | unicast | signaling) { accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } rib-group group-name; } flow { no-validate policy-name; } labeled-unicast { explicit-null { connected-only; } accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } resolve-vpn; rib inet.3; rib-group group-name; } } route-target { advertise-default; external-paths number; accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } } signaling { accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>;
Enabling BGP
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} prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } } } graceful-restart { disable; restart-time seconds; stale-routes-time seconds; } hold-time seconds; import [ policy-names ]; ipsec-sa ipsec-sa; keep (all | none); local-address address; local-as autonomous-system <private>; local-preference local-preference; log-updown; metric-out (metric | minimum-igp <offset> | igp <offset>); mtu-discovery; multihop <ttl-value>; multipath { multiple-as; } neighbor address { ... peer-specific-options ... } no-advertise-peer-as; no-aggregator-id; no-client-reflect; out-delay seconds; passive; peer-as autonomous-system; preference preference; remove-private; tcp-mss segment-size; traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } type type; vpn-apply-export;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
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Enabling BGP
advertise-external <conditional>; advertise-inactive; advertise-peer-as; as-override; authentication-algorithm algorithm; authentication-key key; authentication-key-chain key-chain; cluster cluster-identifier; damping; description text-description; export [ policy-names ]; family { (iso-vpn | inet | inet6 | inet-vpn | inet6-vpn | inet-mvpn | inet6-mvpn | l2-vpn) { (any | flow | multicast | unicast | signaling) { accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } rib-group group-name; } flow { no-validate policy-name; } labeled-unicast { explicit-null { connected-only; } accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | time-in-minutes)>; } resolve-vpn; rib inet.3; rib-group group-name; } } route-target { advertise-default; external-paths number; accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } }
Enabling BGP
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signaling { prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } } } graceful-restart { disable; restart-time seconds; stale-routes-time seconds; } hold-time seconds; import [ policy-names ]; ipsec-sa ipsec-sa; keep (all | none); local-address address; local-as autonomous-system <private>; local-interface interface-name; local-preference preference; log-updown; metric-out (metric | minimum-igp <offset> | igp <offset>); mtu-discovery multihop <ttl-value>; multipath { multiple-as; } no-advertise-peer-as; no-aggregator-id; no-client-reflect; out-delay seconds; passive; peer-as autonomous-system; preference preference; tcp-mss segment-size; traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } vpn-apply-export;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
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Enabling BGP
Enable BGP and define an IBGP group that recognizes only the specified addresses as BGP peers.
[edit] routing-options { autonomous-system 23; router-id 10.0.0.1; } protocols { bgp { group 23 { type internal; peer-as 23; neighbor 10.0.0.2; neighbor 10.0.0.3; } } }
Configure a BGP confederation. Figure 9 on page 655 illustrates the confederation topology used in this example. For AS 32 to be a valid confederation, all routers in the AS must be members of the confederation. For example, Router B must have a confederation member AS number as well as a confederation AS number. Within a confederation, the links between the confederation member ASs must be EBGP links, not IBGP links.
Figure 9: Example: BGP Confederation Topology
Enabling BGP
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On Router A:[edit] routing-options { autonomous-system 5; } protocols { bgp { group AtoB { type external; peer-as 32; neighbor 10.0.0.2; } } } On Router B: [edit] routing-options { autonomous-system 65500; confederation 32 members [65500 65501 65502]; } protocols { bgp { group BtoA { type external; peer-as 5; neighbor 10.0.0.1; } group BtoD { type external; peer-as 65501; neighbor 10.0.10.2; } } } On Router C: [edit] routing-options { autonomous-system 65501; confederation 32 members [65500 65501 65502]; } protocols { bgp { group CtoD { type internal; neighbor 10.0.10.3; } } } On Router D: [edit] routing-options { autonomous-system 65501; confederation 32 members [65500 65501 65502]; } protocols { bgp { group DtoC {
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Enabling BGP
type internal; neighbor 10.0.10.1; } group DtoB { type external; peer-as 65500; neighbor 10.0.10.1; } group DtoE { type external; peer-as 65502; neighbor 10.0.30.1; } } } On Router E: [edit] routing-options { autonomous-system 65502; confederation 32 members [65500 65501 65502]; } protocols { bgp { group EtoD { type external; peer-as 65501; neighbor 10.0.10.4; } group EtoFandG { type internal; neighbor 10.0.30.2; neighbor 10.0.30.5; } } } On Router F: [edit] routing-options { autonomous-system 65502; confederation 32 members [65500 65501 65502]; } protocols { bgp { group FtoEandG { type internal; neighbor 10.0.30.3; neighbor 10.0.30.7; } } } On Router G: [edit] routing-options { autonomous-system 65502; confederation 32 members [65500 65501 65502]; }
Enabling BGP
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protocols { bgp { group GtoH { type external; peer-as 37; neighbor 10.0.40.1; } group GtoEandF { type internal; neighbor 10.0.30.4; neighbor 10.0.30.5; } } } On Router H: [edit] routing-options { autonomous-system 37; } protocols { bgp { group HtoG { type external; peer-as 32; neighbor 10.0.30.8; } } }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. The default hold-time value is 90 seconds. The range is 20 through 65,535 seconds. The hold time is three times the interval at which keepalive messages are sent.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: Configuring graceful restart for BGP resets the BGP peer routing statistics to zero. To disable graceful restart for BGP, specify the disable statement. To configure a time period to complete restart, specify the restart-time statement. To configure a time period over which to keep stale routes during a restart, specify the stale-routes-time statement.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Specify the connected-only statement to advertise explicit null labels between connected routes only (direct routes and loopback routes).
NOTE: Explicit null labels are supported for the IPv4 (inet) family only.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can include the aggregate-label statement, see the statement summary for this statement.
Configuring Authentication
All BGP protocol exchanges can be authenticated to guarantee that only trusted routers participate in the ASs routing. By default, authentication is disabled on the router. You can configure MD5 authentication on the router. The MD5 algorithm creates an encoded checksum that is included in the transmitted packet. The receiving router uses an authentication key (password) to verify the packets MD5 checksum. To configure an MD5 authentication key, include the authentication-key statement:
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authentication-key key;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. If you configure authentication for all peers, each individual peer in that group inherits the groups authentication. The key (password) can be up to 126 characters long. Characters can include any ASCII strings. If you include spaces, enclose all characters in quotation marks (double quotes). You can update MD5 authentication keys without resetting any BGP peering sessions. This is referred to as hitless authentication key rollover. Hitless authentication key rollover uses authentication key chains, which consist of the authentication keys that are being updated. Hitless authentication key rollover also allows users to choose the algorithm through which authentication is established. The user associates a key chain and an authentication algorithm with a BGP neighboring session. The key chain includes multiple keys. Each key contains an identifier and a secret. The key is also configured with a unique start time and an end time. The sending peer chooses the active key based on the system time. The receiving peer determines the key with which it authenticates based upon the incoming key identifier. To configure the authentication key, include the key-chain statement at the [edit security authentication-key-chains] hierarchy level, and specify the key option to create a key chain consisting of several authentication keys.
[edit security] authentication-key-chains { key-chain key-chain-name { key key { secret secret-data; start-time yyyy-mm-dd.hh:mm:ss; } } }
You can configure multiple keys within the key chain. Each key within a key chain must be identified by a unique integer value configured in the key statement. The range of valid identifier values is from 0 through 63. Each key must specify a secret. This secret can be entered in either encrypted or plain text format in the secret statement. It is always displayed in encrypted format. Each key must specify a start time with the start-time statement. Start times are specified in the local time zone for a router and must be unique within the key chain. For more information on configuring authentication key chains, see the JUNOS System Basics Configuration Guide.
Configuring Authentication
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To apply an authentication key chain to the router, include the authentication-key-chain statement:
authentication-key-chain key-chain;
To specify the authentication algorithm type to use for key chains, include the authentication-algorithm statement:
authentication-algorithm algorithm;
NOTE: BGP authentication is not supported with promiscuous mode BGP sessions. If you include the allow statement, you cannot include authentication-key or authentication-key-chain at the same hierarchy level or any higher hierarchy level. When configuring authentication for all peers in a group, you cannot include the allow statement in the configuration because BGP keys require a destination address. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can include the previous statements, see the statement summary for those statements.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. The security association is identified by the SA name.
NOTE: Tunnel mode requires the ES PIC. In transport mode, the JUNOS software does not support authentication header (AH) or encapsulating security payload (ESP) header bundles. The JUNOS software supports only BGP in transport mode.
A more specific security association overrides a less general SA. For example, if a specific SA is applied to a specific peer, that SA overrides the SA applied to the whole peer group.
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For more detailed information about configuring IPsec security associations, see the JUNOS System Basics Configuration Guide.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: A BGP session can still be established when only one of the paired routers has a local address configured. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. If you include the default-address-selection statement in the configuration, the software chooses the system default address as the source for most locally generated IP packets. For more information, see the JUNOS System Basics Configuration Guide. For protocols in which the local address is unconstrained by the protocol specification, for example IBGP and multihop EBGP, if you do not configure a specific local address when configuring the protocol, the local address is chosen using the same methods as other locally generated IP packets.
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other factors in determining an exit point are equal, the exit point with the lowest metric is preferred. If a MED is received over an external BGP link, it is propagated over internal links to other BGP systems within the AS. BGP update messages include a MED metric if the route was learned from BGP and already had a MED metric associated with it, or if you configure the MED metric in the configuration file in one of the following ways:
Defining a MED Metric Directly on page 664 Using Routing Policy to Define a MED Metric on page 665 Examples: Configuring the MED Metric on page 666
For configuration examples, see Examples: Configuring the MED Metric on page 666. A MED metric is advertised with a route according to the following general rules:
A more specific metric overrides a less specific metric. That is, a group-specific metric overrides a global BGP metric and a peer-specific metric overrides a global BGP or group-specific metric. A metric defined with routing policy overrides a metric defined with the metric-out statement. If any metric is defined, it overrides a metric received in a route. If the received route does not have an associated MED metric, and if you do not explicitly configure a metric value, no metric is advertised. When you do not explicitly configure a metric value, the MED is equivalent to zero (0) when advertising an active route.
For a description of the algorithm used to determine the active path, see How the Active Route Is Determined on page 7.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
metric is the primary metric on all routes sent to peers. It can be a value in the range
Specify minimum-igp to set the metric to the minimum metric value calculated in the IGP to get to the BGP next hop. If a newly calculated metric is greater than the minimum metric value, the metric value remains unchanged. If a newly calculated metric is lower, the metric value is lowered to that value.
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Specify igp to set the metric to the most recent metric value calculated in the IGP to get to the BGP next hop. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.0, you can also specify for a BGP group or peer configured with the metric-out igp statement to delay sending MED updates when the MED value increases. Include the delay-med-update statement when you configure the igp statement. The default interval to delay sending updates unless the MED is lower or another attribute associated with the route has changed is 10 minutes. Include the med-igp-update-interval minutes statement at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level to modify the default interval. For information, see Configuring a Timer to Delay Multiple Exit Discriminator IGP Updates on page 122. Specify a value for offset to increase or decrease the metric that is used from the metric value calculated in the IGP. The metric value is offset by the value specified. The metric calculated in the IGP (by specifying either igp or igp-minimum) is increased if the offset value is positive. The metric calculated in the IGP (by specifying either igp or igp-minimum) is decreased if the offset value is negative.
offset can be a value in the range from 231 through 231 1. Note that the adjusted
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. For information about defining routing policy, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. For information about applying filters in BGP, see Configuring BGP Routing Policy on page 696.
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Set the MED metric to 20 for all routes from a particular community:
[edit] routing-options { router-id 10.0.0.1; autonomous-system 23; } policy-options { policy-statement from-otago { from community otago; then metric 20; } community otago members [56:2379 23:46944]; } protocols { bgp { import from-otago; group 23 { type external; peer-as 56; neighbor 192.168.0.1 { traceoptions { file bgp-log-peer; flag packets; } log-updown; } }
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} }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To configure the maximum time-to-live (TTL) value for the TTL in the IP header of BGP packets, specify ttl-value. If you do not specify a TTL value, the systems default maximum TTL value is used. To specify not to change the BGP next-hop value for route advertisements, specify the no-nexthop-change option.
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a common subnet. This situation breaks multipath functionality for routes that are recursively resolved over routes that include these next-hop addresses. Configuring the accept-remote-nexthop statement allows next-hop routes that share a common subnet to be installed as direct, which restores multipath functionality for routes that are resolved over these next-hop addresses. Both the remote next-hop and the EBGP peer must support BGP route refresh as defined in RFC 2918, Route Refresh Capability in BGP-4. If the remote peer does not support BGP route refresh, the session is reset.
NOTE: You cannot configure both the multihop and accept-remote-nexthop statements for the same EBGP peer. When you enable a single-hop EBGP peer to accept a remote next hop, you must also configure an import routing policy on the EBGP peer that specifies the remote next-hop address. For more information about how to configure a BGP routing policy, see Configuring BGP Routing Policy on page 696 and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. To enable a single-hop EBGP peer to accept a remote next hop, include the accept-remote-nexthop statement:
accept-remote-nexthop;
You can configure this statement at the global, group, and neighbor hierarchy levels for BGP. The statement is also supported on logical systems and the VPN routing and forwarding (VRF) routing instance type. For a complete list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
Example: Configure an Import Routing Policy for an EBGP Peer to Accept a Remote Next Hop
Configure an import routing policy, agg_route, that enables a single-hop external BGP peer to accept the remote next-hop 1.1.10.10. At the [edit protocols bgp] hierarchy level, include the import agg_route statement to apply the policy to the external BGP peer and include the accept-remote-nexthop statement to enable the single-hop EBGP peer to accept the remote next hop.
policy-options { policy-statement agg_route { term 1 { from { protocol bgp; route-filter 1.1.230.0/23 exact; } then { next-hop 1.1.10.10; accept; } } } } protocols {
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bgp { accept-remote-nexthop; group ext { type external; import agg_route; peer-as 65001; multipath; neighbor 1.1.0.1; neighbor 1.1.1.1; } group int { type internal; local-address 10.255.71.24; neighbor 10.255.14.177; } } }
NOTE: The LOCAL_PREF path attribute applies at export time only. By default, if a received route contains a LOCAL_PREF path attribute value, the value is not modified. If a BGP route is received without a LOCAL_PREF attribute, the route is handled locally (that is, it is stored in the routing table and advertised by BGP) as if it were received with a LOCAL_PREF value of 100. A non-BGP route that is advertised by BGP is advertised with a LOCAL_PREF value of 100 by default. To change the local preference metric advertised in the path attribute, include the local-preference statement, specifying a value from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (2321):
local-preference local-preference;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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BGP has the highest default preference value, which means that routes learned by BGP are the least likely to become the active route. (For more information about preferences, see Route Preferences on page 6.) To modify the default BGP preference value, include the preference statement, specifying a value from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1):
preference preference;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
Assign a preference of 140 to all routes learned by BGP systems. Because the default OSPF preference is 150, BGP routes will be preferred over those learned from OSPF.
[edit] routing-options { autonomous-system 23; } protocols { bgp { preference 140; group 23 { type external; peer-as 56; neighbor 192.168.1.1; } } }
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Routing table path selection can be configured in one of the following ways:
Using the same nondeterministic behavior as does the Cisco IOS software (cisco-non-deterministic). This behavior has two effects:
The active path is always first. All nonactive, but eligible, paths follow the active path and are maintained in the order in which they were received, with the most recent path first. Ineligible paths remain at the end of the list. When a new path is added to the routing table, path comparisons are made without removing from consideration those paths that should never be selected because those paths lose the MED tie-breaking rule.
These two effects cause the system to only sometimes compare the MEDs between paths that it should otherwise compare. Because of this, we recommend that you not configure nondeterministic behavior.
Always comparing MEDs whether or not the peer ASs of the compared routes are the same (always-compare-med).
For an example of always comparing MEDs, see Example: Always Comparing MEDs on page 671.
Comparing the router ID between external BGP paths to determine the active path (external-router-id). By default, router ID comparison is not performed if one of the external paths is active. Adding the IGP cost to the next-hop destination to the MED before comparing MED values for path selection.
For a description of the algorithm used to determine the active path, see How the Active Route Is Determined on page 7.
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[edit] protocols { bgp { path-selection always-compare-med; group ref { type external; import math; peer-as 10458; neighbor 208.197.169.14; } group ref { type external; peer-as 10; neighbor 208.197.169.15; } } } policy-options { policy-statement math { then { metric add 4; } } }
Load-balancing across multiple links between two routers belonging to different ASs Load-balancing across a common subnet or multiple subnets to different routers belonging to the same peer AS Load-balancing across multiple links between two routers belonging to different external confederation peers Load-balancing across a common subnet or multiple subnets to different routers belonging to external confederation peers
To disable the default check requiring that paths accepted by BGP multipath must have the same neighboring AS, include the multiple-as option. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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Configuring a Local AS
You can configure BGP with a different local AS number for each EBGP session, which allows BGP to configure a local AS for each EBGP session. Configuring a local AS simulates a virtual AS for the router. The AS paths for the routes from that EBGP peer have the configured local-as prepended before the peer AS for that session. This is useful if ISP A has acquired another ISP B, but does not want to change the configurations of ISP Bs customer routers. ISP Bs AS is the AS that is configured as the local AS.
NOTE: If the local AS for the EBGP/IBGP peer is the same as the current AS, do not use the local-as statement to specify the local AS number. To configure a local AS, include the local-as statement:
local-as autonomous-system <private>;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. For autonomous-system, you can specify a number from 1 through 4,294,967,295 in plain-number format. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.1, the range for autonomous system (AS) numbers is extended to provide BGP support for 4-byte AS numbers as defined in RFC 4893, BGP Support for Four-octet AS Number Space. The JUNOS software continues to support 2-byte AS numbers. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.2, you can also configure a 4-byte AS number using the AS-dot notation format of two integer values joined by a period: <16-bit high-order value in decimal>.<16-bit low-order value in decimal>. For example, the 4-byte AS number of 65,546 in plain-number format is represented as 1.10 in the AS-dot notation format. You can specify a value in the range from 0.0 through 65535.65535. in AS-dot notation format. If you include the private keyword, the local AS is not prepended before the peer AS. This means that the AS paths do not show details of such a configuration, and ISP As EBGP peers and IBGP peers do not see any difference from before the local AS configuration.
NOTE: If you configure the local AS values for any BGP group, the detection of routing loops is performed using both the AS and the local AS values for all BGP groups.
Configuring a Local AS
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Use the local-as statement when ISPs merge and want to preserve a customers configuration, particularly the AS the customer is configured to peer with. Use the local-as statement to simulate the AS number already in place in customer routers, even if the ISPs router is in a different AS now.
Figure 10: Local AS Configuration
In Figure 10 on page 674, Router 1 and Router 2 are in AS 65500, Router 4 is in AS 64513, and Router 3 is in AS 64512. Router 2 uses AS 65001 as its local AS. Router 2 adds AS 65001 when announcing Router 1s routes to Router 3. Router 3 sees an AS path of 65001 65500 64512 for the prefix 10/8. To prevent Router 2 from adding the virtual AS number in its announcements to other peers, use the local-as autonomous-system private statement. The local-as autonomous-system private statement configures Router 2 to not include the virtual AS number configured in local-as when announcing Router 1s routes to Router 3. In this case, Router 3 sees an AS path of 65500 64512 for the prefix 10/8. The configuration for each router follows.
On Router 1: routing-options { autonomous-system 65500; } protocols { bgp { group internal-AS65500 { type internal; local-address 10.1.1.1; neighbor 10.1.1.2; } } } On Router 2: routing-options { autonomous-system 65500;
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Configuring a Local AS
} protocols { bgp { group internal-AS65500 { type internal; local-address 10.1.1.2; neighbor 10.1.1.1; } group external-AS64513 { type external; peer-as 64513; neighbor 192.168.1.2; } group external-AS64512 { type external; peer-as 64512; neighbor 192.168.10.2; } } } On Router 3: routing-options { autonomous-system 64512; } protocols { bgp { group external-AS65001 { type external; peer-as 65001; neighbor 192.168.10.1; } } } On Router 4: routing-options { autonomous-system 64513; } protocols { bgp { group external-65500 { peer-as 65500; neighbor 192.168.1.1; } } }
A remote AS for which you provide connectivity is multihomed, but only to the local AS.
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The remote AS does not have an officially allocated AS number. It is not appropriate to make the remote AS a confederation member AS of the local AS.
To have the local system strip private AS numbers from the AS path, include the remove-private statement:
remove-private;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
CAUTION: Changing configuration statements that affect BGP peerings, such as enabling or disabling remove-private or renaming a BGP group, resets the BGP sessions. Changes that affect BGP peerings should only be made when resetting a BGP session is acceptable.
NOTE: The remote-private statement is applicable only when advertising routers to another neighbor. The AS numbers are stripped from the AS path starting at the left end of the AS path (the end where AS paths have been most recently added). This operation takes place after any confederation member ASs have already been removed from the AS path, if applicable. The software is preconfigured with knowledge of the set of AS numbers that is considered private, a range that is defined in the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) assigned numbers document. The set of AS numbers reserved as private are in the range from 64,512 through 65,534, inclusive.
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When the route reflector receives a route, it selects the best path. Then, if the route came from a nonclient peer, the route reflector sends the route to all client peers within the cluster. If the route came from a client peer, the route reflector sends it to all nonclient peers and to all client peers except the originator. In this process, none of the client peers send routes to other client peers. To configure route reflection, you specify a cluster identifier only on the BGP systems that are to be the route reflectors. These systems then determine, from the network reachability information they receive, which BGP systems are part of its cluster and are client peers, and which BGP systems are outside the cluster and are nonclient peers. CAUTION: If you configure both route reflection and VPNs on the same routing device, modifying the route reflection configuration causes all current BGP sessions to be reset. To configure a router to be a route reflector, you must do the following:
Configure multiple IBGP groups. Configure a cluster identifier (using the cluster statement) for groups that are members of the cluster. Configure all the groups with the same IBGP AS number.
To configure the route reflector, include the following statements in the configuration:
group group-name { type internal; peer-as autonomous-system; neighbor address1; neighbor address2; } group group-name { type internal; peer-as autonomous-system; cluster cluster-identifier; neighbor address3; neighbor address4; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. By default, the BGP route reflector performs intracluster reflection because it assumes that all the client peers are not fully meshed. However, if the client peers are fully meshed, intracluster reflection results in the sending of redundant route advertisements. In this case, you can disable intracluster reflection by including the no-client-reflect statement within the group statement:
group group-name { type internal; peer-as autonomous-system; cluster cluster-identifier; no-client-reflect; neighbor address3; neighbor address4; }
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: BGP route reflection is not supported for VPN routing and forwarding (VRF) routing instances.
You must configure all routers to run a common IGP or to have static configuration, so that they learn each others loopback addresses.
Figure 11: Simple Route Reflector
Configure Router 1 to be a route reflector for Router 2 and a regular IBGP neighbor for Router 3:
[edit] routing-options { autonomous-system 65534; } protocols { bgp { group 13 { type internal; local-address 10.1.2.3; neighbor 10.1.2.5; } group 12 {
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Configure Router 2 to be an IBGP neighbor to Router 1 and announce 16.0.0.0/8 to Router 1. Configure route 16.0.0.0/8 as a static route on Router 2.
[edit] routing-options { static { route 16.0.0.0/8 nexthop 172.16.1.2; } autonomous-system 65534; } protocols { bgp { group 21 { type internal; local-address 10.1.2.4; export dist-static; neighbor 10.1.2.3; } } } policy-options { policy-statement dist-static { from protocol static; then accept; } }
Configure Router 3 to be an IBGP neighbor to Router 1 and announce 15.0.0.0/8 to Router 1. Configure route 15.0.0.0/8 as a static route on Router 3.
[edit] routing-options { static { route 15.0.0.0/8 nexthop 172.16.1.2; } autonomous-system 65534; } protocols { bgp { group 31 { type internal; local-address 10.1.2.5; export dist-static; neighbor 10.1.2.3; } } } policy-options {
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The following is the output of the show route detail command for route 16.0.0.0/8 on Router 1 and Router 3. Note that Router 1 learns 16.0.0.0/8 from its client, Router 2, and reflects it to Router 3. On Router 3, the output of the show route commands include the cluster list and originator ID attributes, which are added by Router 1 when the route is reflected.
Router 1
user@router1> show route 16.0.0.0/8 detail inet.0: 1 destinations, 1 routes (1 active, 0 holddown, 0 hidden) + = Active Route, - = Last Active, * = Both 16.0.0.0/8 (1 entry, 1 announced) *BGP Preference: 170/-101 Source: 10.1.2.4 Nexthop: 172.16.1.2 via fxp0.0, selected State: <Active Int Ext> Local AS: 65534 Peer AS: 65534 Age: 11:55 Metric2: 0 Task: BGP_65534.10.1.2.4+4327 Announcement bits (3): 2-KRT 3-BGP.0.0.0.0+179 4-BGP_Sync_Any AS path: I BGP next hop: 172.16.1.2 Localpref: 100 Router ID: 10.1.2.4 user@router3> show route 16.0.0.0/8 detail inet.0: 1 destinations, 1 routes (1 active, 0 holddown, 0 hidden) + = Active Route, - = Last Active, * = Both 16.0.0.0/8 (1 entry, 1 announced) *BGP Preference: 170/-101 Source: 10.1.2.3 Nexthop: 172.16.1.2 via fxp0.0, selected State: <Active Int Ext> Local AS: 65534 Peer AS: 65534 Age: 11:57 Metric2: 0 Task: BGP_65534.10.1.2.3+4619 Announcement bits (2): 2-KRT 4-BGP_Sync_Any AS path: I <Originator> Cluster list: 1.2.3.4 Originator ID: 10.1.2.4 BGP next hop: 172.16.1.2 Localpref: 100 Router ID: 10.1.2.3
Router 3
The following is the output of the show route detail command for route 15.0.0.0/8 on router 1 and router 2. Similar to when routes are reflected from client peers to nonclient peers, router 1 reflects a route it learns from a regular IBGP neighbor to its client. Cluster list and Originator ID attributes are added during the reflection process.
Router 1
user@router1> show route 15.0.0.0/8 detail inet.0: 1 destinations, 1 routes (1 active, 0 holddown, 0 hidden) + = Active Route, - = Last Active, * = Both 15.0.0.0/8 (1 entry, 1 announced)
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*BGP Preference: 170/-101 Source: 10.1.2.5 Nexthop: 172.16.1.2 via fxp0.0, selected State: <Active Int Ext> Local AS: 65534 Peer AS: 65534 Age: 11:14 Metric2: 0 Task: BGP_65534.10.1.2.5+179 Announcement bits (3): 2-KRT 3-BGP.0.0.0.0+179 4-BGP_Sync_Any AS path: I BGP next hop: 172.16.1.2 Localpref: 100 Router ID: 10.1.2.5
Router 2
user@router2> show route 15.0.0.0/8 detail inet.0: 1 destinations, 1 routes (1 active, 0 holddown, 0 hidden) + = Active Route, - = Last Active, * = Both 15.0.0.0/8 (1 entry, 1 announced) *BGP Preference: 170/-101 Source: 10.1.2.3 Nexthop: 172.16.1.2 via fxp0.0, selected State: <Active Int Ext> Local AS: 65534 Peer AS: 65534 Age: 11:23 Metric2: 0 Task: BGP_65534.10.1.2.3+179 Announcement bits (2): 2-KRT 4-BGP_Sync_Any AS path: I <Originator> Cluster list: 1.2.3.4 Originator ID: 10.1.2.5 BGP next hop: 172.16.1.2 Localpref: 100 Router ID: 10.1.2.3
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Damping is applied to external peers and to peers at confederation boundaries. For finer control over which peers have damping enabled, include the damping statement at the [edit protocols bgp group group-name] hierarchy level. By default, route flap damping uses the following parameters:
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To change these default parameters, you must define the flap damping parameters by including the damping statement at the [edit policy-options] hierarchy level and then apply them by including an import statement when configuring BGP. For more information about flap damping and defining flap damping parameters, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. For more information about applying policy filters in BGP, see Configuring BGP Routing Policy on page 696.
To enable MP-BGP to carry NLRI for the IPv6 address family, include the family inet6 statement:
family inet6 { (any | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast) { accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } rib-group group-name; } }
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To enable MP-BGP to carry Layer 3 VPN NLRI for the IPv4 address family, include the family inet-vpn statement:
family inet-vpn { (any | flow | multicast | unicast) { accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } rib-group group-name; } }
To enable MP-BGP to carry Layer 3 VPN NLRI for the IPv6 address family, include the family inet6-vpn statement:
family inet6-vpn { (any | multicast | unicast) { accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } rib-group group-name; } }
To enable MP-BGP to carry multicast VPN NLRI for the IPv4 address family and to enable VPN signaling, include the family inet-mvpn statement:
family inet-mvpn { signaling { accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } } }
To enable MP-BGP to carry multicast VPN NLRI for the IPv6 address family and to enable VPN signaling, include the family inet6-mvpn statement:
family inet6-mvpn { signaling { accepted-prefix-limit {
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maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout <forever | minutes>; } } }
For more information about multiprotocol BGP-based multicast VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide and the JUNOS Multicast Protocols Configuration Guide. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
NOTE: If you change the address family specified in the [edit bgp family inet] hierarchy level, the BGP sessions are dropped and then reestablished. By default, BGP peers carry only unicast routes used for unicast forwarding purposes. To configure BGP peers to carry only multicast routes, specify the multicast option. To configure BGP peers to carry both unicast and multicast routes, specify the any option. When MP-BGP is configured, BGP installs the MP-BGP routes into different routing tables. Each routing table is identified by the protocol family or address family indicator (AFI) and a subaddress family indicator (SAFI). The JUNOS software supports all unicast and multicast SAFIs (1 and 2) for both AFI 1 (IPv4) and AFI 2 (IPv6). The following table shows all possible AFI and SAFI combinations and routing tables populated with this information:
SAFI 1
AFI 1 (IPv4) AFI 2 (IPv6)
inet.0 inet6.0
If peers are not MP-BGP, you cannot export routes from inet.2 to them, only routes in the inet.0 routing table. Routes in inet.2 can be sent only to MP-BGP peers, since they are sent with subaddress family information that identifies them as routes to multicast sources. The inet.2 table should be a subset of the routes that you have in inet.0, since it is unlikely that you would have a route to a multicast source to which you could not send unicast traffic. The inet.2 routing table is used to keep the unicast routes that are used for multicast reverse-path-forwarding checks. You automatically get an inet.2 routing table when you configure MP-BGP (by setting NLRI to any). The additional reachability information learned by MP-BGP from the NLRI multicast updates are placed in inet.2.
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Limiting the Number of Prefixes Received on a BGP Peering Session on page 685 Limiting the Number of Prefixes Accepted on a BGP Peering Session on page 685 Configuring BGP Routing Table Groups on page 686 Resolving Routes to PE Routers Located in Other ASs on page 687 Allowing Labeled and Unlabeled Routes on page 687
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. For maximum number, specify a value in the range from 1 through 4,294,967,295. When the specified maximum number of prefixes is exceeded, a system log message is sent. If you include the teardown statement, the session is torn down when the maximum number of prefixes is exceeded. If you specify a percentage, messages are logged when the number of prefixes exceeds that percentage of the specified maximum limit. After the session is torn down, it is reestablished in a short time (unless you include the idle-timeout statement). Then the session can be kept down for a specified amount of time, or forever. If you specify forever, the session is reestablished only after the you issue a clear bgp neighbor command.
NOTE: Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.2, you can alternatively configure a limit to the number of prefixes that can accepted on a BGP peering session. For more information, see Limiting the Number of Prefixes Accepted on a BGP Peering Session on page 685.
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To configure a limit to the number of prefixes that can be accepted on a BGP peering session, include the accepted-prefix-limit statement:
accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. For maximum number, specify a value in the range from 1 through 4,294,967,295. Include the teardown statement to specify to the reset the BGP peering session when the number of accepted prefixes exceeds the configured limit. You can also include a percentage value from 1 through 100 to have a system log message sent when the number of accepted prefixes exceeds that percentage of the maximum limit. By default a BGP session that is reset is reestablished within a short time. Include the idle-timeout statement to prevent the BGP session from being reestablished for a specified period of time. You can configure a timeout value from 1 through 2400 minutes. Include the forever option to prevent the BGP session from being reestablished until you issue the clear bgp neighbor command.
NOTE: When nonstop routing is enabled and a switchover to a backup Routing Engine occurs, BGP peers that are down are automatically restarted. The peers are restarted even if the idle-timeout forever statement is configured.
NOTE: Alternatively, you can configure a limit to the number of prefixes that can be received on a BGP peering session. For more information, see Limiting the Number of Prefixes Received on a BGP Peering Session on page 685.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
Configuring Flow-Specification Routes for IPv4 Unicast on page 687 Configuring Flow-Specification Routes for Layer 3 VPNs on page 688
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NOTE: Unicast flow routes are supported for the default instance, VRF instances, and virtual-router instances only. Instance type is configured by including the instance-type statement at the [edit routing-instance instance-name] hierarchy level. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Flow routes received using the BGP NLRI messages are validated before they are installed into the flow routing table instance-name.inetflow.0. The validation procedure is described in the Internet draft draft-ietf-idr-flow-spec-00.txt, Dissemination of Flow Specification Rules. You can bypass the validation process and use your own specific import policy. To disable the validation procedure and use an import policy instead, include the no-validate statement at the [edit protocols bgp group group-name family inet flow] hierarchy level:
no-validate policy-name;
NOTE: VPN flow routes are supported for the default instance only. Instance type is configured by including the instance-type statement at the [edit routing-instance instance-name] hierarchy level. Flow routes configured for VPNs with family inet-vpn are not automatically validated, so the no-validate statement is not supported at the [edit protocols bgp group group-name family inet-vpn] hierarchy level. For more information on flow routes, see Configuring a Flow Route on page 95 and the Internet draft draft-marques-idr-flow-spec-02.txt, Dissemination of Flow Specification Rules.
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NOTE: CLNS is supported for the J-series Services Router only. A single routing domain consisting of ISO NSAP devices are considered to be CLNS islands. CLNS islands are connected together by VPNs. You can configure BGP to exchange ISO CLNS routes between PE routers connecting various CLNS islands in a VPN using multiprotocol BGP extensions. These extensions are the ISO VPN NLRIs. To enable MP-BGP to carry CLNS VPN NLRIs, include the iso-vpn statement:
iso-vpn { unicast { prefix-limit number; rib-group group-name; } }
To limit the number of prefixes from a peer, include the prefix-limit statement. To specify a routing table group, include the rib-group statement. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Each CLNS network island is treated as a separate VRF instance on the PE router. You can configure CLNS on the global level, group level, and neighbor level. For information on CLNS, see Configuring Support for Connectionless Network Services on page 324 and the J-series Services Router Advanced WAN Access Configuration Guide. For sample configurations, see the following sections:
Example: Enabling CLNS Between Two Routers on page 689 Example: Configuring CLNS Within a VPN on page 691
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group pe-pe { type internal; neighbor 10.255.245.194 { family iso-vpn { unicast; } } } } } [edit routing-instances] routing-instances { aaaa { instance-type vrf; interface fe-0/0/0.0; interface so-1/1/0.0; interface lo0.1; route-distinguisher 10.255.245.194:1; vrf-target target:11111:1; protocols { isis { export dist-bgp; no-ipv4-routing; no-ipv6-routing; clns-routing; interface all; } } } } On Router 2: [edit protocols bgp] protocols { bgp { group pe-pe { type internal; local-address 10.255.245.198; family route-target; neighbor 10.255.245.194 { family iso-vpn { unicast; } } } } } [edit routing-instances] routing-instances { aaaa { instance-type vrf; interface lo0.1; interface so-0/1/2.0; interface so-0/1/3.0; route-distinguisher 10.255.245.194:1; vrf-target target:11111:1; routing-options {
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rib aaaa.iso.0 { static { iso-route 47.0005.80ff.f800.0000.bbbb.1022/104 next-hop 47.0005.80ff.f800.0000.aaaa.1000.1921.6800.4196.00; } } } protocols { isis { export dist-bgp; no-ipv4-routing; no-ipv6-routing; clns-routing; interface all; } } } } On Route Reflector: [edit protocols bgp] protocols { bgp { group pe-pe { type internal; local-address 10.255.245.194; family route-target; neighbor 10.255.245.195 { cluster 0.0.0.1; } neighbor 10.255.245.198 { cluster 0.0.0.1; } } } }
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peer-as 200; } } } } [edit routing-instances] routing-instances { aaaa { instance-type vrf; interface lo0.1; interface t1-3/0/0.0; interface fe-5/0/1.0; route-distinguisher 10.245.245.1:1; vrf-target target:11111:1; protocols { isis { export dist-bgp; no-ipv4-routing; no-ipv6-routing; clns-routing; interface all; } } } } On PE Router 2: [edit protocols bgp] protocols { bgp { group asbr { type external; multihop; family iso-vpn { unicast; } neighbor 10.245.245.2 { peer-as 300; } neighbor 10.245.245.3 { peer-as 100; } } } } [edit routing-instances] routing-instances { aaaa { instance-type vrf; interface lo0.1; route-distinguisher 10.245.245.1:1; vrf-target target:11111:1; } } On PE Router 3: [edit protocols bgp] protocols {
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bgp { group asbr { type external; multihop; local-address 10.245.245.2; neighbor 10.245.245.1 { family iso-vpn { unicast; } peer-as 200; } } } } [edit routing-instances] routing-instances { aaaa { instance-type vrf; interface lo0.1; interface fe-0/0/1.0; interface t1-3/0/0.0; route-distinguisher 10.245.245.1:1; vrf-target target:11111:1; protocols { isis { export dist-bgp; no-ipv6-routing; clns-routing; interface all; } } } }
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. If you include the advertise-default statement, the router advertises the default route-target route (0:0:0/0) and suppresses any specific route-target routes. This is useful for a route reflector in a BGP group consisting of neighbor PE routers only. If you include the external-paths statement, the router limits the number of external paths accepted for route filtering. The range is from 1 through 16. The default is 1. If you include the teardown statement, the session is torn down when the maximum number of prefixes is reached. If you specify a percentage, messages are logged when the number of prefixes reaches that percentage. Once the session is torn down, it is reestablished in a short time. Include the idle-timeout statement to keep the session down for a specified amount of time, or forever. If you specify forever, the session is reestablished only after you use the clear bgp neighbor command. For more information about VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide.
For a complete list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summaries for these statements.
NOTE: The maximum number of prefix-based outbound route filters that a BGP peer can accept is 5000. If a remote peer sends more than 5000 outbound route filters to a peer address, the additional filters are discarded and a system log message is generated.
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You can also enable interoperability with routers that use the vendor-specific compatibility code of 130 for outbound router filters and the code type of 128. The standard code is 3, and the standard code type is 64. You can configure interoperability for the router as a whole or for specific BGP groups or peers only. To configure BGP peers to interoperate with routers that use vendor-specific compatibility codes for outbound routing filters, include the bgp-orf-cisco-mode statement:
outbound-route-filter { bgp-orf-cisco-mode; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. To configure a maximum number of prefixes, include the prefix-limit statement:
prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; }
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. When you set the maximum number of prefixes, a message is logged when that number is reached. If you include the teardown statement, the session is torn down when the maximum number of prefixes is reached. If you specify a percentage, messages are logged when the number of prefixes reaches that percentage. Once the session is torn down, it is reestablished in a short time. Include the idle-timeout statement to keep the session down for a specified amount of time, or forever. If you specify forever, the session is reestablished only after you use the clear bgp neighbor command. For more information about VPNs, see the JUNOS VPNs Configuration Guide. For a detailed VPLS example configuration, see the JUNOS Feature Guide.
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Applying Routing Policy on page 696 Setting BGP to Advertise Inactive Routes on page 697 Configuring BGP to Advertise the Best External Route to Internal Peers on page 697 Configuring How Often BGP Exchanges Routes with the Routing Table on page 699 Disabling Suppression of Route Advertisements on page 699
BGP global import and export statementsInclude these statements at the [edit protocols bgp] hierarchy level (for routing instances, include these statements at the [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp] hierarchy level). Group import and export statementsInclude these statements at the [edit protocols bgp group group-name] hierarchy level (for routing instances, include these statements at the [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name] hierarchy level). Peer import and export statementsInclude these statements at the [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address] hierarchy level (for routing instances, include these statements at the [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address] hierarchy level). (A peer uses its groups export statement.)
A peer-level import or export statement overrides a group import or export statement. A group-level import or export statement overrides a global BGP import or export statement. To apply policies, see the following sections:
Applying Policies to Routes Being Imported into the Routing Table from BGP on page 697 Applying Policies to Routes Being Exported from the Routing Table into BGP on page 697
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Applying Policies to Routes Being Imported into the Routing Table from BGP
To apply policy to routes being imported into the routing table from BGP, include the import statement, listing the names of one or more policies to be evaluated:
import [ policy-names ];
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. If you specify more than one policy, they are evaluated in the order specified, from first to last, and the first matching filter is applied to the route. If no match is found, BGP places into the routing table only those routes that were learned from BGP routers.
Applying Policies to Routes Being Exported from the Routing Table into BGP
To apply policy to routes being exported from the routing table into BGP, include the export statement, listing the names of one or more policies to be evaluated:
export [ policy-names ];
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. If you specify more than one policy, they are evaluated in the order specified, from first to last, and the first matching filter is applied to the route. If no routes match the filters, the routing table exports into BGP only the routes that it learned from BGP.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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advertising the best external route is beneficial, in particular, situations that can result in IBGP route oscillation. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.3, you can configure BGP to advertise the best external route into an IBGP mesh group, a route reflector cluster, or an AS confederation, even when the best route is an internal route.
NOTE: In order to configure the advertise-external statement on a route reflector, you must disable intracluster reflection with the no-client-reflect statement. When a router is configured as a route reflector for a cluster, a route advertised by the route reflector is considered internal only if it is received from an internal peer with the same cluster identifier or no cluster identifier. A route received from an internal peer that belongs to a another cluster, that is, with a different cluster identifier, is considered external. In a confederation, when advertising a route to a confederation border router, any route from a different confederation sub-AS is considered internal. You can also configure BGP only to advertise the external route if the route selection process reaches the point where the multiple exit discriminator (MED) metric is evaluated. As a result, an external route with an AS path worse (that is, longer) than that of the active path is not advertised. The JUNOS software also provides support for configuring a BGP export policy that matches on the state of an advertised route. You can match on either active or inactive routes. For more information, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. To configure BGP to advertise the best external path to internal peers, include the advertise-external statement:
advertise-external;
NOTE: The advertise-external statement is supported at both the group and neighbor level. If you configure the statement at the neighbor level, you must configure it for all neighbors in a group. Otherwise, the group is automatically split into different groups. For a complete list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
To configure BGP to advertise the best external path only if the route selection process reaches the point where the MED is evaluated, include the conditional statement:
advertise-external { conditional; }
For a complete list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
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Configuring How Often BGP Exchanges Routes with the Routing Table
BGP stores the route information it receives from update messages in the routing table, and the routing table exports active routes from the routing table into BGP. BGP then advertises the exported routes to its peers. By default, the exchange of route information between BGP and the routing table occurs immediately after the routes are received. This immediate exchange of route information might cause instabilities in the network reachability information. To guard against this, you can delay the time between when BGP and the routing table exchange route information. To configure how often BGP and the routing table exchange route information, include the out-delay statement:
out-delay seconds;
By default, the routing table retains some of the route information learned from BGP. To have the routing table retain all or none of this information, include the keep statement:
keep (all | none);
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements. The routing table can retain the route information learned from BGP in one of the following ways:
Default (omit the keep statement)Keep all route information that was learned from BGP except for routes whose AS path is looped and the loop includes the local AS.
keep allKeep all route information that was learned from BGP. keep noneDiscard routes that were received from a peer and that were rejected
by import policy or other sanity checking, such as AS path or next hop. When you configure keep none for the BGP session and the inbound policy changes, the JUNOS software forces readvertisement of the full set of routes advertised by the peer. In an AS path healing situation, routes with looped paths theoretically could become usable during a soft reconfiguration when the AS path loop limit is changed. However, there is a significant memory usage difference between the default and keep all because it is common for a peer to readvertise routes back to the peer from which it learned them. The default behavior is not to waste memory on such routes.
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advertise-peer-as;
NOTE: The route suppression default behavior is disabled if the as-override statement is included in the configuration. If you include the advertise-peer-as statement in the configuration, BGP advertises the route regardless of this check. To restore the default behavior, include the no-advertise-peer-as statement in the configuration:
no-advertise-peer-as;
If you include both the as-override and no-advertise-peer-as statements in the configuration, the no-advertise-peer-as statement is ignored. You can include these statements at multiple hierarchy levels. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary section for this statement.
To specify the interface name for the EBGP link-local peer, include the local-interface statement:
local-interface interface-name;
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for this statements. This statement is valid only for 128-bit IPv6 link-local addresses and is mandatory for configuring an IPv6 EBGP link-local peering session. For more information about IPv6 addressing, see Routing Protocols Concepts on page 3.
NOTE: Configuring EBGP peering using link-local addresses is only applicable for directly connected interfaces. There is no support for multihop peering.
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BGP derives next-hop prefixes using the IPv4-compatible IPv6 prefix. For example, the IPv4 next-hop prefix 10.19.1.1 translates to the IPv6 next-hop prefix ::10.19.1.1 (hexadecimal format ::a13:101).
NOTE: There must be an active route to the IPv4-compatible IPv6 next hop to export IPv6 BGP prefixes. An IPv6 connection must be configured over the link. The connection must be either an IPv6 tunnel or a dual-stack configuration. When configuring IPv4-compatible IPv6 prefixes, use a mask that is longer than 96 bits. Configure a static route if you want to use normal IPv6 prefixes.
Configure the interfaces with both an IPv4 and a corresponding IPv4-compatible IPv6 prefix:
[edit interfaces] ge-0/1/0 { unit 0 {
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: Enabling the log-updown statement causes BGP state transitions to be logged at warning level.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. For detailed information about configuring TCP connection attempts, see the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide.
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For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
NOTE: Beginning with JUNOS Release 8.3, BFD is also supported on IBGP and multihop EBGP sessions as well as on single-hop EBGP sessions. BFD does not support IPv6 interfaces with BGP. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.1, BFD supports IPv6 interfaces in static routes only. To enable failure detection, include the bfd-liveness-detection statement:
bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } holddown-interval milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; no-adaptation;
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transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; no-adaptation; version (1 | automatic); }
To specify the threshold for the adaptation of the detection time, include the detection-time threshold statement:
detection-time { threshold milliseconds; }
When the BFD session detection time adapts to a value equal to or higher than the threshold, a single trap and a system log message are sent. Beginning with JUNOS 8.5, you can configure an interval to specify how long the BFD session for an EBGP peer must remain up before a state change notification is sent. When you configure the hold-down interval for the BFD protocol for EBGP, the BGP session goes down if the BFD session goes down. If you do not configure the BFD hold-down interval, the BGP session remains up even if the BFD session goes down. To specify the hold-down interval, include the holddown-interval statement:
bfd-liveness-detection { holddown-interval milliseconds; }
You can configure a value in the range from 0 through 255,000 and the default is 0. The holddown-interval statement is supported only for EBGP peers at the [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address] hierarchy level. If the BFD session goes down and then comes back up during the configured hold-down interval, the timer is restarted.
NOTE: You must configure the hold-down interval on both EBGP peers.
NOTE: If you configure the hold-down interval for a multihop EBGP session, you must also configure a local IP address by including the local-address statement at the [edit protocols bgp group group-name] hierarchy level. For more information about configuring an EBGP multihop session, see Configuring an EBGP Multihop Session on page 667. For more information about configuring the local address, see Configuring the Local IP Address on page 663. To specify the minimum transmit and receive intervals for failure detection, include the minimum-interval statement:
minimum-interval milliseconds;
704
This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router transmits hello packets as well as the minimum interval that the router expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. You can configure a value in the range from 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. You can also specify the minimum transmit and receive intervals separately.
NOTE: If you specify a minimum interval for Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD) less than 100 ms, the BFD session might transition down and up. On some routing platforms, it is safe to configure values below 100 ms. Please contact Juniper Networks customer support for more information. To specify only the minimum receive interval for failure detection, include the minimum-receive-interval statement:
minimum-receive-interval milliseconds;
This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. The values that you can configure are in the range from 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. To specify the number of hello packets not received by a neighbor that causes the originating interface to be declared down, include the multiplier statement:
multiplier number;
The default is 3, and you can configure a value in the range from 1 through 255. To specify only the minimum transmit interval for failure detection, include the transmit-interval minimum-interval statement:
transmit-interval { minimum-interval milliseconds; }
This value represents the minimum interval at which the local router transmits hello packets to the neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. You can configure a value in the range from 1 through 255,000 milliseconds. To specify the threshold for detecting the adaptation of the transmit interval, include the transmit-interval threshold statement:
transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; }
The threshold value must be greater than the transmit interval. To specify the BFD version used for detection, include the version statement:
version (1 | automatic);
705
Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.0, you can configure BFD sessions not to adapt to changing network conditions. To disable BFD adaptation, include the no-adaptation statement:
no-adaptation;
NOTE: We recommend that you not disable BFD adaptation unless it is preferable not to have BFD adaptation enabled in your network. For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure these statements, see the statement summary sections for these statements.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement. Include the tcp-mss statement for a specific BGP neighbor to send the specified segment size to the BGP neighbor as the advertised MSS. The configured MSS value is also used as the maximum segment size for the sender. If the MSS value from the BGP neighbor is less than the MSS value configured, the MSS value from the BGP neighbor is used as the maximum segment size for the sender.
For a list of hierarchy levels at which you can configure this statement, see the statement summary section for this statement.
706
You can specify the following BGP-specific options in the BGP traceoptions statement:
4byte-asTrace 4-byte AS events. aspathTrace AS path regular expression operations. dampingTrace damping operations. keepaliveTrace BGP keepalive messages. openTrace BGP open packets. These packets are sent between peers when
packetsTrace all BGP protocol packets. updateTrace update packets. These packets provide routing updates to BGP
systems. You can filter trace statements and output only the statement information that passes through the filter by specifying the filter flag modifier. The filter modifier is only supported for the route and damping tracing flags.
NOTE: Per-neighbor trace filtering is not supported on a BGP per-neighbor level for route and damping flags. Trace option filtering support is on a peer group level.
NOTE: Use the trace flags detail and all with caution. These flags may cause the CPU to become very busy. The match-on statement specifies filter matches based on prefixes. It is used to match on route filters. For general information about tracing, see the tracing and logging information in the JUNOS System Basics Configuration Guide.
707
Trace only messages that pass the policy based on prefix match:
[edit] protocols { bgp { traceoptions { file bgp-tr size 5m files 10; flag route filter policy couple-route match-on prefix; } } }
708
Chapter 39
accept-remote-nexthop
Syntax Hierarchy Level
accept-remote-nexthop; [edit protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.5. Specify that a single-hop EBGP peer accept a remote next hop with which it does not share a common subnet. Configure a separate import policy on the EBGP peer to specify the remote next hop. You cannot configure the multihop statement at the same time. See Configuring a Single-Hop EBGP Peer to Accept a Remote Next Hop on page 667. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. multipath and Configuring BGP Routing Policy on page 696.
accept-remote-nexthop
709
accepted-prefix-limit
Syntax
accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; tear-down <percentage-threshold> idle-timeout (minutes | forever); } [edit protocols bgp family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit protocols bgp family route-target], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp family route-target], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family route-target], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family route-target], [edit protocols bgp group group-name family route-target], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name family route-target], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family route-target], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family route-target], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family route-target], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family route-target], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family route-target], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family route-target]
Hierarchy Level
710
accepted-prefix-limit
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Configure a limit to the number of prefixes that can be accepted on a BGP peering session. When that limit is exceeded, a system log message is sent. You can optionally specify to reset the BGP session when the number of accepted prefixes exceeds the specified limit.
maximum numberLimit the number of prefixes that can be accepted on a BGP
Options
peering session. A system log message is sent when that number is exceeded. Range: 1 through 4,294,967,295
teardown <percentage>Specify to reset the BGP peering session when the specified
limit to the number of prefixes that can be accepted is exceeded. If you specify a percentage, a system log message is sent when the accepted number of prefixes on the BGP session exceeds the specified percentage of the configured limit. After a BGP session is reset, it is reestablished within a short time unless you include the idle-timeout statement. Range: 1 through 100
idle-timeout (minutes | forever)Specify not to reestablish a BGP session that has been reset until the after the specified timeout period. Include the forever option to prevent the BGP session from being reestablished until you issue the clear bgp neighbor command.
See Limiting the Number of Prefixes Accepted on a BGP Peering Session on page 685. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. prefix-limit
accepted-prefix-limit
711
advertise-external
Syntax
advertise-external { <conditional>; } [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name bgp group group-name neighbor neighbor-address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name bgp group group-name neighbor neighbor-address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name group group-name neighbor address]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Have BGP advertise the best external route into an internal BGP mesh group, a route reflector cluster, or an AS confederation even if the best route is an internal route.
conditonalAdvertise the best external path only if the route selection process reaches
Options
the point where the multiple exit discriminator (MED) metric is evaluated. As a result, an external path with an AS path worse than that of the active path is not advertised.
Usage Guidelines
See Configuring BGP to Advertise the Best External Route to Internal Peers on page 697. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. advertise-inactive
712
advertise-external
advertise-inactive
Syntax Hierarchy Level
advertise-inactive; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Have BGP advertise the best route even if the routing table did not select it to be an active route. See Setting BGP to Advertise Inactive Routes on page 697. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
advertise-inactive
713
advertise-peer-as
Syntax Hierarchy Level
advertise-peer-as; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Disable the default behavior of suppressing AS routes. See Disabling Suppression of Route Advertisements on page 699. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
714
advertise-peer-as
aggregate-label
Syntax
aggregate-label { community community-name; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp family inet-vpn labeled-unicast], [edit protocols bgp family inet labeled-unicast], [edit protocols bgp family inet-vpn labeled-unicast]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enables aggregate labels for VPN traffic.
community community-nameSpecify the name of the community to which to apply
See Configuring Aggregate Labels for VPNs on page 660. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
aggregate-label
715
allow
Syntax Hierarchy Level
allow ([ network/mask-length ] | all); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Implicitly configure BGP peers, allowing peer connections from any of the specified networks or hosts. To configure multiple BGP peers, configure one or more networks and hosts within a single allow statement or include multiple allow statements.
network/mask-lengthIPv6 or IPv4 network number of a single address or a range
Options
of allowable addresses for BGP peers, followed by the number of significant bits in the subnet mask.
allAllow all addresses, which is equivalent to 0.0.0.0/0 (or ::/0).
Usage Guidelines
See Minimum BGP Configuration on page 643 and Defining BGP Groups and Peers on page 647. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. neighbor
716
allow
as-override
Syntax Hierarchy Level
as-override; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-nameneighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Compare the AS path of an incoming advertised route with the AS number of the BGP peer under the group and replace all occurrences of the peer AS number in the AS path with its own AS number before advertising the route to the peer.
NOTE: The as-override statement is specific to a particular BGP group. This statement does not affect peers from the same remote AS configured in different groups. Enabling the AS override feature allows routes originating from an AS to be accepted by a router residing in the same AS. Without AS override enabled, the router refuses the route advertisement once the AS path shows that the route originated from its own AS. This is done by default to prevent route loops. The as-override statement overrides this default behavior. Note that enabling the AS override feature may result in routing loops. Use this feature only for specific applications that require this type of behavior, and in situations with strict network control. One application is the IGP protocol between the provider edge router and the customer edge router in a virtual private network. For more information, see the JUNOS MPLS Applications Configuration Guide.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Defining BGP Groups and Peers on page 647. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
as-override
717
authentication-algorithm
Syntax Hierarchy Level
authentication-algorithm algorithm; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-nameneighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.0. Configure an MD5 authentication algorithm type.
algorithmType of authentication algorithm. Specify either md5 or hmac-sha-1-96 as
See Configuring Authentication on page 660. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
718
authentication-algorithm
authentication-key
Syntax Hierarchy Level
authentication-key key; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-nameneighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure an MD5 authentication key (password). Neighboring routers use the same password to verify the authenticity of BGP packets sent from this system.
keyAuthentication password. It can be up to 126 characters. Characters can include
Options
any ASCII strings. If you include spaces, enclose all characters in quotation marks (" ").
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring Authentication on page 660. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
authentication-key
719
authentication-key-chain
Syntax Hierarchy Level
authentication-key-chain key-chain; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.0. Apply and enable an authentication keychain to the router.
key-chainAuthentication key chain name. It can be up to 126 characters. Characters
can include any ASCII strings. If you include spaces, enclose all characters in quotation marks (" ").
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring Authentication on page 660. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
720
authentication-key-chain
authentication-key-chains
Syntax
authentication-key-chains { key-chain key-chain-name { key key { secret secret-data; start-time yyyy-mm-dd.hh:mm:ss; } } } [edit security]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 7.6. Configure authentication key updates for the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) and Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) routing protocols. When an authentication-key-chain statement is configured at the [edit security] hierarchy level, and associated with the BGP and LDP protocols at the [edit protocols] hierarchy level, authentication key updates can occur without interrupting routing and signaling protocols such as Open Shortest Path First (OSPF), and Resource Reservation Setup Protocol (RSVP).
key-chainKeychain name. This name is also configured at the [edit protocols bgp] or the [edit protocols ldp] hierarchy level to associate unique authentication key-chain attributes with each protocol as specified using the following options:
Options
secretEach key must specify a secret in encrypted text or plain text format.
See Configuring Authentication on page 660. adminTo view this statement in the configuration. admin-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
authentication-key-chains
721
bfd-liveness-detection
Syntax
bfd-liveness-detection { detection-time { threshold milliseconds; } holddown-interval milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; minimum-receive-interval milliseconds; no-adaptation; transmit-interval { threshold milliseconds; minimum-interval milliseconds; } multiplier number; version (1 | automatic); } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Hierarchy Level
Release Information
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.1. detection-time threshold and transmit-interval threshold options introduced in JUNOS Release 8.2 Support for logical routers introduced in JUNOS Release 8.3. Support for IBGP and multihop EBGP sessions introduced in JUNOS Release 8.3. holddown-interval statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.5. You can configure this statement only for EBGP peers at the [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address] hierarchy level. no-adaptation statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Configure bidirectional failure detection timers. For IBGP and multihop EBGP support configure the bfd-liveness-detection statement at the global [edit bgp protocols] hierarchy level. You can also configure IBGP and multihop support for a routing instance or a logical system.
Description
722
bfd-liveness-detection
Options
detection time adapts to a value equal to or greater than the threshold, a single trap and a single system log message are sent.
holddown-interval millisecondsConfigure an interval specifying how long a BFD
session must remain up before a state change notification is sent. Range: 0 through 255,000 Default: 0
NOTE: You can configure the holddown-interval option only for EBGP peers.
minimum-interval millisecondsConfigure the minimum intervals at which the local
router transmits hello packets and then expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. Range: 1 through 255,000
minimum-receive-interval milliseconds Configure only the minimum interval at which
the local router expects to receive a reply from a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. Range: 1 through 255,000
multiplier numberConfigure the number of hello packets not received by a neighbor
that causes the originating interface to be declared down. Range: 1 through 255 Default: 3
no-adaptationConfigure BFD sessions not to adapt to changing network conditions.
We recommend that you not disable BFD adaptation unless it is preferable to not to have BFD adaptation enabled in your network.
transmit-interval threshold millisecondsConfigure a threshold. When the BFD session
transmit interval adapts to a value greater than the threshold, a single trap and a single system message are sent. The interval threshold must be greater than the minimum transmit interval. Range: 0 through 4,294,967,295
transmit-interval minimum-interval millisecondsConfigure only the minimum interval
at which the local router transmits hello packets to a neighbor with which it has established a BFD session. Range: 1 through 255,000
versionConfigure the BFD version to detect. Range: 1 or automatic (autodetect the BFD version) Default: automatic
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring the BFD Protocol on page 703. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
bfd-liveness-detection
723
bgp
Syntax Hierarchy Level
bgp { ... } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit protocols], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable BGP on the router or for a routing instance. BGP is disabled. See Enabling BGP on page 644. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
724
bgp
bgp-orf-cisco-mode
Syntax Hierarchy Level
bgp-orf-cisco-mode; [edit routing-options outbound-route-filter], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-options outbound-route-filter], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options outbound-route-filter], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name routing-options outbound-route-filter], [edit protocols bgp outbound-route-filter], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp outbound-route-filter], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp outbound-route-filter], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp outbound-route-filter], [edit protocols bgp group group-name outbound-route-filter], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name outbound-route-filter], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name outbound-route-filter], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name outbound-route-filter], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address outbound-route-filter], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address outbound-route-filter], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address outbound-route-filter], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address outbound-route-filter]
Release Information
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Support for the BGP group and neighbor hierarchy levels introduced in JUNOS Release 9.3. Enable interoperability with routers that use the vendor-specific outbound route filter compatibility code of 130 and code type of 128.
Description
NOTE: To enable interoperability for all BGP peers configured on the router, include the statement at the [edit routing-options outbound-route-filter] hierarchy level.
Disabled See Configuring Prefix-Based Outbound Route Filtering on page 694. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
bgp-orf-cisco-mode
725
cluster
Syntax Hierarchy Level
cluster cluster-identifier; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the cluster identifier to be used by the route reflector cluster in an internal BGP group.
cluster-identifierIPv6 or IPv4 address to use as the cluster identifier.
See Configuring Route Reflection on page 676. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. no-client-reflect
726
cluster
damping
Syntax Hierarchy Level
damping; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable route flap damping. Flap damping is disabled on the router. See Enabling Route Flap Damping on page 681 and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
damping
727
description
Syntax Hierarchy Level
description text-description; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Text description of the global, group, or neighbor configuration.
text-descriptionText description of the configuration. Limited to 126 characters.
See Defining BGP Global Properties on page 645, Defining Group Properties on page 650, and Defining Peer Properties on page 652. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
728
description
disable
Syntax Hierarchy Level
disable; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Disable BGP on the system. See Defining BGP Global Properties on page 645. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
disable
729
explicit-null
Syntax Hierarchy Level
explicit-null; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor addressfamily inet labeled-unicast], [edit protocols bgp family inet labeled-unicast], [edit protocols bgp group group-name family inet labeled-unicast], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family inet labeled-unicast], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family inet labeled-unicast], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family inet labeled-unicast], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family inet labeled-unicast]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Advertise label 0 to the egress router of an LSP. If you do not include the explicit-null statement in the configuration, label 3 (implicit null) is advertised. See Advertising an Explicit Null Label on page 659. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
730
explicit-null
export
Syntax Hierarchy Level
export [ policy--names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Apply one or more policies to routes being exported from the routing table into BGP.
policy--namesName of one or more policies.
See Configuring BGP Routing Policy on page 696 and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. import and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide
export
731
family
Syntax
family { (inet | inet6 | inet-mvpn | inet6-mpvn | inet-vpn | inet6-vpn | iso-vpn | l2-vpn) { (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast | signaling) { prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } rib-group group-name; } flow { no-validate policy-name; } labeled-unicast { aggregate-label { community community-name; } explicit-null { connected-only; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } resolve-vpn; rib inet.3; rib-group group-name; } } route-target { advertise-default; external-paths number; prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address],
Hierarchy Level
732
family
[edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Release Information
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. inet-mvpn and inet6-mpvn introduced in JUNOS Release 8.4. Only the signaling option is supported with these statements. Enable multiprotocol BGP (MP-BGP) by configuring BGP to carry network layer reachability information (NLRI) for address families other than unicast IPv4, to specify MP-BGP to carry NLRI for the IPv6 address family, or to carry NLRI for VPNs.
anyConfigure the family type to be both unicast and multicast. labeled-unicastConfigure the family type to be labeled-unicast. This means that the
Description
Options
BGP peers are being used only to carry the unicast routes that are being used by labeled-unicast for resolving the labeled-unicast routes. This statement is supported only with inet and inet6
multicastConfigure the family type to be multicast. This means that the BGP peers
are being used only to carry the unicast routes that are being used by multicast for resolving the multicast routes.
unicastConfigure the family type to be unicast. This means that the BGP peers only
carry the unicast routes that are being used for unicast forwarding purposes. Default: unicast The remaining statements are explained separately.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Enabling Multiprotocol BGP on page 682. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
family
733
flow
Syntax
flow { no-validate policy-name; } [edit protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet-vpn)], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet-vpn)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet-vpn)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet-vpn)]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enables BGP to support flow routes.
NOTE: This statement is supported for the default instance, VRF instance, and virtual-router instance only. It is configured with the instance-type statement at the [edit routing-instance instance-name] hierarchy level. For VPNs, this statement is supported for the default instance only.
The statements are explained separately. See Enabling BGP to Carry Flow-Specification Routes on page 687. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
734
flow
graceful-restart
Syntax
graceful-restart { disable; restart-time seconds; stale-routes-time seconds; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure graceful restart for BGP.
disableDisable graceful restart for BGP. secondsTime period when the restart is expected to be complete.
See Configuring Graceful Restart on page 113 ,Configuring Graceful Restart on page 659 and the JUNOS High Availability Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
graceful-restart
735
group
Syntax
group group-name { advertise-inactive; [ network/mask-length ]; authentication-key key; cluster cluster-identifier; damping; description text-description; export [ policy-names ]; family { (inet | inet6 | inet-vpn | inet6-vpn | l2-vpn) { (any | multicast | unicast | signaling) { prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } rib-group group-name; } flow { no-validate policy-name; } labeled-unicast { explicit-null { connected-only; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } resolve-vpn; rib inet.3; rib-group group-name; } } route-target { advertise-default; external-paths number; prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } } } hold-time seconds; import [ policy-names ]; ipsec-sa ipsec-sa; keep (all | none); local-address address; local-as autonomous-system <private>; local-preference local-preference; log-updown; metric-out metric;
736
group
multihop <ttl-value>; multipath { multiple-as; } no-aggregator-id; no-client-reflect; out-delay seconds; passive; peer-as autonomous-system; preference preference; remove-private; tcp-mss segment-size; traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } type type; neighbor address { ... peer-specific-options ... } }
Hierarchy Level
[edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Define a BGP peer group. BGP peer groups share a common type, peer autonomous system (AS) number, and cluster ID, if present. To configure multiple BGP groups, include multiple group statements. By default, the groups options are identical to the global BGP options. To override the global options, include group-specific options within the group statement. The group statement is one of the statements you must include in the configuration to run BGP on the router. See Minimum BGP Configuration on page 643.
Options
The remaining statements within the group statement are explained separately.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Defining BGP Groups and Peers on page 647. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
group
737
hold-time
Syntax Hierarchy Level
hold-time seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Hold-time value to use when negotiating a connection with the peer. The hold-time value is advertised in open packets and indicates to the peer the length of time that it should consider the sender valid. If the peer does not receive a keepalive, update, or notification message within the specified hold time, the BGP connection to the peer is closed and routers through that peer become unavailable. The hold time is three times the interval at which keepalive messages are sent.
Options
secondsHold time.
See Modifying the Hold-Time Value on page 658. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
738
hold-time
import
Syntax Hierarchy Level
import [ policy-names ]; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Apply one or more routing policies to routes being imported into the JUNOS routing table from BGP.
policy-namesName of one or more policies.
See Configuring BGP Routing Policy on page 696 and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. export and the JUNOS Policy Framework Configuration Guide
import
739
include-mp-next-hop
Syntax Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable multiprotocol updates to contain next-hop reachability information. See Enabling Next-Hop Reachability Information on page 703. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
ipsec-sa
Syntax Hierarchy Level
ipsec-sa ipsec-sa; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Apply a security association to BGP peers. You can apply the security association globally for all BGP peers, to a group of peers, or to an individual peer.
ipsec-saSecurity association name.
See Applying IPsec Security Association on page 662. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
740
include-mp-next-hop
iso-vpn
Syntax
iso-vpn { unicast { prefix-limit number; rib-group group-name; } } [edit protocols bgp family], [edit protocols bgp group group-name family], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor addressfamily], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Enable BGP to carry ISO VPN NLRI messages between PE routes connecting a VPN.
Disabled. The statements are explained separately in this chapter. See Enabling BGP to Carry Connectionless Network Services Routes on page 689 and the J-series Services Router Advanced WAN Access Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
iso-vpn
741
keep
Syntax Hierarchy Level
keep (all | none); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify whether routes learned from a BGP peer are retained in the routing table even if they contain an AS number that was exported from the local AS. If you do not include this statement, most routes are retained in the routing table.
allRetain all routes. noneRetain none of the routes. When keep none is configured for the BGP session
Default Options
and the inbound policy changes, the JUNOS software forces readvertisement of the full set of routes advertised by the peer.
Usage Guidelines
See Configuring How Often BGP Exchanges Routes with the Routing Table on page 699. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
742
keep
labeled-unicast
Syntax
labeled-unicast { aggregate-label { community community-name; } explicit-null { connected-only; } accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } resolve-vpn; rib inet.3; rib-group group-name; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp family (inet | inet6)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet6)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family (inet | inet6)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet6)], [edit protocols bgp family (inet | inet6)], [edit protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6)], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet6)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family (inet | inet6)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet6)]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure the family type to be labeled-unicast. The statements are explained separately. See Enabling Multiprotocol BGP on page 682. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
labeled-unicast
743
local-address
Syntax Hierarchy Level
local-address address; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the address of the local end of a BGP session. This address is used to accept incoming connections to the peer and to establish connections to the remote peer. When none of the operational interfaces are configured with the specified local address, a session with a BGP peer is placed in the idle state. If you do not configure a local address, BGP uses the routers source address selection rules to set the local address. For more information, see the JUNOS Network Interfaces Configuration Guide.
addressIPv6 or IPv4 address of the local end of the connection.
Default
See Assigning a BGP Identifier on page 645. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. router-id
744
local-address
local-as
Syntax Hierarchy Level
local-as autonomous-system <private>; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Set the local AS number. The autonomous system (AS) numeric range in plain-number format has been extended in JUNOS Release 9.1 to provide BGP support for 4-byte AS numbers, as defined in RFC 4893, BGP Support for Four-octet AS Number Space. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.2, you can also configure a 4-byte AS number using the AS-dot notation format of two integer values joined by a period: <16-bit high-order value in decimal>.<16-bit low-order value in decimal>. For example, the 4-byte AS number of 65546 in plain-number format is represented as 1.10 in the AS-dot notation format.
Options
autonomous-systemAS number.
Range: 1 through 4,294,967,295 in plain-number format. Range: 0.0 through 65535.65535 in AS-dot notation format.
private(Optional) Hide the local AS in paths learned from this peering.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring a Local AS on page 673. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
local-as
745
local-interface
Syntax Hierarchy Level
local-interface interface-name; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor ipv6-link-local-address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor ipv6-link-local-address], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor ipv6-link-local-address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor ipv6-link-local-address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the interface name of the peer for IPv6 peering using link-local addresses. This peer is link-local in scope.
interface-nameInterface name of the EBGP IPv6 peer.
See Configuring EBGP Peering Using IPv6 Link-Local Address on page 700. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
746
local-interface
local-preference
Syntax Hierarchy Level
local-preference local-preference; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Modify the value of the LOCAL_PREF path attribute, which is a metric used by internal BGP sessions to indicate the degree of preference for an external route. The route with the highest local preference value is preferred. The LOCAL_PREF path attribute always is advertised to internal BGP peers and to neighboring confederations. It is never advertised to external BGP peers.
Default Options
If you omit this statement, the LOCAL_PREF path attribute, if present, is not modified.
local-preferencePreference to assign to routes learned from BGP or from the group
or peer. Range: 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 1) Default: If the LOCAL_PREF path attribute is present, do not modify its value. If a BGP route is received without a LOCAL_PREF attribute, the route is handled locally (it is stored in the routing table and advertised by BGP) as if it were received with a LOCAL_PREF value of 100. By default, non-BGP routes that are advertised by BGP are advertised with a LOCAL_PREF value of 100.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Configuring the BGP Local Preference on page 669. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. preference
local-preference
747
log-updown
Syntax Hierarchy Level
log-updown; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Log a message whenever a BGP peer makes a state transition. Messages are logged using the system logging mechanism located at the [edit system syslog] hierarchy level. See Configuring BGP to Log System Log Messages on page 702 and the JUNOS System Basics Configuration Guide. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. traceoptions
Usage Guidelines
748
log-updown
metric-out
Syntax Hierarchy Level
metric-out (metric | minimum-igp offset | igp (delay-med-update | offset); [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. delay-med-update option introduced in JUNOS Release 9.0. Metric for all routes sent using the multiple exit discriminator (MED, or MULTI_EXIT_DISC) path attribute in update messages. This path attribute is used to discriminate among multiple exit points to a neighboring AS. If all other factors are equal, the exit point with the lowest metric is preferred. You can specify a constant metric value by including the metric option. For configurations in which a BGP peer sends third-party next hops that require the local system to perform next-hop resolutionIBGP configurations, configurations within confederation peers, or EBGP configurations that include the multihop commandyou can specify a variable metric by including the minimum-igp or igp option. You can increase or decrease the variable metric calculated from the IGP metric (either from the igp or igp-minimum statement) by specifying a value for offset. The metric is increased by specifying a positive value for offset, and decreased by specifying a negative value for offset. Beginning with JUNOS 9.0, you can specify for a BGP group or peer not to advertise updates for the MED path attributes used to calculate IGP costs for BGP next hops unless the MED is lower. You can also configure an interval to delay when MED updates are sent by including the med-igp-update-interval minutes at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level.
Options
delay-med-updateSpecify for a BGP group or peer configured with the metric-out igp
statement not to advertise MED updates when the value worsens, that is, unless the value is lower.
metric-out
749
minimum-igpSet the metric to the minimum metric value calculated in the IGP to
get to the BGP next hop. If a newly calculated metric is greater than the minimum metric value, the metric value remains unchanged. If a newly calculated metric is lower, the metric value is lowered to that value.
offset(Optional) Increases or decreases the metric by this value.
See Configuring the Multiple Exit Discriminator Metric on page 663. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. med-igp-update-interval
750
metric-out
mtu-discovery
Syntax Hierarchy Level
mtu-discovery; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure TCP path MTU discovery. MTU discovery improves convergence times for internal BGP sessions. See Configuring MTU Discovery on page 659. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
mtu-discovery
751
multihop
Syntax
multihop { ttl-value; no-nexthop-change; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Configure an EBGP multihop session. External confederation peering is a special case that allows unconnected third-party next hops. You do not need to configure multihop sessions explicitly in this particular case; multihop behavior is implied. If you have confederation external BGP peer-to-loopback addresses, you still need the multihop configuration.
Default
If you omit this statement, all EBGP peers are assumed to be directly connected (that is, you are establishing a nonmultihop, or "regular," BGP session), and the default time-to-live (TTL) value is 1.
ttl-valueConfigure the maximum TTL value for the TTL in the IP header of BGP
Options
packets. Range: 1 through 255 Default: 64 (for multihop EBGP sessions, confederations, and internal BGP sessions)
no-nexthop-changeSpecify not to change the BGP next-hop value; for route advertisements, specify the no-nexthop-self option.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring an EBGP Multihop Session on page 667. routingTo view this statement in the configuration.
752
multihop
multipath
Syntax
multipath { multiple-as; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Allow load sharing among multiple EBGP paths and multiple IBGP paths.
multiple-asDisable the default check requiring that paths accepted by BGP multipath
See Configuring BGP to Select Multiple BGP Paths on page 672. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
multipath
753
neighbor
Syntax
neighbor address { advertise-inactive; authentication-key key; cluster cluster-identifier; damping; description text-description; export [ policy-names ]; family { (inet | inet6 | inet-vpn | inet6-vpn | l2-vpn) { (any | multicast | unicast | signaling) { prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } rib-group group-name; } flow { no-validate policy-name; } labeled-unicast { explicit-null { connected-only; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } resolve-vpn; rib inet.3; rib-group group-name; } } route-target { advertise-default; external-paths number; prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } } } hold-time seconds; import [ policy-names ]; ipsec-sa ipsec-sa; keep (all | none); local-address address; local-as autonomous-system <private>; local-interface interface-name; local-preference preference; log-updown; metric-out metric;
754
neighbor
multihop <ttl-value>; multipath { multiple-as; } no-aggregator-id; no-client-reflect; out-delay seconds; passive; peer-as autonomous-system; preference preference; tcp-mss segment-size; traceoptions { file filename <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } }
Hierarchy Level
[edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Explicitly configure a neighbor (peer). To configure multiple BGP peers, include multiple neighbor statements. By default, the peers options are identical to those of the group. You can override these options by including peer-specific option statements within the neighbor statement. The neighbor statement is one of the statements you can include in the configuration to define a minimal BGP configuration on the router. (You can include an allow all statement in place of a neighbor statement.)
Options
See Minimum BGP Configuration on page 643 and Defining BGP Groups and Peers on page 647. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
no-advertise-peer-as
See
advertise-peer-as
no-advertise-peer-as
755
no-aggregator-id
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-aggregator-id; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Set the router ID in the BGP aggregator path attribute to zero. (This is one of the path attributes included in BGP update messages.) Doing this prevents different routers within an AS from creating aggregate routes that contain different AS paths. If you omit this statement, the router ID is included in the BGP aggregator path attribute. See Update Messages on page 639 and Controlling the Aggregator Path Attribute on page 667. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
Default
Usage Guidelines
756
no-aggregator-id
no-client-reflect
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-client-reflect; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Disable intracluster route redistribution by the system acting as the route reflector. Include this statement when the client cluster is fully meshed to prevent the sending of redundant route advertisements. See Configuring Route Reflection on page 676. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. cluster
no-client-reflect
757
no-validate
Syntax Hierarchy Level
no-validate policy-name; [edit protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet flow)], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet flow)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet flow)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet flow)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Allows you to skip the flow route validation procedure after packets are accepted by a policy.
policy-nameImport policy to match NLRI messages.
See Enabling BGP to Carry Flow-Specification Routes on page 687. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
758
no-validate
out-delay
Syntax Hierarchy Level
out-delay seconds; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify how long a route must be present in the JUNOS routing table before it is exported to BGP. Use this time delay to help bundle routing updates. If you omit this statement, routes are exported to BGP immediately after they have been added to the routing table.
secondsOutput delay time.
Default
Options
See Configuring How Often BGP Exchanges Routes with the Routing Table on page 699. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
out-delay
759
outbound-route-filter
Syntax
outbound-route-filter { <bgp-orf-cisco-mode>; prefix-based { accept { (inet | inet6); } } } [edit protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Configure a BGP peer to accept outbound route filters from a remote peer.
prefix-basedSpecify that prefix-based filters be accepted. acceptSpecify that outbound route filters from a BGP peer be accepted. inetSpecify that IPv4 prefix-based outbound route filters be accepted. inet6Specify that IPv6 prefix-based outbound route filters be accepted.
NOTE: You can specify that both IPv4 and IPv6 outbound route filters be accepted. The bgp-orf-cisco-mode statement is explained separately.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Configuring Prefix-Based Outbound Route Filtering on page 694. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
760
outbound-route-filter
passive
Syntax Hierarchy Level
passive; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Do not send active open messages to the peer. Rather, wait for the peer to issue an open request. If you omit this statement, all explicitly configured peers are active, and each peer periodically sends open requests until its peer responds. See Opening a Peer Connection Passively on page 663. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
Default
passive
761
path-selection
Syntax
path-selection { (cisco-non-deterministic | always-compare-med | external-router-id); med-plus-igp { igp-multiplier number; med-multiplier number; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. med-plus-igp option introduced in JUNOS Release 8.1. Configure BGP path selection. If the path-selection statement is not included in the configuration, only the MEDs of routes that have the same peer ASs are compared.
cisco-non-deterministicConfigure routing table path selection so that it is performed
Options
using the same nondeterministic behavior as the Cisco IOS software. The active path is always first. All inactive, but eligible, paths follow the active path and are maintained in the order in which they were received, with the most recent path first. Ineligible paths remain at the end of the list.
always-compare-medAlways compare MEDs whether or not the peer ASs of the
762
path-selection
routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
peer-as
Syntax Hierarchy Level
peer-as autonomous-system; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the neighbor (peer) AS number. The autonomous system (AS) numeric range in plain-number format has been extended in JUNOS Release 9.1 to provide BGP support for 4-byte AS numbers, as defined in RFC 4893, BGP Support for Four-octet AS Number Space. Beginning with JUNOS Release 9.2, you can also configure a 4-byte AS number using the AS-dot notation format of two integer values joined by a period: <16-bit high-order value in decimal>.<16-bit low-order value in decimal>. For example, the 4-byte AS number of 65,546 in plain-number format is represented as 1.10 in the AS-dot notation format.
Options
autonomous-systemAS number.
Range: 1 through 4,294,967,295 in plain-number format. Range: 0.0 through 65535.65535 in AS-dot notation format.
Usage Guidelines
See Defining BGP Groups and Peers on page 647 and Specifying the Peers AS Number on page 650. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
peer-as
763
preference
Syntax Hierarchy Level
preference preference; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the preference for routes learned from BGP. At the BGP global level, the preference statement sets the preference for routes learned from BGP. You can override this preference in a BGP group or peer preference statement. At the group or peer level, the preference statement sets the preference for routes learned from the group or peer. Use this statement to override the preference set in the BGP global preference statement when you want to favor routes from one group or peer over those of another.
Options
peer. Range: 0 through 4,294,967,295 (2321) Default: 170 for the primary preference
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Controlling Route Preference on page 669. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. local-preference
764
preference
prefix-limit
Syntax
prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | minutes)>; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit protocols bgp family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) (any | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family (inet | inet6) (any | flow | labeled-unicast | multicast | unicast)]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Limit the number of prefixes received on a BGP peering session and a rate-limit logging when injected prefixes exceed a set limit.
maximum numberWhen you set the maximum number of prefixes, a message is
Options
down when the maximum number of prefixes is reached. If you specify a percentage, messages are logged when the number of prefixes exceeds that percentage. After the session is torn down, it will reestablish in a short time unless you include the idle-timeout statement. Then the session can be kept down for a specified amount of time, or forever. If you specify forever, the session is reestablished only after you issue a clear bgp neighbor command. Range: 1 through 100
prefix-limit
765
statement, the session is torn down for a specified amount of time, or forever. If you specify a period of time, the session is allowed to reestablish after this timeout period. If you specify forever, the session is reestablished only after you intervene with a clear bgp neighbor command. Range: 1 through 2400
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Limiting the Number of Prefixes Received on a BGP Peering Session on page 685. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. accepted-prefix-limit
766
prefix-limit
remove-private
Syntax Hierarchy Level
remove-private; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. When advertising AS paths to remote systems, have the local system strip private AS numbers from the AS path. The numbers are stripped from the AS path starting at the left end of the AS path (the end where AS paths have been most recently added). The router stops searching for private ASs when it finds the first nonprivate AS. This operation takes place after any confederation member ASs have already been removed from the AS path, if applicable. The software recognizes the set of AS numbers that is considered private, a range that is defined in the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) assigned numbers document. The set of reserved AS numbers is in the range from 64,512 through 65,535.
See Removing Private AS Numbers from AS Paths on page 675. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
remove-private
767
resolve-vpn
Syntax Hierarchy Level
resolve-vpn; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family inet labeled-unicast], [edit protocols bgp family inet labeled-unicast], [edit protocols bgp group group-name family inet labeled-unicast], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family inet labeled-unicast], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family inet labeled-unicast], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family inet labeled-unicast], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family inet labeled-unicast]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Allow labeled routes to be placed in the inet.3 routing table for route resolution. These routes are then resolved for PE router connections where the remote PE is located across another AS. For a PE router to install a route in the VRF, the next hop must resolve to a route stored within the inet.3 table. See Enabling Multiprotocol BGP on page 682. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
768
resolve-vpn
rib
Syntax Hierarchy Level
rib inet.3; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family inet labeled-unicast], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family inet labeled-unicast], [edit protocols bgp family inet labeled-unicast], [edit protocols bgp group group-name family inet labeled-unicast], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family inet labeled-unicast], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family inet labeled-unicast], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family inet labeled-unicast], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address inet labeled-unicast]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. You can allow both labeled and unlabeled routes to be exchanged in a single session. The labeled routes are placed in the inet.3 routing table, and both labeled and unlabeled unicast routes can be sent or received by the router.
inet.3Name of the routing table.
See Enabling Multiprotocol BGP on page 682. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
rib
769
rib-group
Syntax Hierarchy Level
rib-group group-name; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp family inet (any | labeled-unicast | unicast | multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name family inet (any | labeled-unicast | unicast | multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family inet (any | labeled-unicast | unicast | multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family inet (any | labeled-unicast | unicast | multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family inet (any | labeled-unicast | unicast | multicast)], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family inet (any | labeled-unicast | unicast | multicast)], [edit protocols bgp family inet (any | labeled-unicast | unicast | multicast)], [edit protocols bgp group group-name family inet (any | labeled-unicast | unicast | multicast)], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family inet (any | labeled-unicast | unicast | multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp family inet (any | labeled-unicast | unicast | multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family inet (any | labeled-unicast | unicast | multicast)], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family inet (any | labeled-unicast | unicast | multicast)]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Add unicast prefixes to unicast and multicast tables.
group-nameName of the routing table group. The name must start with a letter and
can include letters, numbers, and hyphens. You generally specify only one routing table group.
Usage Guidelines
See Creating Routing Table Groups on page 104, Configuring How Interface Routes Are Imported into Routing Tables on page 106, and Configuring BGP Routing Table Groups on page 686. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. interface-routes, rib-group
770
rib-group
route-target
Syntax
route-target { advertise-default; external-paths number; accepted-prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | time-in-minutes)>; } prefix-limit { maximum number; teardown <percentage> <idle-timeout (forever | time-in-minutes)>; } } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp family], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name family], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family], [edit protocols bgp family], [edit protocols bgp group group-name family], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name family], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address family]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Limit the number of prefixes advertised on BGP peerings specifically to the peers that need the updates.
advertise-defaultAdvertise default routes and suppress more specific routes. external-paths numberNumber of external paths accepted for route filtering.
Options
Range: 1 through 16 paths Default: 1 path The remaining statements are explained separately.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level
See Enabling Route Target Filtering on page 693. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
route-target
771
tcp-mss
Syntax Hierarchy Level
tcp-mss segment-size; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocol bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor neighbor-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor neighbor-name]
Statement introduced in JUNOS Release 8.1. Configure the maximum segment size (MSS) for the TCP connection for BGP neighbors. SeeConfiguring the Segment Size for TCP on page 706. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
772
tcp-mss
traceoptions
Syntax
traceoptions { file name <size size> <files number> <(world-readable | no-world-readable)>; flag flag <flag-modifier> <disable>; } [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Hierarchy Level
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. 4byte-as statement introduced in JUNOS Release 9.2. Configure BGP protocol-level tracing options. To specify more than one tracing operation, include multiple flag statements.
Default
The default BGP protocol-level tracing options are inherited from the routing protocols traceoptions statement included at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level. The default group-level trace options are inherited from the BGP protocol-level traceoptions statement. The default peer-level trace options are inherited from the group-level traceoptions statement.
disable(Optional) Disable the tracing operation. You can use this option is to disable
Options
a single operation when you have defined a broad group of tracing operations, such as all.
file nameName of the file to receive the output of the tracing operation. Enclose the name within quotation marks. All files are placed in the directory /var/log. We recommend that you place BGP tracing output in the file bgp-log. files number(Optional) Maximum number of trace files. When a trace file named trace-file reaches its maximum size, it is renamed trace-file.0, then trace-file.1,
and so on, until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten.
traceoptions
773
NOTE: If you specify a maximum number of files, you must also specify a maximum file size with the size option.
4byte-as4-byte AS events as-pathAS path regular expression operations. dampingDamping operations. keepaliveBGP keepalive messages. openOpen packets. These packets are sent between peers when they are
establishing a connection.
packetsAll BGP protocol packets. updateUpdate packets. These packets provide routing updates to BGP systems.
allAll tracing operations. generalA combination of the normal and route trace operations. normalAll normal operations.
Default: If you do not specify this option, only unusual or abnormal operations are traced.
policyPolicy operations and actions. routeRouting table changes. stateState transitions. taskInterface transactions and processing. timerTimer usage.
flag-modifier(Optional) Modifier for the tracing flag. You can specify one or more
of these modifiers:
774
traceoptions
detailProvide detailed trace information. filterFilter trace information. Applies only for route and damping tracing flags. receivePackets being received. sendPackets being transmitted.
no-world-readable(Optional) Prevent any user from reading the log file. size size(Optional) Maximum size of each trace file, in kilobytes (KB), megabytes (MB), or gigabytes (GB). When a trace file named trace-file reaches this size, it is renamed trace-file.0. When the trace-file again reaches its maximum size, trace-file.0 is renamed trace-file.1 and trace-file is renamed trace-file.0. This
renaming scheme continues until the maximum number of trace files is reached. Then, the oldest trace file is overwritten. If you specify a maximum file size, you also must specify a maximum number of trace files with the files option. Syntax: xk to specify KB, xm to specify MB, or xg to specify GB Range: 10 KB through the maximum file size supported on your system Default: 128 KB
world-readable(Optional) Allow any user to read the log file.
Usage Guidelines Required Privilege Level Related Topics
See Tracing BGP Protocol Traffic on page 706. routing and traceTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-control and trace-controlTo add this statement to the configuration. log-updown
traceoptions
775
type
Syntax Hierarchy Level
type type; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-], [edit routing-instances routing-instance-name protocols bgp group group-name]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Specify the type of BGP peer group.
typeType of group:
See Defining BGP Groups and Peers on page 647. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
vpn-apply-export
Syntax Hierarchy Level
vpn-apply-export; [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name], [edit logical-systems logical-system-name protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address], [edit protocols bgp], [edit protocols bgp group group-name], [edit protocols bgp group group-name neighbor address]
Statement introduced before JUNOS Release 7.4. Apply a BGP export policy in addition to a VPN routing and forwarding (VRF) export policy to routes. The default action is to accept. See Applying BGP Export Policy to VRF Routes on page 703. routingTo view this statement in the configuration. routing-controlTo add this statement to the configuration.
776
type
Part 7
Indexes
Indexes
777
778
Indexes
Index
Symbols
#, comments in configuration statements...............xxxix ( ), in syntax descriptions........................................xxxix < >, in syntax descriptions....................................xxxix [ ], in configuration statements...............................xxxix { }, in configuration statements..............................xxxix | (pipe), in syntax descriptions................................xxxix aggregate-label statement..........................................715 usage guidelines..................................................660 aggregator path attribute, BGP See BGP, aggregator path attribute aggregator statement.................................................135 all (tracing flag)..........................................................200 allow statement.........................................................716 usage guidelines..................................................649 alternate preferences.....................................................6 always-compare-med option..............................671, 672 any-sender statement RIP......................................................................535 usage guidelines..................................................532 area statement...........................................................454 usage guidelines..................................................419 area-range statement.................................................455 usage guidelines..................................................432 AS external link advertisements.................................411 as-override statement................................................717 usage guidelines..................................................650 as-path (tracing flag)...................................................774 as-path statement......................................................135 aggregate routes usage guidelines............................................83 generated routes usage guidelines............................................91 static routes usage guidelines............................................66 ASs...............................................................................43 configuring..........................................102, 138, 644 paths...................................................................638 aggregate routes....................................83, 135 generated routes..................................135, 144 operations, tracing.......................................774 static routes...........................................66, 135 private, removing.......................................675, 767 auth (tracing flag).......................................................554 authentication algorithm BGP.............................................................660 BGP.....................................................................639 keychains BGP.............................................................660 MD5 BGP.............................................................660 OSPF...........................................................429
A
accept firewall filters action............................................................98 accept-remote-nexthop statement..............................709 usage guidelines..................................................667 accepted-prefix-limit statement..................................710 usage guidelines..................................................685 action modifiers, firewall filters....................................98 active aggregate routes................................................78 active routes..............................................................7, 8 active statement.........................................................132 aggregate routes usage guidelines............................................84 generated routes usage guidelines............................................92 static routes usage guidelines............................................69 address statement......................................................589 usage guidelines..................................................586 advertise statement....................................................590 usage guidelines..................................................586 advertise-external statement......................................712 usage guidelines..................................................697 advertise-inactive statement......................................713 usage guidelines..................................................697 advertise-peer-as statement.......................................714 usage guidelines..................................................699 advertise-unnumbered-interfaces statement OSPF usage guidelines..........................................443 aggregate routes...................................................78, 133 preferences.............................................................9 aggregate statement...................................................133 usage guidelines....................................................78
Index
779
OSPFv3...............................................................431 simple RIP..............................................................524 authentication-algorithm statement BGP.....................................................................718 usage guidelines..........................................660 authentication-key statement BGP.....................................................................719 usage guidelines..........................................660 IS-IS....................................................................338 usage guidelines..........................................303 RIP......................................................................536 usage guidelines..........................................524 authentication-key-chain statement BGP usage guidelines..........................................660 usage guidelines..................................................660 authentication-key-chains statement security...............................................................721 authentication-type statement IS-IS....................................................................339 usage guidelines..........................................303 RIP......................................................................537 usage guidelines..........................................524 auto-export routing instance..................................................137 auto-export statement................................................137 usage guidelines..................................................241 autonomous statement..............................................609 usage guidelines..................................................605 autonomous systems See ASs autonomous-system statement..................................138 usage guidelines..........................................102, 644
B
BFD protocol................................71, 320, 436, 530, 703 bfd-liveness-detection statement BGP.....................................................................722 usage guidelines..........................................703 IS-IS....................................................................340 usage guidelines..........................................320 OSPF...................................................................457 usage guidelines..........................................436 RIP......................................................................538 usage guidelines..........................................530 static routes........................................................140 usage guidelines......................................62, 71 BGP....................................................................727, 741 aggregator path attribute............................667, 756 AS numbers, peers..............................................763 ASs See ASs authentication.....................................639, 660, 719 authentication algorithm.....................................718 authentication keychain......................................720
autonomous system override..............................717 best external route advertising...................................................697 BFD............................................................703, 722 CLNS...................................................................689 communities aggregate routes............................................82 generated routes............................................90 static routes...................................................65 confederations....................................145, 644, 655 configuration statements............641, 643, 709, 776 configuring EBGP groups....................................648 description..........................................................702 EBGP IPv6 peering..............................................700 enabling on router..............................644, 654, 724 external (EBGP)...................................................637 graceful restart....................................................735 groups.........................................................647, 737 hold time............................................639, 658, 738 identifier.....................................................639, 645 internal (IBGP)....................................................637 IP address...........................................................639 IPsec...........................................................662, 740 keepalive messages....................................639, 774 local address...............................................663, 744 local interface.....................................................746 messages............................................................638 MP-BGP.......................................................682, 733 mtu discovery.....................................................751 multihop sessions...............................................752 multipath configuration......................................672 multiprotocol reachability...................................703 Multitopology Routing configuring..................................................277 neighbors BGP, peers See BGP, peers NLRI...................................................................639 IPv4 VPN.....................................................683 IPv6 VPN.....................................................683 open messages...................................639, 663, 761 outbound route filters interoperability............................................725 overview.............................................................635 packets, tracing...................................................774 passive mode......................................................663 path attributes............................................638, 639 peers...................................................637, 647, 755 policy, routing.............................................731, 739 precedence.........................................................696 preferences.............................................9, 669, 764 prefix-limit accepted......................................................685 received.......................................................685 resolve routes to other tables..............................687 route reflection...........................676, 677, 726, 757 route target filtering....................................693, 771 router identifier...........................................103, 191
780
Index
Index
routes.................................................................638 routing instances configure.....................................................219 routing tables delays in exchanging routes.................699, 759 nonactive routes..................................697, 713 retaining routes...........................................742 set local AS number............................................745 standards supported...........................................636 system log messages..........................................702 TCP.....................................................................635 TCP port block....................................................702 tracing operations...............................................773 type, group.........................................................776 update messages................................................639 version supported...............................................635 VRF export policy...............................................703 bgp statement............................................................724 usage guidelines..................................................643 bgp-orf-cisco-mode statement....................................725 BOOTP accepting packets...............................................113 Border Gateway Protocol See BGP braces, in configuration statements.........................xxxix brackets angle, in syntax descriptions............................xxxix square, in configuration statements.................xxxix brief statement..........................................................143 aggregate routes usage guidelines............................................84 generated routes usage guidelines............................................92 broadcast mode, router discovery..............................586 broadcast statement..................................................590 usage guidelines..................................................586
C
check-zero statement.................................................540 usage guidelines..................................................526 checksum statement..................................................341 usage guidelines..................................................305 cisco-non-deterministic option...........................671, 762 class of service-based forwarding, configure..............239 CLNS..........................................................................741 BGP.....................................................................689 static routes..........................................................60 clns-routing statement IS-IS....................................................................342 usage guidelines..........................................324 cluster statement.......................................................726 usage guidelines..................................................676
color statement aggregate routes.................................................177 usage guidelines............................................81 generated routes.................................................177 usage guidelines............................................89 static routes........................................................177 usage guidelines................................55, 59, 65 comments, in configuration statements..................xxxix communities aggregate routes...........................................82, 144 generated routes...................................................90 static routes..................................................65, 144 community statement aggregate routes.................................................144 usage guidelines............................................81 generated routes.................................................144 usage guidelines............................................90 Multitopology Routing.........................................282 Multitopology Routing (BGP) usage guidelines..........................................277 static routes........................................................144 usage guidelines............................................65 complete sequence number PDUs, IS-IS See IS-IS, complete sequence number PDUs confederation statement............................................145 usage guidelines..........................................103, 644 confederations...........................................145, 644, 655 config-internal (tracing flag).......................................200 configuration mode, CLI statement hierarchy..............................................15 contributing routes aggregate routes...................................................78 generated routes...................................................86 conventions text and syntax...............................................xxxviii count (firewall filter action)..........................................98 critical (system logging severity level)........................173 cryptographic-address statement...............................625 usage guidelines..................................................622 csn (tracing flag).........................................................385 csnp-interval statement..............................................342 usage guidelines..................................................306 curly braces, in configuration statements................xxxix current-hop-limit statement.......................................610 usage guidelines..................................................603 customer support......................................................xlvii contacting JTAC..................................................xlvii
D
damping............................................................727, 774 damping (tracing flag)................................................774 damping statement....................................................727 usage guidelines..................................................681 database description packets.....................................410
Index
781
dead-interval statement.............................................459 usage guidelines..................................................435 debug (system logging severity level).........................173 default-lifetime statement..........................................610 usage guidelines..................................................603 default-lsa statement..................................................460 usage guidelines..................................................420 default-metric statement............................................461 usage guidelines..................................................420 defaults statement aggregate statement...........................................133 usage guidelines............................................78 generate statement.............................................154 usage guidelines............................................86 static statement..................................................195 usage guidelines............................................51 delay statement IS-IS....................................................................382 OSPF...................................................................504 demand-circuit statement..........................................462 OSPF usage guidelines..........................................425 usage guidelines..................................................449 description statement........................................253, 728 usage guidelines..................................................702 designated router IS-IS....................................................................312 OSPF...........................................................411, 432 destination-networks statement.................................146 usage guidelines..................................................115 destination-port (firewall filter match condition)..........96 detail (tracing flag modifier).......................................201 detection-time statement BFD....................................................................140 IS-IS....................................................................340 DHCP accepting............................................................113 disable statement.......................................................399 BGP.....................................................................729 usage guidelines..........................................645 ES-IS usage guidelines..........................................393 graceful restart usage guidelines..........................................114 IS-IS....................................................................344 graceful restart.............................................348 LDP synchronization....................................345 usage guidelines..................................309, 320 OSPF...................................................................464 LDP synchronization....................................463 usage guidelines..........................................413 router discovery..................................................591 routing options usage guidelines..........................................108 discard (firewall filter action)........................................98
discard statement aggregate routes.................................................147 generated routes.................................................147 discard statement, in static statement usage guidelines....................................................54 documentation set comments on.....................................................xlvii domain-id statement..................................................465 usage guidelines..................................................246 domain-vpn-tag statement.........................................465 usage guidelines..................................................246 dscp (firewall filter match condition)............................96 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol DHCP See DHCP dynamic tunnels........................................................148 source.................................................................193 dynamic-tunnels statement........................................148 usage guidelines..................................................114
E
EBGP See BGP EBGP IPv6 peering, BGP.............................................700 enable statement routing options...................................................161 usage guidelines..........................................108 enabling multicast on an interface.............................108 equal-cost paths.......................................................8, 10 error (system logging severity level)...........................173 error (tracing flag) ES-IS...................................................................401 IS-IS....................................................................385 OSPF...................................................................509 RIP......................................................................554 RIPng..................................................565, 579, 618 router discovery..................................................597 ES-IS..........................................................................389 configuration statements....................................391 disable................................................................393 end system configuration timer..........................393 errored packets...................................................401 graceful restart....................................393, 399, 401 hello PDUs...........................................................401 hello interval.......................................................393 preference..........................................................394 esct statement ES-IS usage guidelines..........................................393 esis statement usage guidelines..................................................392 Ethernet interfaces, unnumbered as next-hop interface for static routes...................55 configuration example...................................58 except (firewall filter match condition).........................96 expiration (tracing flag)..............................554, 579, 618
782
Index
Index
explicit-null statement................................................730 usage guidelines..................................................660 export statement BGP.....................................................................731 usage guidelines..........................................697 forwarding table.................................................148 usage guidelines..........................................106 IS-IS....................................................................345 usage guidelines..........................................328 OSPF...................................................................466 usage guidelines..........................................445 RIP......................................................................541 usage guidelines..........................................528 RIPng..................................................................567 usage guidelines..........................................564 export-rib statement..................................................149 usage guidelines..................................................104 external-preference statement IS-IS....................................................................346 usage guidelines..........................................308 OSPF...................................................................467 usage guidelines..........................................433 external-router-id option............................................671
forwarding-class (firewall filter action)..........................98 forwarding-table statement........................................153 usage guidelines..................................................111 fragment-offset (firewall filter match condition)...........96 full statement.....................................................143, 153 aggregate routes usage guidelines............................................84 generated routes usage guidelines............................................92
G
general (tracing flag)..................................................201 RIPng..........................................................580, 619 generate statement....................................................154 usage guidelines..............................................86, 88 generated routes..................................................43, 154 preferences.............................................................9 graceful restart...........................................................113 graceful-restart (tracing flag)......................................401 IS-IS....................................................................385 OSPF...................................................................509 graceful-restart statement..........................................399 BGP.....................................................................735 usage guidelines..........................................659 IS-IS....................................................................348 OSPF...................................................................468 usage guidelines..........................................439 RIP......................................................................541 usage guidelines..........................................529 RIPng..................................................................568 usage guidelines..........................................565 usage guidelines..................................................114 group statement BGP.....................................................................736 usage guidelines..........................................649 RIP......................................................................542 usage guidelines..........................................527 RIPng..................................................................569 usage guidelines..........................................563
F
family statement BGP.....................................................................732 usage guidelines..........................................682 IS-IS....................................................................347 usage guidelines..........................................318 fate-sharing statement...............................................150 usage guidelines....................................................44 FBF, configuring.........................................................237 filter statement..........................................................151 usage guidelines....................................................99 filter-based forwarding configuring..........................................................237 Multitopology Routing.........................................278 flash (tracing flag)......................................................201 flooding (tracing flag).................................................509 flow routes.................................................................152 BGP.....................................................................687 flow statement...................................................152, 734 usage guidelines............................................95, 687 font conventions....................................................xxxviii forwarding table aggregate routes...........................................84, 143 generated routes...........................................92, 143 overview.................................................................5 policy, routing.....................................................148 static routes..........51, 67, 68, 69, 84, 92, 132, 159, 184 synchronizing.........................................................5 forwarding-cache statement.......................................153 usage guidelines..................................................109
H
hello (tracing flag) ES-IS...................................................................401 IS-IS....................................................................385 hello packets IS-IS....................................................................296 OSPF...................................................................409 hello-authentication-key statement............................349 IS-IS usage guidelines..........................................310 hello-authentication-type statement...........................350 usage guidelines..................................................310
Index
783
hello-interval statement ES-IS usage guidelines..........................................393 IS-IS....................................................................351 usage guidelines..........................................311 OSPF...................................................................469 usage guidelines..........................................434 hello-padding statement.............................................352 usage guidelines..................................................323 helper-disable statement IS-IS....................................................................348 usage guidelines..................................................317 hold-time statement BGP.....................................................................738 usage guidelines..........................................658 IS-IS....................................................................353 LDP synchronization....................................354 usage guidelines..........................................311 OSPF LDP synchronization....................................470 holddown (tracing flag)..............................554, 579, 618 holddown statement IS-IS....................................................................382 OSPF...................................................................504 RIP......................................................................543 usage guidelines..........................................525 RIPng..................................................................570 usage guidelines..........................................562 holddown-interval statement BFD static routes.................................................140 BFD (static routes usage guidelines............................................71
I
IBGP See BGP ICMP router discovery................................................585 icmp-code (firewall filter match condition)...................96 icmp-type (firewall filter match condition)...................96 icons defined, notice..............................................xxxviii identifiers BGP See BGP, identifier router See router identifier ignore statement................................................590, 591 usage guidelines..................................................586 ignore-attached-bit statement....................................354 usage guidelines..................................................299 ignore-lsp-metrics statement IS-IS....................................................................355 usage guidelines..........................................319 OSPF...................................................................470 usage guidelines..........................................443
import statement BGP.....................................................................739 usage guidelines..........................................697 OSPF...................................................................471 usage guidelines..........................................445 RIP......................................................................544 usage guidelines..........................................527 RIPng..................................................................571 usage guidelines..........................................563 route resolution...................................................156 import-policy statement.............................................156 usage guidelines..................................................104 import-rib statement..................................................157 usage guidelines..................................................104 include-mp-next-hop statement.................................740 usage guidelines..................................................703 independent-domain statement.................................157 indirect next hop................................................117, 158 indirect-next-hop statement.......................................158 usage guidelines..................................................117 ineligible statement............................................591, 596 inet 6.0 routing table................................................4, 49 inet.0 routing table.........................................................4 inet.1 routing table.........................................................4 inet.2 routing table...................................................4, 49 inet.3 routing table.........................................................4 info (system logging severity level).............................173 info (tracing flag)........................................................597 input statement..........................................................158 usage guidelines....................................................99 install statement........................................................159 usage guidelines....................................................67 instance type, configuring..........................................233 instance-export statement..........................................160 usage guidelines..................................................241 instance-import statement.........................................160 usage guidelines..................................................241 instance-name.inet.0 routing table.................................4 instance-type statement.............................................254 usage guidelines..................................................233 instances routing, multiple.................................................205 inter-area-prefix-export statement OSPFv3...............................................................472 usage guidelines..................................................446 inter-area-prefix-import statement OSPFv3...............................................................473 usage guidelines..................................................446 interface statement ES-IS usage guidelines..........................................392 IS-IS............................................................255, 356 usage guidelines..........................................304 multicast scoping................................................162 usage guidelines..........................................107 multicast via static routes....................................161
784
Index
Index
neighbor discovery.............................................611 usage guidelines..........................................602 OSPF...........................................................255, 474 usage guidelines..................................423, 424 router discovery..................................................592 routing options usage guidelines..........................................108 interface-group (firewall filter match condition)...........96 interface-routes statement.........................................163 usage guidelines..................................................106 interface-type statement............................................476 usage guidelines..................................................424 interfaces descriptive text..........................................253 Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System protocol See IS-IS Internet Control Message Protocol router discovery See router discovery ipsec-sa statement.....................................................477 BGP.....................................................................740 OSPF usage guidelines..........................................449 usage guidelines..........................................431, 662 ipv4-multicast statement IS-IS....................................................................357 usage guidelines..................................................330 ipv4-multicast-metric statement.................................358 usage guidelines..................................................330 ipv4-multicast-rpf-routes statement IS-IS usage guidelines..........................................320 IPv6 addressing............................................................12 representation...............................................13 structure........................................................14 types..............................................................13 advantages............................................................10 EBGP link-local peering.......................................700 header fields.........................................................12 ipv6-multicast statement IS-IS....................................................................358 ipv6-multicast-metric statement.................................359 ipv6-unicast statement...............................................359 ipv6-unicast-metric statement....................................360 IS-IS addresses............................................................295 areas...................................................................308 authentication.....................................303, 338, 369 CSNP...........................................................370 hello............................................................370 PSNP...........................................................373 BFD............................................................320, 340 checksum...................................................305, 323 CLNS...................................................324, 342, 389 export BGP routes........................................324 pure ISO network........................................324
complete sequence number PDUs...............................296, 306, 333, 342, 385 configuration statements....................................299 designated router........................................312, 378 disable................................................................317 disabling.............................................309, 326, 344 IPv4 multicast topology...............................330 IPv4 routing.................................................327 IPv4 unicast topology..................................330 IPv6 multicast topology...............................330 IPv6 routing.................................................327 IPv6 unicast topology..................................332 enabling......................................326, 327, 328, 360 errored packets...................................................385 errored PDUs......................................................333 graceful restart............................................317, 348 hello interval................................................311, 351 packet authentication..........................310, 350 packet authentication key............................349 PDUs...........................................296, 333, 385 hold time....................................................311, 353 hold-down timer disabling......................................................369 interfaces............................................................356 IPv4 unicast topology..........................................374 IPv6 unicast topology..................................359, 373 label-switched path.....................................361, 478 LDP synchronization...................................313, 345 hold time.....................................................354 level properties global...........................................................363 interfaces.....................................................364 link-state PDUs See IS-IS, LSPs loose authentication....................................323, 365 LSPs....................................................296, 333, 386 errored........................................................335 generation...................................................333 interval................................................313, 365 lifetime................................................314, 366 tracing.........................................................386 mesh groups.......................................306, 335, 367 metrics.......................................306, 307, 312, 379 IPv6.............................................................360 multicast..............................................358, 359 normal.........................................................368 traffic engineering.......................................383 wide....................................................307, 388 multicast reverse-path forwarding.......................320 multicast topologies............................330, 357, 358 IPv4.............................................................371 IPv6.............................................................372 network PDUs.....................................................294 NSAP..................................................................295 overloaded, marking router as............315, 375, 443 packets See IS-IS, PDUs
Index
785
padding......................................................323, 352 partial sequence number PDUs...........296, 333, 386 PDUs...................................................................296 point-to-point interface...............................317, 377 policy, routing.............................................328, 345 preferences.............................9, 308, 328, 346, 377 prefix limit..................................................308, 378 protocol data units See IS-IS, PDUs protocol task processing.....................................333 protocol timer processing...................................333 route tagging.......................................................297 routing domains..................................................364 routing instances minimum configuration...................................214, 217, 218 SPF delay calculations.................................333, 386 standards supported...........................................293 state transitions..................................................333 topology..............................................................384 tracing operations...............................333, 385, 401 traffic engineering lsp metrics...................................................470 traffic engineering support.....312, 318, 320, 344, 381, 387, 480, 503 wide metrics.......................................................307 isis statement.............................................................360 usage guidelines..................................................302 ISO addresses............................................................295 system identifier.................................................295 iso-vpn statement......................................................741 usage guidelines..................................................689
K
keep statement..........................................................742 usage guidelines..................................................699 keepalive (tracing flag) BGP.....................................................................774 keepalive messages....................................................639 kernel (tracing flag)....................................................201 key-length statement.................................................626 usage guidelines..................................................623 key-pair statement.....................................................626 usage guidelines..................................................623 keychain BGP.....................................................................660
L
label-switched-path statement IS-IS....................................................................361 usage guidelines..........................................314 OSPF...................................................................478 usage guidelines..........................................442 labeled-unicast statement...........................................743 usage guidelines..................................................660
last resort, route of generated routes See generated routes LDP routing instances configure multiple........................................225 minimum configuration.......................215, 219 ldp-synchronization statement IS-IS....................................................................362 usage guidelines..........................................313 OSPF...................................................................479 usage guidelines..........................................438 level statement IS-IS interfaces.....................................................364 protocol.......................................................363 usage guidelines..................................................308 lifetime statement......................................................593 usage guidelines..................................................587 link-state acknowledgment packets See OSPF, link-state acknowledgment packets link-state advertisements See OSPF, link-state advertisements link-state PDUs See IS-IS, LSPs load sharing.................................................................10 local statement OSPF...................................................................502 usage guidelines..........................................449 local-address statement BFD....................................................................140 usage guidelines............................................71 BGP.....................................................................744 usage guidelines..................................................663 local-as statement......................................................745 usage guidelines..................................................673 local-interface statement BGP.....................................................................746 usage guidelines..................................................700 local-preference statement.........................................747 usage guidelines..................................................669 log (firewall filter action)..............................................98 log-updown statement...............................................748 BGP usage guidelines..........................................702 logging, routing protocol process.......................116, 173 logical system............................................................125 configuration statements....................................127 minimum configuration......................................127 overview.............................................................125 logical-systems statement usage guidelines..................................................129 loose-authentication-check statement IS-IS....................................................................365 loss-priority (firewall filter action).................................98 LSAs See OSPF, link-state advertisements lsp (tracing flag).........................................................386 lsp-generation (tracing flag)........................................386
786
Index
Index
lsp-interval statement.................................................365 usage guidelines..................................................313 lsp-lifetime statement................................................366 usage guidelines..................................................314 lsp-metric-into-summary statement...........................480 OSPF usage guidelines..........................................443 lsp-next-hop statement..............................................164 usage guidelines....................................................59 lsp-next-hop, static routes..................................164, 174 LSPs...........................................................................296 MPLS, fate-sharing..............................................150 See also IS-IS, LSPs, MPLS
M
managed-configuration statement..............................612 usage guidelines..................................................603 manuals comments on.....................................................xlvii martian addresses..........................................43, 93, 165 martians statement....................................................165 usage guidelines..............................................94, 95 match conditions firewall filters overview........................................................96 max-advertisement-interval statement.......................612 ICMP usage guidelines..........................................587 neighbor discovery usage guidelines..........................................604 max-areas statement..................................................366 usage guidelines..................................................307 maximum-paths statement........................................166 usage guidelines..................................................251 maximum-prefixes statement....................................167 usage guidelines..................................................251 MD5 authentication...................................................660 BGP.....................................................................660 OSPF...................................................................429 md5 statement OSPF...................................................................481 MED See BGP med-igp-update-interval statement.............................168 usage guidelines..................................................122 med-plus-igp statement..............................................762 usage guidelines..................................................671 members statement usage guidelines..................................................103 mesh groups......................................................306, 367 mesh-group statement...............................................367 usage guidelines..................................................306 message-size statement.............................................545 usage guidelines..................................................526
metric statement aggregate routes.................................................169 usage guidelines............................................81 CLNS usage guidelines............................................60 generated routes.................................................169 IS-IS....................................................................368 usage guidelines..........................................312 OSPF...................................................................482 usage guidelines..................................433, 449 qualified next hop...............................................170 usage guidelines............................................55 static routes........................................................169 usage guidelines............................................64 metric-in statement RIP......................................................................546 RIPng..................................................................572 usage guidelines..........................................561 usage guidelines..................................................525 metric-out statement BGP.....................................................................749 usage guidelines..........................................664 RIP......................................................................547 usage guidelines..........................................529 RIPng..................................................................573 usage guidelines..........................................564 metric-type statement................................................483 usage guidelines..................................................420 metrics IS-IS............................................306, 307, 312, 379 OSPF...................................................433, 445, 498 RIP......................................................................529 RIPng..........................................................561, 564 static routes..........................................................64 min-advertisement-interval statement...............594, 613 usage guidelines..........................................587, 604 minimum-interval statement BFD....................................................................140 usage guidelines............................................71 BGP.....................................................................722 IS-IS....................................................................340 OSPF...................................................................457 usage guidelines..........................................436 RIP......................................................................538 usage guidelines..........................................530 minimum-receive-interval statement BFD....................................................................140 usage guidelines............................................71 BFD (BGP) usage guidelines..........................................703 BGP.....................................................................722 IS-IS....................................................................340 usage guidelines..........................................320
Index
787
OSPF...................................................................457 usage guidelines..........................................436 RIP......................................................................538 usage guidelines..........................................530 minimum-receive-ttl statement BFD....................................................................140 BFD (static routes) usage guidelines............................................71 MP-BGP........................................................49, 682, 733 MPLS ultimate-hop popping..........................................730 mpls.0 routing table.......................................................4 MSDP configuring multiple instances............................226 MSDP routing instances, minimum configuration......216 mtu-discovery statement............................................751 BGP usage guidelines..........................................659 multiarea adjacency OSPF...................................................................426 multicast scoping...............................................................107 multicast statement...................................................171 router discovery..................................................595 usage guidelines..........................................586 routing options usage guidelines..........................................107 multicast-rpf-routes statement...................................368 OSPF usage guidelines..........................................443 multihop statement....................................................752 usage guidelines..................................................667 multipath statement...................................................753 multiple active routes.....................................................8 multiplier statement BFD....................................................................140 usage guidelines............................................71 BFD (BGP) usage guidelines..........................................703 BGP.....................................................................722 IS-IS....................................................................340 usage guidelines..........................................320 OSPF...................................................................457 usage guidelines..........................................436 RIP......................................................................538 usage guidelines..........................................530 multiprotocol BGP (MP-BGP)..............................682, 733 Multitopology Routing BGP configuring..................................................277 community statement.........................................282 filter-based forwarding........................................278 OSPF configuring..................................................270 overview.............................................................265
N
neighbor discovery autoconfiguration................................................603 autonomous.................................................605 basics..................................................................599 configuration statements......................29, 601, 602 enabling..............................................................602 frequency...........................................................604 hop limit.............................................................603 neighbor solicitation, frequency..........................604 onlink.................................................................605 preferred lifetime................................................606 prefix information...............................................605 reachable time....................................................604 router advertisements.........................................602 router lifetime.....................................................603 standards documents..........................................599 valid lifetime.......................................................606 neighbor statement BGP.....................................................................754 usage guidelines..................................647, 754 OSPF...................................................................484 usage guidelines..........................................424 RIP......................................................................548 usage guidelines..........................................524 RIPng..................................................................574 usage guidelines..........................................561 neighbor-discovery statement....................................627 usage guidelines..................................................622 neighbors BGP.....................................................................637 OSPF...................................................................424 RIP......................................................................524 RIPng..................................................................561 network layer reachability information See BGP, NLRI network link advertisements......................................410 network PDUs............................................................294 network protocol data units See IS-IS, network PDUs network service access point......................................295 network-summary-export statement..........................485 usage guidelines..................................................446 network-summary-import statement.........................485 usage guidelines..................................................446 next-hop statement CLNS usage guidelines............................................60 next-table statement usage guidelines....................................................54 NLRI, BGP..................................................................639
788
Index
Index
no-adaptation BFD (BGP) usage guidelines..........................................703 no-adaptation statement BFD....................................................................140 BFD (IS-IS) usage guidelines..........................................320 BFD (static routes) usage guidelines............................................71 BGP.....................................................................722 IS-IS....................................................................340 OSPF...................................................................457 usage guidelines..........................................436 RIP......................................................................538 usage guidelines..................................530, 532 no-adjacency-holddown statement.............................369 usage guidelines..................................................323 no-advertise-peer-as statement usage guidelines..................................................699 no-aggregator-id statement........................................756 usage guidelines..................................................667 no-authentication-check statement............................369 usage guidelines..................................................303 no-autonomous statement usage guidelines..................................................605 no-check-zero statement............................................540 usage guidelines..................................................526 no-client-reflect statement..........................................757 usage guidelines..................................................676 no-csnp-authentication statement..............................370 usage guidelines..................................................303 no-hello-authentication statement..............................370 usage guidelines..................................................303 no-indirect-next-hop statement usage guidelines..................................................117 no-install statement...................................................159 usage guidelines....................................................67 no-ipv4-multicast statement.......................................371 usage guidelines..................................................330 no-ipv4-routing statement..........................................371 usage guidelines..................................................327 no-ipv6-multicast statement.......................................372 usage guidelines..................................................330 no-ipv6-routing statement..........................................372 usage guidelines..................................................327 no-ipv6-unicast statement..........................................373 no-managed-configuration statement.........................612 usage guidelines..................................................603 no-nssa-abr statement................................................486 OSPF usage guidelines..........................................422 no-on-link statement usage guidelines..................................................605 no-other-stateful-configuration statement usage guidelines..................................................603
no-psnp-authentication statement..............................373 usage guidelines..................................................303 no-readvertise statement...................................172, 180 usage guidelines....................................................70 no-retain statement............................................172, 184 usage guidelines....................................................68 no-rfc-1583 statement................................................487 usage guidelines..................................................423 no-unicast-topology statement...................................374 usage guidelines..................................................330 no-validate statement.................................................758 no-vrf-advertise statement.........................................255 usage guidelines..................................................246 nonstop-routing statement.........................................172 usage guidelines..................................................118 normal (tracing flag)...................................................201 RIPng..........................................................580, 619 notice icons defined...............................................xxxviii NPDUs See IS-IS, network PDUs NSAP..........................................................................295 nssa statement...........................................................488 usage guidelines..................................................420
O
on-link statement.......................................................614 usage guidelines..................................................605 open messages, BGP..................................................639 Open Shortest Path First See OSPF options statement......................................................173 usage guidelines..................................................116 OSPF adjacencies.........................................................454 area border routers.............................................432 areas configuring..................................................454 nonbackbone...............................................419 AS external link advertisements..........................411 authentication.............................................427, 456 md5.............................................................481 simple..........................................................503 backbone....................................................419, 454 BFD............................................................436, 457 configuration statements....................................418 configuring..........................................................413 cost See OSPF, metrics database description packets..............................410 default route.......................................................407 demand circuits..................................................425 designated router................................424, 432, 496 disable........................................................439, 659 domain ID configuring..................................................246 enabling..............................255, 418, 423, 475, 489 error packets.......................................................509 graceful restart............................................439, 468
Index
789
hello interval.......................................434, 469, 493 hello packets.......................................................409 interface types....................................................476 LDP synchronization...................................438, 463 hold time.....................................................470 link-state acknowledgment packets............................410 advertisements............................410, 435, 499 flooding packets..........................................509 request packets............................................410 update packets............................................410 LSAs See OSPF, link-state advertisements metric-type statement usage guidelines..........................................420 metrics.......................................433, 445, 482, 498 traffic engineering.......................................507 multiarea adjacency configuring..................................................426 NBMA networks..................................................424 neighbors............................................424, 484, 488 network link advertisements...............................410 nonbroadcast, multiaccess networks..................424 NSSAs.........................................................460, 461 overload bit.........................................................490 packets...............................................408, 411, 509 passive mode..............................................440, 491 passive traffic-engineering mode........................441 peer-interfaces............................................449, 492 policy, routing.....................................445, 466, 471 network summaries.....................................446 route install priority.....................................447 preferences.............................................9, 467, 494 prefix limit..................................................431, 495 route cost See OSPF, metrics route summarization...................................432, 455 route-type-community statement........................501 usage guidelines..........................................246 router dead interval............................................459 router identifier...................................................103 router link advertisements..................................410 routing algorithm................................................407 routing instances, configure multiple..........217, 226 sham link....................................................449, 502 SPF.............................................................407, 509 standards documents..........................................405 stub areas...........................................420, 460, 461 summary link advertisements.............................411 tags aggregate routes....................................84, 198 generated routes....................................91, 198 static routes...........................................67, 198 timers.................................................................434 topological database...........................................404 tracing operations...............................................508 traffic engineering features.................................512 traffic engineering support..................................445
transmission delay......................................436, 514 transmit interval.................................................515 virtual links.................................................421, 517 ospf statement...........................................................489 usage guidelines..........................................413, 418 ospf3 statement.........................................................489 OSPFv2 authentication, configuring.................................427 OSPFv3 authentication.............................................431, 477 enabling..............................................................489 multiple address families configuring..................................................427 other-stateful-configuration statement........................614 usage guidelines..................................................603 out-delay statement...................................................759 usage guidelines..................................................699 outbound-route-filter statement BGP.....................................................................760 overload statement IS-IS....................................................................375 OSPF...................................................................490 usage guidelines..................................................442
P
p2mp-lsp-next-hop statement....................................174 packet-dump (tracing flag).........................................509 packet-length (firewall filter match condition)..............96 packets (tracing flag) BGP.....................................................................774 IS-IS....................................................................386 OSPF...................................................................509 RIP......................................................................554 RIPng..........................................................579, 618 router discovery..................................................597 parentheses, in syntax descriptions.........................xxxix parse (tracing flag).....................................................201 partial sequence number PDUs See IS-IS, partial sequence number PDUs passive statement......................................................491 aggregate routes.................................................132 usage guidelines............................................84 BGP.....................................................................761 usage guidelines..........................................663 generated routes.................................................132 usage guidelines............................................92 IS-IS....................................................................376 usage guidelines..................................310, 313 OSPF usage guidelines..........................................440 static routes........................................................132 usage guidelines............................................69 path attributes, BGP...................................638, 639, 667 path-selection statement............................................762 usage guidelines..................................................671
790
Index
Index
PDUs See IS-IS, PDUs peer-as statement......................................................763 usage guidelines..................................................650 peer-interface statement............................................492 usage guidelines..................................................449 per-packet load balancing..........................................109 physical interfaces, descriptive text............................253 PIM configuring multiple instances............................229 PIM routing instances, minimum configuration.........218 point-to-point statement.............................................377 usage guidelines..................................................317 policers firewall filter action...............................................98 policy (tracing flag).....................................................201 RIPng..........................................................580, 619 policy statement aggregate routes.................................................175 usage guidelines............................................85 generated routes.................................................175 usage guidelines............................................92 policy, routing aggregate routes...................................................85 BGP.............................................................731, 739 description............................................................43 forwarding table.................................................148 generated routes...................................................92 IS-IS............................................................328, 345 OSPF...................................................445, 466, 471 network summaries.....................................446 precedence.........................................................696 RIP..............................................................541, 544 RIPng..........................................................567, 571 routing instance..................................................160 policy-based instance export, configuring..................241 poll-interval statement...............................................493 usage guidelines..................................................424 port (firewall filter match condition).............................96 ppm statement..........................................................176 usage guidelines..................................................121 precedence (firewall filter match condition).................96 preference statement aggregate routes.................................................177 usage guidelines............................................81 BGP.....................................................................764 usage guidelines..........................................669 CLNS static routes usage guidelines............................................60 ES-IS usage guidelines..........................................394 generated routes.................................................177 usage guidelines............................................89 IS-IS....................................................................377 usage guidelines..........................................308 OSPF...................................................................494 usage guidelines..........................................433
RIP......................................................................549 usage guidelines..........................................529 RIPng..................................................................575 usage guidelines..........................................564 static routes........................................................177 usage guidelines................................55, 59, 65 preferences active routes.......................................................7, 8 aggregate routes...........................................81, 177 generated routes..............................................9 alternate preferences..............................................6 default preferences...............................................10 generated routes...................................................89 IS-IS................................................9, 308, 346, 377 modifying with configuration statements...................9, 10 OSPF...........................................................467, 494 overview.................................................................6 RIP..........................................................................9 static routes..................................9, 55, 59, 65, 177 tie-breaker preferences...........................................6 preferred-lifetime statement......................................615 usage guidelines..................................................606 prefix limit IS-IS............................................................308, 378 OSPF...........................................................431, 495 prefix statement.........................................................178 neighbor discovery.............................................615 usage guidelines..........................................602 usage guidelines..................................................107 prefix-export-limit statement IS-IS....................................................................378 usage guidelines..........................................308 OSPF...................................................................495 usage guidelines..........................................431 prefix-limit statement.................................................765 usage guidelines..........................................685, 695 primary routing tables................................................104 priority statement IS-IS....................................................................378 usage guidelines..........................................312 OSPF...................................................................496 usage guidelines..........................................432 router discovery..................................................596 protocol data units.....................................................296 See also IS-IS, PDUs protocol-independent routing properties See aggregate routes protocols firewall filter match condition...............................96 match condition firewall filters.................................................96 protocols statement...................................................256 psn (tracing flag)........................................................386 PSNP IS-IS See IS-IS, partial sequence number PDUs
Index
791
Q
qualified-next-hop statement.....................................179 CLNS usage guidelines............................................60 usage guidelines....................................................55
R
rapid-runs statement IS-IS....................................................................382 OSPF...................................................................504 reachable-time statement...........................................616 usage guidelines..................................................604 readvertise statement................................................180 usage guidelines....................................................70 realm statement.........................................................497 usage guidelines..................................................427 receive (tracing flag modifier)....................................201 receive routes..............................................................54 receive statement RIP......................................................................550 usage guidelines..........................................527 RIPng..................................................................576 usage guidelines..................................562, 563 static routes usage guidelines............................................54 redirect (tracing flag)..................................................597 redirected routes............................................................9 reference-bandwidth statement.................................498 IS-IS....................................................................379 usage guidelines..........................................307, 433 regex-parse (tracing flag)............................................201 reject firewall filters action............................................................98 reject option to static statement.................................196 usage guidelines....................................................54 remove-private statement..........................................767 usage guidelines..................................................675 resolution statement..................................................181 usage guidelines..................................................116 resolution-ribs statement...........................................181 resolve statement.......................................................182 usage guidelines....................................................70 resolve-vpn statement................................................768 usage guidelines..................................................687 restart-duration statement..................................183, 399 ES-IS usage guidelines..........................................393 graceful restart usage guidelines..........................................114 IS-IS....................................................................348 usage guidelines..................................................317 retain statement.........................................................184 usage guidelines..............................................68, 75
retransmit-interval statement.....................................499 usage guidelines..................................................435 retransmit-timer statement........................................616 usage guidelines..................................................604 rib statement BGP.....................................................................769 Multitopology Routing static routes.................................................283 route resolution...................................................187 routing tables......................................................186 usage guidelines....................................................49 rib-group statement...................................................188 BGP.....................................................................770 usage guidelines..........................................682 IS-IS....................................................................380 OSPF...................................................................500 usage guidelines..........................................449 RIP......................................................................551 usage guidelines..........................................527 usage guidelines..................................................106 rib-groups statement..................................................189 usage guidelines..................................................104 RIB-groups, static routes..............................................60 RIP authentication.............................................524, 536 BFD....................................................................530 configuration statements....................521, 523, 556 disable restart.....................................................530 disabling address checks.....................................535 enabling......................................................523, 551 graceful restart............................................529, 541 groups.................................................................527 hold-down timer.................................................543 holddown timer..................................................570 metrics.......................................................546, 547 neighbors....................................................524, 548 packets...............................................................520 policy, routing.............................................541, 544 preferences.............................................9, 529, 549 reserved fields....................................................540 rib-group messages.............................................527 rib-group statement usage guidelines..........................................527 route timeout......................................................552 routing instances, configure multiple..................230 standards documents..........................................520 tracing operations...............................................532 UDP, use of.........................................................519 update interval....................................................556 update messages................................526, 527, 545 rip statement.............................................................551 usage guidelines..................................................523 RIPng configuration statements....................................559 disable restart.....................................................565 enabling..............................................................577
792
Index
Index
graceful restart............................................565, 568 groups.................................................................563 holddown timer..................................................570 metrics...............................................561, 572, 573 neighbors....................................................561, 574 overview.............................................................557 packets...............................................................558 policy, routing.....................................564, 567, 571 preferences.................................................564, 575 route timeout......................................................577 standards documents..........................................558 tracing operations...............................................565 UDP, use of.........................................................557 update interval....................................................581 ripng statement..........................................................577 usage guidelines..................................................560 route aggregate statement usage guidelines............................................78 generate statement usage guidelines............................................86 static statement..................................................195 route (tracing flag) RIPng..........................................................580, 619 routing................................................................201 route distinguisher.....................................................190 route limit, configuring...............................................251 paths...................................................................166 prefix..................................................................167 route of last resort See generated routes route recording..........................................................190 route resolution..........................................................116 BGP.............................................................768, 772 route statement aggregate statement...........................................133 generate statement.............................................154 static statement usage guidelines............................................51 route-distinguisher statement.....................................259 usage guidelines..................................................236 route-distinguisher-id statement.................................190 usage guidelines..................................................114 route-record statement...............................................190 usage guidelines..................................................104 route-target statement................................................771 usage guidelines..................................................693 route-timeout statement RIP......................................................................552 usage guidelines..........................................526 RIPng..................................................................577 usage guidelines..........................................562 route-type-community statement...............................501 usage guidelines..................................................246 router advertisements................................586, 587, 594
router discovery configuration statements............................585, 586 designated router, configuring............................596 router advertisements.........................583, 584, 586 router solicitations..............................................583 server operation..................................................584 server, enabling..........................................586, 596 standards documents..........................................583 tracing operations...............................587, 588, 597 router identifier..................................................103, 191 router link advertisements.........................................410 router-advertisement statement.................................617 router-discovery (tracing flag).....................................597 router-discovery statement........................................596 usage guidelines..................................................586 router-id statement....................................................191 usage guidelines..........................................103, 645 routes aggregate See aggregate routes contributing....................................................78, 86 static See static routes Routing Information Protocol See RIP Routing Information Protocol next generation See RIPng routing instances BGP.....................................................................214 configure............................................................231 IS-IS....................................................................214 configuration example.................................221 LDP.............................................................215, 225 MSDP..................................................................226 multiple..............................................................205 router..........................................................222 second router, configure......................225, 229 multiprotocol BGP-based multicast VPNs............216 OSPF...........................................................217, 226 configuration example.................................227 PIM.............................................................218, 229 policy-based auto-export configuration example..............241 instance-import configuration example.......243 RIP..............................................................218, 230 router identifier...................................................190 routing protocol databases.............................................4 routing tables...............................................................43 BGP, delays in exchanging routes.......................699 creating.........................................................49, 186 default..................................................................49 default unicast......................................................49 export local routes..............................................106 flow routes............................................................49 group...104, 106, 149, 151, 157, 188, 189, 500, 770 import policy......................................................156 inet 6.0.............................................................4, 49 inet.0......................................................................4 inet.1......................................................................4
Index
793
inet.2................................................................4, 49 inet.3......................................................................4 instance-name.inet.0............................................49 instance-name.inetflow.0......................................49 instance-name.init.0...............................................4 mpls.0....................................................................4 nonactive routes, exchanging with BGP.........................................................697, 713 overview.................................................................4 policy, routing.....................................................160 primary...............................................................104 secondary...........................................................104 synchronizing.........................................................5 routing-instance (firewall filter action)..........................98 routing-instances statement.......................................260 usage guidelines..................................207, 213, 219 routing-options statement..........................................191 usage guidelines....................................................43 RSVP preferences.............................................................9
S
sample (firewall filter action)........................................98 scope statement.........................................................192 usage guidelines..................................................107 scoping, multicast................................................43, 107 secondary import and export policies, configure........240 secondary routing tables............................................104 secondary statement OSPF interface....................................................501 usage guidelines..................................................426 Secure Neighbor Discovery cryptographic addresses configuring..................................................622 cryptographic-address statement........................625 enabling..............................................................622 neighbor-discovery statement.............................627 security-level statement......................................629 timestamp statement..........................................630 secure statement........................................................628 security-level statement.............................................629 send (tracing flag modifier)........................................201 send statement RIP......................................................................553 usage guidelines..........................................527 RIPng..................................................................578 usage guidelines..................................562, 563 sham-link statement..................................................502 usage guidelines..................................................449 sham-link-remote statement......................................502 usage guidelines..................................................449
shortcuts statement IS-IS....................................................................381 usage guidelines..........................................318 OSPF...................................................................503 usage guidelines..........................................443 simple-password statement........................................503 source routing usage guidelines..................................................122 source-address statement...........................................193 source-port (firewall filter match condition) ................96 source-routing statement...........................................193 SPF....................................................................293, 407 spf (tracing flag) IS-IS....................................................................386 OSPF...................................................................509 spf-options statement IS-IS....................................................................382 usage guidelines..........................................316 OSPF...................................................................504 usage guidelines..........................................439 SSM groups, IGMP......................................................108 ssm-groups statement................................................194 usage guidelines..................................................109 state (tracing flag) RIPng..........................................................580, 619 routing protocols.................................................201 static options static routes..........................................................62 static routes...................................................43, 51, 195 BFD..............................................................71, 141 Multitopology Routing.........................................276 preferences.............................................................9 static statement.........................................................195 usage guidelines....................................................51 stub areas..................................................................420 stub statement...........................................................505 usage guidelines..................................................420 summaries statement................................................506 usage guidelines..................................................420 summary LSA............................................................411 support, technical See technical support synchronizing routing information.................................5 syntax conventions................................................xxxviii syslog (firewall filter action).........................................98 syslog statement routing options...................................................173 usage guidelines..........................................116 system ID See ISO, system identifier system identifier See ISO, system identifier system log messages routing protocol process.............................116, 173
794
Index
Index
T
tag statement.............................................................198 aggregate routes usage guidelines............................................84 generated routes usage guidelines............................................91 static routes usage guidelines............................................67 task (tracing flag).......................................................201 RIPng..........................................................580, 619 tcp-mss statement......................................................772 BGP usage guidelines..........................................706 te-metric statement IS-IS....................................................................383 OSPF...................................................................507 usage guidelines..........................................312, 445 technical support contacting JTAC..................................................xlvii threshold statement...................................................199 BFD (BGP) usage guidelines..........................................703 BGP.....................................................................722 IS-IS....................................................................340 usage guidelines..........................................320 OSPF usage guidelines..........................................436 RIP usage guidelines..........................................530 usage guidelines..................................................109 tie-breaker preferences..................................................6 timer (tracing flag).....................................201, 580, 619 timers OSPF...................................................................434 timestamp statement.................................................630 topologies statement IS-IS....................................................................384 Multitopology Routing.........................................284 usage guidelines..........................................269 topology statement filter-based forwarding Multitopology Routing..................................286 usage guidelines..........................................278 Multitopology Routing.........................................287 OSPF...........................................................288 OSPF interface.............................................289 Multitopology Routing (OSPF) usage guidelines..........................................270 topology-id statement Multitopology Routing.........................................290 traceoptions statement BGP.....................................................................773 usage guidelines..........................................706 ES-IS usage guidelines..........................................394
IS-IS....................................................................385 usage guidelines..........................................333 neighbor discovery.............................................618 usage guidelines..........................................606 OSPF...................................................................508 usage guidelines..........................................450 RIP......................................................................554 usage guidelines..........................................532 RIPng..................................................................579 usage guidelines..........................................565 router discovery..................................................597 usage guidelines..........................................587 routing protocols.................................................200 usage guidelines..........................................119 Secure Neighbor Discovery.................................631 tracing flags all........................................................................200 as-path................................................................774 auth....................................................................554 config-internal.....................................................200 csn......................................................................385 damping.............................................................774 error ES-IS............................................................401 IS-IS.............................................................385 OSPF...........................................................509 RIP..............................................................554 RIPng...........................................565, 579, 618 router discovery...........................................597 expiration...........................................554, 579, 618 flash....................................................................201 flooding..............................................................509 general................................................................201 RIPng...................................................580, 619 graceful restart IS-IS.............................................................385 OSPF...........................................................509 graceful-restart....................................................401 hello ES-IS............................................................401 IS-IS.............................................................385 holddown............................................554, 579, 618 info.....................................................................597 keepalive BGP.............................................................774 kernel.................................................................201 lsp.......................................................................386 lsp-generation.....................................................386 modifiers detail...........................................................201 receive.........................................................201 send............................................................201 normal................................................................201 RIPng...................................................580, 619 packet-dump.......................................................509
Index
795
packets BGP.............................................................774 IS-IS.............................................................386 OSPF...........................................................509 RIP..............................................................554 RIPng...................................................579, 618 router discovery...........................................597 parse...................................................................201 policy..................................................................201 RIPng...................................................580, 619 psn.....................................................................386 redirect...............................................................597 regex-parse.........................................................201 route RIPng...................................................580, 619 routing.........................................................201 router-discovery..................................................597 spf IS-IS.............................................................386 OSPF...........................................................509 state RIPng...................................................580, 619 routing protocols.........................................201 task.....................................................................201 RIPng...................................................580, 619 timer...................................................................201 RIPng...................................................580, 619 trigger.................................................555, 580, 618 update RIP..............................................................555 RIPng...................................................580, 619 tracing operations BGP.....................................................................773 ES-IS...................................................................401 IS-IS............................................................333, 385 OSPF...................................................................508 RIP..............................................................532, 554 RIPng..................................................565, 579, 618 router discovery..................................587, 588, 597 routing protocols.........................................119, 200 traffic engineering database OSPF support......................................................512 traffic-engineering statement IS-IS....................................................................387 usage guidelines..........................................318 OSPF...................................................................512 usage guidelines..........................................443 OSPF passive TE mode.......................................513 usage guidelines..........................................441 transit-delay statement..............................................514 usage guidelines..................................................436 transmit-interval statement........................................515 BFD..............................................................18, 140 BGP.....................................................................722
IS-IS....................................................................340 OSPF usage guidelines..........................................436 trigger (tracing flag)....................................555, 580, 618 tunnel-type statement................................................202 usage guidelines..................................................115 type statement...........................................................776 usage guidelines..................................................649 type-7 statement........................................................516 usage guidelines..................................................420
U
unicast reverse path check.........................................202 unicast RPF example configuration........................................113 fail filters.............................................................113 unicast-reverse-path statement..................................202 usage guidelines..................................................112 unnumbered Ethernet interfaces as next-hop interface for static routes...................55 configuration example...................................58 update (tracing flag) RIP......................................................................555 RIPng..........................................................580, 619 update messages BGP.....................................................................639 update-interval statement RIP......................................................................556 usage guidelines..........................................526 RIPng..................................................................581 usage guidelines..........................................562
V
valid-lifetime statement..............................................620 usage guidelines..................................................606 validation statement usage guidelines....................................................95 version statement BFD....................................................................140 usage guidelines............................................71 BFD (BGP) usage guidelines..........................................703 BGP.....................................................................722 IS-IS....................................................................340 usage guidelines..........................................320 OSPF...................................................................457 usage guidelines..........................................436 RIP......................................................................538 usage guidelines..........................................530 virtual switch configure............................................................232 virtual-link statement.................................................517 usage guidelines..................................................421
796
Index
Index
vpn-apply-export statement.......................................776 usage guidelines..................................................703 VPNs configure............................................................232 VRF export policy......................................................776 VRF table label, configuring.......................................245 VRF target, configuring..............................................245 vrf-export statement..................................................261 usage guidelines..................................................240 vrf-import statement..................................................261 usage guidelines..................................................240 vrf-table-label statement............................................262 usage guidelines..................................................245 vrf-target statement usage guidelines..................................................245
W
warning (system logging severity level)......................173 wide-metrics-only statement......................................388 usage guidelines..................................................307
Index
797
798
Index
A
accept-remote-nexthop statement..............................709 accepted-prefix-limit statement..................................710 active statement.........................................................132 address statement......................................................589 advertise statement....................................................590 advertise-external statement......................................712 advertise-inactive statement......................................713 advertise-peer-as statement.......................................714 aggregate statement...................................................133 aggregate-label statement..........................................715 aggregator statement.................................................135 allow statement.........................................................716 any-sender statement RIP......................................................................535 area statement...........................................................454 area-range statement.................................................455 as-override statement................................................717 as-path statement......................................................135 authentication-algorithm statement BGP.....................................................................718 authentication-key statement BGP.....................................................................719 IS-IS....................................................................338 RIP......................................................................536 authentication-key-chains statement security...............................................................721 authentication-type statement IS-IS....................................................................339 RIP......................................................................537 auto-export statement................................................137 autonomous statement..............................................609 autonomous-system statement..................................138
C
check-zero statement.................................................540 checksum statement..................................................341 clns-routing statement IS-IS....................................................................342 cluster statement.......................................................726 community statement aggregate routes.................................................144 generated routes.................................................144 Multitopology Routing.........................................282 static routes........................................................144 confederation statement............................................145 cryptographic-address statement...............................625 csnp-interval statement..............................................342 current-hop-limit statement.......................................610
D
damping statement....................................................727 dead-interval statement.............................................459 default-lifetime statement..........................................610 default-lsa statement..................................................460 default-metric statement............................................461 defaults statement generate statement.............................................154 static statement..................................................195 delay statement IS-IS....................................................................382 OSPF...................................................................504 demand-circuit statement..........................................462 description statement........................................253, 728 destination-networks statement.................................146 detection-time statement BFD....................................................................140 IS-IS....................................................................340 disable statement.......................................................399 BGP.....................................................................729 IS-IS....................................................................344 graceful restart.............................................348 LDP synchronization....................................345 OSPF...................................................................464 LDP synchronization....................................463
B
bfd-liveness-detection statement BGP.....................................................................722 IS-IS....................................................................340 OSPF...................................................................457 RIP......................................................................538 static routes........................................................140 bgp statement............................................................724 bgp-orf-cisco-mode statement....................................725
799
discard statement aggregate routes.................................................147 generated routes.................................................147 domain-id statement..................................................465 domain-vpn-tag statement.........................................465 dynamic-tunnels statement........................................148
E
enable statement routing options...................................................161 explicit-null statement................................................730 export statement BGP.....................................................................731 forwarding table.................................................148 IS-IS....................................................................345 OSPF...................................................................466 RIP......................................................................541 RIPng..................................................................567 export-rib statement..................................................149 external-preference statement IS-IS....................................................................346 OSPF...................................................................467
hello-interval statement IS-IS....................................................................351 OSPF...................................................................469 hello-padding statement.............................................352 helper-disable statement IS-IS....................................................................348 hold-time statement BGP.....................................................................738 IS-IS....................................................................353 LDP synchronization....................................354 OSPF LDP synchronization....................................470 holddown statement IS-IS....................................................................382 OSPF...................................................................504 RIP......................................................................543 RIPng..................................................................570
I
ignore statement................................................590, 591 ignore-attached-bit statement....................................354 ignore-lsp-metrics statement IS-IS....................................................................355 OSPF...................................................................470 import statement BGP.....................................................................739 OSPF...................................................................471 RIP......................................................................544 RIPng..................................................................571 route resolution...................................................156 import-policy statement.............................................156 import-rib statement..................................................157 include-mp-next-hop statement.................................740 independent-domain statement.................................157 indirect-next-hop statement.......................................158 ineligible statement............................................591, 596 input statement..........................................................158 install statement........................................................159 instance-export statement..........................................160 instance-import statement.........................................160 instance-type statement.............................................254 inter-area-prefix-export statement OSPFv3...............................................................472 inter-area-prefix-import statement OSPFv3...............................................................473 interface statement IS-IS............................................................255, 356 multicast scoping................................................162 multicast via static routes....................................161 neighbor discovery.............................................611 OSPF...........................................................255, 474 interface-routes statement.........................................163 interface-type statement............................................476 ipsec-sa statement.....................................................477 BGP.....................................................................740
F
family statement BGP.....................................................................732 IS-IS....................................................................347 fate-sharing statement...............................................150 filter statement..........................................................151 flow statement...................................................152, 734 forwarding-cache statement.......................................153 forwarding-table statement........................................153 full statement.....................................................143, 153
G
generate statement....................................................154 graceful-restart statement..........................................399 BGP.....................................................................735 IS-IS....................................................................348 OSPF...................................................................468 RIP......................................................................541 RIPng..................................................................568 group statement BGP.....................................................................736 RIP......................................................................542 RIPng..................................................................569
H
hello-authentication-key statement............................349 hello-authentication-type statement...........................350
800
ipv4-multicast statement IS-IS....................................................................357 ipv4-multicast-metric statement.................................358 ipv6-multicast statement IS-IS....................................................................358 ipv6-multicast-metric statement.................................359 ipv6-unicast statement...............................................359 ipv6-unicast-metric statement....................................360 isis statement.............................................................360 iso-vpn statement .....................................................741
K
keep statement..........................................................742 key-length statement.................................................626 key-pair statement.....................................................626
L
label-switched-path statement IS-IS....................................................................361 OSPF...................................................................478 labeled-unicast statement...........................................743 ldp-synchronization statement IS-IS....................................................................362 OSPF...................................................................479 level statement IS-IS interfaces.....................................................364 protocol.......................................................363 lifetime statement......................................................593 local statement OSPF...................................................................502 local-address statement BFD....................................................................140 BGP.....................................................................744 local-as statement......................................................745 local-interface statement BGP.....................................................................746 local-preference statement.........................................747 log-updown statement...............................................748 loose-authentication-check statement IS-IS....................................................................365 lsp-interval statement.................................................365 lsp-lifetime statement................................................366 lsp-metric-into-summary statement...........................480 lsp-next-hop statement..............................................164
md5 statement OSPF...................................................................481 med-igp-update-interval statement.............................168 med-plus-igp statement..............................................762 mesh-group statement...............................................367 message-size statement.............................................545 metric statement aggregate routes.................................................169 generated routes.................................................169 IS-IS....................................................................368 OSPF...................................................................482 qualified next hop...............................................170 static routes........................................................169 metric-in statement RIP......................................................................546 RIPng..................................................................572 metric-out statement BGP.....................................................................749 RIP......................................................................547 RIPng..................................................................573 metric-type statement................................................483 min-advertisement-interval statement...............594, 613 minimum-interval statement BFD....................................................................140 BGP.....................................................................722 IS-IS....................................................................340 OSPF...................................................................457 RIP......................................................................538 minimum-receive-interval statement BFD....................................................................140 BGP.....................................................................722 IS-IS....................................................................340 OSPF...................................................................457 RIP......................................................................538 minimum-receive-ttl statement BFD....................................................................140 mtu-discovery statement............................................751 multicast statement...................................................171 router discovery..................................................595 multicast-rpf-routes statement...................................368 multihop statement....................................................752 multipath statement...................................................753 multiplier statement BFD....................................................................140 BGP.....................................................................722 IS-IS....................................................................340 OSPF...................................................................457 RIP......................................................................538
M
managed-configuration statement..............................612 martians statement....................................................165 max-advertisement-interval statement.......................612 max-areas statement..................................................366 maximum-paths statement........................................166 maximum-prefixes statement....................................167
N
neighbor statement BGP.....................................................................754 OSPF...................................................................484 RIP......................................................................548 RIPng..................................................................574
801
neighbor-discovery statement....................................627 network-summary-export statement..........................485 network-summary-import statement.........................485 no-adaptation statement BFD....................................................................140 BGP.....................................................................722 IS-IS....................................................................340 OSPF...................................................................457 RIP......................................................................538 no-adjacency-holddown statement.............................369 no-aggregator-id statement........................................756 no-authentication-check statement............................369 no-check-zero statement............................................540 no-client-reflect statement..........................................757 no-csnp-authentication statement..............................370 no-hello-authentication statement..............................370 no-install statement...................................................159 no-ipv4-multicast statement.......................................371 no-ipv4-routing statement..........................................371 no-ipv6-multicast statement.......................................372 no-ipv6-routing statement..........................................372 no-ipv6-unicast statement..........................................373 no-managed-configuration statement.........................612 no-nssa-abr statement................................................486 no-psnp-authentication statement..............................373 no-readvertise statement...................................172, 180 no-retain statement............................................172, 184 no-rfc-1583 statement................................................487 no-unicast-topology statement...................................374 no-validate statement.................................................758 no-vrf-advertise statement.........................................255 nonstop-routing statement.........................................172 nssa statement...........................................................488
path-selection statement............................................762 peer-as statement......................................................763 peer-interface statement............................................492 point-to-point statement.............................................377 policy statement aggregate routes.................................................175 generated routes.................................................175 poll-interval statement...............................................493 ppm statement..........................................................176 preference statement aggregate routes.................................................177 BGP.....................................................................764 generated routes.................................................177 IS-IS....................................................................377 OSPF...................................................................494 RIP......................................................................549 RIPng..................................................................575 static routes........................................................177 preferred-lifetime statement......................................615 prefix statement.........................................................178 neighbor discovery.............................................615 prefix-export-limit statement IS-IS....................................................................378 OSPF...................................................................495 prefix-limit statement.................................................765 priority statement IS-IS....................................................................378 OSPF...................................................................496 router discovery..................................................596 protocols statement...................................................256
Q
qualified-next-hop statement ....................................179
O
on-link statement.......................................................614 options statement......................................................173 ospf statement...........................................................489 ospf3 statement.........................................................489 other-stateful-configuration statement........................614 out-delay statement...................................................759 outbound-route-filter statement BGP.....................................................................760 overload statement IS-IS....................................................................375 OSPF...................................................................490
R
rapid-runs statement IS-IS....................................................................382 OSPF...................................................................504 reachable-time statement...........................................616 readvertise statement................................................180 realm statement.........................................................497 receive statement RIP......................................................................550 RIPng..................................................................576 reference-bandwidth statement.................................498 IS-IS....................................................................379 remove-private statement..........................................767 resolution statement..................................................181 resolution-ribs statement...........................................181 resolve statement.......................................................182 resolve-vpn statement................................................768 restart-duration statement..................................183, 399 IS-IS....................................................................348 retain statement.........................................................184
P
p2mp-lsp-next-hop statement....................................174 passive statement......................................................491 aggregate routes.................................................132 BGP.....................................................................761 generated routes.................................................132 IS-IS....................................................................376
802
retransmit-interval statement.....................................499 retransmit-timer statement........................................616 rib statement BGP.....................................................................769 Multitopology Routing static routes.................................................283 route resolution...................................................187 routing tables......................................................186 rib-group statement...................................................188 BGP.....................................................................770 IS-IS....................................................................380 OSPF...................................................................500 RIP......................................................................551 rib-groups statement..................................................189 rip statement.............................................................551 ripng statement..........................................................577 route statement aggregate statement...........................................133 generate statement.............................................154 route-distinguisher statement.....................................259 route-distinguisher-id statement.................................190 route-record statement...............................................190 route-target statement................................................771 route-timeout statement RIP......................................................................552 RIPng..................................................................577 route-type-community statement...............................501 router-advertisement statement.................................617 router-discovery statement........................................596 router-id statement....................................................191 routing-instances statement.......................................260 routing-options statement..........................................191
T
tag statement.............................................................198 tcp-mss statement......................................................772 te-metric statement IS-IS....................................................................383 OSPF...................................................................507 threshold statement...................................................199 BGP.....................................................................722 IS-IS....................................................................340 timestamp statement.................................................630 topologies statement IS-IS....................................................................384 Multitopology Routing.........................................284 topology statement filter-based forwarding Multitopology Routing..................................286 Multitopology Routing.........................................287 OSPF...........................................................288 OSPF interface.............................................289 topology-id statement Multitopology Routing.........................................290 traceoptions statement BGP.....................................................................773 IS-IS....................................................................385 neighbor discovery.............................................618 OSPF...................................................................508 RIP......................................................................554 RIPng..................................................................579 router discovery..................................................597 routing protocols.................................................200 Secure Neighbor Discovery.................................631 traffic-engineering statement IS-IS....................................................................387 OSPF...................................................................512 OSPF passive TE mode.......................................513 transit-delay statement..............................................514 transmit-interval statement........................................515 BFD..............................................................18, 140 BGP.....................................................................722 IS-IS....................................................................340 tunnel-type statement................................................202 type statement...........................................................776 type-7 statement........................................................516
S
scope statement.........................................................192 secondary statement OSPF interface....................................................501 secure statement........................................................628 security-level statement.............................................629 send statement RIP......................................................................553 RIPng..................................................................578 sham-link statement..................................................502 sham-link-remote statement......................................502 shortcuts statement IS-IS....................................................................381 OSPF...................................................................503 simple-password statement........................................503 source-address statement...........................................193 source-routing statement...........................................193 spf-options statement IS-IS....................................................................382 OSPF...................................................................504 ssm-groups statement................................................194 static statement.........................................................195
U
unicast-reverse-path statement..................................202 update-interval statement RIP......................................................................556 RIPng..................................................................581
803
V
valid-lifetime statement..............................................620 version statement BFD....................................................................140 BGP.....................................................................722 IS-IS....................................................................340 OSPF...................................................................457 RIP......................................................................538 virtual-link statement.................................................517 vpn-apply-export statement.......................................776 vrf-export statement..................................................261 vrf-import statement..................................................261 vrf-table-label statement............................................262
W
wide-metrics-only statement......................................388
804