This section provides information to configure an IP router.
Topics in this section include:
In a Nokia router, an interface is a logical named entity. An interface is created by specifying an interface name under the configure>router context. This is the global router configuration context where objects like static routes are defined. An IP interface name can be up to 32 alphanumeric characters long, must start with a letter, and is case-sensitive; for example, the interface name “1.1.1.1” is not allowed, but “int-1.1.1.1” is allowed.
To create an interface, the basic configuration tasks that must be performed are:
A system interface and network interface should be configured.
The system interface is associated with the network entity (such as a specific Nokia router), not a specific interface. The system interface is also referred to as the loopback address. The system interface is associated during the configuration of the following entities:
The system interface is used to preserve connectivity (when routing reconvergence is possible) when an interface fails or is removed. The system interface is used as the router identifier. A system interface must have an IP address with a 32-bit subnet mask.
A network interface can be configured on one of the following entities a physical port or LAG:
For the 7950 XRS, a network interface can be configured on either a physical port or Ethernet LAG interface.
Refer to each specific chapter for specific routing protocol information and command syntax to configure protocols such as OSPF and BGP.
The most basic router configuration must have the following:
The following example displays a router configuration for the 7750 SR and 7450 ESS:
The following sections describe basic system tasks.
Use the system command to configure a name for the device. The name is used in the prompt string. Only one system name can be configured. If multiple system names are configured, the last one configured will overwrite the previous entry.
If special characters are included in the system name string, such as spaces, #, or ?, the entire string must be enclosed in double quotes. Use the following CLI syntax to configure the system name:
The following example displays the system name output.
The following command sequences create a system and a logical IP interface. The system interface assigns an IP address to the interface, and then associates the IP interface with a physical port. The logical interface can associate attributes like an IP address or port.
The system interface cannot be deleted.
To configure a system interface:
To configure a network interface for the 7450 ESS:
To configure a network interface for the 7750 SR:
To configure a network interface on the 7950 XRS:
The following displays an IP configuration output showing interface information.
To enable CPU protection:
CPU protection policies are configured in the config>sys>security>cpu-protection context. See the 7450 ESS, 7750 SR, and 7950 XRS System Management Guide.
IPv6 interfaces and associated routing protocols may only be configured on the following systems:
The following displays the interface configuration showing the IPv6 default configuration when IPv6 is enabled on the interface.
Use the following CLI syntax to configure IPv6 parameters on a router interface.
The following displays a configuration example showing interface information.
This section provides several examples of the features that must be configured in order to implement IPv6 over IPv4 relay services for the 7750 SR OS.
This configuration shows how the interface through which the IPv6 over IPv4 traffic leaves the node. This must be configured on a network interface.
The following displays configuration output showing interface configuration.
Both the IPv4 and IPv6 system addresses must to configured.
The following displays configuration output showing interface information.
This configuration displays the OSPF configuration to learn the IPv4 system address of the tunnel endpoint.
The following displays a configuration showing OSPF output.
This configuration display the commands to configure an IPv4 BGP peer with (IPv4 and) IPv6 protocol families.
The following displays a configuration showing BGP output.
The IPv6 address is the next-hop as it is received through BGP. The IPv4 address is the system address of the tunnel's endpoint.
This configuration displays an example to configure a policy to export IPv6 routes into BGP.
The following displays the configuration output.
This configuration shows how the interface through which the IPv6 over IPv4 traffic leaves the node. It must be configured on a network interface. Both the IPv4 and IPv6 system addresses must be configured.
The following displays interface configuration.
This configuration displays the OSPF configuration to learn the IPv4 system address of the tunnel endpoint.
The following displays OSPF configuration information.
This configuration display the commands to configure an IPv4 BGP peer with (IPv4 and) IPv6 protocol families.
The following displays the IPv4 BGP peer configuration example.
The IPv6 address is the next-hop as it is received through BGP. The IPv4 address is the system address of the tunnel's endpoint.
This configuration displays an example to configure a policy to export IPv6 routes into BGP.
The following displays an IPv6 over IPv4 tunnel configuration
To configure the router to originate router advertisement messages on an interface, the interface must be configured under the router-advertisement context and be enabled (no shutdown). All other router advertisement configuration parameters are optional.
Router advertisement can be configured under the config>router>router-advertisement context or under the config>service>vprn>router-advertisement context. Use the following examples of CLI syntax to enable router advertisement and configure router advertisement parameters.
To configure router advertisement on the 7750 SR:
To configure router advertisement for the 7450 ESS:
The following displays a router advertisement configuration example.
The following displays the interface configuration showing the IPv6 default configuration when IPv6 is enabled on the interface.
The following displays an IPv6 configuration example.
The IPv6 address is the next-hop as it is received through BGP. The IPv4 address is the system address of the tunnel's endpoint.
This configuration displays an example to configure a policy to export IPv6 routes into BGP.
The following displays the configuration showing the policy output.
To configure proxy ARP, you can configure:
Use the following CLI syntax to configure the policy statement specified in the proxy-arp-policy policy-statement command.
The following displays prefix list and policy statement configuration examples:
Use the following CLI to configure proxy ARP:
The following displays a proxy ARP configuration example:
An IP address range can be reserved for exclusive use for services by defining the config>router>service-prefix command. When the service is configured, the IP address must be in the range specified as a service prefix. If no service prefix command is configured, then no limitation exists.
The no service-prefix ip-prefix/mask command removes all address reservations. A service prefix cannot be removed while one or more services use address(es) in the range to be removed.
The router ID defaults to the address specified in the system interface command. If the system interface is not configured with an IP address, then the router ID inherits the last four bytes of the MAC address. The router ID can also be manually configured in the config>router router-id context. On the BGP protocol level, a BGP router ID can be defined in the config>router>bgp router-id context and is only used within BGP.
If a new router ID is configured, protocols are not automatically restarted with the new router ID. The next time a protocol is initialized the new router ID is used. An interim period of time can occur when different protocols use different router IDs. To force the new router ID, issue the shutdown and no shutdown commands for each protocol that uses the router ID, or restart the entire router.
It is possible to configure an SR OS to operate with an IPv6 only BOF and no IPv4 system interface address. When configured in this manner, the operator must explicitly define IPv4 router IDs for protocols such as OSPF and BGP as there is no mechanism to derive the router ID from an IPv6 system interface address.
Use the following CLI syntax to configure the router ID:
The following example displays a router ID configuration:
Configuring a confederation is optional. The AS and confederation topology design should be carefully planned. Autonomous system (AS), confederation, and BGP connection and peering parameters must be explicitly created on each participating router. Identify AS numbers, confederation numbers, and members participating in the confederation.
Refer to the BGP section for CLI syntax and command descriptions.
Use the following CLI syntax to configure a confederation:
The following example displays the commands to configure the confederation topology diagram displayed in Confederation Configuration.
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The following displays a confederation example.
Configuring an autonomous system is optional. Use the following CLI syntax to configure an autonomous system:
The following displays an autonomous system configuration example:
A 7450 ESS or 7750 SR with a single SFM installed has a system multicast throughput that is only a half of a system with dual SFMs installed. For example, in a mixed environment in which IOM1s, IOM2s, and IOM3s are installed in the same system (chassis mode B or C), system multicast throughput doubles when redundant SFMs are used instead of a single SFM. If the required system multicast throughput is between 16G and 32G (which means both SFMs are being actively used), when there is an SFM failure, multicast traffic needs to be rerouted around the node.
Some scenarios include:
You can use an overload state in IGP to trigger the traffic reroute by setting the overload bit in IS-IS or setting the metric to maximum in OSPF. Since PIM uses IGP to find out the upstream router, a next-hop change in IGP will cause PIM to join the new path and prune the old path, which effectively reroutes the multicast traffic downstream. When the problem is resolved, the overload condition is cleared, which will cause the traffic to be routed back to the router.
This section discusses the following service management tasks:
The system command sets the name of the device and is used in the prompt string. Only one system name can be configured. If multiple system names are configured, the last one configured will overwrite the previous entry.
Use the following CLI syntax to change the system name:
The following example displays the command usage to change the system name:
The following example displays the system name change:
Starting at the config>router level, navigate down to the router interface context.
To modify an IP address, perform the following steps:
To modify a port, perform the following steps:
The following example displays the interface configuration:
The no form of the interface command typically removes the entry, but all entity associations must be shut down and/or deleted before an interface can be deleted.