[c-nsp] BGP Signalled VPLS

Aaron aaron1 at gvtc.com
Tue Apr 23 12:21:05 EDT 2013


How does bgp-vpls save the need for xstp when dual-homing a customer to
multiple pe's ?  ( I assume you mean vpls w/bgp ad w/bgp sig)
How does ldp-vpls *not* save the need for xstp when dual-homing a customer
to multiple pe's ?  (based on previous assumption, this means vpls w/bgp ad
w/ldp sig)


Aaron

-----Original Message-----
From: Caillin Bathern [mailto:caillinb at commtelns.com] 
Sent: Monday, April 22, 2013 7:57 PM
To: Adam Vitkovsky; Nick Ryce; Aaron; Waris Sagheer (waris);
cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net
Subject: RE: [c-nsp] BGP Signalled VPLS

VPLS multihoming is the major up-shot of BGP-VPLS in my opinion.  Saves the
need for xSTP within your network when dual-homing a customer to multiple
PEs which makes everybody happy.

Caillin

-----Original Message-----
From: cisco-nsp [mailto:cisco-nsp-bounces at puck.nether.net] On Behalf Of Adam
Vitkovsky
Sent: Tuesday, 23 April 2013 12:36 AM
To: 'Nick Ryce'; 'Aaron'; 'Waris Sagheer (waris)'; cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net
Subject: Re: [c-nsp] BGP Signalled VPLS

While we are on the topic what do you folks think about BGP signaled VPLS
please? 
While I would prefer BGP in favor of LDP signaling as I believe it saves
control plane overhead (1 BGP session VS n-1 LDP sessions), I have heard a
valid objection as to why to run yet another functionality/feature (not
tested by majority of operators) when the reliable and stable LDP
functionality is enabled already anyways (for p2p PWs and base MPLS). 

adam
-----Original Message-----
From: cisco-nsp [mailto:cisco-nsp-bounces at puck.nether.net] On Behalf Of Nick
Ryce
Sent: Monday, April 22, 2013 3:48 PM
To: Aaron; 'Waris Sagheer (waris)'; cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net
Subject: Re: [c-nsp] BGP Signalled VPLS

Hi Aaron,

The VE ID etc is for BGP signalling.

Nick


--
Nick Ryce

Fluency Communications Ltd.
e. nick at fluency.net.uk
w. http://fluency.net.uk/
t. 0845 874 7000

From: Aaron <aaron1 at gvtc.com<mailto:aaron1 at gvtc.com>>
Date: Monday, 22 April 2013 14:28
To: "'Waris Sagheer (waris)'" <waris at cisco.com<mailto:waris at cisco.com>>,
Nick Ryce <nick at fluency.net.uk<mailto:nick at fluency.net.uk>>,
"cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net<mailto:cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net>"
<cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net<mailto:cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net>>
Subject: RE: [c-nsp] BGP Signalled VPLS

I ran vpls w/bgp ad w/ldg sig between (2) asr9k's and (4) me3600's and I
didn't have to use ve id nor ve range.. Is there something I would miss out
on without using ve id or ve range?  Also, is there a default value
associated with ve id or ve range that was enacted in the absence of my not
explicitly configuring it ?

Waris, if the VE ID is for unique PE VPLS Edge ID assignment, would that
mean that my configuration without the ve id configured would have duplicate
VE ID's per PE?  Or maybe there is a autoassignment thing that occurs.
Perhaps I'll set it up again and see what happens, as I mentioned previously
I had removed my vpls architecture for l3vpn preference.
Aaron

From: Waris Sagheer (waris) [mailto:waris at cisco.com]
Sent: Sunday, April 21, 2013 10:10 PM
To: Nick Ryce; Aaron;
cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net<mailto:cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net>
Subject: Re: [c-nsp] BGP Signalled VPLS

All PEs within a given VPLS are assigned a unique VPLS Edge device ID (VE
ID).
Nick is right about BGP NLRI,

VPLS BGP NLRI (RFC 4761)
AFI = 25 (L2VPN)
SAFI = 65 (VPLS)
VE ID
VE Block Offset (VBO)
VE Block Size (VBS)
Label Base (LB)


Best Regards,

[http://www.cisco.com/web/europe/images/email/signature/horizontal06.jpg
]


Waris Sagheer
Technical Marketing Manager
Service Provider Access Group
waris at cisco.com<mailto:waris at cisco.com>
Phone: +1 408 853 6682
Mobile: +1 408 835 1389

CCIE - 19901



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of the intended recipient. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure by
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authorized to receive for the recipient), please contact the sender by reply
email and delete all copies of this message.

For corporate legal information go to:
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.



From: Nick Ryce <nick at fluency.net.uk<mailto:nick at fluency.net.uk>>
Date: Tuesday, April 16, 2013 7:52 AM
To: "aaron1 at gvtc.com<mailto:aaron1 at gvtc.com>"
<aaron1 at gvtc.com<mailto:aaron1 at gvtc.com>>,
"cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net<mailto:cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net>"
<cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net<mailto:cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net>>
Subject: Re: [c-nsp] BGP Signalled VPLS

Its part for the BGP L2VPN NLRI as far as I'm aware.

--
Nick Ryce

Fluency Communications Ltd.
e. nick at fluency.net.uk<mailto:nick at fluency.net.uk>
w. http://fluency.net.uk/
t. 0845 874 7000





On 16/04/2013 15:50, "Aaron" <aaron1 at gvtc.com<mailto:aaron1 at gvtc.com>>
wrote:

Anyone know what and why to use this "ve" stuff?  I didn't use it during my
vpls (ios-ioxr) trial run in my network and never understood what it was
for...

  ve id 1
  ve range 11

Aaron

-----Original Message-----
From: cisco-nsp [mailto:cisco-nsp-bounces at puck.nether.net] On Behalf Of Nick
Ryce
Sent: Tuesday, April 16, 2013 7:41 AM
To: Nick Ryce;
cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net<mailto:cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net>
Subject: Re: [c-nsp] BGP Signalled VPLS

Apologies the attachment has went through.

ASCII art as below

PE1-------PE2--------PE3

PE1 and PE3 are ME3600's and PE2 is a Juniper SRX.

>From PE2 labels are being pushed/popped correctly.

Nick







On 16/04/2013 13:37, "Nick Ryce"
<nick at fluency.net.uk<mailto:nick at fluency.net.uk>> wrote:

Hi,

I have 2 x ME3600x running me360x-universalk9-mz.153-2.S and am looking to
use the new VPLS BGP signalling functionality.

I am using RSVP with the topology attached but I cannot get traffic to pass.
Any ideas?


Configs as below.

Any help with debug commands would also be greatly appreciated.

hostname PE1
!
!
!
no aaa new-model
ip routing
!
!
!
!
ip name-server 8.8.8.8
!
!
mpls traffic-eng tunnels
l2vpn vfi context lab
vpn id 512
autodiscovery bgp signaling bgp
  ve id 1
  ve range 11
  rd 172.16.1.1:512
  route-target export 56595:512
  route-target import 56595:512
!
vlan 512
name lab
!
l2 router-id 172.16.1.1
!
!
!
interface Loopback0
ip address 172.16.1.1 255.255.255.255
ip ospf 1 area 0.0.0.0
!
interface Tunnel0
description PE1-to-PE2
ip unnumbered Loopback0
tunnel mode mpls traffic-eng
tunnel destination 172.16.2.2
tunnel mpls traffic-eng priority 1 1
tunnel mpls traffic-eng path-option 1 dynamic !
interface Tunnel1
description PE1-toPE3
ip unnumbered Loopback0
tunnel mode mpls traffic-eng
tunnel destination 172.16.3.3
tunnel mpls traffic-eng priority 1 1
tunnel mpls traffic-eng path-option 1 dynamic !
interface GigabitEthernet0/1
no switchport
ip address 10.0.0.1 255.255.255.252
mpls traffic-eng tunnels
ip rsvp bandwidth percent 100
!
interface GigabitEthernet0/2
switchport access vlan 512
!
router ospf 1
router-id 172.16.1.1
network 10.0.0.0 0.0.0.3 area 0.0.0.0
mpls traffic-eng router-id Loopback0
mpls traffic-eng area 0.0.0.0
!
router bgp 56595
bgp log-neighbor-changes
bgp graceful-restart restart-time 120
bgp graceful-restart stalepath-time 360  bgp graceful-restart  no bgp
default ipv4-unicast  neighbor 172.16.2.2 remote-as 56595  neighbor
172.16.2.2 update-source Loopback0  neighbor 172.16.3.3 remote-as 56595
neighbor 172.16.3.3 update-source Loopback0  !
address-family ipv4
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 activate
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 send-community extended
  neighbor 172.16.3.3 activate
  neighbor 172.16.3.3 send-community extended  exit-address-family  !
address-family vpnv4
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 activate
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 send-community extended
  neighbor 172.16.3.3 activate
  neighbor 172.16.3.3 send-community extended  exit-address-family  !
address-family l2vpn vpls
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 activate
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 send-community extended
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 prefix-length-size 2
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 suppress-signaling-protocol ldp
  neighbor 172.16.3.3 activate
  neighbor 172.16.3.3 send-community extended
  neighbor 172.16.3.3 suppress-signaling-protocol ldp exit-address-family


hostname PE3
!
!
!
no aaa new-model
ip routing
!
!
!
!
ip name-server 8.8.8.8
ipv6 multicast rpf use-bgp
!
!
mpls traffic-eng tunnels
l2vpn vfi context lab
vpn id 512
autodiscovery bgp signaling bgp
  ve id 3
  ve range 11
  rd 172.16.3.3:512
  route-target export 56595:512
  route-target import 56595:512
vlan 512
name test
!
!
!
!
interface Loopback0
ip address 172.16.3.3 255.255.255.255
ip ospf 1 area 0.0.0.0
!
interface Tunnel0
description PE3-to-PE2
ip unnumbered Loopback0
tunnel mode mpls traffic-eng
tunnel destination 172.16.2.2
tunnel mpls traffic-eng priority 1 1
tunnel mpls traffic-eng path-option 1 dynamic !
interface Tunnel1
description PE3-to-PE1
ip unnumbered Loopback0
tunnel mode mpls traffic-eng
tunnel destination 172.16.1.1
tunnel mpls traffic-eng priority 1 1
tunnel mpls traffic-eng path-option 1 dynamic !
interface GigabitEthernet0
ip address 46.226.1.178 255.255.255.248  speed auto  duplex auto negotiation
auto !
interface GigabitEthernet0/1
no switchport
ip address 10.0.0.6 255.255.255.252
mpls traffic-eng tunnels
ip rsvp bandwidth percent 100
!
interface GigabitEthernet0/2
switchport access vlan 512
!
interface Vlan512
no ip address
member vfi lab
!
router ospf 1
router-id 172.16.3.3
network 10.0.0.4 0.0.0.3 area 0.0.0.0
mpls traffic-eng router-id Loopback0
mpls traffic-eng area 0.0.0.0
!
router bgp 56595
bgp log-neighbor-changes
bgp graceful-restart restart-time 120
bgp graceful-restart stalepath-time 360  bgp graceful-restart  no bgp
default ipv4-unicast  neighbor 172.16.1.1 remote-as 56595  neighbor
172.16.1.1 update-source Loopback0  neighbor 172.16.2.2 remote-as 56595
neighbor 172.16.2.2 update-source Loopback0  !
address-family ipv4
  neighbor 172.16.1.1 activate
  neighbor 172.16.1.1 send-community extended
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 activate
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 send-community extended  exit-address-family  !
address-family vpnv4
  neighbor 172.16.1.1 activate
  neighbor 172.16.1.1 send-community extended
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 activate
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 send-community extended  exit-address-family  !
address-family l2vpn vpls
  neighbor 172.16.1.1 activate
  neighbor 172.16.1.1 send-community extended
  neighbor 172.16.1.1 suppress-signaling-protocol ldp
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 activate
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 send-community extended
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 prefix-length-size 2
  neighbor 172.16.2.2 suppress-signaling-protocol ldp exit-address-family


Tunnels are up in both directions.

Output of some commands as below

PE3#show l2vpn vfi name lab
Legend: RT=Route-target, S=Split-horizon, Y=Yes, N=No

VFI name: lab, state: up, type: multipoint, signaling: BGP
  VPN ID: 512, VE-ID: 3, VE-SIZE: 11
  RD: 172.16.3.3:512, RT: 56595:512, 56595:512
  Bridge-Domain 512 attachment circuits:
    Vlan512
  Pseudo-port interface: pseudowire100001
  Interface          Peer Address    VE-ID  Local Label  Remote Label
S

PE1#show l2vpn vfi name lab
Legend: RT=Route-target, S=Split-horizon, Y=Yes, N=No

VFI name: lab, state: down, type: multipoint, signaling: BGP
  VPN ID: 512, VE-ID: 1, VE-SIZE: 11
  RD: 172.16.1.1:512, RT: 56595:512, 56595:512
  Bridge-Domain 512 attachment circuits:
    Vlan512
  Pseudo-port interface: pseudowire100003
  Interface          Peer Address    VE-ID  Local Label  Remote Label
S

PE3#show bgp l2vpn vpls all
BGP table version is 28, local router ID is 172.16.3.3 Status codes: s
suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best, i - internal,
              r RIB-failure, S Stale, m multipath, b backup-path, f
RT-Filter,
              x best-external, a additional-path, c RIB-compressed, Origin
codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete RPKI validation codes: V valid, I
invalid, N Not found

     Network          Next Hop            Metric LocPrf Weight Path
Route Distinguisher: 172.16.1.1:512
*>i 172.16.1.1:512:VEID-1:Blk-1/136
                       172.16.1.1               0    100      0 ?
Route Distinguisher: 172.16.2.2:512
*>i 172.16.2.2:512:VEID-2:Blk-1/136
                       172.16.2.2                    100      0 i
*>i 172.16.2.2:512:VEID-2:Blk-1/136
                       172.16.2.2                    100      0 i
Route Distinguisher: 172.16.3.3:512
*>  172.16.3.3:512:VEID-3:Blk-1/136
                       0.0.0.0                            32768 ?


PE1# show bgp l2vpn vpls all
BGP table version is 39, local router ID is 172.16.1.1 Status codes: s
suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best, i - internal,
              r RIB-failure, S Stale, m multipath, b backup-path, f
RT-Filter,
              x best-external, a additional-path, c RIB-compressed, Origin
codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete RPKI validation codes: V valid, I
invalid, N Not found

     Network          Next Hop            Metric LocPrf Weight Path
Route Distinguisher: 172.16.1.1:512
*>  172.16.1.1:512:VEID-1:Blk-1/136
                       0.0.0.0                            32768 ?
Route Distinguisher: 172.16.2.2:512
*>i 172.16.2.2:512:VEID-2:Blk-1/136
                       172.16.2.2                    100      0 i
*>i 172.16.2.2:512:VEID-2:Blk-1/136
                       172.16.2.2                    100      0 i
Route Distinguisher: 172.16.3.3:512
*>i 172.16.3.3:512:VEID-3:Blk-1/136
                       172.16.3.3               0    100      0 ?


Nick

--
Nick Ryce

Fluency Communications Ltd.
e.
nick at fluency.net.uk<mailto:nick at fluency.net.uk><mailto:nick at fluency.net.
uk>
w. http://fluency.net.uk/
t. 0845 874 7000
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