Fast Reroute With Srlg Constraints - Cisco ASR 9000 Series Configuration Manual

Aggregation services router mpls
Hide thumbs Also See for ASR 9000 Series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

MPLS Traffic Engineering Shared Risk Link Groups
The MPLS Traffic Engineering (TE)—IP Explicit Address Exclusion feature provides a means to exclude a
link or node from the path for an Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) TE label-switched path (LSP).
This feature is enabled through the explicit-path command that allows you to create an IP explicit path and
enter a configuration submode for specifying the path. The feature adds to the submode commands of the
exclude-address command for specifying addresses to exclude from the path.
The feature also adds to the submode commands of the exclude-srlg command that allows you to specify
the IP address to get SRLGs to be excluded from the explicit path.
If the excluded address or excluded srlg for an MPLS TE LSP identifies a flooded link, the constraint-based
shortest path first (CSPF) routing algorithm does not consider that link when computing paths for the LSP.
If the excluded address specifies a flooded MPLS TE router ID, the CSPF routing algorithm does not allow
paths for the LSP to traverse the node identified by the router ID.
Related Topics
Configuring the SRLG Values of Each Link that has a Shared Risk with Another Link, on page 212
Creating an Explicit Path With Exclude SRLG, on page 214
Using Explicit Path With Exclude SRLG, on page 216
Creating a Link Protection on Backup Tunnel with SRLG Constraint, on page 218
Creating a Node Protection on Backup Tunnel with SRLG Constraint, on page 221
Configure the MPLS-TE Shared Risk Link Groups: Example, on page 259

Fast ReRoute with SRLG Constraints

Fast ReRoute (FRR) protects MPLS TE Label Switch Paths (LSPs) from link and node failures by locally
repairing the LSPs at the point of failure. This protection allows data to continue to flow on LSPs, while their
headend routers attempt to establish new end-to-end LSPs to replace them. FRR locally repairs the protected
LSPs by rerouting them over backup tunnels that bypass failed links or nodes.
Backup tunnels that bypass only a single link of the LSP's path provide Link Protection. They protect LSPs
by specifying the protected link IP addresses to extract SRLG values that are to be excluded from the explicit
path, thereby bypassing the failed link. These are referred to as next-hop (NHOP) backup tunnels because
Cisco ASR 9000 Series Aggregation Services Router MPLS Configuration Guide, Release 4.3.x
146
Implementing MPLS Traffic Engineering
OL-28381-02

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents