Dell S6000–ON Configuration Manual

Dell S6000–ON Configuration Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for S6000–ON:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Dell Configuration Guide for the S6000–ON
System
9.9(0.0)

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Summary of Contents for Dell S6000–ON

  • Page 1 Dell Configuration Guide for the S6000–ON System 9.9(0.0)
  • Page 2 WARNING: A WARNING indicates a potential for property damage, personal injury, or death. Copyright © 2015 Dell Inc. All rights reserved. This product is protected by U.S. and international copyright and intellectual property laws. Dell and the Dell logo are trademarks of Dell Inc.
  • Page 3: Table Of Contents

    Save the Running-Configuration ..............52 Configure the Overload Bit for a Startup Scenario ..........................52 Viewing Files ........................53 Managing the File System ........................54 View Command History ......................54 Upgrading Dell Networking OS ......................54 Using HTTP for File Transfers...
  • Page 4 ............55 Using Hashes to Verify Software Images Before Installation 4 Management......................57 ........................57 Configuring Privilege Levels ....................57 Creating a Custom Privilege Level ..................57 Removing a Command from EXEC Mode ..........58 Moving a Command from EXEC Privilege Mode to EXEC Mode ............
  • Page 5 6 Access Control Lists (ACLs)................96 ......................96 IP Access Control Lists (ACLs) ............................ 97 CAM Usage ................98 Implementing ACLs on Dell Networking OS ......................99 Important Points to Remember ..................100 Configuration Task List for Route Maps ......................102 Configuring Match Routes ......................
  • Page 6 ...............111 Configuring Filters Without a Sequence Number ....................112 Configure Layer 2 and Layer 3 ACLs ....................... 113 Assign an IP ACL to an Interface ..........................113 Applying an IP ACL ........................114 Counting ACL Hits ........................114 Configure Ingress ACLs ........................115 Configure Egress ACLs ................116 Applying Egress Layer 3 ACLs (Control-Plane)
  • Page 7 ............................167 AS Path ............................167 Next Hop ..........................168 Multiprotocol BGP ..................168 Implement BGP with Dell Networking OS ................... 168 Additional Path (Add-Path) Support ..............168 Advertise IGP Cost as MED for Redistributed Routes ................169 Ignore Router-ID in Best-Path Calculation .......................
  • Page 8 ........................200 Filtering BGP Routes ..................202 Filtering BGP Routes Using Route Maps ..............203 Filtering BGP Routes Using AS-PATH Information .................... 203 Configuring BGP Route Reflectors ........................204 Aggregating Routes ....................205 Configuring BGP Confederations ....................205 Enabling Route Flap Dampening ........................ 208 Changing BGP Timers ................208 Enabling BGP Neighbor Soft-Reconfiguration...
  • Page 9 ....................... 238 Priority-Based Flow Control ..................... 240 Enhanced Transmission Selection ..............241 Data Center Bridging Exchange Protocol (DCBx) ..................241 Data Center Bridging in a Traffic Flow ......................242 Enabling Data Center Bridging ....................... 242 DCB Maps and its Attributes .................. 243 Data Center Bridging: Default Configuration ..................244 Configuring Priority-Based Flow Control...
  • Page 10 ..........................266 DCBx Example ..................266 DCBx Prerequisites and Restrictions ........................266 Configuring DCBx ......................270 Verifying the DCB Configuration ............... 281 QoS dot1p Traffic Classification and Queue Assignment ..................282 Configuring the Dynamic Buffer Method ......................283 Sample DCB Configuration ..............285 PFC and ETS Configuration Command Examples 12 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)........286 ....................
  • Page 11 ....................308 Configuring the Hash Algorithm ..................308 Enabling Deterministic ECMP Next Hop ..................309 Configuring the Hash Algorithm Seed ........................309 Link Bundle Monitoring ....................310 Managing ECMP Group Paths ....................310 Creating an ECMP Group Bundle ..................311 Modifying the ECMP Group Threshold ....311 Support for /128 IPv6 and /32 IPv4 Prefixes in Layer 3 Host Table and LPM Table ....................
  • Page 12 ..................... 333 Unexpected Reload of the System ........................334 Software Upgrade ......................... 334 LACP Fast Switchover ......................334 Changes to BGP Multipath .................334 Delayed Installation of ECMP Routes Into BGP ................ 335 RDMA Over Converged Ethernet (RoCE) Overview ............. 336 Preserving 802.1Q VLAN Tag Value for Lite Subinterfaces 16 Force10 Resilient Ring Protocol (FRRP).............
  • Page 13 .......................359 Related Configuration Tasks ....................360 Viewing IGMP Enabled Interfaces ....................... 360 Selecting an IGMP Version ........................361 Viewing IGMP Groups ..........................361 Adjusting Timers ..................361 Adjusting Query and Response Timers ....................362 Enabling IGMP Immediate-Leave ..........................362 IGMP Snooping ................362 IGMP Snooping Implementation Information ......................
  • Page 14 ..................382 Configuring Layer 3 (Interface) Mode ......................383 Egress Interface Selection (EIS) ....................383 Important Points to Remember ........................... 383 Configuring EIS ........................384 Management Interfaces ..................384 Configuring Management Interfaces ............386 Configuring a Management Interface on an Ethernet Port ..........................387 VLAN Interfaces .........................
  • Page 15 ................408 Using Ethernet Pause Frames for Flow Control .......................409 Enabling Pause Frames ..................409 Configure the MTU Size on an Interface ............................410 Port-Pipes ..................411 Auto-Negotiation on Ethernet Interfaces ............. 411 Setting the Speed and Duplex Mode of Ethernet Interfaces ....................412 Set Auto-Negotiation Options ....................413 View Advanced Interface Information ..................414...
  • Page 16 Longest Prefix Match (LPM) Table and IPv6 /65 – /128 support ........................440 IPv6 Header Fields ......................441 Extension Header Fields ...........................442 Addressing ................. 444 Implementing IPv6 with Dell Networking OS ..............................446 ICMPv6 ......................... 446 Path MTU Discovery ........................447 IPv6 Neighbor Discovery .................448 IPv6 Neighbor Discovery of MTU Packets ................
  • Page 17 Information Monitored in iSCSI Traffic Flows ..........463 Detection and Auto-Configuration for Dell EqualLogic Arrays ..........464 Configuring Detection and Ports for Dell Compellent Arrays ........464 Synchronizing iSCSI Sessions Learned on VLT-Lags with VLT-Peer ..................464 Enable and Disable iSCSI Optimization ....................
  • Page 18 ..................496 Introduction to Dynamic LAGs and LACP ....................496 Important Points to Remember ..........................497 LACP Modes ....................497 Configuring LACP Commands ........................498 LACP Configuration Tasks ..........................498 Creating a LAG ................499 Configuring the LAG Interfaces as Dynamic ....................499 Setting the LACP Long Timeout ....................
  • Page 19 ............................ 527 Optional TLVs ........................527 Management TLVs ......................529 TIA-1057 (LLDP-MED) Overview .....................530 TIA Organizationally Specific TLVs ..........................534 Configure LLDP .......................534 Related Configuration Tasks ....................534 Important Points to Remember ........................535 LLDP Compatibility ..............535 CONFIGURATION versus INTERFACE Configurations ........................... 536 Enabling LLDP ......................536 Disabling and Undoing LLDP...
  • Page 20 .....................580 Adding and Removing Interfaces ..................580 Creating Multiple Spanning Tree Instances .....................582 Influencing MSTP Root Selection ....................582 Interoperate with Non-Dell Bridges ..................583 Changing the Region Name or Revision ......................583 Modifying Global Parameters ....................584 Modifying the Interface Parameters ........................585 Configuring an EdgePort ................
  • Page 21 ................618 Designated and Backup Designated Routers ....................618 Link-State Advertisements (LSAs) ......................620 Router Priority and Cost ......................620 OSPF with Dell Networking OS ...........................621 Graceful Restart ..................622 Fast Convergence (OSPFv2, IPv4 Only) ....................622 Multi-Process OSPFv2 with VRF ..................623 RFC-2328 Compliant OSPF Flooding ........................
  • Page 22 OSPFv3 Authentication Using IPsec ......................655 Troubleshooting OSPFv3 33 Policy-based Routing (PBR)................. 657 ............................657 Overview ............. 658 Implementing Policy-based Routing with Dell Networking OS ................659 Configuration Task List for Policy-based Routing ......................659 PBR Exceptions (Permit) ........................659 Create a Redirect List ....................660...
  • Page 23 Encapsulated Remote Port Monitoring ........... 690 Changes to Default BehaviorConfiguration steps for ERPM ................692 ERPM Behavior on a typical Dell Networking OS ..........692 Decapsulation of ERPM packets at the Destination IP/ Analyzer 37 Per-VLAN Spanning Tree Plus (PVST+)............694 ..........................694...
  • Page 24 ......................723 Enabling QoS Rate Adjustment ....................724 Enabling Strict-Priority Queueing ............. 724 Queue Classification Requirements for PFC Functionality ..............725 Support for marking dot1p value in L3 Input Qos Policy ....................726 Weighted Random Early Detection ......................726 Creating WRED Profiles .....................
  • Page 25 ..........................760 Protocol Overview ....................760 Configuring Rapid Spanning Tree .......................760 Related Configuration Tasks ......................761 Important Points to Remember ..........................761 RSTP and VLT ..................761 Configuring Interfaces for Layer 2 Mode ................762 Enabling Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol Globally ..................... 764 Adding and Removing Interfaces ......................
  • Page 26 Creating Access and Trunk Ports ....................815 Enable VLAN-Stacking for a VLAN ..........815 Configuring the Protocol Type Value for the Outer VLAN Tag ............815 Configuring Dell Networking OS Options for Trunk Ports ......................816 Debugging VLAN Stacking ..................817 VLAN Stacking in Multi-Vendor Networks ..................820 VLAN Stacking Packet Drop Precedence ......................820...
  • Page 27 ......................... 830 Enabling Extended sFlow ................. 831 Enabling and Disabling sFlow on an Interface ..................831 Enabling sFlow Max-Header Size Extended ........................833 sFlow Show Commands ....................833 Displaying Show sFlow Global ..................833 Displaying Show sFlow on an Interface ..................834 Displaying Show sFlow on a Stack-unit ......................
  • Page 28 ............856 Viewing the Software Core Files Generated by the System ......................857 Manage VLANs using SNMP .......................... 857 Creating a VLAN ........................ 857 Assigning a VLAN Alias ....................858 Displaying the Ports in a VLAN ................858 Add Tagged and Untagged Ports to a VLAN ......................
  • Page 29 Disabling NTP on an Interface ..............895 Configuring a Source IP Address for NTP Packets ....................895 Configuring NTP Authentication ....................899 Dell Networking OS Time and Date ......................899 Configuration Task List ............899 Setting the Time and Date for the Switch Software Clock ......................... 899 Setting the Timezone ......................900...
  • Page 30 ....................912 Assigning Interfaces to a VLAN .......................913 Moving Untagged Interfaces ..................... 914 Assigning an IP Address to a VLAN ........................ 915 Configuring Native VLANs ..................916 Enabling Null VLAN as the Default VLAN 54 VLT Proxy Gateway..................917 ......................917 Proxy Gateway in VLT Domains ...............
  • Page 31 ........................960 Troubleshooting VLT ..................962 Reconfiguring Stacked Switches as VLT ....................962 Specifying VLT Nodes in a PVLAN ................963 Association of VLTi as a Member of a PVLAN ..............963 MAC Synchronization for VLT Nodes in a PVLAN ..............964 PVLAN Operations When One VLT Peer is Down ..............964 PVLAN Operations When a VLT Peer is Restarted ...........964...
  • Page 32 ................992 Assigning an OSPF Process to a VRF Instance ..................992 Configuring VRRP on a VRF Instance ....................993 Configuring Management VRF ......................994 Configuring a Static Route ....................... 994 Sample VRF Configuration ........................1002 Route Leaking VRFs ......................... 1002 Dynamic Route Leaking .............
  • Page 33 ....................1056 Display Stack Member Counters ....................1062 Enabling Application Core Dumps ..........................1063 Mini Core Dumps ........................1064 Enabling TCP Dumps 60 Standards Compliance................1065 ..........................1065 IEEE Compliance ....................... 1066 RFC and I-D Compliance .......................1066 General Internet Protocols ......................1067 General IPv4 Protocols ......................1069 General IPv6 Protocols ....................
  • Page 34: About This Guide

    About this Guide This guide describes the protocols and features the Dell Networking Operating System (OS) supports and provides configuration instructions and examples for implementing them. The S6000–ON platform is available with Dell Networking OS version 9.7 (0.0) and beyond.
  • Page 35: Configuration Fundamentals

    In Dell Networking OS, after you enter a command, the command is added to the running configuration file. You can view the current configuration for the whole system or for a particular CLI mode. To save the current configuration, copy the running configuration to another location.
  • Page 36 • EXEC Privilege mode has commands to view configurations, clear counters, manage configuration files, run diagnostics, and enable or disable debug operations. The privilege level is 15, which is unrestricted. You can configure a password for this mode; refer to the Configure the Enable Password section in the Getting Started chapter.
  • Page 37: Navigating Cli Modes

    Navigating CLI Modes The Dell Networking OS prompt changes to indicate the CLI mode. The following table lists the CLI mode, its prompt, and information about how to access and exit the CLI mode. Move linearly through the command modes, except for the end command which takes you directly to EXEC Privilege mode and the exit command which moves you up one command mode level.
  • Page 38 MULTIPLE SPANNING TREE Dell(config-mstp)# protocol spanning-tree mstp Per-VLAN SPANNING TREE Plus Dell(config-pvst)# protocol spanning-tree pvst PREFIX-LIST Dell(conf-nprefixl)# ip prefix-list RAPID SPANNING TREE Dell(config-rstp)# protocol spanning-tree rstp REDIRECT Dell(conf-redirect-list)# ip redirect-list ROUTE-MAP Dell(config-route-map)# route-map ROUTER BGP Dell(conf-router_bgp)# router bgp Configuration Fundamentals...
  • Page 39 FRRP Dell(conf-frrp-ring-id)# protocol frrp LLDP Dell(conf-lldp)# or protocol lldp (CONFIGURATION or INTERFACE Dell(conf-if—interface- Modes) lldp)# LLDP MANAGEMENT INTERFACE Dell(conf-lldp-mgmtIf)# management-interface (LLDP Mode) LINE line console orline vty Dell(config-line-console) or Dell(config-line-vty) MONITOR SESSION Dell(conf-mon-sess- monitor session sessionID)# OPENFLOW INSTANCE...
  • Page 40: The Do Command

    INTERFACE, SPANNING TREE, and so on.) without having to return to EXEC mode by preceding the EXEC mode command with the do command. The following example shows the output of the do command. Dell(conf)#do show system brief Stack MAC : 34:17:eb:f2:c2:c4...
  • Page 41: Undoing Commands

    For example, to delete an IP address configured on an interface, use the no ip address ip-address command. NOTE: Use the help or ? command as described in Obtaining Help. Example of Viewing Disabled Commands Dell(conf)#interface tengigabitethernet 4/17/1 Dell(conf-if-te-4/17/1)#ip address 192.168.10.1/24 Dell(conf-if-te-4/17/1)#show config interface tenGigabitEthernet 4/17/1 ip address 192.168.10.1/24 no shutdown...
  • Page 42: Entering And Editing Commands

    Dell(conf)#cl • Enter [space]? after a keyword lists all of the keywords that can follow the specified keyword. Dell(conf)#clock ? summer-time Configure summer (daylight savings) time timezone Configure time zone Dell(conf)#clock Entering and Editing Commands Notes for entering commands.
  • Page 43: Command History

    Dell(conf)#do show system brief | grep 0 not present NOTE: Dell Networking OS accepts a space or no space before and after the pipe. To filter a phrase with spaces, underscores, or ranges, enclose the phrase with double quotation marks.
  • Page 44: Multiple Users In Configuration Mode

    Multiple Users in Configuration Mode Dell Networking OS notifies all users when there are multiple users logged in to CONFIGURATION mode. A warning message indicates the username, type of connection (console or VTY), and in the case of a VTY connection, the IP address of the terminal on which the connection was established.
  • Page 45: Getting Started

    When you power up the chassis, the system performs a power-on self test (POST) and system then loads the Dell Networking Operating System. Boot messages scroll up the terminal window during this process. No user interaction is required if the boot process proceeds without interruption.
  • Page 46: Default Configuration

    Although a version of Dell Networking OS is pre-loaded onto the system, the system is not configured when you power up the first time (except for the default hostname, which is Dell). You must configure the system using the CLI.
  • Page 47: Accessing The System Remotely

    The platform has a dedicated management port and a management routing table that is separate from the IP routing table. • You can manage all Dell Networking products in-band via the front-end data ports through interfaces assigned an IP address as well. Accessing the System Remotely Configuring the system for remote access is a three-step process, as described in the following topics: Configure an IP address for the management port.
  • Page 48: Configure A Management Route

    0 is for inputting the password in clear text. 7 is for inputting a password that is already encrypted using a Type 7 hash. Obtaining the encrypted password from the configuration of another Dell Networking system. Configuring the Enable Password Access EXEC Privilege mode using the enable command.
  • Page 49: Configuration File Management

    To copy a local file to a remote system, combine the file-origin syntax for a local file location with the file-destination syntax for a remote file location. • To copy a remote file to Dell Networking system, combine the file-origin syntax for a remote file location with the file-destination syntax for a local file location. Table 3. Forming a...
  • Page 50: Mounting An Nfs File System

    27952672 bytes successfully copied Example of Importing a File to the Local System core1#$//copy ftp://myusername:mypassword@10.10.10.10//Dell/ Dell-EF-8.2.1.0.bin flash:// Destination file name [Dell-EF-8.2.1.0.bin.bin]: !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 26292881 bytes successfully copied Mounting an NFS File System This feature enables you to quickly access data on an NFS mounted file system. You can perform file operations on an NFS mounted file system using supported file commands.
  • Page 51: Save The Running-Configuration

    225 bytes successfully copied Dell# Save the Running-Configuration The running-configuration contains the current system configuration. Dell Networking recommends coping your running-configuration to the startup-configuration. The commands in this section follow the same format as those commands in the Copy Files to and from the System section but use the filenames startup-configuration and running-configuration.
  • Page 52: Configure The Overload Bit For A Startup Scenario

    Configure the Overload Bit for a Startup Scenario For information about setting the router overload bit for a specific period of time after a switch reload is implemented, refer to the Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) section in the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.
  • Page 53: Managing The File System

    <output truncated for brevity> Managing the File System The Dell Networking system can use the internal Flash, external Flash, or remote devices to store files. The system stores files on the internal Flash by default but can be configured to store files elsewhere.
  • Page 54: View Command History

    [12/5 10:57:13]: CMD-(CLI):boot system rpm0 primary flash://FTOS- CB-1.1.1.2E2.bin Upgrading Dell Networking OS NOTE: To upgrade Dell Networking Operating System (OS), refer to the Release Notes for the version you want to load on the system. Using HTTP for File Transfers Stating with Release 9.3(0.1), you can use HTTP to copy files or configuration details to a remote server.
  • Page 55: Using Hashes To Verify Software Images Before Installation

    The published hash for that file is displayed next to the software image file on the iSupport page. Go on to the Dell Networking system and copy the software image to the flash drive, using the copy command. Run the verify {md5 | sha256} [ flash://]img-file [hash-value] command. For example, verify sha256 flash://FTOS-SE-9.5.0.0.bin...
  • Page 56 • hash-value: (Optional). Specify the relevant hash published on i-Support. • img-file: Enter the name of the Dell Networking software image file to validate Examples: Without Entering the Hash Value for Verification Dell# verify md5 flash://FTOS-SE-9.5.0.0.bin MD5 hash for FTOS-SE-9.5.0.0.bin: 275ceb73a4f3118e1d6bcf7d75753459 SHA256 Dell# verify sha256 flash://FTOS-SE-9.5.0.0.bin...
  • Page 57: Management

    Management This chapter describes the different protocols or services used to manage the Dell Networking system. Configuring Privilege Levels Privilege levels restrict access to commands based on user or terminal line. There are 16 privilege levels, of which three are pre-defined. The default privilege level is 1.
  • Page 58: Moving A Command From Exec Privilege Mode To Exec Mode

    Moving a Command from EXEC Privilege Mode to EXEC Mode To move a command from EXEC Privilege to EXEC mode for a privilege level, use the privilege exec command from CONFIGURATION mode. In the command, specify the privilege level of the user or terminal line and specify all keywords in the command to which you want to allow access.
  • Page 59 CONFIGURATION mode privilege {configure |interface | line | route-map | router} level level {command ||...|| command} Example of EXEC Privilege Commands Dell(conf)#do show run priv privilege exec level 3 capture privilege exec level 3 configure privilege exec level 4 resequence...
  • Page 60: Applying A Privilege Level To A Username

    NOTE: When you assign a privilege level between 2 and 15, access to the system begins at EXEC mode, but the prompt is hostname#, rather than hostname>. Configuring Logging The Dell Networking OS tracks changes in the system using event and error messages. By default, Dell Networking OS logs these messages on: •...
  • Page 61: Audit And Security Logs

    • Disable logging to the logging buffer. CONFIGURATION mode no logging buffer • Disable logging to terminal lines. CONFIGURATION mode no logging monitor • Disable console logging. CONFIGURATION mode no logging console Audit and Security Logs This section describes how to configure, display, and clear audit and security logs. The following is the configuration task list for audit and security logs: •...
  • Page 62: Configuring Logging Format

    For information about the logging extended command, see Enabling Audit and Security Logs Dell#show logging auditlog May 12 12:20:25: Dell#: %CLI-6-logging extended by admin from vty0 (10.14.1.98) May 12 12:20:42: Dell#: %CLI-6-configure terminal by admin from vty0 (10.14.1.98) May 12 12:20:42: Dell#: %CLI-6-service timestamps log datetime by admin from vty0 (10.14.1.98)
  • Page 63: Setting Up A Secure Connection To A Syslog Server

    • 1 – Displays syslog message format as described in RFC 5424, The SYSLOG Protocol Example of Configuring the Logging Message Format Dell(conf)#logging version ? <0-1> Select syslog version (default = 0) Dell(conf)#logging version 1 Setting Up a Secure Connection to a Syslog Server You can use reverse tunneling with the port forwarding to securely connect to a syslog server.
  • Page 64: Log Messages In The Internal Buffer

    Configure logging to a local host. locahost is “127.0.0.1” or “::1”. If you do not, the system displays an error when you attempt to enable role-based only AAA authorization. Dell(conf)# logging localhost tcp port Dell(conf)#logging 127.0.0.1 tcp 5140 Log Messages in the Internal Buffer All error messages, except those beginning with %BOOTUP (Message), are log in the internal buffer.
  • Page 65: Sending System Messages To A Syslog Server

    In the previous lines, local7 is the logging facility level and debugging is the severity level. Track Login Activity Dell Networking OS enables you to track the login activity of users and view the successful and unsuccessful login events. When you log in using the console or VTY line, the system displays the last successful login details of the current user and the number of unsuccessful login attempts since your last successful login to the system.
  • Page 66: Configuring Login Activity Tracking

    The following example enables login activity tracking and configures the system to store the login activity details for 12 days. Dell(config)#login statistics enable Dell(config)#login statistics time-period 12 Display Login Statistics To view the login statistics, use the show login statistics command.
  • Page 67: Limit Concurrent Login Sessions

    ------------------------------------------------------------------ Limit Concurrent Login Sessions Dell Networking OS enables you to limit the number of concurrent login sessions of users on VTY, auxiliary, and console lines. You can also clear any of your existing sessions when you reach the maximum permitted number of concurrent sessions.
  • Page 68: Enabling The System To Clear Existing Sessions

    Example of Configuring Concurrent Session Limit The following example limits the permitted number of concurrent login sessions to 4. Dell(config)#login concurrent-session limit 4 Enabling the System to Clear Existing Sessions To enable the system to clear existing login sessions, follow this procedure: •...
  • Page 69: Changing System Logging Settings

    Specify the size of the logging buffer. CONFIGURATION mode logging buffered size NOTE: When you decrease the buffer size, Dell Networking OS deletes all messages stored in the buffer. Increasing the buffer size does not affect messages in the buffer. •...
  • Page 70: Display The Logging Buffer And The Logging Configuration

    EXEC privilege mode. When RBAC is enabled, the security logs are filtered based on the user roles. Only the security administrator and system administrator can view the security logs. Example of the show logging Command Dell#show logging syslog logging: enabled Console logging: level Debugging Monitor logging: level Debugging...
  • Page 71 – uucp (UNIX to UNIX copy protocol) Example of the show running-config logging Command To view nondefault settings, use the show running-config logging command in EXEC mode. Dell#show running-config logging logging buffered 524288 debugging service timestamps log datetime msec service timestamps debug datetime msec...
  • Page 72: Synchronizing Log Messages

    Synchronizing Log Messages You can configure Dell Networking OS to filter and consolidate the system messages for a specific line by synchronizing the message output. Only the messages with a severity at or below the set level appear. This feature works on the terminal and console connections available on the system.
  • Page 73: File Transfer Services

    File Transfer Services With Dell Networking OS, you can configure the system to transfer files over the network using the file transfer protocol (FTP). One FTP application is copying the system image files over an interface on to the system; however, FTP is not supported on virtual local area network (VLAN) interfaces.
  • Page 74: Configuring Ftp Client Parameters

    • Specify the directory for users using FTP to reach the system. CONFIGURATION mode ftp-server topdir dir The default is the internal flash directory. • Specify a user name for all FTP users and configure either a plain text or encrypted password. CONFIGURATION mode ftp-server username username password [encryption-type] password Configure the following optional and required parameters:...
  • Page 75: Terminal Lines

    (VTYs) connect you through Telnet to the system. The auxiliary line (aux) connects secondary devices such as modems. Denying and Permitting Access to a Terminal Line Dell Networking recommends applying only standard access control lists (ACLs) to deny and permit access to VTY lines. •...
  • Page 76: Configuring Login Authentication For Terminal Lines

    A combination of authentication methods is called a method list. If the user fails the first authentication method, Dell Networking OS prompts the next method until all methods are exhausted, at which point the connection is terminated. The available authentication methods are: Prompt for the enable password.
  • Page 77: Setting Timeout For Exec Privilege Mode

    Dell(config-line-vty)# Setting Timeout for EXEC Privilege Mode EXEC timeout is a basic security feature that returns Dell Networking OS to EXEC mode after a period of inactivity on the terminal lines. To set timeout, use the following commands.
  • Page 78: Using Telnet To Get To Another Network Device

    EXEC Privilege telnet [ip-address] If you do not enter an IP address, Dell Networking OS enters a Telnet dialog that prompts you for one. Enter an IPv4 address in dotted decimal format (A.B.C.D). Enter an IPv6 address in the format 0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000. Elision of zeros is supported.
  • Page 79: Viewing The Configuration Lock Status

    Alternatively, you can clear any line using the clear command from EXEC Privilege mode. If you clear a console session, the user is returned to EXEC mode. Example of Locking CONFIGURATION Mode for Single-User Access Dell(conf)#configuration mode exclusive auto BATMAN(conf)#exit 3d23h35m: %RPM0-P:CP %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from console by console Dell#config ! Locks configuration mode exclusively.
  • Page 80: Restoring Factory Default Environment Variables

    After the restore is complete, the units power cycle immediately. The following example illustrates the restore factory-defaults command to restore the factory default settings. Dell#restore factory-defaults stack-unit 1 nvram *********************************************************************** Warning - Restoring factory defaults will delete the existing persistent settings (stacking, fanout, etc.) After restoration the unit(s) will be powercycled immediately.
  • Page 81 Press esc key to abort the boot process (while the system prompts to) You enter BLI immediately, as indicated by the BOOT_USER # prompt. press any key Assign the new location of the FTOS image to be used when the system reloads. To boot from flash partition A: BOOT_USER # boot change primary boot device : flash...
  • Page 82: 802.1X

    (typically RADIUS) using a mandatory intermediary network access device, in this case, a Dell Networking switch. The network access device mediates all communication between the end-user device and the authentication server so that the network remains secure. The network access device uses EAP-over-Ethernet (EAPOL) to communicate with the end-user device and EAP-over- RADIUS to communicate with the server.
  • Page 83: Port-Authentication Process

    It translates and forwards requests and responses between the authentication server and the supplicant. The authenticator also changes the status of the port based on the results of the authentication process. The Dell Networking switch is the authenticator. •...
  • Page 84 The authenticator decapsulates the EAP response from the EAPOL frame, encapsulates it in a RADIUS Access-Request frame and forwards the frame to the authentication server. The authentication server replies with an Access-Challenge frame. The Access-Challenge frame requests the supplicant to prove that it is who it claims to be, using a specified method (an EAP- Method).
  • Page 85: Eap Over Radius

    The Type value for EAP messages is 79. Figure 6. EAP Over RADIUS RADIUS Attributes for 802.1X Support Dell Networking systems include the following RADIUS attributes in all 802.1X-triggered Access-Request messages: Attribute 31 Calling-station-id: relays the supplicant MAC address to the authentication server.
  • Page 86: Important Points To Remember

    Important Points to Remember • Dell Networking OS supports 802.1X with EAP-MD5, EAP-OTP, EAP-TLS, EAP-TTLS, PEAPv0, PEAPv1, and MS-CHAPv2 with PEAP. • All platforms support only RADIUS as the authentication server. • If the primary RADIUS server becomes unresponsive, the authenticator begins using a secondary RADIUS server, if configured.
  • Page 87 Verify that 802.1X is enabled globally and at the interface level using the show running-config | find dot1x command from EXEC Privilege mode. In the following example, the bold lines show that 802.1X is enabled. Dell#show running-config | find dot1x dot1x authentication [output omitted]...
  • Page 88: Configuring Request Identity Re-Transmissions

    Configuring Request Identity Re-Transmissions When the authenticator sends a Request Identity frame and the supplicant does not respond, the authenticator waits for 30 seconds and then re-transmits the frame. The amount of time that the authenticator waits before re-transmitting and the maximum number of times that the authenticator re-transmits can be configured.
  • Page 89: Forcibly Authorizing Or Unauthorizing A Port

    Example of Configuring and Verifying Port Authentication The following example shows configuration information for a port for which the authenticator re- transmits an EAP Request Identity frame: • after 90 seconds and a maximum of 10 times for an unresponsive supplicant •...
  • Page 90: Re-Authenticating A Port

    The bold line shows the new port-control state. Dell(conf-if-Te-1/1/1)#dot1x port-control force-authorized Dell(conf-if-Te-1/1/1)#show dot1x interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 802.1x information on Te 1/1/1: ----------------------------- Dot1x Status: Enable Port Control: FORCE_AUTHORIZED Port Auth Status: UNAUTHORIZED Re-Authentication: Disable Untagged VLAN id: None Tx Period:...
  • Page 91: Configuring Timeouts

    Dell(conf-if-Te-1/1/1)#do show dot1x interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 802.1x information on Te 1/1/1: ----------------------------- Dot1x Status: Enable Port Control: FORCE_AUTHORIZED Port Auth Status: UNAUTHORIZED Re-Authentication: Enable Untagged VLAN id: None Tx Period: 90 seconds Quiet Period: 120 seconds ReAuth Max: Supplicant Timeout:...
  • Page 92: Configuring Dynamic Vlan Assignment With Port Authentication

    The RADIUS server authenticates the request and returns a RADIUS ACCEPT message with the VLAN assignment using Tunnel-Private-Group-ID The illustration shows the configuration on the Dell Networking system before connecting the end user device in black and blue text, and after connecting the device in red text. The blue text corresponds to the preceding numbered steps on dynamic VLAN assignment with 802.1X.
  • Page 93: Guest And Authentication-Fail Vlans

    Authentication). Guest and Authentication-Fail VLANs Typically, the authenticator (the Dell system) denies the supplicant access to the network until the supplicant is authenticated. If the supplicant is authenticated, the authenticator enables the port and places it in either the VLAN for which the port is configured or the VLAN that the authentication server indicates in the authentication data.
  • Page 94: Configuring A Guest Vlan

    INTERFACE mode. View your configuration using the show config command from INTERFACE mode or using the show dot1x interface command from EXEC Privilege mode. Example of Viewing Guest VLAN Configuration Dell(conf-if-Te-2/1/1)#dot1x guest-vlan 200 Dell(conf-if-Te 2/1/1))#show config interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/1/1 switchport...
  • Page 95 200 no shutdown Dell(conf-if-Te-2/1/1)# Dell(conf-if-Te-2/1/1)#dot1x auth-fail-vlan 100 max-attempts 5 Dell(conf-if-Te-2/1/1)#show config interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/1/1 switchport dot1x authentication dot1x guest-vlan 200 dot1x auth-fail-vlan 100 max-attempts 5 no shutdown Dell(conf-if-Te-2/1/1)# Example of Viewing Configured Authentication View your configuration using the show config command from INTERFACE mode, as shown in the...
  • Page 96: Access Control Lists (Acls)

    IP Access Control Lists (ACLs) In Dell Networking switch/routers, you can create two different types of IP ACLs: standard or extended. A standard ACL filters packets based on the source IP packet. An extended ACL filters traffic based on the following criteria: •...
  • Page 97: Cam Usage

    When creating an access list, the sequence of the filters is important. You have a choice of assigning sequence numbers to the filters as you enter them, or the Dell Networking Operating System (OS) assigns numbers in the order the filters are created. The sequence numbers are listed in the display output of the show config and show ip accounting access-list commands.
  • Page 98: Implementing Acls On Dell Networking Os

    ACL Optimization If an access list contains duplicate entries, Dell Networking OS deletes one entry to conserve CAM space. Standard and extended ACLs take up the same amount of CAM space. A single ACL rule uses two CAM entries to identify whether the access list is a standard or extended ACL.
  • Page 99: Important Points To Remember

    ACL rules. The order can range from 0 to 254. Dell Networking OS writes to the CAM ACL rules with lower-order numbers (order numbers closer to 0) before rules with higher-order numbers so that packets are matched as you intended. By default, all ACL rules have an order of 255.
  • Page 100: Configuration Task List For Route Maps

    You can create multiple instances of this route map by using the sequence number option to place the route maps in the correct order. Dell Networking OS processes the route maps with the lowest sequence number first. When a configured route map is applied to a command, such as redistribute, traffic passes through all instances of that route map until a match is found.
  • Page 101 When there are multiple match commands with the same parameter under one instance of route-map, Dell Networking OS does a match between all of those match commands. If there are multiple match commands with different parameters, Dell Networking OS does a match ONLY if there is a match among ALL the match commands.
  • Page 102: Configuring Match Routes

    In the following example, instance 10 permits the route having a tag value of 1000 and instances 20 and 30 deny the route having a tag value of 1000. In this scenario, Dell Networking OS scans all the instances of the route-map for any permit statement. If there is a match anywhere, the route is permitted.
  • Page 103: Configuring Set Conditions

    match ipv6 address prefix-list-name • Match next-hop routes specified in a prefix list (IPv4). CONFIG-ROUTE-MAP mode match ip next-hop {access-list-name | prefix-list prefix-list-name} • Match next-hop routes specified in a prefix list (IPv6). CONFIG-ROUTE-MAP mode match ipv6 next-hop {access-list-name | prefix-list prefix-list-name} •...
  • Page 104: Configure A Route Map For Route Redistribution

    Route maps on their own cannot affect traffic and must be included in different commands to affect routing traffic. Route redistribution occurs when Dell Networking OS learns the advertising routes from static or directly connected routes or another routing protocol. Different protocols assign different values to redistributed routes to identify either the routes and their origins.
  • Page 105: Configure A Route Map For Route Tagging

    Use the redistribute command in OSPF, RIP, ISIS, and BGP to set some of these attributes for routes that are redistributed into those protocols. Route maps add to that redistribution capability by allowing you to match specific routes and set or change more attributes when redistributing those routes.
  • Page 106: Ip Fragment Handling

    Implementing the required rules uses a significant number of CAM entries per TCP/UDP entry. • For IP ACL, Dell Networking OS always applies implicit deny. You do not have to configure it. • For IP ACL, Dell Networking OS applies implicit permit for second and subsequent fragment just prior to the implicit deny.
  • Page 107: Layer 4 Acl Rules Examples

    In this first example, TCP packets from host 10.1.1.1 with TCP destination port equal to 24 are permitted. All others are denied. Dell(conf)#ip access-list extended ABC Dell(conf-ext-nacl)#permit tcp host 10.1.1.1 any eq 24 Dell(conf-ext-nacl)#deny ip any any fragment Dell(conf-ext-nacl) Example of Permitting Only First Fragments and Non-Fragmented Packets from a Specified Host In the following example, the TCP packets that are first fragments or non-fragmented from host 10.1.1.1...
  • Page 108: Configure A Standard Ip Acl

    To configure an ACL, use commands in IP ACCESS LIST mode and INTERFACE mode. For a complete list of all the commands related to IP ACLs, refer to the Dell Networking OS Command Line Interface Reference Guide. To set up extended ACLs, refer to Configure an Extended IP ACL.
  • Page 109: Configuring A Standard Ip Acl Filter

    Configuring a Standard IP ACL Filter If you are creating a standard ACL with only one or two filters, you can let Dell Networking OS assign a sequence number based on the order in which the filters are configured. The software assigns filters in multiples of five.
  • Page 110: Configure An Extended Ip Acl

    Configure an Extended IP ACL Extended IP ACLs filter on source and destination IP addresses, IP host addresses, TCP addresses, TCP host addresses, UDP addresses, and UDP host addresses. The traffic passes through the filter in the order of the filter’s sequence and hence you can configure the extended IP ACL by first entering IP ACCESS LIST mode, and then assigning a sequence number to the filter.
  • Page 111: Configuring Filters Without A Sequence Number

    Configuring Filters Without a Sequence Number If you are creating an extended ACL with only one or two filters, you can let Dell Networking OS assign a sequence number based on the order in which the filters are configured. Dell Networking OS assigns filters in multiples of five.
  • Page 112: Configure Layer 2 And Layer 3 Acls

    When Dell Networking OS routes the packets, only the L3 ACL governs them because they are not filtered against an L2 ACL. • When Dell Networking OS switches the packets, first the L3 ACL filters them, then the L2 ACL filters them. •...
  • Page 113: Assign An Ip Acl To An Interface

    To view which IP ACL is applied to an interface, use the show config command in INTERFACE mode, or use the show running-config command in EXEC mode. Example of Viewing ACLs Applied to an Interface Dell(conf-if)#show conf interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 Access Control Lists (ACLs)
  • Page 114: Counting Acl Hits

    To specify ingress, use the in keyword. Begin applying rules to the ACL with the ip access-list extended abcd command. To view the access-list, use the show command. Dell(conf)#interface tengigabitethernet 1/1/1 Dell(conf-if-te1/1/1)#ip access-group abcd in Dell(conf-if-te1/1/1)#show config tengogabitethernet 1/1/1 no ip address...
  • Page 115: Configure Egress Acls

    To specify ingress, use the out keyword. Begin applying rules to the ACL with the ip access-list extended abcd command. To view the access-list, use the show command. Dell(conf)#interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)#ip access-group abcd out Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)#show config TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 no ip address...
  • Page 116: Applying Egress Layer 3 Acls (Control-Plane)

    (if configured) is applied. When the route prefix matches a filter, Dell Networking OS drops or forwards the packet based on the filter’s designated action. If the route prefix does not match any of the filters in the prefix list, the route is dropped (that is, implicit deny).
  • Page 117: Implementation Information

    Configuring a prefix list • Use a prefix list for route redistribution For a complete listing of all commands related to prefix lists, refer to the Dell Networking OS Command Line Interface Reference Guide. Creating a Prefix List To create a prefix list, use the following commands.
  • Page 118 To delete a filter, use the no seq sequence-number command in PREFIX LIST mode.If you are creating a standard prefix list with only one or two filters, you can let Dell Networking OS assign a sequence number based on the order in which the filters are configured. The Dell Networking OS assigns filters in multiples of five.
  • Page 119 [prefix-name] Examples of the show ip prefix-list Command The following example shows the show ip prefix-list detail command. Dell>show ip prefix detail Prefix-list with the last deletion/insertion: filter_ospf ip prefix-list filter_in: count: 3, range entries: 3, sequences: 5 - 10 seq 5 deny 1.102.0.0/16 le 32 (hit count: 0)
  • Page 120 Dell(conf-router_rip)#show config router rip distribute-list prefix juba out network 10.0.0.0 Dell(conf-router_rip)#router ospf 34 Applying a Filter to a Prefix List (OSPF) To apply a filter to routes in open shortest path first (OSPF), use the following commands. • Enter OSPF mode.
  • Page 121: Acl Resequencing

    ACL Resequencing ACL resequencing allows you to re-number the rules and remarks in an access or prefix list. The placement of rules within the list is critical because packets are matched against rules in sequential order. To order new rules using the current numbering scheme, use resequencing whenever there is no opportunity.
  • Page 122 10 permit ip any host 1.1.1.2 seq 15 permit ip any host 1.1.1.3 seq 20 permit ip any host 1.1.1.4 Dell# end Dell# resequence access-list ipv4 test 2 2 Dell# show running-config acl ip access-list extended test remark 2 XYZ remark 4 this remark corresponds to permit any host 1.1.1.1...
  • Page 123: Route Maps

    seq 10 permit ip any host 1.1.1.3 seq 12 permit ip any host 1.1.1.4 Route Maps Although route maps are similar to ACLs and prefix lists in that they consist of a series of commands that contain a matching criterion and an action, route maps can modify parameters in matching packets. Implementation Information ACLs and prefix lists can only drop or forward the packet or traffic.
  • Page 124 The show monitor session session-id command has been enhanced to display the Type field in the output, which indicates whether a particular session is enabled for flow-monitoring. Example Output of the show Command Dell(conf-mon-sess-0)#do show monitor session 0 SessID Source...
  • Page 125: Enabling Flow-Based Monitoring

    Layer 3 ingress and egress traffic. You can specify traffic using standard or extended access-lists. Enable flow-based monitoring for a monitoring session. MONITOR SESSION mode flow-based enable Define access-list rules that include the keyword monitor. Dell Networking OS only considers port monitoring traffic that matches rules with the keyword monitor. CONFIGURATION mode ip access-list...
  • Page 126 10.11.1.254/24 ip access-group testflow in shutdown Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)#exit Dell(conf)#do show ip accounting access-list testflow Extended Ingress IP access list testflow on TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 Total cam count 4 seq 5 permit icmp any any monitor count bytes (0 packets 0 bytes) seq 10 permit ip 102.1.1.0/24 any monitor count bytes (0 packets 0 bytes)
  • Page 127: Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (Bfd)

    BFD also carries less overhead than routing protocol hello mechanisms. Control packets can be encapsulated in any form that is convenient, and, on Dell Networking routers, BFD agents maintain sessions that reside on the line card, which frees resources on the route processor. Only session state changes are reported to the BFD Manager (on the route processor), which in turn notifies the routing protocols that are registered with it.
  • Page 128: Bfd Packet Format

    NOTE: A session state change from Up to Down is the only state change that triggers a link state change in the routing protocol client. BFD Packet Format Control packets are encapsulated in user datagram protocol (UDP) packets. The following illustration shows the complete encapsulation of a BFD control packet inside an IPv4 packet.
  • Page 129 Required Min Echo The minimum rate at which the local system would like to receive echo packets. NOTE: Dell Networking OS does not currently support the echo function. Authentication An optional method for authenticating control packets.
  • Page 130: Bfd Sessions

    Demand mode initiator. Either system (but not both) can request Demand mode at any time. NOTE: Dell Networking OS supports Asynchronous mode only. A session can have four states: Administratively Down, Down, Init, and Up.
  • Page 131: Session State Changes

    The active system receives the response from the passive system and changes its session state to Up. It then sends a control packet indicating this state change. This is the third and final part of the handshake. Now the discriminator values have been exchanged and the transmit intervals have been negotiated.
  • Page 132: Important Points To Remember

    Important Points to Remember • Dell Networking OS supports 128 sessions per stack unit at 200 minimum transmit and receive intervals with a multiplier of 3, and 64 sessions at 100 minimum transmit and receive intervals with a multiplier of 4.
  • Page 133: Configure Bfd For Physical Ports

    • Configure BFD for OSPFv3 • Configure BFD for IS-IS • Configure BFD for BGP • Configure BFD for VRRP • Configuring Protocol Liveness • Troubleshooting BFD Configure BFD for Physical Ports Configuring BFD for physical ports is supported on the C-Series and E-Series platforms only. BFD on physical ports is useful when you do not enable the routing protocol.
  • Page 134 Establishing a Session on Physical Ports To establish a session, enable BFD at the interface level on both ends of the link, as shown in the following illustration. The configuration parameters do not need to match. Figure 12. Establishing a BFD Session on Physical Ports Enter interface mode.
  • Page 135 2.2.2.2 on interface Te 4/24/1 (diag: 0) Viewing Physical Port Session Parameters BFD sessions are configured with default intervals and a default role (active). Dell Networking recommends maintaining the default values. To view session parameters, use the show bfd neighbors detail command.
  • Page 136: Configure Bfd For Static Routes

    Number of messages from IFA about port state change: 0 Number of messages communicated b/w Manager and Agent: 7 Disabling and Re-Enabling BFD BFD is enabled on all interfaces by default, though sessions are not created unless explicitly configured. If you disable BFD, all of the sessions on that interface are placed in an Administratively Down state ( the first message example), and the remote systems are notified of the session state change (the second message example).
  • Page 137 Establishing Sessions for Static Routes Sessions are established for all neighbors that are the next hop of a static route. Figure 13. Establishing Sessions for Static Routes To establish a BFD session, use the following command. • Establish BFD sessions for all neighbors that are the next hop of a static route. CONFIGURATION mode ip route bfd Example of the show bfd neighbors Command to Verify Static Routes...
  • Page 138: Configure Bfd For Ospf

    CONFIGURATION mode ip route bfd interval milliseconds min_rx milliseconds multiplier value role [active | passive] To view session parameters, use the show bfd neighbors detail command, as shown in the examples in Displaying BFD for BGP Information Disabling BFD for Static Routes If you disable BFD, all static route BFD sessions are torn down.
  • Page 139 Establishing Sessions with OSPF Neighbors BFD sessions can be established with all OSPF neighbors at once or sessions can be established with all neighbors out of a specific interface. Sessions are only established when the OSPF adjacency is in the Full state.
  • Page 140 ip ospf bfd all-neighbors Example of Verifying Sessions with OSPF Neighbors To view the established sessions, use the show bfd neighbors command. The bold line shows the OSPF BFD sessions. R2(conf-router_ospf)#bfd all-neighbors R2(conf-router_ospf)#do show bfd neighbors - Active session role Ad Dn - Admin Down - CLI - ISIS...
  • Page 141: Configure Bfd For Ospfv3

    no bfd all-neighbors • Disable BFD sessions with all OSPF neighbors on an interface. INTERFACE mode ip ospf bfd all-neighbors disable Configure BFD for OSPFv3 BFD for OSPFv3 provides support for IPV6. Configuring BFD for OSPFv3 is a two-step process: Enable BFD globally.
  • Page 142: Configure Bfd For Is-Is

    bfd all-neighbors interval milliseconds min_rx milliseconds multiplier value role [active | passive] • Change parameters for OSPFv3 sessions on a single interface. INTERFACE mode ipv6 ospf bfd all-neighbors interval milliseconds min_rx milliseconds multiplier value role [active | passive] Disabling BFD for OSPFv3 If you disable BFD globally, all sessions are torn down and sessions on the remote system are placed in a Down state.
  • Page 143 Establishing Sessions with IS-IS Neighbors BFD sessions can be established for all IS-IS neighbors at once or sessions can be established for all neighbors out of a specific interface. Figure 15. Establishing Sessions with IS-IS Neighbors To establish BFD with all IS-IS neighbors or with IS-IS neighbors on a single interface, use the following commands.
  • Page 144 The bold line shows that IS-IS BFD sessions are enabled. R2(conf-router_isis)#bfd all-neighbors R2(conf-router_isis)#do show bfd neighbors - Active session role Ad Dn - Admin Down - CLI - ISIS - OSPF - Static Route (RTM) LocalAddr RemoteAddr Interface State Rx-int Tx-int Mult Clients * 2.2.2.2 2.2.2.1 Te 2/1/1...
  • Page 145: Configure Bfd For Bgp

    isis bfd all-neighbors disable Configure BFD for BGP In a BGP core network, BFD provides rapid detection of communication failures in BGP fast-forwarding paths between internal BGP (iBGP) and external BGP (eBGP) peers for faster network reconvergence. BFD for BGP is supported on 1GE, 10GE, 40GE, port-channel, and VLAN interfaces. BFD for BGP does not support IPv6 and the BGP multihop feature.
  • Page 146 The sample configuration shows alternative ways to establish a BFD session with a BGP neighbor: • By establishing BFD sessions with all neighbors discovered by BGP (the bfd all-neighbors command). • By establishing a BFD session with a specified BGP neighbor (the neighbor {ip-address | peer- group-name} bfd command) BFD packets originating from a router are assigned to the highest priority egress queue to minimize transmission delays.
  • Page 147 neighbor {ip-address | peer-group-name} bfd NOTES: • When you establish a BFD session with a specified BGP neighbor or peer group using the neighbor bfd command, the default BFD session parameters are used (interval: 100 milliseconds, min_rx: 100 milliseconds, multiplier: 3 packets, and role: active). •...
  • Page 148 Displaying BFD for BGP Information You can display related information for BFD for BGP. To display information about BFD for BGP sessions on a router, use the following commands and refer to the following examples. • Verify a BFD for BGP configuration. EXEC Privilege mode show running-config bgp •...
  • Page 149 The following example shows viewing BFD neighbors with full detail. The bold lines show the BFD session parameters: TX (packet transmission), RX (packet reception), and multiplier (maximum number of missed packets). R2# show bfd neighbors detail Session Discriminator: 9 Neighbor Discriminator: 10 Local Addr: 1.1.1.3 Local MAC Addr: 00:01:e8:66:da:33 Remote Addr: 1.1.1.2...
  • Page 150 Protocol BGP Messages: Registration De-registration : 4 Init Down Admin Down Interface TenGigabitEthernet 6/2/1 Protocol BGP Messages: Registration De-registration : 4 Init Down Admin Down Interface TenGigabitEthernet 6/3/1 Protocol BGP Messages: Registration De-registration : 0 Init Down Admin Down The following example shows viewing BFD summary information. The bold line shows the message displayed when you enable BFD for BGP connections.
  • Page 151: Configure Bfd For Vrrp

    Last read 00:00:30, last write 00:00:30 Hold time is 180, keepalive interval is 60 seconds Received 8 messages, 0 in queue 1 opens, 0 notifications, 0 updates 7 keepalives, 0 route refresh requests Sent 9 messages, 0 in queue 2 opens, 0 notifications, 0 updates 7 keepalives, 0 route refresh requests Minimum time between advertisement runs is 30 seconds Minimum time before advertisements start is 0 seconds...
  • Page 152 neighboring interface fails, the BFD agent on the line card notifies the BFD manager, which in turn notifies the VRRP protocol that a link state change occurred. Configuring BFD for VRRP is a three-step process: Enable BFD globally. Refer to Enabling BFD Globally.
  • Page 153 Examples of Viewing VRRP Sessions To view the established sessions, use the show bfd neighbors command. The bold line shows that VRRP BFD sessions are enabled. Dell(conf-if-te-4/25/1)#vrrp bfd all-neighbors Dell(conf-if-te-4/25/1)#do show bfd neighbor - Active session role Ad Dn - Admin Down - CLI...
  • Page 154: Configuring Protocol Liveness

    To change parameters for all VRRP sessions or for a particular VRRP session, use the following commands. • Change parameters for all VRRP sessions. INTERFACE mode vrrp bfd all-neighbors interval milliseconds min_rx milliseconds multiplier value role [active | passive] • Change parameters for a particular VRRP session.
  • Page 155: Troubleshooting Bfd

    Troubleshooting BFD To troubleshoot BFD, use the following commands and examples. To control packet field values or to examine the control packets in hexadecimal format, use the following command. • Examine control packet field values. CONFIGURATION mode debug bfd detail •...
  • Page 156 The output for the debug bfd event command is the same as the log messages that appear on the console by default. Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD)
  • Page 157: Border Gateway Protocol Ipv4 (Bgpv4)

    Border Gateway Protocol IPv4 (BGPv4) This chapter provides a general description of BGPv4 as it is supported in the Dell Networking Operating System (OS). BGP protocol standards are listed in the Standards Compliance chapter. BGP is an external gateway protocol that transmits interdomain routing information within and between autonomous systems (AS).
  • Page 158 Figure 18. Internal BGP BGP version 4 (BGPv4) supports classless interdomain routing and aggregate routes and AS paths. BGP is a path vector protocol — a computer network in which BGP maintains the path that updated information takes as it diffuses through the network. Updates traveling through the network and returning to the same node are easily detected and discarded.
  • Page 159: Sessions And Peers

    Figure 19. BGP Routers in Full Mesh The number of BGP speakers each BGP peer must maintain increases exponentially. Network management quickly becomes impossible. Sessions and Peers When two routers communicate using the BGP protocol, a BGP session is started. The two end-points of that session are Peers.
  • Page 160: Establish A Session

    Establish a Session Information exchange between peers is driven by events and timers. The focus in BGP is on the traffic routing policies. In order to make decisions in its operations with other BGP peers, a BGP process uses a simple finite state machine that consists of six states: Idle, Connect, Active, OpenSent, OpenConfirm, and Established.
  • Page 161: Bgp Attributes

    Route reflection divides iBGP peers into two groups: client peers and nonclient peers. A route reflector and its client peers form a route reflection cluster. Because BGP speakers announce only the best route for a given prefix, route reflector rules are applied after the router makes its best path decision. •...
  • Page 162: Best Path Selection Criteria

    In non-deterministic mode (the bgp non-deterministic-med command is applied), paths are compared in the order in which they arrive. This method can lead to Dell Networking OS choosing different best paths from a set of paths, depending on the order in which they were received from the neighbors because MED may or may not get compared between the adjacent paths.
  • Page 163 Figure 21. BGP Best Path Selection Best Path Selection Details Prefer the path with the largest WEIGHT attribute. Prefer the path with the largest LOCAL_PREF attribute. Prefer the path that was locally Originated via a network command, redistribute command or aggregate-address command. Routes originated with the Originated via a network or redistribute commands are preferred over routes originated with the aggregate-address command.
  • Page 164: Weight

    Prefer the path with the lowest IGP metric to the BGP if next-hop is selected when synchronization is disabled and only an internal path remains. Dell Networking OS deems the paths as equal and does not perform steps 9 through 11, if the following criteria is met: the IBGP multipath or EBGP multipath are configured (the maximum-path command).
  • Page 165: Multi-Exit Discriminators (Meds)

    and AS300. This is advertised to all routers within AS100, causing all BGP speakers to prefer the path through Router B. Figure 22. BGP Local Preference Multi-Exit Discriminators (MEDs) If two ASs connect in more than one place, a multi-exit discriminator (MED) can be used to assign a preference to a preferred path.
  • Page 166: Origin

    BGP. In Dell Networking OS, these origin codes appear as shown in the following example. The question mark (?) indicates an origin code of INCOMPLETE (shown in bold). The lower case letter (i) indicates an origin code of IGP (shown in bold).
  • Page 167: As Path

    NOTE: Any update that contains the AS path number 0 is valid. The AS path is shown in the following example. The origin attribute is shown following the AS path information (shown in bold). Example of Viewing AS Paths Dell#show ip bgp paths Total 30655 Paths Address Hash Refcount Metric Path...
  • Page 168: Multiprotocol Bgp

    BGP routes into BGP. Implement BGP with Dell Networking OS The following sections describe how to implement BGP on Dell Networking OS. Additional Path (Add-Path) Support The add-path feature reduces convergence times by advertising multiple paths to its peers for the same address prefix without replacing existing paths with new ones.
  • Page 169: Ignore Router-Id In Best-Path Calculation

    • If BGP peer outbound route-map has metric configured, all other metrics are overwritten by this configuration. NOTE: When redistributing static, connected, or OSPF routes, there is no metric option. Simply assign the appropriate route-map to the redistributed route. The following table lists some examples of these rules. Table 8.
  • Page 170: As4 Number Representation

    AS4 Number Representation Dell Networking OS supports multiple representations of 4-byte AS numbers: asplain, asdot+, and asdot. NOTE: The ASDOT and ASDOT+ representations are supported only with the 4-Byte AS numbers feature. If 4-Byte AS numbers are not implemented, only ASPLAIN representation is supported.
  • Page 171: As Number Migration

    172.30.1.250 local-as 65057 <output truncated> Dell(conf-router_bgp)#do show ip bgp BGP table version is 31571, local router ID is 172.30.1.57 <output truncated> AS-PLAIN Dell(conf-router_bgp)#bgp asnotation asplain Dell(conf-router_bgp)#sho conf router bgp 100 bgp four-octet-as-support neighbor 172.30.1.250 local-as 65057 <output truncated> Dell(conf-router_bgp)#do sho ip bgp BGP table version is 34558, local router ID is 172.30.1.57...
  • Page 172 Figure 24. Before and After AS Number Migration with Local-AS Enabled When you complete your migration, and you have reconfigured your network with the new information, disable this feature. If you use the “no prepend” option, the Local-AS does not prepend to the updates received from the eBGP peer.
  • Page 173: Bgp4 Management Information Base (Mib)

    (SNMP) objects and notifications (traps) defined in draft-ietf- idr-bgp4-mibv2-05. To see these enhancements, download the MIB from the Dell website. NOTE: For the Force10-BGP4-V2-MIB and other MIB documentation, refer to the Dell iSupport web page.
  • Page 174: Configuration Information

    ROUTER BGP mode to configure a BGP neighbor. By default, BGP is disabled. By default, Dell Networking OS compares the MED attribute on different paths from within the same AS (the bgp always-compare-med command is not enabled). Border Gateway Protocol IPv4 (BGPv4)
  • Page 175: Enabling Bgp

    Disabled Enabling BGP By default, BGP is not enabled on the system. Dell Networking OS supports one autonomous system (AS) and assigns the AS number (ASN). To establish BGP sessions and route traffic, configure at least one BGP neighbor or peer.
  • Page 176 NOTE: Sample Configurations for enabling BGP routers are found at the end of this chapter. Assign an AS number and enter ROUTER BGP mode. CONFIGURATION mode router bgp as-number • as-number: from 0 to 65535 (2 Byte) or from 1 to 4294967295 (4 Byte) or 0.1 to 65535.65535 (Dotted format).
  • Page 177 192.168.12.2 65123 0 never Active For the router’s identifier, Dell Networking OS uses the highest IP address of the Loopback interfaces configured. Because Loopback interfaces are virtual, they cannot go down, thus preventing changes in Border Gateway Protocol IPv4 (BGPv4)
  • Page 178 The third line of the show ip bgp neighbors output contains the BGP State. If anything other than ESTABLISHED is listed, the neighbor is not exchanging information and routes. For more information about using the show ip bgp neighbors command, refer to the Dell Networking OS Command Line Interface Reference Guide.
  • Page 179: Configuring As4 Number Representations

    No active TCP connection Dell# The following example shows verifying the BGP configuration using the show running-config bgp command.. Dell#show running-config bgp router bgp 65123 bgp router-id 192.168.10.2 network 10.10.21.0/24 network 10.10.32.0/24 network 100.10.92.0/24 network 192.168.10.0/24 bgp four-octet-as-support neighbor 10.10.21.1 remote-as 65123 neighbor 10.10.21.1 filter-list ISP1in...
  • Page 180 NOTE: ASPLAIN is the default method Dell Networking OS uses and does not appear in the configuration display. • Enable ASDOT AS Number representation. CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode bgp asnotation asdot • Enable ASDOT+ AS Number representation. CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode bgp asnotation asdot+ Examples of the bgp asnotation Commands The following example shows the bgp asnotation asplain command output.
  • Page 181: Configuring Peer Groups

    Configuring Peer Groups To configure multiple BGP neighbors at one time, create and populate a BGP peer group. An advantage of peer groups is that members of a peer group inherit the configuration properties of the group and share same update policy. A maximum of 256 peer groups are allowed on the system.
  • Page 182 10.14.8.60 remote-as 18505 neighbor 10.14.8.60 no shutdown Dell(conf-router_bgp)# To enable a peer group, use the neighbor peer-group-name no shutdown command in CONFIGURATION ROUTER BGP mode (shown in bold). Dell(conf-router_bgp)#neighbor zanzibar no shutdown Dell(conf-router_bgp)#show config router bgp 45 bgp fast-external-fallover bgp log-neighbor-changes...
  • Page 183: Configuring Bgp Fast Fall-Over

    ESTABLISHED state move to the IDLE state. To view the status of peer groups, use the show ip bgp peer-group command in EXEC Privilege mode, as shown in the following example. Dell>show ip bgp peer-group Peer-group zanzibar, remote AS 65535 BGP version 4...
  • Page 184 To verify that you enabled fast fall-over on a particular BGP neighbor, use the show ip bgp neighbors command. Because fast fall-over is disabled by default, it appears only if it has been enabled (shown in bold). Dell#sh ip bgp neighbors BGP neighbor is 100.100.100.100, remote AS 65517, internal link Member of peer-group test for session parameters BGP version 4, remote router ID 30.30.30.5...
  • Page 185: Configuring Passive Peering

    When a BGP neighbor connection with authentication configured is rejected by a passive peer-group, Dell Networking OS does not allow another passive peer-group on the same subnet to connect with the BGP neighbor. To work around this, change the BGP configuration or change the order of the peer group configuration.
  • Page 186: Maintaining Existing As Numbers During An As Migration

    CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode neighbor peer-group-name subnet subnet-number mask The peer group responds to OPEN messages sent on this subnet. Enable the peer group. CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode neighbor peer-group-name no shutdown Create and specify a remote peer for BGP neighbor. CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode neighbor peer-group-name remote-as as-number Only after the peer group responds to an OPEN message sent on the subnet does its BGP state change to ESTABLISHED.
  • Page 187: Allowing An As Number To Appear In Its Own As Path

    network 192.168.10.0/24 bgp four-octet-as-support neighbor 10.10.21.1 remote-as 65123 neighbor 10.10.21.1 filter-list Laura in neighbor 10.10.21.1 no shutdown neighbor 10.10.32.3 remote-as 65123 neighbor 10.10.32.3 no shutdown neighbor 100.10.92.9 remote-as 65192 neighbor 100.10.92.9 local-as 6500 neighbor 100.10.92.9 no shutdown neighbor 192.168.10.1 remote-as 65123 neighbor 192.168.10.1 update-source Loopback 0 neighbor 192.168.10.1 no shutdown neighbor 192.168.12.2 remote-as 65123...
  • Page 188: Enabling Graceful Restart

    Speeds convergence by advertising a special update packet known as an end-of-RIB marker. This marker indicates the peer has been updated with all routes in the local RIB. If you configure your system to do so, Dell Networking OS can perform the following actions during a hot failover: •...
  • Page 189: Enabling Neighbor Graceful Restart

    BGP graceful restart is active only when the neighbor becomes established. Otherwise, it is disabled. Graceful-restart applies to all neighbors with established adjacency. With the graceful restart feature, Dell Networking OS enables the receiving/restarting mode by default. In Receiver-Only mode, graceful restart saves the advertised routes of peers that support this capability when they restart.
  • Page 190 Example of the show ip bgp paths Command To view all BGP path attributes in the BGP database, use the show ip bgp paths command in EXEC Privilege mode. Dell#show ip bgp paths Total 30655 Paths Address Hash Refcount Metric Path...
  • Page 191: Regular Expressions As Filters

    For an AS-path access list, as shown in the previous commands, if the AS path matches the regular expression in the access list, the route matches the access list. The following lists the regular expressions accepted in Dell Networking OS. Regular Expression Definition ^ (caret) Matches the beginning of the input string.
  • Page 192: Redistributing Routes

    Dell(conf-router_bgp)#show conf router bgp 99 neighbor AAA peer-group neighbor AAA no shutdown neighbor 10.155.15.2 remote-as 32 neighbor 10.155.15.2 shutdown Dell(conf-router_bgp)#neigh 10.155.15.2 filter-list 1 in Dell(conf-router_bgp)#ex Dell(conf)#ip as-path access-list Eagle Dell(config-as-path)#deny 32$ Dell(config-as-path)#ex Dell(conf)#router bgp 99 Dell(conf-router_bgp)#neighbor AAA filter-list Eagle in...
  • Page 193: Enabling Additional Paths

    One attribute you can manipulate is the COMMUNITY attribute. This attribute is an optional attribute that is defined for a group of destinations. In Dell Networking OS, you can assign a COMMUNITY attribute to BGP routers by using an IP community list. After you create an IP community list, you can apply routing decisions to all routers meeting the criteria in the IP community list.
  • Page 194 All routes with the NO_EXPORT (0xFFFFFF01) community attribute must not be advertised outside a BGP confederation boundary, but are sent to CONFED-EBGP and IBGP peers. Dell Networking OS also supports BGP Extended Communities as described in RFC 4360 — BGP Extended Communities Attribute.
  • Page 195: Configuring An Ip Extended Community List

    To view the configuration, use the show config command in CONFIGURATION COMMUNITY-LIST or CONFIGURATION EXTCOMMUNITY LIST mode or the show ip {community-lists | extcommunity-list} command in EXEC Privilege mode. Dell#show ip community-lists ip community-list standard 1 deny 701:20 deny 702:20...
  • Page 196: Filtering Routes With Community Lists

    In addition to permitting or denying routes based on the values of the COMMUNITY attributes, you can manipulate the COMMUNITY attribute value and send the COMMUNITY attribute with the route information. By default, Dell Networking OS does not send the COMMUNITY attribute. To send the COMMUNITY attribute to BGP neighbors, use the following command. •...
  • Page 197 To view the BGP configuration, use the show config command in CONFIGURATION ROUTER BGP mode. If you want to remove or add a specific COMMUNITY number from a BGP path, you must create a route map with one or both of the following statements in the route map. Then apply that route map to a BGP neighbor or peer group.
  • Page 198: Changing Med Attributes

    209 7170 1455 i --More-- Changing MED Attributes By default, Dell Networking OS uses the MULTI_EXIT_DISC or MED attribute when comparing EBGP paths from the same AS. To change how the MED attribute is used, enter any or all of the following commands.
  • Page 199: Changing The Next_Hop Attribute

    • Change the LOCAL_PREF value. CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode bgp default local-preference value – value: the range is from 0 to 4294967295. The default is 100. To view the BGP configuration, use the show config command in CONFIGURATION ROUTER BGP mode or the show running-config bgp command in EXEC Privilege mode. A more flexible method for manipulating the LOCAL_PREF attribute value is to use a route map.
  • Page 200: Changing The Weight Attribute

    AS-Path ACLs filter routes based on the ASN. Route maps can filter and set conditions, change attributes, and assign update policies. NOTE: Dell Networking OS supports up to 255 characters in a set community statement inside a route map.
  • Page 201 NOTE: You can create inbound and outbound policies. Each of the commands used for filtering has in and out parameters that you must apply. In Dell Networking OS, the order of preference varies depending on whether the attributes are applied for inbound updates or outbound updates.
  • Page 202: Filtering Bgp Routes Using Route Maps

    • out: apply the prefix list to outbound routes. As a reminder, the following are rules concerning prefix lists: • If the prefix list contains no filters, all routes are permitted. • If none of the routes match any of the filters in the prefix list, the route is denied. This action is called an implicit deny.
  • Page 203: Filtering Bgp Routes Using As-Path Information

    BGP route reflectors are intended for ASs with a large mesh; they reduce the amount of BGP control traffic. NOTE: Dell Networking recommends not using multipath and add path simultaneously in a route reflector. With route reflection configured properly, IBGP routers are not fully meshed within a cluster but all receive routing information.
  • Page 204: Aggregating Routes

    BGP mode or the show running-config bgp in EXEC Privilege mode. Aggregating Routes Dell Networking OS provides multiple ways to aggregate routes in the BGP routing table. At least one specific route of the aggregate must be in the routing table for the configured aggregate to become active.
  • Page 205: Configuring Bgp Confederations

    When that penalty value reaches a configured limit, the route is not advertised, even if the route is up. In Dell Networking OS, that penalty value is 1024. As time passes and the route does not flap, the penalty value decrements or is decayed. However, if the route flaps again, it is assigned another penalty.
  • Page 206 • history entry — an entry that stores information on a downed route • dampened path — a path that is no longer advertised • penalized path — a path that is assigned a penalty To configure route flap dampening parameters, set dampening parameters using a route map, clear information on route dampening and return suppressed routes to active state, view statistics on route flapping, or change the path selection from the default mode (deterministic) to non-deterministic, use the following commands.
  • Page 207 – regexp regular-expression: enter a regular express to match on. By default, the path selection in Dell Networking OS is deterministic, that is, paths are compared irrespective of the order of their arrival. You can change the path selection method to non- deterministic, that is, paths are compared in the order in which they arrived (starting with the most recent).
  • Page 208: Changing Bgp Timers

    10.114.8.33 18508 117265 25069 780266 20 00:38:50 102759 Dell> To view which routes are dampened (non-active), use the show ip bgp dampened-routes command in EXEC Privilege mode. Changing BGP Timers To configure BGP timers, use either or both of the following commands.
  • Page 209 When inbound soft reconfiguration is done later, the stored information is used to generate a new set of inbound updates. Dell>router bgp 100 neighbor 10.108.1.1 remote-as 200 neighbor 10.108.1.1 soft-reconfiguration inbound...
  • Page 210: Route Map Continue

    The routes associated with multicast routing are used by the protocol independent multicast (PIM) to build data distribution trees. Dell Networking OS MBGP is implemented per RFC 1858. You can enable the MBGP feature per router and/or per peer/peer-group.
  • Page 211: Bgp Regular Expression Optimization

    Most Dell Networking OS BGP IPv4 unicast commands are extended to support the IPv4 multicast RIB using extra options to the command. For a detailed description of the MBGP commands, refer to the Dell Networking OS Command Line Interface Reference Guide.
  • Page 212: Storing Last And Bad Pdus

    Storing Last and Bad PDUs Dell Networking OS stores the last notification sent/received and the last bad protocol data unit (PDU) received on a per peer basis. The last bad PDU is the one that causes a notification to be issued.
  • Page 213: Capturing Pdus

    To change the maximum buffer size, use the capture bgp-pdu max-buffer-size command. To view the captured PDUs, use the show capture bgp-pdu neighbor command. Dell#show capture bgp-pdu neighbor 20.20.20.2 Incoming packet capture enabled for BGP neighbor 20.20.20.2 Available buffer size 40958758, 26 packet(s) captured using 680 bytes...
  • Page 214: Pdu Counters

    243295 313511 0 00:12:46 207896 PDU Counters Dell Networking OS supports additional counters for various types of PDUs sent and received from neighbors. These are seen in the output of the show ip bgp neighbor command. Sample Configurations The following example configurations show how to enable BGP and set up some peer groups. These examples are not comprehensive directions.
  • Page 215 The following illustration shows the configurations described on the following examples. These configurations show how to create BGP areas using physical and virtual links. They include setting up the interfaces and peers groups with each other. Figure 25. Sample Configurations Example of Enabling BGP (Router 1) R1# conf R1(conf)#int loop 0...
  • Page 216 R1(conf-if-te-1/31/1)#show config interface TengigabitEthernet 1/31/1 ip address 10.0.3.31/24 no shutdown R1(conf-if-te-1/31)#router bgp 99 R1(conf-router_bgp)#network 192.168.128.0/24 R1(conf-router_bgp)#neighbor 192.168.128.2 remote 99 R1(conf-router_bgp)#neighbor 192.168.128.2 no shut R1(conf-router_bgp)#neighbor 192.168.128.2 update-source loop 0 R1(conf-router_bgp)#neighbor 192.168.128.3 remote 100 R1(conf-router_bgp)#neighbor 192.168.128.3 no shut R1(conf-router_bgp)#neighbor 192.168.128.3 update-source loop 0 R1(conf-router_bgp)#show config router bgp 99 network 192.168.128.0/24...
  • Page 217 Example of Enabling BGP (Router 3) R3# conf R3(conf)# R3(conf)#int loop 0 R3(conf-if-lo-0)#ip address 192.168.128.3/24 R3(conf-if-lo-0)#no shutdown R3(conf-if-lo-0)#show config interface Loopback 0 ip address 192.168.128.3/24 no shutdown R3(conf-if-lo-0)#int te 3/11/1 R3(conf-if-te-3/11/1)#ip address 10.0.3.33/24 R3(conf-if-te-3/11/1)#no shutdown R3(conf-if-te-3/11/1)#show config interface TengigabitEthernet 3/11/1 ip address 10.0.3.33/24 no shutdown R3(conf-if-lo-0)#int te 3/21/1...
  • Page 218 neighbor 192.168.128.2 no shutdown neighbor 192.168.128.3 remote-as 100 neighbor 192.168.128.3 peer-group BBB neighbor 192.168.128.3 update-source Loopback 0 neighbor 192.168.128.3 no shutdown R1#show ip bgp summary BGP router identifier 192.168.128.1, local AS number 99 BGP table version is 1, main routing table version 1 1 network entrie(s) using 132 bytes of memory 3 paths using 204 bytes of memory BGP-RIB over all using 207 bytes of memory...
  • Page 219 R2(conf-router_bgp)# neighbor 192.168.128.3 no shut R2(conf-router_bgp)#show conf router bgp 99 network 192.168.128.0/24 neighbor AAA peer-group neighbor AAA no shutdown neighbor BBB peer-group neighbor BBB no shutdown neighbor 192.168.128.1 remote-as 99 neighbor 192.168.128.1 peer-group CCC neighbor 192.168.128.1 update-source Loopback 0 neighbor 192.168.128.1 no shutdown neighbor 192.168.128.3 remote-as 100 neighbor 192.168.128.3 peer-group BBB neighbor 192.168.128.3 update-source Loopback 0...
  • Page 220 Received 93 messages, 0 in queue 5 opens, 0 notifications, 5 updates 83 keepalives, 0 route refresh requests Sent 99 messages, 0 in queue 5 opens, 4 notifications, 5 updates 85 keepalives, 0 route refresh requestsCapabilities received from neighbor for IPv4 Unicast : MULTIPROTO_EXT(1) ROUTE_REFRESH(2)
  • Page 221: Content Addressable Memory (Cam)

    Content Addressable Memory (CAM) CAM is a type of memory that stores information in the form of a lookup table. On Dell Networking systems, CAM stores Layer 2 (L2) and Layer 3 (L3) forwarding information, access-lists (ACLs), flows, and routing policies.
  • Page 222 Select 1 to configure 256 entries. Select 2 to configure 512 entries. Even though you can perform CAM carving to allocate the maximum number of NLB entries, Dell Networking recommends you to use a maximum of 64 NLB ARP entries.
  • Page 223: Test Cam Usage

    Privilege mode. The Status column in the command output indicates whether or not you can enable the policy. Example of the test cam-usage Command Dell#test cam-usage service-policy input test-cam-usage stack-unit 2 po 0 Stack-Unit| Portpipe|CAM Partition|Available CAM|Estimated CAM per Port|Status --------------------------------------------------------------------------------...
  • Page 224: View Cam-Acl Settings

    NOTE: If you select the CAM profile from CONFIGURATION mode, the output of this command does not reflect any changes until you save the running-configuration and reload the chassis. Example of show running-config cam-profile Command Dell#show running-config cam-profile cam-profile default microcode default Dell# View CAM-ACL Settings The show cam-acl command shows the cam-acl setting that will be loaded after the next reload.
  • Page 225 The default values for the show cam-acl command are: Dell#show cam-acl -- Chassis Cam ACL -- Current Settings(in block sizes) 1 block = 128 entries...
  • Page 226: View Cam Usage

    View CAM Usage View the amount of CAM space available, used, and remaining in each ACL partition using the show cam-usage command from EXEC Privilege mode. Example of the show cam-usage Command Dell#show cam-usage Stackunit|Portpipe| CAM Partition | Total CAM Used CAM...
  • Page 227: Cam Optimization

    If three resets do not bring up the card, or if the system is running an Dell Networking OS version prior to version 6.3.1.1, the system displays an error message. In this case, manually adjust the CAM configuration on the card to match the system configuration.
  • Page 228: Syslog Error When The Table Is Full

    Syslog Error When the Table is Full In the Dell Networking OS, the table full condition is displayed as CAM full only for LPM. But now the LPM is split into two tables. There are two syslog errors that are displayed: /65 to /128 Table full.
  • Page 229 Dell#write mem 01:13:36: %STKUNIT0-M:CP %FILEMGR-5-FILESAVED: Copied running-config to startup-config in flash by default Dell(conf)# Dell(conf)#end Dell#01:13:44: %STKUNIT0-M:CP %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from console Dell# Display the hardware forwarding table mode in the current boot and in the next boot. EXEC Privilege show hardware forwarding-table mode...
  • Page 230: Control Plane Policing (Copp)

    Control Plane Policing (CoPP) Control plane policing (CoPP) uses access control list (ACL) rules and quality of service (QoS) policies to create filters for a system’s control plane. That filter prevents traffic not specifically identified as legitimate from reaching the system control plane, rate-limits, traffic to an acceptable level. CoPP increases security on the system by protecting the routing processor from unnecessary or DoS traffic, giving priority to important control plane and management traffic.
  • Page 231: Configure Control Plane Policing

    Figure 27. CoPP Implemented Versus CoPP Not Implemented Configure Control Plane Policing The system can process a maximum of 4200 packets per second (PPS). Protocols that share a single queue may experience flaps if one of the protocols receives a high rate of control traffic even though per protocol CoPP is applied.
  • Page 232: Configuring Copp For Protocols

    queue rate limit value. You must complete queue bandwidth tuning carefully because the system cannot open up to handle any rate, including traffic coming at the line rate. CoPP policies are assigned on a per-protocol or a per-queue basis, and are assigned in CONTROL- PLANE mode to each port-pipe.
  • Page 233 Dell(conf-ipv6-acl-cpuqos)#exit Dell(conf)#ipv6 access-list ipv6-vrrp cpu-qos Dell(conf-ipv6-acl-cpuqos)#permit vrrp Dell(conf-ipv6-acl-cpuqos)#exit The following example shows creating the QoS input policy. Dell(conf)#qos-policy-in rate_limit_200k cpu-qos Dell(conf-in-qos-policy-cpuqos)#rate-police 200 40 peak 500 40 Dell(conf-in-qos-policy-cpuqos)#exit Dell(conf)#qos-policy-in rate_limit_400k cpu-qos Dell(conf-in-qos-policy-cpuqos)#rate-police 400 50 peak 600 50 Dell(conf-in-qos-policy-cpuqos)#exit Dell(conf)#qos-policy-in rate_limit_500k cpu-qos...
  • Page 234: Configuring Copp For Cpu Queues

    The following example shows matching the QoS class map to the QoS policy. Dell(conf)#policy-map-input egressFP_rate_policy cpu-qos Dell(conf-policy-map-in-cpuqos)#class-map class_ospf qos-policy rate_limit_500k Dell(conf-policy-map-in-cpuqos)#class-map class_bgp qos-policy rate_limit_400k Dell(conf-policy-map-in-cpuqos)#class-map class_lacp qos-policy rate_limit_200k Dell(conf-policy-map-in-cpuqos)#class-map class-ipv6 qos-policy rate_limit_200k Dell(conf-policy-map-in-cpuqos)#exit The following example shows creating the control plane service policy.
  • Page 235: Displaying Copp Configuration

    Examples of Configuring CoPP for CPU Queues The following example shows creating the QoS policy. Dell#conf Dell(conf)#qos-policy-input cpuq_1 Dell(conf-qos-policy-in)#rate-police 3000 40 peak 500 40 Dell(conf-qos-policy-in)#exit Dell(conf)#qos-policy-input cpuq_2 Dell(conf-qos-policy-in)#rate-police 5000 80 peak 600 50 Dell(conf-qos-policy-in)#exit The following example shows assigning the QoS policy to the queues.
  • Page 236 Dell# To view the queue mapping for the MAC protocols, use the show mac protocol-queue-mapping command. Example of Viewing Queue Mapping for MAC Protocols Dell#show mac protocol-queue-mapping Protocol Destination Mac EtherType Queue EgPort Rate (kbps) -------- ---------------- ----------- ----- ------ -----------...
  • Page 237: Data Center Bridging (Dcb)

    DCB-enabled network is required in a data center. The Dell Networking switches that support a unified fabric and consolidate multiple network infrastructures use a single input/output (I/O) device called a converged network adapter (CNA).
  • Page 238: Priority-Based Flow Control

    • Data Center Bridging Exchange (DCBx) protocol NOTE: Dell Networking OS supports only the PFC, ETS, and DCBx features in data center bridging. Priority-Based Flow Control In a data center network, priority-based flow control (PFC) manages large bursts of one traffic type in multiprotocol links so that it does not affect other traffic types and no frames are lost due to congestion.
  • Page 239 FCoE converged traffic with priority 3. • iSCSI storage traffic with priority 4. In the Dell Networking OS, PFC is implemented as follows: • PFC is supported on specified 802.1p priority traffic (dot1p 0 to 7) and is configured per interface.
  • Page 240: Enhanced Transmission Selection

    Percentage of available bandwidth allocated to a priority group. Group transmission selection algorithm (TSA) Type of queue scheduling a priority group uses. In Dell Networking OS, ETS is implemented as follows: • ETS supports groups of 802.1p priorities that have: Data Center Bridging (DCB)
  • Page 241: Data Center Bridging Exchange Protocol (Dcbx)

    – PFC enabled or disabled – No bandwidth limit or no ETS processing • ETS uses the DCB MIB IEEE 802.1azd2.5. Data Center Bridging Exchange Protocol (DCBx) The data center bridging exchange (DCBx) protocol is disabled by default on the S4810; ETS is also disabled.
  • Page 242: Enabling Data Center Bridging

    NOTE: To save the pfc buffering configuration changes, save the configuration and reboot the system. NOTE: Dell Networking OS Behavior: DCB is not supported if you enable link-level flow control on one or more interfaces. For more information, refer to Ethernet Pause Frames.
  • Page 243: Data Center Bridging: Default Configuration

    Queue : 0 Dell(conf)# NOTE: In Dell Networking OS we support 4 data queues in MXL. PFC is not applied on specific dot1p priorities. ETS: Equal bandwidth is assigned to each port queue and each dot1p priority in a priority group.
  • Page 244: Configuring Priority-Based Flow Control

    2 maps to dot1p priority 4; priority group 4 maps to dot1p priorities 5, 6, and 7. Dell Networking OS Behavior: As soon as you apply a DCB policy with PFC enabled on an interface, DCBx starts exchanging information with PFC-enabled peers. The IEEE802.1Qbb, CEE, and CIN versions...
  • Page 245: Configuring Lossless Queues

    If the traffic congestion is on PORT B , Egress DROP is on PORT A or C, as the PFC is not enabled on PORT B. Refer the following configuration for queue to dot1p mapping: Dell(conf)#do show qos dot1p-queue-mapping Dot1p Priority : 0 Queue : 2...
  • Page 246: Configuring Pfc In A Dcb Map

    The default: No lossless queues are configured. NOTE: Dell Networking OS Behavior: By default, no lossless queues are configured on a port. A limit of two lossless queues is supported on a port. If the amount of priority traffic that you configure to be paused exceeds the two lossless queues, an error message displays.
  • Page 247: Pfc Prerequisites And Restrictions

    In a switch stack, configure all stacked ports with the same PFC configuration. • Dell Networking OS allows you to change the default dot1p priority-queue assignments only if the change satisfies the following requirements in DCB maps already applied to S6000 interfaces: •...
  • Page 248: Applying A Dcb Map On A Port

    INTERFACE dcb-map name configure it with the PFC and ETS settings in the map; for example: Dell# interface tengigabitEthernet 1/1/1 Dell(config-if-te-1/1/1)# dcb-map SAN_A_dcb_map1 Repeat Steps 1 and 2 to apply a DCB map to more than one port. You cannot apply a DCB map on an interface...
  • Page 249: Configuring Lossless Queuesexample

    If the traffic congestion is on PORT B , Egress DROP is on PORT A or C, as the PFC is not enabled on PORT B. Refer the following configuration for queue to dot1p mapping: Dell(conf)#do show qos dot1p-queue-mapping Dot1p Priority : 0 -> On ingress interfaces[Port A and C] we used the PFC on priority level.
  • Page 250: Priority-Based Flow Control Using Dynamic Buffer Method

    When configuring lossless queues on a port interface, consider the following points: • By default, no lossless queues are configured on a port. • A limit of two lossless queues is supported on a port. If the number of lossless queues configured exceeds the maximum supported limit per port (two), an error message is displayed.
  • Page 251: Pause And Resume Of Traffic

    When PFC detects congestion on a queue for a specified priority, it sends a pause frame for the 802.1p priority traffic to the transmitting device. Pause and Resume of Traffic The pause message is used by the sending device to inform the receiving device about a congested, heavily-loaded traffic state that has been identified.
  • Page 252: Behavior Of Tagged Packets

    This default behavior is impacted if you modify the total buffer available for PFC or assign static buffer configurations to the individual PFC queues. Behavior of Tagged Packets The below is example for enabling PFC for priority 2 for tagged packets. Priority (Packet Dot1p) 2 will be mapped to PG6 on PRIO2PG setting.
  • Page 253: Snmp Support For Pfc And Buffer Statistics Tracking

    Buffer Statistics Tracking (BST) feature provides a mechanism to aid in Resource Monitoring and Tuning of Buffer Allocation. The support for Max Use Count mode in Buffer Statistics is introduced in Dell Networking OS 9.3(0.). Max Use Count mode provides the maximum value of the counters accumulated over a period of time.
  • Page 254: Performing Pfc Using Dscp Bits Instead Of 802.1P Bits

    The packet Dot1p to Queue mapping for classification on the ingress must be same as the mapping of Dot1p to the Queue to be halted on the egress used for PFC honoring. Dell Networking OS ensures that these mappings are identical. This section discusses the Dell Networking OS configurations needed for above PFC generation and honoring mechanism to work for the untagged packets.
  • Page 255: Pfc And Ets Configuration Examples

    PFC and ETS Configuration Examples This section contains examples of how to configure and apply DCB policies on an interface. Using PFC to Manage Converged Ethernet Traffic To use PFC for managing converged Ethernet traffic, use the following command: dcb-map stack-unit all dcb-map-name Operations on Untagged Packets The below is example for enabling PFC for priority 2 for tagged packets.
  • Page 256: Configure Enhanced Transmission Selection

    Configure Enhanced Transmission Selection ETS provides a way to optimize bandwidth allocation to outbound 802.1p classes of converged Ethernet traffic. Different traffic types have different service needs. Using ETS, you can create groups within an 802.1p priority class to configure different treatment for traffic with different bandwidth, latency, and best-effort needs.
  • Page 257: Ets Operation With Dcbx

    2 maps to dot1p priority 4; priority group 4 maps to dot1p priorities 5, 6, and 7. Dell Networking OS Behavior: A priority group consists of 802.1p priority values that are grouped for similar bandwidth allocation and scheduling, and that share latency and loss requirements. All 802.1p priorities mapped to the same queue must be in the same priority group.
  • Page 258: Configuring Bandwidth Allocation For Dcbx Cin

    Create a QoS output policy. CONFIGURATION mode Dell(conf)#qos-policy-output test12 The maximum 32 alphanumeric characters. Configure the percentage of bandwidth to allocate to the dot1p priority/queue traffic in the associated L2 class map.
  • Page 259: Configuring Ets In A Dcb Map

    • Dell Networking OS supports hierarchical scheduling on an interface. The control traffic on Dell Networking OS is redirected to control queues as higher priority traffic with strict priority scheduling. After the control queues drain out, the remaining data traffic is scheduled to queues according to the bandwidth and scheduler configuration in the DCB map.
  • Page 260: Hierarchical Scheduling In Ets Output Policies

    • ETS configuration error: If an error occurs in an ETS configuration, the configuration is ignored and the scheduler and bandwidth allocation settings are reset to the ETS default value: 100% of available bandwidth is allocated to priority group 0 and the bandwidth is equally assigned to each dot1p priority.
  • Page 261: Using Ets To Manage Converged Ethernet Traffic

    Priority group 3 Assigns traffic to two priority queues with 50% of the link bandwidth and strict- priority scheduling. In this example, the configured ETS bandwidth allocation and scheduler behavior is as follows: Unused bandwidth Normally, if there is no traffic or unused bandwidth for a priority group, the usage: bandwidth allocated to the group is distributed to the other priority groups according to the bandwidth percentage allocated to each group.
  • Page 262: Dcbx Operation

    DCBx is a prerequisite for using DCB features, such as priority-based flow control (PFC) and enhanced traffic selection (ETS), to exchange link-level configurations in a converged Ethernet environment. DCBx is also deployed in topologies that support lossless operation for FCoE or iSCSI traffic. In these scenarios, all network devices are DCBx-enabled (DCBx is enabled end-to-end).
  • Page 263 On a DCBx port in a manual role, all PFC, application priority, ETS recommend, and ETS configuration TLVs are enabled. When making a configuration change to a DCBx port in a Manual role, Dell Networking recommends shutting down the interface using the shutdown command, change the configuration, then re-activate the interface using the no shutdown command.
  • Page 264: Dcb Configuration Exchange

    The default for the DCBx port role is manual. NOTE: On a DCBx port, application priority TLV advertisements are handled as follows: • The application priority TLV is transmitted only if the priorities in the advertisement match the configured PFC priorities on the port. •...
  • Page 265: Propagation Of Dcb Information

    – The switch is capable of supporting the received DCB configuration values through either a symmetric or asymmetric parameter exchange. A newly elected configuration source propagates configuration changes received from a peer to the other auto-configuration ports. Ports receiving auto-configuration information from the configuration source ignore their current settings and use the configuration source information.
  • Page 266: Dcbx Example

    Legacy DCBx (CIN and CEE) supports the DCBx control state machine that is defined to maintain the sequence number and acknowledge the number sent in the DCBx control TLVs. DCBx Example The following figure shows how to use DCBx. The external 40GbE 40GbE ports on the base module (ports 33 and 37) of two switches are used for uplinks configured as DCBx auto-upstream ports.
  • Page 267 Configure ToR- and FCF-facing interfaces as auto-upstream ports. Configure server-facing interfaces as auto-downstream ports. Configure a port to operate in a configuration-source role. Configure ports to operate in a manual role. Enter INTERFACE Configuration mode. CONFIGURATION mode interface type slot/port/subport Enter LLDP Configuration mode to enable DCBx operation.
  • Page 268 NOTE: You can configure the transmission of more than one TLV type at a time; for example, advertise DCBx-tlv ets-conf ets-reco. You can enable ETS recommend TLVs (ets-reco) only if you enable ETS configuration TLVs (ets-conf). To disable TLV transmission, use the no form of the command; for example, no advertise DCBx- tlv pfc ets-reco.
  • Page 269 [no] advertise DCBx-tlv {ets-conf | ets-reco | pfc} [ets-conf | ets-reco | pfc] [ets-conf | ets-reco | pfc] • ets-conf: enables transmission of ETS Configuration TLVs. • ets-reco: enables transmission of ETS Recommend TLVs. • pfc: enables transmission of PFC TLVs. NOTE: You can configure the transmission of more than one TLV type at a time.
  • Page 270: Verifying The Dcb Configuration

    in a DCBx TLV from a remote peer but received a different, conflicting DCBx version. DSM_DCBx_PFC_PARAMETERS_MATCH and DSM_DCBx_PFC_PARAMETERS_MISMATCH: A local DCBx port received a compatible (match) or incompatible (mismatch) PFC configuration from a peer. DSM_DCBx_ETS_PARAMETERS_MATCH and DSM_DCBx_ETS_PARAMETERS_MISMATCH: A local DCBx port received a compatible (match) or incompatible (mismatch) ETS configuration from a peer.
  • Page 271 Examples of the show Commands The following example shows the show dot1p-queue mapping command. Dell(conf)# show qos dot1p-queue-mapping Dot1p Priority: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Queue : 0 0 0 1 2 3 3 3 The following example shows the show dcb command.
  • Page 272 PG:1 TSA:ETS BW:50 PFC:ON Priorities:3 4 The following example shows the show interfaces pfc summary command. Dell# show interfaces tengigabitethernet 1/4/1 pfc summary Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/4/1 Admin mode is on Admin is enabled Remote is enabled, Priority list is 4...
  • Page 273 Fields Description is on, PFC advertisements are enabled to be sent and received from peers; received PFC configuration takes effect. The admin operational status for a DCBx exchange of PFC configuration is enabled or disabled. Remote is enabled; Priority list Remote Willing Operational status (enabled or disabled) of peer Status is enabled device for DCBx exchange of PFC configuration...
  • Page 274 Priority Received PFC Frames Transmitted PFC Frames -------- ------------------- ---------------------- The following example shows the show interface ets summary command. Dell(conf-qos-policy-out-ets)#do sho int te 1/3/1 ets su Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/3/1 Max Supported TC Groups is 4 Number of Traffic Classes is 8...
  • Page 275 0 Input Conf TLV Pkts, 1955 Output Conf TLV Pkts, 0 Error Conf TLV Pkts 0 Input Reco TLV Pkts, 1955 Output Reco TLV Pkts, 0 Error Reco TLV Pkts Dell(conf)# show interfaces tengigabitethernet 1/1/1 ets detail Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1...
  • Page 276 0T LIVnput Traffic Class TLV Pkts, 0 Output Traffic Class TLV Pkts, 0 Error Traffic Class Pkts The following example shows the show interface ets detail command. Dell(conf)# show interfaces tengigabitethernet 1/1/1 ets detail Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 Max Supported TC Groups is 4 Number of Traffic Classes is 8...
  • Page 277 Priority# Bandwidth Oper status is init Conf TLV Tx Status is disabled Traffic Class TLV Tx Status is disabled 0 Input Conf TLV Pkts, 0 Output Conf TLV Pkts, 0 Error Conf TLV Pkts 0 Input Traffic Class TLV Pkts, 0 Output Traffic Class TLV Pkts, 0 Error Traffic Class TLV Pkts The following table describes the show interface ets detail command fields.
  • Page 278 Number of ETS Error Configuration TLVs received. The following example shows the show stack-unit all stack-ports all pfc details command. Dell(conf)# show stack-unit all stack-ports all pfc details stack unit 1 stack-port all Admin mode is On Admin is enabled, Priority list is 4-5...
  • Page 279 Bandwidth ------------------------------------------------ 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7 100% The following example shows the show interface DCBx detail command (IEEE). Dell(conf-if-te-1/17/1-lldp)#do sho int te 2/12/1 dc d E-ETS Configuration TLV enabled e-ETS Configuration TLV disabled R-ETS Recommendation TLV enabled r-ETS Recommendation TLV disabled P-PFC Configuration TLV enabled...
  • Page 280 I-Application priority for iSCSI enabled i-Application Priority for iSCSI disabled ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/14/1 Remote Mac Address 00:01:e8:8a:df:a0 Port Role is Auto-Upstream DCBx Operational Status is Enabled Is Configuration Source? FALSE Local DCBx Compatibility mode is CEE Local DCBx Configured mode is CEE Peer Operating version is CEE Local DCBx TLVs Transmitted: ErPFi Local DCBx Status...
  • Page 281: Qos Dot1P Traffic Classification And Queue Assignment

    Field Description Local DCBx Configured mode DCBx version configured on the port: CEE, CIN, IEEE v2.5, or Auto (port auto-configures to use the DCBx version received from a peer). Peer Operating version DCBx version that the peer uses to exchange DCB parameters.
  • Page 282: Configuring The Dynamic Buffer Method

    NOTE: Dell Networking does not recommend mapping all ingress traffic to a single queue when using PFC and ETS. However, Dell Networking does recommend using Ingress traffic classification using the service-class dynamic dot1p command (honor dot1p) on all DCB-enabled interfaces. If you use L2 class maps to map dot1p priority traffic to egress queues, take into account...
  • Page 283: Sample Dcb Configuration

    CONFIGURATION mode Dell(conf)# dcb-policy buffer-threshold stack-unit all stack-ports all dcb- policy-name Assign the DCB policy to the DCB buffer threshold profile on interfaces. This setting takes precedence over the default buffer-threshold setting. INTERFACE mode (conf-if-te) dcb-policy buffer-threshold buffer-threshold Configuring Global total buffer size on stack ports.
  • Page 284 Figure 32. PFC and ETS Applied to LAN, IPC, and SAN Priority Traffic QoS Traffic Classification: The service-class dynamic dot1p command has been used in Global Configuration mode to map ingress dot1p frames to the queues shown in the following table. For more information, refer to QoS dot1p Traffic Classification and Queue Assignment.
  • Page 285: Pfc And Ets Configuration Command Examples

    The following examples show PFC and ETS configuration commands to manage your data center traffic. Enabling DCB Dell(conf)#dcb enable Configure DCB map and enable PFC, and ETS Dell(conf)# service-class dynamic dot1p Dell(conf)# interface tengigabitethernet 1/1/1 Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)# service-class dynamic dot1p Apply DCB map to relevant interface...
  • Page 286: Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (Dhcp)

    Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) DHCP is an application layer protocol that dynamically assigns IP addresses and other configuration parameters to network end-stations (hosts) based on configuration policies determined by network administrators. DHCP relieves network administrators of manually configuring hosts, which can be a tedious and error- prone process when hosts often join, leave, and change locations on the network and it reclaims IP addresses that are no longer in use to prevent address exhaustion.
  • Page 287 Option Number and Description Subnet Mask Option 1 Specifies the client’s subnet mask. Router Option 3 Specifies the router IP addresses that may serve as the client’s default gateway. Domain Name Option 6 Server Specifies the domain name servers (DNSs) that are available to the client. Domain Name Option 15 Specifies the domain name that clients should use when resolving hostnames via...
  • Page 288: Assign An Ip Address Using Dhcp

    Option Number and Description Identifiers a user-defined string used by the Relay Agent to forward DHCP client packets to a specific server. L2 DHCP Option 82 Snooping Specifies IP addresses for DHCP messages received from the client that are to be monitored to build a DHCP snooping database.
  • Page 289: Implementation Information

    IP source address validation. If you configure IP source address validation on a member port of a virtual local area network (VLAN) and then to apply an access list to the VLAN, Dell Networking OS displays the first line in the following message. If you first apply an ACL to a VLAN and then enable IP source address validation on one of its member ports, Dell Networking OS displays the second line in the following message.
  • Page 290: Configuring The Server For Automatic Address Allocation

    The following table lists the key responsibilities of DHCP servers. Table 24. DHCP Server Responsibilities DHCP Server Responsibilities Description Address Storage and Management DHCP servers are the owners of the addresses used by DHCP clients.The server stores the addresses and manages their use, keeping track of which addresses have been allocated and which are still available.
  • Page 291 DHCP <POOL> mode show config After an IP address is leased to a client, only that client may release the address. Dell Networking OS performs a IP + MAC source address validation to ensure that no client can release another clients address.
  • Page 292: Specifying A Default Gateway

    DHCP <POOL> default-router address Configure a Method of Hostname Resolution Dell systems are capable of providing DHCP clients with parameters for two methods of hostname resolution—using DNS or NetBIOS WINS. Using DNS for Address Resolution A domain is a group of networks. DHCP clients query DNS IP servers when they need to correlate host names to IP addresses.
  • Page 293: Debugging The Dhcp Server

    NOTE: Dell Networking OS does not prevent you from using a network IP as a host IP; be sure to not use a network IP as a host IP.
  • Page 294: Configuring The Dhcp Client System

    This section describes how to configure and view an interface as a DHCP client to receive an IP address. Dell Networking OS Behavior: The ip address dhcp command enables DHCP server-assigned dynamic addresses on an interface. The setting persists after a switch reboot. To stop DHCP transactions and save the dynamically acquired IP address, use the shutdown command on the interface.
  • Page 295 To manually configure a static IP address on an interface, use the ip address command. A prompt displays to release an existing dynamically acquired IP address. If you confirm, the ability to receive a DHCP server-assigned IP address is removed. To enable acquiring a dynamic IP address from a DHCP server on an interface configured with a static IP address, use the ip address dhcp command.
  • Page 296: Dhcp Client On A Management Interface

    DHCP Client Operation with Other Features The DHCP client operates with other Dell Networking OS features, as the following describes. Stacking The DHCP client daemon runs only on the master unit and handles all DHCP packet transactions. It periodically synchronizes the lease file with the standby unit.
  • Page 297: Configure The System For User Port Stacking (Option 230)

    • If you enable DHCP snooping globally on a switch and you enable a DHCP client on an interface, the trust port, source MAC address, and snooping table validations are not performed on the interface by DHCP snooping for packets destined to the DHCP client daemon. The following criteria determine packets destined for the DHCP client: –...
  • Page 298: Option 82

    Option 82 RFC 3046 (the relay agent information option, or Option 82) is used for class-based IP address assignment. The code for the relay agent information option is 82, and is comprised of two sub-options, circuit ID and remote ID. Circuit ID This is the interface on which the client-originated message is received.
  • Page 299 packet arrived on the correct port. Packets that do not pass this check are forwarded to the server for validation. This checkpoint prevents an attacker from spoofing a client and declining or releasing the real client’s address. Server-originated packets (DHCPOFFER, DHCPACK, and DHCPNACK) that arrive on a not trusted port are also dropped.
  • Page 300 Delete all of the entries in the binding table. EXEC Privilege mode clear ipv6 dhcp snooping binding Dell# clear ipv6 dhcp snooping? binding Clear the snooping binding database Displaying the Contents of the Binding Table To display the contents of the binding table, use the following command.
  • Page 301 Example of the show ipv6 dhcp snooping binding Command View the DHCP snooping statistics with the show ipv6 dhcp snooping command. Dell#show ipv6 dhcp snooping binding Codes : S - Static D – Dynamic IPv6 Address...
  • Page 302: Drop Dhcp Packets On Snooped Vlans Only

    To view the number of entries in the table, use the show ip dhcp snooping binding command. This output displays the snooping binding table created using the ACK packets from the trusted port. Dell#show ip dhcp snooping binding Codes : S - Static D - Dynamic...
  • Page 303: Configuring Dynamic Arp Inspection

    Validate ARP frames against the DHCP snooping binding table. INTERFACE VLAN mode arp inspection Examples of Viewing the ARP Information To view entries in the ARP database, use the show arp inspection database command. Dell#show arp inspection database Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)
  • Page 304: Source Address Validation

    Dynamic ARP inspection is supported on Layer 2 and Layer 3. Source Address Validation Using the DHCP binding table, Dell Networking OS can perform three types of source address validation (SAV). Table 25. Three Types of Source Address Validation...
  • Page 305: Enabling Ip Source Address Validation

    DHCP MAC source address validation (SAV) validates a DHCP packet’s source hardware address against the client hardware address field (CHADDR) in the payload. Dell Networking OS ensures that the packet’s source MAC address is checked against the CHADDR field in the DHCP header only for packets from snooped VLANs.
  • Page 306: Viewing The Number Of Sav Dropped Packets

    INTERFACE mode ip dhcp source-address-validation ipmac vlan vlan-id Dell Networking OS creates an ACL entry for each IP+MAC address pair and optionally with its VLAN ID in the binding table and applies it to the interface. To display the IP+MAC ACL for an interface for the entire system, use the show ip dhcp snooping source-address-validation [interface] command in EXEC Privilege mode.
  • Page 307: Clearing The Number Of Sav Dropped Packets

    To clear the number of SAV dropped packets, use the clear ip dhcp snooping source-address- validation discard-counters command. Dell>clear ip dhcp snooping source-address-validation discard-counters To clear the number of SAV dropped packets on a particular interface, use the clear ip dhcp snooping source-address-validation discard-counters interface interface command.
  • Page 308: Equal Cost Multi-Path (Ecmp)

    0 lag checksum 0 nh-ecmp checksum 0 Dell Networking OS Behavior: In the Dell Networking OS versions prior to 8.2.1.2, the ExaScale default hash-algorithm is 0. Beginning with Dell Networking OS version 8.2.1.2, the default hash-algorithm is 24.
  • Page 309: Configuring The Hash Algorithm Seed

    This behavior means that for a given flow, even though the prefixes are sorted, two unrelated chassis can select different hops. Dell Networking OS provides a command line interface (CLI)-based solution for modifying the hash seed to ensure that on each configured system, the ECMP selection is same. When configured, the same seed is set for ECMP, LAG, and NH, and is used for incoming traffic only.
  • Page 310: Managing Ecmp Group Paths

    These two ecmp-groups are not related in any way. Example of Viewing Link Bundle Monitoring Dell# show link-bundle-distribution ecmp-group 1 Link-bundle trigger threshold - 60 ECMP bundle - 1 Utilization[In Percent] - 44 Alarm State - Active...
  • Page 311: Modifying The Ecmp Group Threshold

    You can configure ecmp-group with id 2 for link bundle monitoring. This ecmp-group is different from the ecmp-group index 2 that is created by configuring routes and is automatically generated. These two ecmp-groups are not related in any way. Dell(conf-ecmp-group-5)#show config ecmp-group 5 interface tengigabitethernet 1/2/1...
  • Page 312: Support For Ecmp In Host Table

    Dell Networking OS releases earlier than Release 9.3(0.1) stores IPv6 /128 entries in Host table since it cannot be written in LPM table, and IPv4 0/32 route entries are written in LPM table itself to support the ECMP since ECMP was not supported in Host table.
  • Page 313: Fcoe Transit

    FCoE Transit The Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) Transit feature is supported on Ethernet interfaces. When you enable the switch for FCoE transit, the switch functions as a FIP snooping bridge. NOTE: FIP snooping is not supported on Fibre Channel interfaces or in a switch stack. Fibre Channel over Ethernet FCoE provides a converged Ethernet network that allows the combination of storage-area network (SAN) and LAN traffic on a Layer 2 link by encapsulating Fibre Channel data into Ethernet frames.
  • Page 314 requirement for point-to-point connections by creating a unique virtual link for each connection between an FCoE end-device and an FCF via a transit switch. FIP provides functionality for discovering and logging into an FCF. After discovering and logging in, FIP allows FCoE traffic to be sent and received between FCoE end-devices (ENodes) and the FCF.
  • Page 315: Fip Snooping On Ethernet Bridges

    Figure 35. FIP Discovery and Login Between an ENode and an FCF FIP Snooping on Ethernet Bridges In a converged Ethernet network, intermediate Ethernet bridges can snoop on FIP packets during the login process on an FCF. Then, using ACLs, a transit bridge can permit only authorized FCoE traffic to be transmitted between an FCoE end-device and an FCF.
  • Page 316 The top-of-rack (ToR) switch operates as an FCF for FCoE traffic. The switch operates as a lossless FIP snooping bridge to transparently forward FCoE frames between the ENode servers and the FCF switch. Figure 36. FIP Snooping on a Dell Networking Switch The following sections describe how to configure the FIP snooping feature on a switch: •...
  • Page 317: Fip Snooping In A Switch Stack

    Example. Statistical information is available for FIP Snooping-related information. For available commands, refer to the FCoE Transit chapter in the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide. FIP Snooping Prerequisites Before you enable FCoE transit and configure FIP snooping on a switch, ensure that certain conditions are met.
  • Page 318: Important Points To Remember

    You must apply the CAM-ACL space for the FCoE region before enabling the FIP-Snooping feature. If you do not apply CAM-ACL space, the following error message is displayed: Dell(conf)#feature fip-snooping % Error: Cannot enable fip snooping. CAM Region not allocated for Fcoe.
  • Page 319: Enabling The Fcoe Transit Feature

    Enabling the FCoE Transit Feature The following sections describe how to enable FCoE transit. NOTE: FCoE transit is disabled by default. To enable this feature, you must follow the Configure FIP Snooping. As soon as you enable the FCoE transit feature on a switch-bridge, existing VLAN-specific and FIP snooping configurations are applied.
  • Page 320: Configure A Port For A Bridge-To-Fcf Link

    Configure a Port for a Bridge-to-FCF Link If a port is directly connected to an FCF, configure the port mode as FCF. Initially, all FCoE traffic is blocked; only FIP frames are allowed to pass. FCoE traffic is allowed on the port only after a successful fabric login (FLOGI) request/response and confirmed use of the configured FC-MAP value for the VLAN.
  • Page 321: Displaying Fip Snooping Information

    To enable FCoE transit on the switch and configure the FCoE transit parameters on ports, follow these steps. Configure FCoE. FCoE configuration: copy flash:/ CONFIG_TEMPLATE/ FCoE_DCB_Config running-config The configuration files are stored in the flash memory in the CONFIG_TEMPLATE file. NOTE: DCB/DCBx is enabled when either of these configurations is applied.
  • Page 322 Displays information on the FCoE VLANs on which show fip-snooping vlan FIP snooping is enabled. Examples of the show fip-snooping Commands The following example shows the show fip-snooping sessions command. Dell#show fip-snooping sessions Enode MAC Enode Intf FCF MAC FCF Intf...
  • Page 323 Worldwide port name of the CNA port. Port WWNN Worldwide node name of the CNA port. The following example shows the show fip-snooping config command. Dell# show fip-snooping config FIP Snooping Feature enabled Status: Enabled FIP Snooping Global enabled Status: Enabled Global FC-MAP Value: 0X0EFC00...
  • Page 324 Fibre Channel session ID assigned by the FCF. The following example shows the show fip-snooping statistics interface vlan command (VLAN and port). Dell# show fip-snooping statistics interface vlan 100 Number of Vlan Requests Number of Vlan Notifications Number of Multicast Discovery Solicits...
  • Page 325 Number of VN Port Session Timeouts Number of Session failures due to Hardware Config :0 The following example shows the show fip-snooping statistics port-channel command. Dell# show fip-snooping statistics interface port-channel 22 Number of Vlan Requests Number of Vlan Notifications...
  • Page 326 Number of Session failures due to Hardware Number of session failures due to hardware Config configuration that occurred on the interface. The following example shows the show fip-snooping system command. Dell# show fip-snooping system Global Mode : Enabled FCOE VLAN List (Operational) : 1, 100 FCFs...
  • Page 327: Fcoe Transit Configuration Example

    The following example shows the show fip-snooping vlan command. Dell# show fip-snooping vlan * = Default VLAN VLAN FC-MAP FCFs Enodes Sessions ---- ------ ---- ------ -------- 0X0EFC00 FCoE Transit Configuration Example The following illustration shows a switch used as a FIP snooping bridge for FCoE traffic between an ENode (server blade) and an FCF (ToR switch).
  • Page 328 Example of Enabling the FIP Snooping Feature on the Switch (FIP Snooping Bridge) Dell(conf)# feature fip-snooping Example of Enabling FIP Snooping on the FCoE VLAN Dell(conf)# interface vlan 10 Dell(conf-if-vl-10)# fip-snooping enable Example of Enabling an FC-MAP Value on a VLAN...
  • Page 329: Flex Hash And Optimized Boot-Up

    L4 header, which contains a flow identification field. In Dell Networking OS Release 9.3(0.0), you can enable bins 2 and 3 by using the load-balance ingress-port enable command in Global Configuration mode. To configure the flex hash functionality, you must enable these bins.
  • Page 330: Configuring Fast Boot And Lacp Fast Switchover

    L4 header to be used for hash calculation, and a meaningful description to associate the protocol number with the name. CONFIGURATION mode Dell(conf)# load-balance flexhash ipv4/ipv6 ip-proto <protocol number> <description string> offset1 <offset1 value> [offset2 <offset2 value>] To delete the configured flex hash setting, use the no version of the command.
  • Page 331: Booting Process When Optimized Boot Time Mechanism Is Enabled

    Global Configuration mode or by using the reset command in uBoot mode on a switch that is running Dell Networking OS Release 9.3(0.0) or later, or when you perform a planned upgrade (and not an abrupt or unexpected shutdown) from an older release of Dell Networking OS to Release 9.3(0.0) or later.
  • Page 332: Interoperation Of Applications With Fast Boot And System States

    A file is generated to indicate that the system is undergoing a fast boot, which is used after the system comes up. After the Dell Networking OS image is loaded and activated, and the appropriate software components come up, the following additional actions are performed: •...
  • Page 333: Lacp And Ipv6 Routing

    To ensure that the adjacent systems do not time out and purge their ND cache entries, the age-out time or the reachable time for ND cache entries must be configured to be as high as necessary. Dell recommends that you configure the reachable timer to be 90 seconds or longer.
  • Page 334: Software Upgrade

    (30-60 seconds) after the system comes up. Delayed Installation of ECMP Routes Into BGP The current FIB component of Dell Networking OS has some inherent inefficiencies when handling a large number of ECMP routes (i.e., routes with multiple equal-cost next hops). To circumvent this for the configuration of fast boot, changes are made in BGP to delay the installation of ECMP routes.
  • Page 335: Rdma Over Converged Ethernet (Roce) Overview

    While the above change will ensure that at least one path to each destination gets into the FIB as quickly as possible, it does prevent additional paths from being used even if they are available. This downside has been deemed to be acceptable. RDMA Over Converged Ethernet (RoCE) Overview This functionality is supported on the platform.
  • Page 336: Preserving 802.1Q Vlan Tag Value For Lite Subinterfaces

    VLAN ID is appended to the packet and transmitted out of the interface as a tagged packet with the dot1Q value preserved. To provide lossless service for RRoCE, the QoS service policy must be configured in the ingress and egress directions on lite sub interfaces. Preserving 802.1Q VLAN Tag Value for Lite Subinterfaces This functionality is supported on the platform.
  • Page 337: Force10 Resilient Ring Protocol (Frrp)

    Force10 Resilient Ring Protocol (FRRP) FRRP provides fast network convergence to Layer 2 switches interconnected in a ring topology, such as a metropolitan area network (MAN) or large campuses. FRRP is similar to what can be achieved with the spanning tree protocol (STP), though even with optimizations, STP can take up to 50 seconds to converge (depending on the size of network and node of failure) and may require 4 to 5 seconds to reconverge.
  • Page 338: Ring Status

    The Member VLAN is the VLAN used to transmit data as described earlier. The Control VLAN is used to perform the health checks on the ring. The Control VLAN can always pass through all ports in the ring, including the secondary port of the Master node. Ring Status The ring failure notification and the ring status checks provide two ways to ensure the ring remains up and active in the event of a switch or port failure.
  • Page 339: Multiple Frrp Rings

    Multiple FRRP Rings Up to 255 rings are allowed per system and multiple rings can be run on one system. More than the recommended number of rings may cause interface instability. You can configure multiple rings with a single switch connection; a single ring can have multiple FRRP groups; multiple rings can be connected with a common link.
  • Page 340: Important Frrp Points

    Figure 38. Example of Multiple Rings Connected by Single Switch Important FRRP Points FRRP provides a convergence time that can generally range between 150ms and 1500ms for Layer 2 networks. The Master node originates a high-speed frame that circulates around the ring. This frame, appropriately, sets up or breaks down the ring.
  • Page 341: Important Frrp Concepts

    • STP disabled on ring interfaces. • Master node secondary port is in blocking state during Normal operation. • Ring health frames (RHF) – Hello RHF: sent at 500ms (hello interval); Only the Master node transmits and processes these. – Topology Change RHF: triggered updates; processed at all nodes. Important FRRP Concepts The following table lists some important FRRP concepts.
  • Page 342: Implementing Frrp

    • FRRP is media and speed independent. • FRRP is a Dell proprietary protocol that does not interoperate with any other vendor. • You must disable the spanning tree protocol (STP) on both the Primary and Secondary interfaces before you can enable FRRP.
  • Page 343: Creating The Frrp Group

    • Clearing the FRRP Counters • Viewing the FRRP Configuration • Viewing the FRRP Information Creating the FRRP Group Create the FRRP group on each switch in the ring. To create the FRRP group, use the command. • Create the FRRP group with this Ring ID. CONFIGURATION mode protocol frrp ring-id Ring ID: the range is from 1 to 255.
  • Page 344: Configuring And Adding The Member Vlans

    Slot/Port[/subport], Range: Slot and Port ID for the interface. Range is entered Slot/Port[/ subport]-Slot/Port[/subport]. Assign the Primary and Secondary ports and the control VLAN for the ports on the ring. CONFIG-FRRP mode. interface primary interface slot/port[/subport] secondary int slot/port[/ subport] control-vlan vlan id Interface: •...
  • Page 345: Setting The Frrp Timers

    VLAN ID: the range is from 1 to 4094. Tag the specified interface or range of interfaces to this VLAN. CONFIG-INT-VLAN mode. tagged interface slot/port[/subport] {range} Interface: • Slot/Port[/subport]: Slot and Port ID for the interface. Range is entered Slot/Port[/subport]- Slot/Port[/subport].
  • Page 346: Clearing The Frrp Counters

    • Enter the desired intervals for Hello-Interval or Dead-Interval times. CONFIG-FRRP mode. timer {hello-interval|dead-interval} milliseconds – Hello-Interval: the range is from 50 to 2000, in increments of 50 (default is 500). – Dead-Interval: the range is from 50 to 6000, in increments of 50 (default is 1500). Clearing the FRRP Counters To clear the FRRP counters, use one of the following commands.
  • Page 347: Troubleshooting Frrp

    Troubleshooting FRRP To troubleshoot FRRP, use the following information. Configuration Checks • Each Control Ring must use a unique VLAN ID. • Only two interfaces on a switch can be Members of the same control VLAN. • There can be only one Master node for any FRRP group. •...
  • Page 348 no ip address switchport no shutdown interface Vlan 101 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 2/14/1,31/1 no shutdown interface Vlan 201 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 2/14/1,31/1 no shutdown protocol frrp 101 interface primary TenGigabitEthernet 2/14/1 secondary TenGigabitEthernet 2/31/1 control-vlan 101 member-vlan 201 mode transit no disable...
  • Page 349: Garp Vlan Registration Protocol (Gvrp)

    Dynamic VLANs are aged out after the LeaveAll timer expires three times without receipt of a Join message. To display status, use the show gvrp statistics {interface interface | summary} command. Dell(conf)#protocol spanning-tree pvst Dell(conf-pvst)#no disable % Error: GVRP running. Cannot enable PVST.
  • Page 350: Configure Gvrp

    Configure GVRP To begin, enable GVRP. To facilitate GVRP communications, enable GVRP globally on each switch. Then, GVRP configuration is per interface on a switch-by-switch basis. Enable GVRP on each port that connects to a switch where you want GVRP information exchanged. In the following example, GVRP is configured on VLAN trunk ports.
  • Page 351: Enabling Gvrp Globally

    To configure GVRP globally, use the following command. • Enable GVRP for the entire switch. CONFIGURATION mode gvrp enable Example of Configuring GVRP Dell(conf)#protocol gvrp Dell(config-gvrp)#no disable Dell(config-gvrp)#show config protocol gvrp no disable Dell(config-gvrp)# To inspect the global configuration, use the show gvrp brief command.
  • Page 352: Configure A Garp Timer

    The device then restarts the LeaveAll timer to begin a new cycle. The LeaveAll timer must be greater than or equal to 5x of the Leave timer. The Dell Networking OS default is 10000ms. Example of the garp timer Command...
  • Page 353 Dell Networking OS displays this message if an attempt is made to configure an invalid GARP timer: Dell(conf)#garp timers join 300 % Error: Leave timer should be >= 3*Join timer. GARP VLAN Registration Protocol (GVRP)
  • Page 354: Internet Group Management Protocol (Igmp)

    3376, respectively. • Dell Networking OS does not support IGMP version 3 and versions 1 or 2 on the same subnet. • IGMP on Dell Networking OS supports 95 interfaces on S4810 and S4820 and an unlimited number of groups on all other platforms.
  • Page 355 Figure 40. IGMP Messages in IP Packets Join a Multicast Group There are two ways that a host may join a multicast group: it may respond to a general query from its querier or it may send an unsolicited report to its querier. Responding to an IGMP Query The following describes how a host can join a multicast group.
  • Page 356: Igmp Version 3

    response, the querier removes the group from the list associated with forwarding port and stops forwarding traffic for that group to the subnet. IGMP Version 3 Conceptually, IGMP version 3 behaves the same as version 2. However, there are differences. •...
  • Page 357 Figure 42. IGMP Version 3–Capable Multicast Routers Address Structure Joining and Filtering Groups and Sources The following illustration shows how multicast routers maintain the group and source information from unsolicited reports. The first unsolicited report from the host indicates that it wants to receive traffic for group 224.1.1.1. The host’s second report indicates that it is only interested in traffic from group 224.1.1.1, source 10.11.1.1.
  • Page 358 Figure 43. Membership Reports: Joining and Filtering Leaving and Staying in Groups The following illustration shows how multicast routers track and refresh state changes in response to group-and-specific and general queries. Host 1 sends a message indicating it is leaving group 224.1.1.1 and that the included filter for 10.11.1.1 and 10.11.1.2 are no longer necessary.
  • Page 359: Configure Igmp

    Figure 44. Membership Queries: Leaving and Staying Configure IGMP Configuring IGMP is a two-step process. Enable multicast routing using the ip multicast-routing command. Enable a multicast routing protocol. Related Configuration Tasks • Viewing IGMP Enabled Interfaces • Selecting an IGMP Version •...
  • Page 360: Viewing Igmp Enabled Interfaces

    Dell# Selecting an IGMP Version Dell Networking OS enables IGMP version 2 by default, which supports version 1 and 2 hosts, but is not compatible with version 3 on the same subnet. If hosts require IGMP version 3, you can switch to IGMP version 3.
  • Page 361: Viewing Igmp Groups

    View both learned and statically configured IGMP groups. EXEC Privilege mode show ip igmp groups Example of the show ip igmp groups Command Dell#show ip igmp groups Total Number of Groups: 2 IGMP Connected Group Membership Group Address Interface Mode...
  • Page 362: Enabling Igmp Immediate-Leave

    If IGMP snooping is enabled on a PIM-enabled VLAN interface, data packets using the router as an Layer 2 hop may be dropped. To avoid this scenario, Dell Networking recommends that users enable IGMP snooping on server-facing end-point VLANs only.
  • Page 363: Configuring Igmp Snooping

    • Specifying a Port as Connected to a Multicast Router • Configuring the Switch as Querier Example of ip igmp snooping enable Command Dell(conf)#ip igmp snooping enable Dell(conf)#do show running-config igmp ip igmp snooping enable Dell(conf)# Removing a Group-Port Association To configure or view the remove a group-port association feature, use the following commands.
  • Page 364: Disabling Multicast Flooding

    Dell(conf-if-vl-100)# Disabling Multicast Flooding If the switch receives a multicast packet that has an IP address of a group it has not learned (unregistered frame), the switch floods that packet out of all ports on the VLAN. When you configure the no ip igmp snooping flood command, the system drops the packets immediately.
  • Page 365: Fast Convergence After Mstp Topology Changes

    Fast Convergence after MSTP Topology Changes When a port transitions to the Forwarding state as a result of an STP or MSTP topology change, Dell Networking OS sends a general query out of all ports except the multicast router ports. The host sends a response to the general query and the forwarding database is updated without having to wait for the query interval to expire.
  • Page 366: Protocol Separation

    management port. In this chapter, all the references to traffic indicate switch-initiated traffic and responses to switch-destined traffic with management port IP address as the source IP address. In customer deployment topologies, it might be required that the traffic for certain management applications needs to exit out of the management port only.
  • Page 367: Enabling And Disabling Management Egress Interface Selection

    Application Name Port Number Client Server 8888 secure HTTP server port for confd application If you configure a source interface is for any EIS management application, EIS might not coexist with that interface and the behavior is undefined in such a case. You can configure the source interface for the following applications: FTP, ICMP (ping and traceroute utilities), NTP, RADIUS, TACACS, Telnet, TFTP, syslog, and SNMP traps.
  • Page 368: Handling Of Management Route Configuration

    • If the management port is down or route lookup fails in the management EIS routing table, packets are dropped. • For all non-management applications, traffic exits out of either front-end data port or management port based on route lookup in default routing table. •...
  • Page 369: Handling Of Switch-Destined Traffic

    • To ensure that protocol separation is done only for switch initiated traffic where the application acts as client, only the destination TCP/UDP port is compared and not the source TCP/UDP port. The source TCP/UDP port becomes a known port number when the box acts as server. •...
  • Page 370: Handling Of Transit Traffic (Traffic Separation)

    The fallback route between the management and data networks is used in such a case. At any given time, end users can access Dell Networking OS applications using either ip1 or ip2. Return traffic for such end-user-originated sessions destined to management port ip1 is handled using the EIS route lookup.
  • Page 371 Traffic type / Switch initiated traffic Switch-destined traffic Transit Traffic Application type management port is down or route lookup fails, packets are dropped Non-EIS Front-end default route If source TCP/UDP port matches a Traffic from management will take higher management application and the management port application precedence over...
  • Page 372: Behavior Of Various Applications For Switch-Initiated Traffic

    Non-management application traffic exits out of either front-end data port or management port based on routing table. If there is a default route on both the management and front-end data port, the default for the data port is preferred route. Behavior of Various Applications for Switch-Initiated Traffic This section describes the different system behaviors that occur when traffic is originating from the switch:...
  • Page 373: Behavior Of Various Applications For Switch-Destined Traffic

    Behavior of Various Applications for Switch-Destined Traffic This section describes the different system behaviors that occur when traffic is terminated on the switch. Traffic has not originated from the switch and is not transiting the switch. Switch-destined traffic is applicable only for applications which act as server for the TCP session and also for ICMP-based applications like ping and traceroute.
  • Page 374: Designating A Multicast Router Interface

    To designate an interface as a multicast router interface, use the following command. Dell Networking OS also has the capability of listening in on the incoming IGMP general queries and designate those interfaces as the multicast router interface when the frames have a non-zero IP source address.
  • Page 375: Interfaces

    Interfaces This chapter describes interface types, both physical and logical, and how to configure them with Dell Networking Operating System (OS). • The system supports 10 Gigabit Ethernet and 40 Gigabit Ethernet interfaces. NOTE: Only Dell-qualified optics are supported on these interfaces. Non-Dell optics are set to error-disabled state by default.
  • Page 376: Interface Types

    NOTE: To end output from the system, such as the output from the show interfaces command, enter CTRL+C and Dell Networking OS returns to the command prompt. NOTE: The CLI output may be incorrectly displayed as 0 (zero) for the Rx/Tx power values. To obtain the correct power information, perform a simple network management protocol (SNMP) query.
  • Page 377 To view which interfaces are enabled for Layer 3 data transmission, use the show ip interfaces brief command in EXEC Privilege mode. In the following example, TenGigabitEthernet interface 1/6/1 is in Layer 3 mode because an IP address has been assigned to it and the interface’s status is operationally Dell#show ip interface brief Interface IP-Address...
  • Page 378: Resetting An Interface To Its Factory Default State

    8 mac learning-limit 10 no-station-move no shutdown Reset an interface to its factory default state. CONFIGURATION mode default interface interface-type slot/port[/subport] Dell(conf)#default interface tengigabitethernet 1/5/1 Verify the configuration. INTERFACE mode show config Dell(conf-if-te-1/5/1)#show config interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/5/1 no ip address shutdown All the applied configurations are removed and the interface is set to the factory default state.
  • Page 379: Enabling A Physical Interface

    Port Channel Interfaces. Dell Networking OS Behavior: The system uses a single MAC address for all physical interfaces. Configuration Task List for Physical Interfaces By default, all interfaces are operationally disabled and traffic does not pass through them.
  • Page 380: 40G To 1G Breakout Cable Adaptor

    QSFP 0 Vendor Rev Overview of Layer Modes On all systems running Dell Networking OS, you can place physical interfaces, port channels, and VLANs in Layer 2 mode or Layer 3 mode. By default, VLANs are in Layer 2 mode.
  • Page 381: Configuring Layer 2 (Data Link) Mode

    To set Layer 2 data transmissions through an individual interface, use the following command. • Enable Layer 2 data transmissions through an individual interface. INTERFACE mode switchport Example of a Basic Layer 2 Interface Configuration Dell(conf-if)#show config interface Port-channel 1 no ip address switchport no shutdown Dell(conf-if)# Configuring Layer 2 (Interface) Mode To configure an interface in Layer 2 mode, use the following commands.
  • Page 382: Configuring Layer 3 (Interface) Mode

    EXEC mode as shown in View Basic Interface Information. To view IP information on an interface in Layer 3 mode, use the show ip interface command in EXEC Privilege mode. Dell>show ip int vlan 58 Vlan 58 is up, line protocol is up Interfaces...
  • Page 383: Egress Interface Selection (Eis)

    Internet address is 1.1.49.1/24 Broadcast address is 1.1.49.255 Address determined by config file MTU is 1554 bytes Inbound access list is not set Proxy ARP is enabled Split Horizon is enabled Poison Reverse is disabled ICMP redirects are not sent ICMP unreachables are not sent Egress Interface Selection (EIS) EIS allows you to isolate the management and front-end port domains by preventing switch-initiated...
  • Page 384: Management Interfaces

    You can configure this interface using the CLI, but the configuration options on this interface are limited. You cannot configure Gateway addresses and IP addresses if it appears in the main routing table of Dell Networking OS. In addition, proxy ARP is not supported on this interface.
  • Page 385 IP address of the new RPM’s management interface— the system will still recognizes the virtual-IP address. Dell#show interfaces managementethernet 1/1 ManagementEthernet 1/1 is up, line protocol is up Hardware is DellForce10Eth, address is 00:01:e8:a0:bf:f3...
  • Page 386: Configuring A Management Interface On An Ethernet Port

    To display the routing table, use the show ip route command in EXEC Privilege mode. Dell#show int TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 is up, line protocol is up Description: This is the Managment Interface...
  • Page 387: Vlan Interfaces

    NOTE: You cannot simultaneously use egress rate shaping and ingress rate policing on the same VLAN. Dell Networking OS supports Inter-VLAN routing (Layer 3 routing in VLANs). You can add IP addresses to VLANs and use them in routing protocols in the same manner that physical interfaces are used. For more information about configuring different routing protocols, refer to the chapters on the specific protocol.
  • Page 388: Null Interfaces

    A LAG is “a group of links that appear to a MAC client as if they were a single link” according to IEEE 802.3ad. In Dell Networking OS, a LAG is referred to as a port channel interface. A port channel provides redundancy by aggregating physical interfaces into one logical interface. If one physical interface goes down in the port channel, another physical interface carries the traffic.
  • Page 389: Port Channel Benefits

    1000 speed or auto negotiate are disabled. Dell Networking OS brings up the interfaces interfaces that are set to auto negotiate so that their speed is identical to the speed of the first channel member in the port channel.
  • Page 390: Configuration Tasks For Port Channel Interfaces

    The physical interfaces in a port channel can be on any line card in the chassis, but must be the same physical type. NOTE: Port channels can contain a mix of Ethernet interfaces, but Dell Networking OS disables the interfaces that are not the same speed of the first channel member in the port channel (refer to 10/100/1000 Mbps Interfaces in Port Channels).
  • Page 391 EXEC Privilege mode, use the show running-config interface interface command. When an interface is added to a port channel, Dell Networking OS recalculates the hash algorithm. To add a physical interface to a port, use the following commands.
  • Page 392: Reassigning An Interface To A New Port Channel

    Time since last interface status change: 04:31:57 Dell> When more than one interface is added to a Layer 2-port channel, Dell Networking OS selects one of the active interfaces in the port channel to be the primary port. The primary port replies to flooding and sends protocol data units (PDUs).
  • Page 393: Configuring The Minimum Oper Up Links In A Port Channel

    4 to port channel 3. Dell(conf-if-po-4)#show config interface Port-channel 4 no ip address channel-member TenGigabitEthernet 1/8/1 no shutdown Dell(conf-if-po-4)#no chann tengi 1/8/1 Dell(conf-if-po-4)#int port 3 Dell(conf-if-po-3)#channel tengi 1/8/1 Dell(conf-if-po-3)#sho conf interface Port-channel 3 no ip address channel-member TenGigabitEthernet 1/8/1...
  • Page 394 EXEC mode Dell(conf)# interface tengigabitethernet 1/1/1 Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)#switchport Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)# vlan tagged 2-5,100,4010 Dell#show interfaces switchport te 1/1/1 Codes: U - Untagged, T - Tagged x - Dot1x untagged, X - Dot1x tagged G - GVRP tagged, M - Trunk, H - VSN tagged...
  • Page 395: Assigning An Ip Address To A Port Channel

    Dell Networking OS allows you to modify the hashing algorithms used for flows and for fragments. The load-balance and hash-algorithm commands are available for modifying the distribution algorithms.
  • Page 396 [ecmp{crc16|crc16cc|crc32LSB|crc32MSB|crc-upper|dest-ip|lsb| xor1|xor2|xor4|xor8|xor16}] Example of the hash-algorithm Command Dell(conf)#hash-algorithm ecmp xor 26 lag crc 26 nh-ecmp checksum 26 Dell(conf)# The hash-algorithm command is specific to ECMP group. The default ECMP hash configuration is crc- lower. This command takes the lower 32 bits of the hash key to compute the egress port. Other options for ECMP hash-algorithms are: •...
  • Page 397: Bulk Configuration

    • xor2 — Upper 8 bits of CRC16-BISYNC and lower 8 bits of xor2 • xor4 —Upper 8 bits of CRC16-BISYNC and lower 8 bits of xor4 • xor8 — Upper 8 bits of CRC16-BISYNC and lower 8 bits of xor8 •...
  • Page 398 The following is an example showing how duplicate entries are omitted from the interface-range prompt. Example of the Interface-Range Prompt for Duplicate Interfaces Dell(conf)#interface range vlan 1 , vlan 1 , vlan 3 , vlan 3 Dell(conf-if-range-vl-1,vl-3)# Dell(conf)#interface range tengigabitethernet 2/1/1 - 2/3/2 ,...
  • Page 399: Defining Interface Range Macros

    The following example shows how to use commas to add VLAN and port-channel interfaces to the range. Example of Adding VLAN and Port-Channel Interface Ranges Dell(config-if-range-te-1/1/1-1/2/1)# interface range Vlan 2 – 100 , Port 1 – 25 Dell(config-if-range-te-1/1/1-1/2/1-vl-2-100-po-1-25)# no shutdown Defining Interface Range Macros You can define an interface-range macro to automatically select a range of interfaces for configuration.
  • Page 400 — Page down • q — Quit Dell#monitor interface Te 3/1/1 Dell uptime is 1 day(s), 4 hour(s), 31 minute(s) Monitor time: 00:00:00 Refresh Intvl.: 2s Interface: Te 3/1/1, Disabled, Link is Down, Linespeed is 1000 Mbit Traffic statistics: Current...
  • Page 401: Maintenance Using Tdr

    Fanning out 40G Ports Dynamically The device supports the Fan-out Interfaces without reboot on Dell Networking OS. It aims at converting the 40G ports into 10G mode without reboot. The switch has the facility to dynamically change the 40G port to 4X10G port and vice-versa without reload.
  • Page 402: Splitting Qsfp Ports To Sfp+ Ports

    The following example shows the system stack-unit quad-port-profile show Command command. Dell(conf)#stack-unit 1 port 24 portmode quad Warning: Enabling quad mode on stack-unit 1 port 24. Please verify whether the configs related to interface Fo 1/24 cleaned up before proceeding further.
  • Page 403: Converting A Qsfp Or Qsfp+ Port To An Sfp Or Sfp+ Port

    Similarly, you can enable the fan-out mode to configure the QSFP port on a device to act as an SFP or SFP+ port. As the QSA enables a QSFP or QSFP+ port to be used as an SFP or SFP+ port, Dell Networking OS does not immediately detect the QSA after you insert it into a QSFP port cage.
  • Page 404: Important Points To Remember

    QSFP to SFP+ conversions using the QSA. Important Points to Remember • Starting from Dell OS 9.7(0.0), as part of dynamic fan-out support, only 96 ports can be split into 10G mode. Remaining eight ports stay in 40G. For more information, see Fanning out 40G Ports Dynamically.
  • Page 405 3/1 are inactive and no physical SFP or SFP+ connection actually exists on these ports. However, Dell Networking OS still perceives these ports as valid and the output shows that pluggable media (optical cables) is inserted into these ports. This is a software limitation for this release.
  • Page 406: Link Dampening

    R1(conf-if-te-1/1/1)#show config interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 ip address 10.10.19.1/24 dampening 1 2 3 4 no shutdown To view dampening information on all or specific dampened interfaces, use the show interfaces dampening command from EXEC Privilege mode. Dell# show interfaces dampening InterfaceStateFlapsPenaltyHalf-LifeReuseSuppressMax-Sup Interfaces...
  • Page 407 The link MTU is the frame size of a packet, and the IP MTU size is used for IP fragmentation. If the system determines that the IP packet must be fragmented as it leaves the interface, Dell Networking OS divides the packet into fragments no bigger than the size set in the ip mtu command.
  • Page 408: Link Bundle Monitoring

    Using Ethernet Pause Frames for Flow Control Ethernet pause frames and threshold settings are supported on the Dell Networking OS. Ethernet Pause Frames allow for a temporary stop in data transmission. A situation may arise where a sending device may transmit data faster than a destination device can accept it.
  • Page 409: Enabling Pause Frames

    As a workaround, apply the new settings, execute shut then no shut on the interface, and then check the running-config of the port. NOTE: If you disable rx flow control, Dell Networking recommends rebooting the system. The flow control sender and receiver must be on the same port-pipe. Flow control is not supported across different port-pipes.
  • Page 410: Port-Pipes

    1400-byte IP MTU + 22-byte VLAN Tag = 1422-byte link MTU The following table lists the various Layer 2 overheads found in Dell Networking OS and the number of bytes. The following table lists the various Layer 2 overheads found in the Dell Networking OS and the number of bytes.
  • Page 411: Auto-Negotiation On Ethernet Interfaces

    NOTE: As a best practice, Dell Networking recommends keeping auto-negotiation enabled. Only disable auto-negotiation on switch ports that attach to devices not capable of supporting negotiation or where connectivity issues arise from interoperability issues.
  • Page 412: Set Auto-Negotiation Options

    Example of the show interfaces status Command to View Link Status NOTE: The show interfaces status command displays link status, but not administrative status. For both link and administrative status, use the show ip interface [interface | brief | linecard slot-number] [configuration] command. Dell#show interfaces status Port Description Status Speed...
  • Page 413: View Advanced Interface Information

    Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1-autoneg)# For details about the speed, duplex, and negotiation auto commands, refer to the Interfaces chapter of the Dell Networking OS Command Reference Guide. Adjusting the Keepalive Timer To change the time interval between keepalive messages on the interfaces, use the keepalive command.
  • Page 414: Configuring The Interface Sampling Size

    IEEE 802.1Q tagging or not, and the VLANs to which the interface belongs. Dell#show interfaces switchport Name: TenGigabitEthernet 3/1/1 802.1QTagged: True Vlan membership: Vlan 2 Name: TenGigabitEthernet 3/1/2 802.1QTagged: True Vlan membership: Vlan 2 Name: TenGigabitEthernet 3/1/3 802.1QTagged: True...
  • Page 415: Dynamic Counters

    Dynamic Counters By default, counting is enabled for IPFLOW, IPACL, L2ACL, L2FIB. For the remaining applications, Dell Networking OS automatically turns on counting when you enable the application, and is turned off when you disable the application. NOTE: If you enable more than four counter-dependent applications on a port pipe, there is an impact on line rate performance.
  • Page 416: Clearing Interface Counters

    – (OPTIONAL) To clear unknown source address (SA) drop counters when you configure the MAC learning limit on the interface, enter the keywords learning-limit. Example of the clear counters Command When you enter this command, confirm that you want Dell Networking OS to clear the interface counters for that interface. Dell#clear counters te 1/1/1...
  • Page 417 2.1.1.1/16 switchport shut shut shut shut shut shut Dell# show running-config Dell# show running-config compressed <snip> <snip> interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 no ip address no ip address switchport switchport shutdown shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/2/1 Interface group TenGigabitEthernet 1/2/1 –...
  • Page 418 interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/4/1 interface group Vlan 2 , Vlan 100 no ip address no ip address shutdown no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/10/1 interface group Vlan 3 – 5 no ip address tagged te 1/1/1 shutdown no ip address shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/34/1 ip address 2.1.1.1/16 interface Vlan 1000 shutdown...
  • Page 419 Copy one file, after optimizing and reducing the size of the configuration file, to another location. Dell Networking OS supports IPv4 and IPv6 addressing for FTP, TFTP, and SCP (in the hostip field).
  • Page 420: Ipv4 Routing

    Dell Networking OS supports RFC 3021 with ARP. NOTE: Even though Dell Networking OS listens to all ports, you can only use the ports starting from 35001 for IPv4 traffic. Ports starting from 0 to 35000 are reserved for internal use and you cannot use them for IPv4 traffic.
  • Page 421: Configuration Tasks For Ip Addresses

    • Configure Static Routes for the Management Interface (optional) For a complete listing of all commands related to IP addressing, refer to the Dell Networking OS Command Line Interface Reference Guide. Assigning IP Addresses to an Interface Assign primary and secondary IP addresses to physical or logical (for example, [virtual local area network [VLAN] or port channel) interfaces to enable IP communication between the system and hosts connected to that interface.
  • Page 422: Configuring Static Routes

    – tag tag-value: the range is from 1 to 4294967295. (optional) Example of the show ip route static Command To view the configured routes, use the show ip route static command. Dell#show ip route static Destination Gateway Dist/Metric Last Change...
  • Page 423: Configure Static Routes For The Management Interface

    Direct, Lo 0 --More-- Dell Networking OS installs a next hop that is on the directly connected subnet of current IP address on the interface (for example, if interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 is on 172.31.5.0 subnet, Dell Networking OS installs the static route).
  • Page 424: Configuring The Icmp Source Interface

    Define the wait duration in seconds for the TCP connection to be established. CONFIGURATION mode Dell(conf)#ip tcp reduced-syn-ack-wait <9-75> You can use the no ip tcp reduced-syn-ack-wait command to restore the default behavior, which causes the wait period to be set as 8 seconds.
  • Page 425: Enabling Directed Broadcast

    Enabling Directed Broadcast By default, Dell Networking OS drops directed broadcast packets destined for an interface. This default setting provides some protection against denial of service (DoS) attacks. To enable Dell Networking OS to receive directed broadcasts, use the following command.
  • Page 426: Specifying The Local System Domain And A List Of Domains

    Specifying the Local System Domain and a List of Domains If you enter a partial domain, Dell Networking OS can search different domains to finish or fully qualify that partial domain. A fully qualified domain name (FQDN) is any name that is terminated with a period/dot. Dell Networking OS searches the host table first to resolve the partial domain.
  • Page 427: Arp

    For more information about ARP, refer to RFC 826, An Ethernet Address Resolution Protocol. In Dell Networking OS, Proxy ARP enables hosts with knowledge of the network to accept and forward packets from hosts that contain no knowledge of the network. Proxy ARP makes it possible for hosts to be ignorant of the network, including subnetting.
  • Page 428: Configuring Static Arp Entries

    These entries do not age and can only be removed manually. To remove a static ARP entry, use the no arp ip-address command. To view the static entries in the ARP cache, use the show arp static command in EXEC privilege mode. Dell#show arp Protocol Address Age(min) Hardware Address...
  • Page 429: Clearing Arp Cache

    Gratuitous ARP can mean an ARP request or reply. In the context of ARP learning via gratuitous ARP on Dell Networking OS, the gratuitous ARP is a request. A gratuitous ARP request is an ARP request that is not needed according to the ARP specification, but one that hosts may send to: •...
  • Page 430: Arp Learning Via Arp Request

    ARP Learning via ARP Request In Dell Networking OS versions prior to 8.3.1.0, Dell Networking OS learns via ARP requests only if the target IP specified in the packet matches the IP address of the receiving router interface. This is the case when a host is attempting to resolve the gateway address.
  • Page 431: Icmp

    The following lists the configuration tasks for ICMP. • Enabling ICMP Unreachable Messages For a complete listing of all commands related to ICMP, refer to the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide. Enabling ICMP Unreachable Messages By default, ICMP unreachable messages are disabled.
  • Page 432: Udp Helper

    IP address of packets to match those addresses. Configure UDP Helper To configure Dell Networking OS to direct UDP broadcast, enable UDP helper and specify the UDP ports for which traffic is forwarded. See Enabling UDP Helper Important Points to Remember •...
  • Page 433: Configuring A Broadcast Address

    UDP Helper with No Configured Broadcast Addresses UDP Helper with Broadcast-All Addresses When the destination IP address of an incoming packet is the IP broadcast address, Dell Networking OS rewrites the address to match the configured broadcast address. In the following illustration:...
  • Page 434: Udp Helper With Subnet Broadcast Addresses

    Packet 1 is dropped at ingress if you did not configure UDP helper address. If you enable UDP helper (using the ip udp-helper udp-port command), and the UDP destination port of the packet matches the UDP port configured, the system changes the destination address to the configured broadcast 1.1.255.255 and routes the packet to VLANs 100 and 101.
  • Page 435: Udp Helper With Configured Broadcast Addresses

    Figure 48. UDP Helper with Subnet Broadcast Addresses UDP Helper with Configured Broadcast Addresses Incoming packets with a destination IP address matching the configured broadcast address of any interface are forwarded to the matching interfaces. In the following illustration, Packet 1 has a destination IP address that matches the configured broadcast address of VLAN 100 and 101.
  • Page 436: Troubleshooting Udp Helper

    To display debugging information for troubleshooting, use the debug ip udp-helper command. Example of the debug ip udp-helper Command Dell(conf)# debug ip udp-helper 01:20:22: Pkt rcvd on Te 5/1/1 with IP DA (0xffffffff) will be sent on Te 5/1/2 Te 5/1/3 Vlan 3 01:44:54: Pkt rcvd on Te 7/1/1 is handed over for DHCP processing.
  • Page 437: Ipv6 Routing

    Implementing IPv6 with Dell Networking NOTE: Even though Dell Networking OS listens to all ports, you can only use the ports starting from 1024 for IPv6 traffic. Ports from 0 to 1023 are reserved for internal use and you cannot use them for IPv6 traffic.
  • Page 438: Ipv6 Headers

    (DHCP) servers via stateful auto-configuration. NOTE: Dell Networking OS provides the flexibility to add prefixes on Router Advertisements (RA) to advertise responses to Router Solicitations (RS). By default, RA response messages are sent when an RS message is received.
  • Page 439: Longest Prefix Match (Lpm) Table And Ipv6 /65 - /128 Support

    A command has been introduced to partition the LPM to support provisioning of IPv6 /65 to /128 route prefixes. To support /65 – /128 IPv6 route prefix entries, Dell Networking OS needs to be programmed with /65 - /128 bit IPv6 support. The number of entries as well needs to be explicitly programmed. This number can be1K, 2K, or 3K granularity.
  • Page 440: Ipv6 Header Fields

    The optimized booting functionality does not use Openflow and therefore SDN support is not available. LPM partitioning might have a slight impact on the number of SDN-programmed L3 entries because the LPM space becomes reduced. IPv6 Header Fields The 40 bytes of the IPv6 header are ordered, as shown in the following illustration. Figure 50.
  • Page 441: Extension Header Fields

    protocol (TCP) or user datagram protocol (UDP) header, the value in this field is the same as for IPv4. The Extension header is located between the IP header and the TCP or UDP header. The following lists the Next Header field values. Value Description Hop-by-Hop option header...
  • Page 442: Addressing

    However, if the Destination Address is a Hop-by-Hop options header, the Extension header is examined by every forwarding router along the packet’s route. The Hop-by-Hop options header must immediately follow the IPv6 header, and is noted by the value 0 (zero) in the Next Header field. Extension headers are processed in the order in which they appear in the packet header.
  • Page 443 reduced to two colons, as long as there is only one double colon used in an address. Leading and/or trailing zeros in a group can also be omitted (as in ::1 for localhost, 1:: for network addresses and :: for unspecified addresses).
  • Page 444: Implementing Ipv6 With Dell Networking Os

    Implementing IPv6 with Dell Networking OS Dell Networking OS supports both IPv4 and IPv6 and both may be used simultaneously in your system. The following table lists the Dell Networking OS version in which an IPv6 feature became available for each platform.
  • Page 445 Feature and Documentation and Functionality Chapter Location IS-IS for IPv6 Intermediate System to Intermediate System IPv6 IS-IS in the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide. IS-IS for IPv6 support for Intermediate System to redistribution Intermediate System IPv6 IS-IS in the Dell...
  • Page 446: Icmpv6

    ICMP for IPv6 combines the roles of ICMP, IGMP and ARP in IPv4. Like IPv4, it provides functions for reporting delivery and forwarding errors, and provides a simple echo service for troubleshooting. The Dell Networking OS implementation of ICMPv6 is based on RFC 4443.
  • Page 447: Ipv6 Neighbor Discovery

    IPv6 device to determine the relationship of the neighboring node. NOTE: To avoid problems with network discovery, Dell Networking recommends configuring the static route last or assigning an IPv6 address to the interface and assigning an address to the peer (the forwarding router’s address) less than 10 seconds apart.
  • Page 448: Ipv6 Neighbor Discovery Of Mtu Packets

    Figure 52. NDP Router Redirect IPv6 Neighbor Discovery of MTU Packets You can set the MTU advertised through the RA packets to incoming routers, without altering the actual MTU setting on the interface. The ipv6 nd mtu command sets the value advertised to routers. It does not set the actual MTU rate. For example, if you set ipv6 nd mtu to 1280, the interface still passes 1500-byte packets, if that is what is set with the mtu command.
  • Page 449: Debugging Ipv6 Rdnss Information Sent To The Host

    Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)#do debug ipv6 nd tengigabitethernet 1/1/1 ICMPv6 Neighbor Discovery packet debugging is on for tengigabitethernet 1/1/1 Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)#00:13:02 : : cp-ICMPV6-ND: Sending RA on Te 1/1/1 current hop limit=64, flags: M-, O-, router lifetime=1800 sec, reachable time=0 ms, retransmit time=0 ms...
  • Page 450: Secure Shell (Ssh) Over An Ipv6 Transport

    SSH supports accessing the system through the management interface as well as through a physical Layer 3 interface. For SSH configuration details, refer to the Security chapter in the Dell Networking OS Command Line Interface Reference Guide. Configuration Tasks for IPv6 The following are configuration tasks for the IPv6 protocol.
  • Page 451: Adjusting Your Cam-Profile

    Assigning an IPv6 Address to an Interface Essentially, IPv6 is enabled in Dell Networking OS simply by assigning IPv6 addresses to individual router interfaces. You can use IPv6 and IPv4 together on a system, but be sure to differentiate that usage carefully.
  • Page 452: Assigning A Static Ipv6 Route

    You can configure up to two IPv6 addresses on management interfaces, allowing required default router support on the management port that is acting as host, per RFC 4861. Data ports support more than two IPv6 addresses. When you configure IPv6 addresses on multiple interfaces (the ipv6 address command) and verify the configuration (the show ipv6 interfaces command), the same link local (fe80) address is displayed for each IPv6 interface.
  • Page 453: Configuring Telnet With Ipv6

    Configuring Telnet with IPv6 The Telnet client and server in Dell Networking OS supports IPv6 connections. You can establish a Telnet session directly to the router using an IPv6 Telnet client, or you can initiate an IPv6 Telnet connection from the router.
  • Page 454: Displaying An Ipv6 Interface Information

    – For a port channel interface, enter the keywords port-channel then a number. – For a VLAN interface, enter the keyword vlan then a number from 1 to 4094. Example of the show ipv6 interface Command Dell#show ipv6 int ManagementEthernet 1/1 ManagementEthernet 1/1 is up, line protocol is up IPV6 is enabled...
  • Page 455 – To display information about an IPv6 Prefix lists, enter list and the prefix-list name. Examples of the show ipv6 route Commands The following example shows the show ipv6 route summary command. Dell#show ipv6 route summary Route Source Active Routes Non-active Routes connected 5 0...
  • Page 456: Showing The Running-Configuration For An Interface

    – For a 40-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword fortyGigE then the slot/port information. – For the Management interface on the stack-unit, enter the keyword ManagementEthernet then the slot/port information. Example of the show running-config interface Command Dell#show run int Te 2/2/1 interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/2/1 no ip address ipv6 address 3:4:5:6::8/24...
  • Page 457: Configuring Ipv6 Ra Guard

    Configuring IPv6 RA Guard The IPv6 Router Advertisement (RA) guard allows you to block or reject the unwanted router advertisement guard messages that arrive at the network device platform. To configure the IPv6 RA guard, perform the following steps: Configure the terminal to enter the Global Configuration mode. EXEC Privilege mode configure terminal Enable the IPv6 RA guard.
  • Page 458 The retransmission time range is from 100 to 4,294,967,295 milliseconds. 15. Display the configurations applied on the RA guard policy mode. POLICY LIST CONFIGURATION mode show config Example of the show config Command Dell(conf-ra_guard_policy_list)#show config ipv6 nd ra-guard policy test device-role router hop-limit maximum 251 mtu 1350...
  • Page 459: Configuring Ipv6 Ra Guard On An Interface

    [interface slot/port[/subport] | count value] The count range is from 1 to 65534. The default is infinity. For a complete listing of all commands related to IPv6 RA Guard, see the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.
  • Page 460: Iscsi Optimization

    In a data center network, Dell EqualLogic and Compellent iSCSI storage arrays are connected to a converged Ethernet network using the data center bridging exchange protocol (DCBx) through stacked and/or non-stacked Ethernet switches.
  • Page 461 • iSCSI monitoring sessions — the switch monitors and tracks active iSCSI sessions in connections on the switch, including port information and iSCSI session information. • iSCSI QoS — A user-configured iSCSI class of service (CoS) profile is applied to all iSCSI traffic. Classifier rules are used to direct the iSCSI data traffic to queues that can be given preferential QoS treatment over other data passing through the switch.
  • Page 462: Monitoring Iscsi Traffic Flows

    4, use the CoS dot1p- priority command (refer to QoS dot1p Traffic Classification and Queue Assignment). Dell Networking recommends setting the CoS dot1p priority-queue to 0 (zero). You can configure whether iSCSI frames are re-marked to contain the configured VLAN priority tag or IP DSCP when forwarded through the switch.
  • Page 463: Detection And Auto-Configuration For Dell Equallogic Arrays

    Dell EqualLogic storage arrays and automatically reconfigure the switch to enhance storage traffic flows. The switch uses the link layer discovery protocol (LLDP) to discover Dell EqualLogic devices on the network. LLDP is enabled by default. For more information about LLDP, refer to...
  • Page 464: Configuring Detection And Ports For Dell Compellent Arrays

    Configuring Detection and Ports for Dell Compellent Arrays To configure a port connected to a Dell Compellent storage array, use the following command. • Configure a port connected to a Dell Compellent storage array. INTERFACE Configuration mode iscsi profile-compellent The command configures a port for the best iSCSI traffic conditions.
  • Page 465: Default Iscsi Optimization Values

    iSCSI optimization, which can turn on flow control again on reboot, use the no iscsi enable command and save the configuration. When you enable iSCSI on the switch, the following actions occur: • Link-level flow control is globally enabled, if it is not already enabled, and PFC is disabled. •...
  • Page 466: Iscsi Optimization Prerequisites

    Parameter Default Value but can be removed as any other configured target. iSCSI session monitoring Disabled. The CAM allocation for iSCSI is set to zero (0). iSCSI Optimization Prerequisites The following are iSCSI optimization prerequisites. • iSCSI optimization requires LLDP on the switch. LLDP is enabled by default (refer to Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP)).
  • Page 467 EXEC Privilege mode write memory Reload the switch. EXEC Privilege mode reload After the switch is reloaded, DCB/ DCBx and iSCSI monitoring are enabled. (Optional) Configure the iSCSI target ports and optionally the IP addresses on which iSCSI communication is monitored. CONFIGURATION mode [no] iscsi target port tcp-port-1 [tcp-port-2...tcp-port-16] [ip-address address]...
  • Page 468: Displaying Iscsi Optimization Information

    ID. show iscsi sessions detailed [session isid] • Display all globally configured non-default iSCSI settings in the current Dell Networking OS session. show run iscsi Examples of the show iscsi Commands The following example shows the show iscsi command.
  • Page 469 Session 0: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- Target: iqn.2001-05.com.equallogic:0-8a0906-0f60c2002-0360018428d48c94-iom011 iqn.1991-05.com.microsoft:win-x9l8v27yajg ISID: 400001370000 The following example shows the show iscsi session detailed command. VLT PEER1 Dell# show iscsi session detailed Session 0: ------------------------------------------------------------ Target:iqn.2010-11.com.ixia:ixload:iscsi-TG1 Initiator:iqn.2010-11.com.ixia.ixload:initiator-iscsi-2c Up Time:00:00:01:28(DD:HH:MM:SS) Time for aging out:00:00:09:34(DD:HH:MM:SS) ISID:806978696102 Initiator Initiator Target Target Connection IP Address TCP Port IP Address TCPPort ID 10.10.0.44 33345 10.10.0.101 3260 0...
  • Page 470: Intermediate System To Intermediate System

    The IS-IS protocol, developed by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), is an interior gateway protocol (IGP) that uses a shortest-path-first algorithm. NOTE: This protocol supports routers passing both IP and OSI traffic, though the Dell Networking implementation supports only IP traffic.
  • Page 471: Multi-Topology Is-Is

    • system address — the router’s MAC address. • N-selector — this is always 0. The following illustration is an example of the ISO-style address to show the address format IS-IS uses. In this example, the first five bytes (47.0005.0001) are the area address. The system portion is 000c.000a. 4321 and the last byte is always 0.
  • Page 472: Interface Support

    Interface Support MT IS-IS is supported on physical Ethernet interfaces, physical synchronous optical network technologies (SONET) interfaces, port-channel interfaces (static and dynamic using LACP), and virtual local area network (VLAN) interfaces. Adjacencies Adjacencies on point-to-point interfaces are formed as usual, where IS-IS routers do not implement MT extensions.
  • Page 473: Implementation Information

    By default, Dell Networking OS supports dynamic host name exchange to assist with troubleshooting and configuration. By assigning a name to an IS-IS NET address, you can track IS-IS information on that address easier. Dell Networking OS does not support ISO CLNS routing; however, the ISO NET format is supported for addressing.
  • Page 474: Configuration Information

    IS-IS Parameter Default Value Circuit Type Level 1 and Level 2 IS Type Level 1 and Level 2 Equal Cost Multi Paths Configuration Information To use IS-IS, you must configure and enable IS-IS in two or three modes: CONFIGURATION ROUTER ISIS, CONFIGURATION INTERFACE, and ( when configuring for IPv6) ADDRESS-FAMILY mode.
  • Page 475 To configure IS-IS globally, use the following commands. Create an IS-IS routing process. CONFIGURATION mode router isis [tag] tag: (optional) identifies the name of the IS-IS process. Configure an IS-IS network entity title (NET) for a routing process. ROUTER ISIS mode net network-entity-title Specify the area address and system ID for an IS-IS routing process.
  • Page 476 ROUTER ISIS mode. To view the IS-IS configuration, enter the show isis protocol command in EXEC Privilege mode or the show config command in ROUTER ISIS mode. Dell#show isis protocol IS-IS Router: <Null Tag> System Id: EEEE.EEEE.EEEE IS-Type: level-1-2 Manual area address(es): 47.0004.004d.0001...
  • Page 477 You can assign more NET addresses, but the System ID portion of the NET address must remain the same. Dell Networking OS supports up to six area addresses. Some address considerations are: • In order to be neighbors, configure Level 1 routers with at least one common area address.
  • Page 478 graceful-restart ietf • Configure the time during which the graceful restart attempt is prevented. ROUTER-ISIS mode graceful-restart interval minutes The range is from 1 to 120 minutes. The default is 5 minutes. • Enable the graceful restart maximum wait time before a restarting peer comes up. ROUTER-ISIS mode graceful-restart restart-wait seconds When implementing this command, be sure to set the t3 timer to adjacency on the restarting router.
  • Page 479 Example of the show isis interface Command To view all interfaces configured with IS-IS routing along with the defaults, use the show isis interface command in EXEC Privilege mode. Dell#show isis interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/34/1 TenGigabitEthernet 1/34/1 is up, line protocol is up MTU 1497, Encapsulation SAP...
  • Page 480 Example of Viewing IS-IS Configuration (ROUTER ISIS Mode) To view the configuration, use the show config command in ROUTER ISIS mode or the show running-config isis command in EXEC Privilege mode. Dell#show running-config isis router isis lsp-refresh-interval 902 net 47.0005.0001.000C.000A.4321.00 net 51.0005.0001.000C.000A.4321.00...
  • Page 481 16,777,215. Dell Networking OS supports five different metric styles: narrow, wide, transition, narrow transition, and wide transition. By default, Dell Networking OS generates and receives narrow metric values. Matrixes or costs higher than 63 are not supported. To accept or generate routes with a higher metric, you must change the metric style of the IS-IS process.
  • Page 482 Accept wide metrics: none Dell# Configuring the IS-IS Cost When you change from one IS-IS metric style to another, the IS-IS metric value could be affected. For each interface with IS-IS enabled, you can assign a cost or metric that is used in the link state calculation.
  • Page 483: Configuring The Distance Of A Route

    The default is Level 1-2 router. When the IS-type is Level 1-2, the software maintains two Link State databases, one for each level. To view the Link State databases, use the show isis database command. Dell#show isis database IS-IS Level-1 Link State Database LSPID...
  • Page 484 Prefix lists are applied to incoming or outgoing routes and routes must meet the conditions of the prefix lists or Dell Networking OS does not install the route in the routing table. The prefix lists are globally applied on all interfaces running IS-IS.
  • Page 485 – connected: for directly connected routes. – ospf process-id: for OSPF routes only. – rip: for RIP routes only. – static: for user-configured routes. – bgp: for BGP routes only. • Deny RTM download for pre-existing redistributed IPv4 routes. ROUTER ISIS mode distribute-list redistributed-override in Applying IPv6 Routes To apply prefix lists to incoming or outgoing IPv6 routes, use the following commands.
  • Page 486: Redistributing Ipv4 Routes

    Redistributing IPv4 Routes In addition to filtering routes, you can add routes from other routing instances or protocols to the IS-IS process. With the redistribute command syntax, you can include BGP, OSPF, RIP, static, or directly connected routes in the IS-IS process. NOTE: Do not route iBGP routes to IS-IS unless there are route-maps associated with the IS-IS redistribution.
  • Page 487: Configuring Authentication Passwords

    redistribute {bgp as-number | connected | rip | static} [level-1 level-1-2 | level-2] [metric metric-value] [metric-type {external | internal}] [route-map map-name] Configure the following parameters: – level-1, level-1-2, or level-2: assign all redistributed routes to a level. The default is level-2. –...
  • Page 488: Setting The Overload Bit

    Another use for the overload bit is to prevent other routers from using this router as an intermediate hop in their shortest path first (SPF) calculations. For example, if the IS-IS routing database is out of memory and cannot accept new LSPs, Dell Networking OS sets the overload bit and IS-IS traffic continues to transit the system.
  • Page 489 – interface: Enter the type of interface and slot/port information to view IS-IS information on that interface only. Dell Networking OS displays debug messages on the console. To view which debugging commands are enabled, use the show debugging command in EXEC Privilege mode.
  • Page 490: Is-Is Metric Styles

    The following sections provide additional information about the IS-IS metric styles. • Configuring the IS-IS Metric Style • Configure Metric Values Dell Networking OS supports the following IS-IS metric styles: • narrow (supports only type, length, and value [TLV] up to 63) • wide (supports TLV up to 16777215) •...
  • Page 491 Table 45. Metric Value When the Metric Style Changes Beginning Metric Style Final Metric Style Resulting IS-IS Metric Value wide narrow default value (10) if the original value is greater than 63. A message is sent to the console. wide transition truncated value (the truncated value appears in the LSP only).
  • Page 492: Leaks From One Level To Another

    Beginning Metric Style Final Metric Style Resulting IS-IS Metric Value wide transition narrow transition default value (10) if the original value is greater than 63. A message is sent to the console. wide transition transition truncated value (the truncated value appears in the LSP only). The original isis metric value is displayed in the show config and show running-config...
  • Page 493: Sample Configurations

    The following example shows the response from the router: Dell#clear isis * % ISIS not enabled. Dell#clear isis 9999 * You can configure IPv6 IS-IS routes in one of the following three different methods: • Congruent Topology — You must configure both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses on the interface. Enable the ip router isis and ipv6 router isis commands on the interface.
  • Page 494 TenGigabitEthernet 3/17/1 ip address 24.3.1.1/24 ipv6 address 24:3::1/76 ip router isis ipv6 router isis no shutdown Dell (conf-if-te-3/17/1)# Dell (conf-router_isis)#show config router isis metric-style wide level-1 metric-style wide level-2 net 34.0000.0000.AAAA.00 Dell (conf-router_isis)# Dell (conf-if-te-3/17/1)#show config interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/17/1...
  • Page 495 34.0000.0000.AAAA.00 address-family ipv6 unicast multi-topology exit-address-family Dell (conf-router_isis)# Dell (conf-if-te-3/17/1)#show config interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/17/1 ipv6 address 24:3::1/76 ipv6 router isis no shutdown Dell (conf-if-te-3/17/1)# Dell (conf-router_isis)#show config router isis net 34.0000.0000.AAAA.00 address-family ipv6 unicast multi-topology transition exit-address-family Dell (conf-router_isis)#...
  • Page 496: Link Aggregation Control Protocol (Lacp)

    Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) A link aggregation group (LAG), referred to as a port channel by the Dell Networking OS, can provide both load-sharing and port redundancy across line cards. You can enable LAGs as static or dynamic. Introduction to Dynamic LAGs and LACP A link aggregation group (LAG), referred to as a port channel by Dell Networking OS, can provide both load-sharing and port redundancy across line cards.
  • Page 497: Lacp Modes

    You can configure link dampening on individual members of a LAG. LACP Modes Dell Networking OS provides three modes for configuration of LACP — Off, Active, and Passive. • Off — In this state, an interface is not capable of being part of a dynamic LAG. LACP does not run on any port that is configured to be in this state.
  • Page 498: Lacp Configuration Tasks

    Create a dynamic port channel (LAG). CONFIGURATION mode switchport Example of Configuring a LAG Interface Dell(conf)#interface port-channel 32 Dell(conf-if-po-32)#no shutdown Dell(conf-if-po-32)#switchport The LAG is in the default VLAN. To place the LAG into a non-default VLAN, use the tagged command on the LAG.
  • Page 499: Configuring The Lag Interfaces As Dynamic

    Configure the dynamic LAG interfaces. CONFIGURATION mode port-channel-protocol lacp Example of the port-channel-protocol lacp Command Dell(conf)#interface TenGigabitethernet 3/15/1 Dell(conf-if-te-3/15/1)#no shutdown Dell(conf-if-te-3/15/1)#port-channel-protocol lacp Dell(conf-if-te-3/15/1-lacp)#port-channel 32 mode active Dell(conf)#interface TenGigabitethernet 3/16/1 Dell(conf-if-te-3/16/1)#no shutdown Dell(conf-if-te-3/16/1)#port-channel-protocol lacp Dell(conf-if-te-3/16/1-lacp)#port-channel 32 mode active Dell(conf)#interface TenGigabitethernet 4/15/1 Dell(conf-if-te-4/15/1)#no shutdown...
  • Page 500: Monitoring And Debugging Lacp

    Dell(conf-if-po-32)#end Dell# show lacp 32 Port-channel 32 admin up, oper up, mode lacp Actor System ID: Priority 32768, Address 0001.e800.a12b Partner System ID: Priority 32768, Address 0001.e801.45a5 Actor Admin Key 1, Oper Key 1, Partner Oper Key 1 LACP LAG 1 is an aggregatable link...
  • Page 501: Configuring Shared Lag State Tracking

    Figure 56. Shared LAG State Tracking To avoid packet loss, redirect traffic through the next lowest-cost link (R3 to R4). Dell Networking OS has the ability to bring LAG 2 down if LAG 1 fails, so that traffic can be redirected. This redirection is what is meant by shared LAG state tracking.
  • Page 502: Important Points About Shared Lag State Tracking

    2d1h45m: %RPM0-P:CP %IFMGR-5-OSTATE_DN: Changed interface state to down: Po 2 To view the status of a failover group member, use the show interface port-channel command. Dell#show interface port-channel 2 Port-channel 2 is up, line protocol is down (Failover-group 1 is down)
  • Page 503: Lacp Basic Configuration Example

    • If a LAG moves to the Down state due to this feature, its members may still be in the Up state. LACP Basic Configuration Example The screenshots in this section are based on the following example topology. Two routers are named ALPHA and BRAVO, and their hostname prompts reflect those names.
  • Page 504 Queueing strategy: fifo Input statistics: 132 packets, 163668 bytes 0 Vlans 0 64-byte pkts, 12 over 64-byte pkts, 120 over 127-byte pkts 0 over 255-byte pkts, 0 over 511-byte pkts, 0 over 1023-byte pkts 132 Multicasts, 0 Broadcasts 0 runts, 0 giants, 0 throttles 0 CRC, 0 overrun, 0 discarded Output Statistics 136 packets, 16718 bytes, 0 underruns...
  • Page 505 Figure 60. Inspecting Configuration of LAG 10 on ALPHA Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP)
  • Page 506 Figure 61. Verifying LAG 10 Status on ALPHA Using the show lacp Command Summary of the LAG Configuration on Alpha Alpha(conf-if-po-10)#int tengig 2/31 Alpha(conf-if-te-2/31)#no ip address Alpha(conf-if-te-2/31)#no switchport Alpha(conf-if-te-2/31)#shutdown Alpha(conf-if-te-2/31)#port-channel-protocol lacp Alpha(conf-if-te-2/31-lacp)#port-channel 10 mode active Alpha(conf-if-te-2/31-lacp)#no shut Alpha(conf-if-te-2/31)#show config interface GigabitEthernet 2/31 no ip address port-channel-protocol LACP port-channel 10 mode active...
  • Page 507 interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/31 no ip address Summary of the LAG Configuration on Bravo Bravo(conf-if-te-3/21/1)#int port-channel 10 Bravo(conf-if-po-10)#no ip add Bravo(conf-if-po-10)#switch Bravo(conf-if-po-10)#no shut Bravo(conf-if-po-10)#show config interface Port-channel 10 no ip address switchport no shutdown Bravo(conf-if-po-10)#exit Bravo(conf)#int tengig 3/21/1 Bravo(conf)#no ip address Bravo(conf)#no switchport Bravo(conf)#shutdown Bravo(conf-if-te-3/21/1)#port-channel-protocol lacp...
  • Page 508 Figure 62. Inspecting a LAG Port on BRAVO Using the show interface Command Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP)
  • Page 509 Figure 63. Inspecting LAG 10 Using the show interfaces port-channel Command Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP)
  • Page 510 Figure 64. Inspecting the LAG Status Using the show lacp command The point-to-point protocol (PPP) is a connection-oriented protocol that enables layer two links over various different physical layer connections. It is supported on both synchronous and asynchronous lines, and can operate in Half-Duplex or Full-Duplex mode. It was designed to carry IP traffic but is general enough to allow any type of network layer datagram to be sent over a PPP connection.
  • Page 511: Layer 2

    Layer 2 This chapter describes the Layer 2 features supported on the device. Manage the MAC Address Table You can perform the following management tasks in the MAC address table. • Clearing the MAC Address Table • Setting the Aging Time for Dynamic Entries •...
  • Page 512: Configuring A Static Mac Address

    Setting Station Move Violation Actions • Recovering from Learning Limit and Station Move Violations Dell Networking OS Behavior: When configuring the MAC learning limit on a port or VLAN, the configuration is accepted (becomes part of running-config and show mac learning-limit Layer 2...
  • Page 513: Setting The Mac Learning Limit

    Entries created before this option is set are not affected. Dell Networking OS Behavior: If you do not configure the dynamic option, the system does not detect station moves in which a MAC address learned from a MAC-limited port is learned on another port on the same system.
  • Page 514: Mac Learning-Limit Mac-Address-Sticky

    EXEC Privilege mode show mac learning-limit Dell Networking OS Behavior: The systems do not generate a station-move violation log entry for physical interfaces or port-channels when you configure mac learning-limit or when you configure mac learning-limit station-move-violation log. Dell Networking OS detects a station-move...
  • Page 515: Learning Limit Violation Actions

    no ip address switchport mac learning-limit 1 dynamic no-station-move mac learning-limit station-move-violation log no shutdown Learning Limit Violation Actions To configure the system to take an action when the MAC learning limit is reached on an interface and a new address is received using one the following options with the mac learning-limit command, use the following commands.
  • Page 516: Recovering From Learning Limit And Station Move Violations

    NOTE: When the MAC learning limit (MLL) is configured as no-station-move, the MLL will be processed as static entries internally. For static entries, the MAC address will be installed in all port-pipes, irrespective of the VLAN membership. Recovering from Learning Limit and Station Move Violations After a learning-limit or station-move violation shuts down an interface, you must manually reset it.
  • Page 517: Configure Redundant Pairs

    Down state until the primary fails, at which point it transitions to Up state. If the primary interface fails, and later comes up, it becomes the backup interface for the redundant pair. Dell Networking OS supports Gigabit, 10 Gigabit, and 40-Gigabit interfaces as backup interfaces.
  • Page 518 Apply all other configurations to each interface in the redundant pair such that their configurations are identical, so that transition to the backup interface in the event of a failure is transparent to rest of the network. Figure 67. Configuring Redundant Layer 2 Pairs without Spanning Tree You configure a redundant pair by assigning a backup interface to a primary interface with the switchport backup interface command.
  • Page 519: Important Points About Configuring Redundant Pairs

    TenGigabitEthernet 3/11/2 no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/11/2 no ip address switchport no shutdown Dell(conf-if-range-te-3/11/1-3/11/2)# Dell(conf-if-range-te-3/11/1-3/11/2)#do show ip int brief | find 3/11/1 TenGigabitEthernet 3/11/1 unassigned YES Manual up TenGigabitEthernet 3/11/2 unassigned NO Manual up down [output omitted]...
  • Page 520: Far-End Failure Detection

    Vl 1 00:24:55: %RPM0-P:CP %IFMGR-5-STATE_STBY_ACT: Changed interface state from standby to active: Te 3/11/2 Dell(conf-if-te-3/11/1)#do show ip int brief | find 3/11/1 TenGigabitEthernet 3/11/1 unassigned NO Manual administratively down down TenGigabitEthernet 3/11/2 unassigned YES Manual up [output omitted] Example of Configuring Redundant Pairs on a Port-Channel...
  • Page 521: Fefd State Changes

    Figure 68. Configuring Far-End Failure Detection The report consists of several packets in SNAP format that are sent to the nearest known MAC address. In the event of a far-end failure, the device stops receiving frames and, after the specified time interval, assumes that the far-end is not available.
  • Page 522: Configuring Fefd

    You can enable FEFD globally or on a per-interface basis. Interface FEFD configurations override global FEFD configurations. • Dell Networking OS supports FEFD on physical Ethernet interfaces only, excluding the management interface. • FEFD is not supported on Fibre Channel and copper Ethernet ports.
  • Page 523: Enabling Fefd On An Interface

    Te 1/3/1 Normal 3 Admin Shutdown Te 1/4/1 Normal 3 Admin Shutdown Dell#show run fefd fefd-global mode normal fefd-global interval 3 Enabling FEFD on an Interface To enable, change, or disable FEFD on an interface, use the following commands. •...
  • Page 524: Debugging Fefd

    Dell(conf)#int te 1/1/1 Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)#shutdown 2w1d22h: %RPM0-P:CP %IFMGR-5-ASTATE_DN: Changed interface Admin state to down: Te 1/1/1 Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)#2w1d22h : FEFD state on Te 1/1/1 changed from ANY to Unknown 2w1d22h: %RPM0-P:CP %IFMGR-5-OSTATE_DN: Changed interface state to down: Te 1/1/1 2w1d22h: %RPM0-P:CP %IFMGR-5-OSTATE_DN: Changed interface state to down: Te...
  • Page 525 Vl 1 2w1d22h : FEFD state on Te 4/1/1 changed from Bi-directional to Unknown Dell#debug fefd packets Dell#2w1d22h : FEFD packet sent via interface Te 1/1/1 Sender state -- Bi-directional Sender info -- Mgmt Mac(00:01:e8:14:89:25), Slot-Port-Subport(Te 1/1/1) Peer info -- Mgmt Mac (00:01:e8:14:89:25), Slot-Port-Subport(Te 4/1/1)
  • Page 526: Link Layer Discovery Protocol (Lldp)

    Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) This chapter describes how to configure and use the link layer discovery protocol (LLDP). 802.1AB (LLDP) Overview LLDP — defined by IEEE 802.1AB — is a protocol that enables a local area network (LAN) device to advertise its configuration and receive configuration information from adjacent LLDP-enabled LAN infrastructure devices.
  • Page 527: Optional Tlvs

    Organizationally Specific TLVs. Figure 70. LLDPDU Frame Optional TLVs The Dell Networking OS supports these optional TLVs: management TLVs, IEEE 802.1 and 802.3 organizationally specific TLVs, and TIA-1057 organizationally specific TLVs. Management TLVs A management TLV is an optional TLVs sub-type. This kind of TLV contains essential management information about the sender.
  • Page 528 Eight TLV types have been defined by the IEEE 802.1 and 802.3 working groups as a basic part of LLDP; the IEEE OUI is 00-80-C2. You can configure the Dell Networking system to advertise any or all of these TLVs.
  • Page 529: Tia-1057 (Lldp-Med) Overview

    • LLDP-MED Network Connectivity Device — any device that provides access to an IEEE 802 LAN to an LLDP-MED endpoint device and supports IEEE 802.1AB (LLDP) and TIA-1057 (LLDP-MED). The Dell Networking system is an LLDP-MED network connectivity device. Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP)
  • Page 530: Tia Organizationally Specific Tlvs

    LLDP-MED is designed for, but not limited to, VoIP endpoints. TIA Organizationally Specific TLVs The Dell Networking system is an LLDP-MED Network Connectivity Device (Device Type 4). Network connectivity devices are responsible for: • transmitting an LLDP-MED capability TLV to endpoint devices •...
  • Page 531 LLDP-MED capability (as shown in the following table). • The possible values of the LLDP-MED device type are shown in the following. The Dell Networking system is a network connectivity device, which is Type 4. When you enable LLDP-MED in Dell Networking OS (using the advertise med command), the system begins transmitting this TLV.
  • Page 532 An integer represents the application type (the Type integer shown in the following table), which indicates a device function for which a unique network policy is defined. An individual LLDP-MED network policy TLV is generated for each application type that you specify with the Dell Networking OS CLI (Advertising TLVs).
  • Page 533 NOTE: As shown in the following table, signaling is a series of control packets that are exchanged between an endpoint device and a network connectivity device to establish and maintain a connection. These signal packets might require a different network policy than the media packets for which a connection is made.
  • Page 534: Configure Lldp

    • Power Type — there are two possible power types: power source entity (PSE) or power device (PD). The Dell Networking system is a PSE, which corresponds to a value of 0, based on the TIA-1057 specification. •...
  • Page 535: Lldp Compatibility

    Dell Networking systems support up to eight neighbors per interface. • Dell Networking systems support a maximum of 8000 total neighbors per system. If the number of interfaces multiplied by eight exceeds the maximum, the system does not configure more than 8000.
  • Page 536: Enabling Lldp

    Enabling LLDP LLDP is enabled by default. Enable and disable LLDP globally or per interface. If you enable LLDP globally, all UP interfaces send periodic LLDPDUs. To enable LLDP, use the following command. Enter Protocol LLDP mode. CONFIGURATION or INTERFACE mode protocol lldp Enable LLDP.
  • Page 537: Advertising Tlvs

    Enter the disable command. LLDP-MANAGEMENT-INTERFACE mode. To undo an LLDP management port configuration, precede the relevant command with the keyword no. Advertising TLVs You can configure the system to advertise TLVs out of all interfaces or out of specific interfaces. •...
  • Page 538: Viewing The Lldp Configuration

    Dell(conf-lldp)#show config protocol lldp advertise dot1-tlv port-protocol-vlan-id port-vlan-id advertise dot3-tlv max-frame-size advertise management-tlv system-capabilities system-description hello 10 no disable Dell(conf-lldp)# Dell(conf-lldp)#exit Dell(conf)#interface tengigabitethernet 1/31/1 Dell(conf-if-te-1/31/1)#show config interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/31/1 no ip address switchport no shutdown Dell(conf-if-te-1/31/1)#protocol lldp Dell(conf-if-te-1/31/1-lldp)#show config protocol lldp...
  • Page 539: Viewing Information Advertised By Adjacent Lldp Agents

    Information valid for next 120 seconds Time since last information change of this neighbor: 01:50:16 Remote MTU: 1554 Remote System Desc: Dell Networks Real Time Operating System Software Dell Operating System Version: 1.0. Dell Application Software Version: 9.4.0.0. Copyright (c) 1999-2014...
  • Page 540: Configuring Lldpdu Intervals

    Configuring LLDPDU Intervals LLDPDUs are transmitted periodically; the default interval is 30 seconds. To configure LLDPDU intervals, use the following command. • Configure a non-default transmit interval. CONFIGURATION mode or INTERFACE mode hello Example of Viewing LLDPDU Intervals R1(conf)#protocol lldp R1(conf-lldp)#show config protocol lldp advertise dot1-tlv port-protocol-vlan-id port-vlan-id...
  • Page 541: Configuring The Time To Live Value

    • Return to the default setting. CONFIGURATION mode or INTERFACE mode no mode Example of Configuring a Single Mode R1(conf)#protocol lldp R1(conf-lldp)#show config protocol lldp advertise dot1-tlv port-protocol-vlan-id port-vlan-id advertise dot3-tlv max-frame-size advertise management-tlv system-capabilities system-description no disable R1(conf-lldp)#mode ? Rx only Tx only R1(conf-lldp)#mode tx...
  • Page 542: Debugging Lldp

    advertise management-tlv system-capabilities system-description no disable R1(conf-lldp)#multiplier ? <2-10> Multiplier (default=4) R1(conf-lldp)#multiplier 5 R1(conf-lldp)#show config protocol lldp advertise dot1-tlv port-protocol-vlan-id port-vlan-id advertise dot3-tlv max-frame-size advertise management-tlv system-capabilities system-description multiplier 5 no disable R1(conf-lldp)#no multiplier R1(conf-lldp)#show config protocol lldp advertise dot1-tlv port-protocol-vlan-id port-vlan-id advertise dot3-tlv max-frame-size advertise management-tlv system-capabilities system-description no disable...
  • Page 543: Relevant Management Objects

    Figure 76. The debug lldp detail Command — LLDPDU Packet Dissection Relevant Management Objects Dell Networking OS supports all IEEE 802.1AB MIB objects. The following tables list the objects associated with: • received and transmitted TLVs • the LLDP configuration on the local agent •...
  • Page 544 MIB Object LLDP Variable LLDP MIB Object Description Category msgTxInterval lldpMessageTxInterval Transmit Interval value. rxInfoTTL lldpRxInfoTTL Time to live for received TLVs. txInfoTTL lldpTxInfoTTL Time to live for transmitted TLVs. Basic TLV mibBasicTLVsTxEnable lldpPortConfigTLVsTxEnabl Indicates which Selection management TLVs are enabled for system ports.
  • Page 545 Table 56. LLDP System MIB Objects TLV Type TLV Name TLV Variable System LLDP MIB Object Chassis ID chassis ID subtype Local lldpLocChassisIdSub type Remote lldpRemChassisIdSu btype chassid ID Local lldpLocChassisId Remote lldpRemChassisId Port ID port subtype Local lldpLocPortIdSubtyp Remote lldpRemPortIdSubty port ID Local...
  • Page 546 TLV Type TLV Name TLV Variable System LLDP MIB Object interface numbering Local lldpLocManAddrIfSu subtype btype Remote lldpRemManAddrIfS ubtype interface number Local lldpLocManAddrIfId Remote lldpRemManAddrIfId Local lldpLocManAddrOID Remote lldpRemManAddrOI Table 57. LLDP 802.1 Organizationally specific TLV MIB Objects TLV Type TLV Name TLV Variable System...
  • Page 547 Table 58. LLDP-MED System MIB Objects TLV Sub-Type TLV Name TLV Variable System LLDP-MED MIB Object lldpXMedPortCapSu LLDP-MED LLDP-MED Local pported Capabilities Capabilities lldpXMedPortConfig TLVsTx Enable lldpXMedRemCapSu Remote pported lldpXMedRemConfig TLVsTxEnable LLDP-MED Class Local lldpXMedLocDevice Type Class Remote lldpXMedRemDevice Class Network Policy Application Type Local...
  • Page 548 TLV Sub-Type TLV Name TLV Variable System LLDP-MED MIB Object Location Identifier Location Data Local lldpXMedLocLocatio Format nSubtype Remote lldpXMedRemLocati onSubtype Location ID Data Local lldpXMedLocLocatio nInfo Remote lldpXMedRemLocati onInfo Extended Power via Power Device Type Local lldpXMedLocXPoED eviceType Remote lldpXMedRemXPoED eviceType lldpXMedLocXPoEPS...
  • Page 549: Microsoft Network Load Balancing

    Microsoft Network Load Balancing Network load balancing (NLB) is a clustering functionality that is implemented by Microsoft on Windows 2000 Server and Windows Server 2003 operating systems (OSs). NLB uses a distributed methodology or pattern to equally split and balance the network traffic load across a set of servers that are part of the cluster or group.
  • Page 550: Nlb Multicast Mode Scenario

    If the active server sends a reply, the Dell switch learns the active server’s MAC address. If all servers reply, the switch registers only the last received ARP reply, and the switch learns one server’s actual MAC address;...
  • Page 551: Enable And Disable Vlan Flooding

    Enable and Disable VLAN Flooding • The older ARP entries are overwritten whenever newer NLB entries are learned. • All ARP entries, learned after you enable VLAN flooding, are deleted when you disable VLAN flooding, and RP2 triggers an ARP resolution. Disable VLAN flooding with the no ip vlan-flooding command.
  • Page 552 mac-address-table static multicast-mac-address vlan vlan-id output-range interface Microsoft Network Load Balancing...
  • Page 553: Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (Msdp)

    Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) Multicast source discovery protocol (MSDP) is supported on Dell Networking OS. Protocol Overview MSDP is a Layer 3 protocol that connects IPv4 protocol-independent multicast-sparse mode (PIM-SM) domains. A domain in the context of MSDP is a contiguous set of routers operating PIM within a common boundary defined by an exterior gateway protocol, such as border gateway protocol (BGP).
  • Page 554 Figure 77. Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) RPs advertise each (S,G) in its domain in type, length, value (TLV) format. The total number of TLVs contained in the SA is indicated in the “Entry Count” field. SA messages are transmitted every 60 seconds, and immediately when a new source is detected.
  • Page 555: Anycast Rp

    New sources register with the backup RP. Receivers join toward the new RP and connectivity is maintained. Implementation Information The Dell Networking OS implementation of MSDP is in accordance with RFC 3618 and Anycast RP is in accordance with RFC 3446. Configure Multicast Source Discovery Protocol Configuring MSDP is a four-step process.
  • Page 556 • Accept Source-Active Messages that Fail the RFP Check • Specifying Source-Active Messages • Limiting the Source-Active Cache • Preventing MSDP from Caching a Local Source • Preventing MSDP from Caching a Remote Source • Preventing MSDP from Advertising a Local Source •...
  • Page 557 Figure 80. Configuring OSPF and BGP for MSDP Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP)
  • Page 558 Figure 81. Configuring PIM in Multiple Routing Domains Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP)
  • Page 559: Enable Msdp

    Figure 82. Configuring MSDP Enable MSDP Enable MSDP by peering RPs in different administrative domains. Enable MSDP. CONFIGURATION mode ip multicast-msdp Peer PIM systems in different administrative domains. CONFIGURATION mode ip msdp peer connect-source Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP)
  • Page 560: Manage The Source-Active Cache

    Examples of Configuring and Viewing MSDP R3(conf)#ip multicast-msdp R3(conf)#ip msdp peer 192.168.0.1 connect-source Loopback 0 R3(conf)#do show ip msdp summary Peer Addr Local Addr State Source Up/Down Description To view details about a peer, use the show ip msdp peer command in EXEC privilege mode. Multicast sources in remote domains are stored on the RP in the source-active cache (SA cache).
  • Page 561: Limiting The Source-Active Cache

    If the total number of active sources is already larger than the limit when limiting is applied, the sources that are already in Dell Networking OS are not discarded. To enforce the limit in such a situation, use the clear ip msdp sa-cache command to clear all existing entries.
  • Page 562 Figure 83. MSDP Default Peer, Scenario 1 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP)
  • Page 563 Figure 84. MSDP Default Peer, Scenario 2 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP)
  • Page 564 Figure 85. MSDP Default Peer, Scenario 3 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP)
  • Page 565: Specifying Source-Active Messages

    RPs that the ACL denies are subject to the normal RPF check. Example of the ip msdp default-peer Command and Viewing Denied Sources Dell(conf)#ip msdp peer 10.0.50.2 connect-source Vlan 50 Dell(conf)#ip msdp default-peer 10.0.50.2 list fifty Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP)
  • Page 566: Limiting The Source-Active Messages From A Peer

    Dell(conf)#ip access-list standard fifty Dell(conf)#seq 5 permit host 200.0.0.50 Dell#ip msdp sa-cache MSDP Source-Active Cache - 3 entries GroupAddr SourceAddr RPAddr LearnedFrom Expire UpTime 229.0.50.2 24.0.50.2 200.0.0.50 10.0.50.2 00:13:49 229.0.50.3 24.0.50.3 200.0.0.50 10.0.50.2 00:13:49 229.0.50.4 24.0.50.4 200.0.0.50 10.0.50.2 00:13:49 Dell#ip msdp sa-cache rejected-sa...
  • Page 567: Preventing Msdp From Caching A Remote Source

    Example of Verifying the System is not Caching Local Sources When you apply this filter, the SA cache is not affected immediately. When sources that are denied by the ACL time out, they are not refreshed. Until they time out, they continue to reside in the cache. To apply the redistribute filter to entries already present in the SA cache, first clear the SA cache.
  • Page 568: Preventing Msdp From Advertising A Local Source

    R3(conf)# R3(conf)#do show ip msdp peer Peer Addr: 192.168.0.1 Local Addr: 0.0.0.0(639) Connect Source: Lo 0 State: Listening Up/Down Time: 00:01:19 Timers: KeepAlive 30 sec, Hold time 75 sec SourceActive packet count (in/out): 0/0 SAs learned from this peer: 0 SA Filtering: Input (S,G) filter: myremotefilter Output (S,G) filter: none...
  • Page 569: Terminating A Peership

    ip msdp log-adjacency-changes Terminating a Peership MSDP uses TCP as its transport protocol. In a peering relationship, the peer with the lower IP address initiates the TCP session, while the peer with the higher IP address listens on port 639. •...
  • Page 570: Debugging Msdp

    SA Filtering: Input (S,G) filter: myremotefilter Output (S,G) filter: none R3(conf)#do clear ip msdp peer 192.168.0.1 R3(conf)#do show ip msdp peer Peer Addr: 192.168.0.1 Local Addr: 0.0.0.0(0) Connect Source: Lo 0 State: Inactive Up/Down Time: 00:00:04 Timers: KeepAlive 30 sec, Hold time 75 sec SourceActive packet count (in/out): 0/0 SAs learned from this peer: 0 SA Filtering:...
  • Page 571: Configuring Anycast Rp

    Anycast RP relieves these limitations by allowing multiple RPs per group, which can be distributed in a topologically significant manner according to the locations of the sources and receivers. All the RPs serving a given group are configured with an identical anycast address. Sources then register with the topologically closest RP.
  • Page 572: Reducing Source-Active Message Flooding

    interface loopback Make this address the RP for the group. CONFIGURATION mode ip pim rp-address In each routing domain that has multiple RPs serving a group, create another Loopback interface on each RP serving the group with a unique IP address. CONFIGURATION mode interface loopback Peer each RP with every other RP using MSDP, specifying the unique Loopback address as the...
  • Page 573 ip address 10.11.3.1/24 no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/2/1 ip address 10.11.2.1/24 no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/21/1 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.1.12/24 no shutdown interface Loopback 0 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 192.168.0.1/32 no shutdown interface Loopback 1 ip address 192.168.0.11/32 no shutdown router ospf 1 network 10.11.2.0/24 area 0...
  • Page 574 router ospf 1 network 10.11.1.0/24 area 0 network 10.11.4.0/24 area 0 network 192.168.0.22/32 area 0 redistribute static redistribute connected redistribute bgp 100 router bgp 100 redistribute ospf 1 neighbor 192.168.0.3 remote-as 200 neighbor 192.168.0.3 ebgp-multihop 255 neighbor 192.168.0.3 no shutdown ip multicast-msdp ip msdp peer 192.168.0.3 connect-source Loopback 1 ip msdp peer 192.168.0.11 connect-source Loopback 1...
  • Page 575: Msdp Sample Configurations

    ip route 192.168.0.22/32 10.11.0.23 ip pim rp-address 192.168.0.3 group-address 224.0.0.0/4 MSDP Sample Configurations The following examples show the running-configurations described in this chapter. For more information, see the illustrations in the Related Configuration Tasks section. MSDP Sample Configuration: R1 Running-Config MSDP Sample Configuration: R2 Running-Config MSDP Sample Configuration: R3 Running-Config MSDP Sample Configuration: R4 Running-Config...
  • Page 576 ip address 10.11.0.23/24 no shutdown interface Loopback 0 ip address 192.168.0.2/32 no shutdown router ospf 1 network 10.11.1.0/24 area 0 network 10.11.4.0/24 area 0 network 192.168.0.2/32 area 0 redistribute static redistribute connected redistribute bgp 100 router bgp 100 redistribute ospf 1 neighbor 192.168.0.3 remote-as 200 neighbor 192.168.0.3 ebgp-multihop 255 neighbor 192.168.0.3 update-source Loopback 0...
  • Page 577 ip route 192.168.0.2/32 10.11.0.23 ip multicast-routing interface TenGigabitEthernet 4/1/1 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.5.1/24 no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 4/22/1 ip address 10.10.42.1/24 no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 4/31/1 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.6.43/24 no shutdown interface Loopback 0 ip address 192.168.0.4/32 no shutdown router ospf 1 network 10.11.5.0/24 area 0...
  • Page 578: Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (Mstp)

    Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (MSTP) Multiple spanning tree protocol (MSTP) — specified in IEEE 802.1Q-2003 — is a rapid spanning tree protocol (RSTP)-based spanning tree variation that improves per-VLAN spanning tree plus (PVST+). MSTP allows multiple spanning tree instances and allows you to map many VLANs to one spanning tree instance to reduce the total number of required instances.
  • Page 579: Spanning Tree Variations

    Spanning Tree Variations The Dell Networking OS supports four variations of spanning tree, as shown in the following table. Table 59. Spanning Tree Variations Dell Networking Term IEEE Specification Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) 802 .1d Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP) 802 .1w...
  • Page 580: Enable Multiple Spanning Tree Globally

    Enable MSTP. PROTOCOL MSTP mode no disable Example of Verifying MSTP is Enabled To verify that MSTP is enabled, use the show config command in PROTOCOL MSTP mode. Dell(conf)#protocol spanning-tree mstp Dell(config-mstp)#show config protocol spanning-tree mstp no disable Dell# Adding and Removing Interfaces To add and remove interfaces, use the following commands.
  • Page 581 All bridges in the MSTP region must have the same VLAN-to-instance mapping. To view which instance a VLAN is mapped to, use the show spanning-tree mst vlan command from EXEC Privilege mode. Dell(conf-mstp)#name my-mstp-region Dell(conf-mstp)#exit Dell(conf)#do show spanning-tree mst config MST region name: my-mstp-region Revision: 0 MSTI VID 1 100...
  • Page 582: Influencing Mstp Root Selection

    For a bridge to be in the same MSTP region as another, all three of these qualities must match exactly. The default values for the name and revision number must match on all Dell Networking OS devices. If there are non-Dell devices that participate in MSTP, ensure these values match on all devices.
  • Page 583: Changing The Region Name Or Revision

    • Max-hops — the maximum number of hops a BPDU can travel before a receiving switch discards it. NOTE: Dell Networking recommends that only experienced network administrators change MSTP parameters. Poorly planned modification of MSTP parameters can negatively affect network performance.
  • Page 584: Modifying The Interface Parameters

    PROTOCOL MSTP mode hello-time seconds NOTE: With large configurations (especially those configurations with more ports) Dell Networking recommends increasing the hello-time. The range is from 1 to 10. The default is 2 seconds. Change the max-age parameter. PROTOCOL MSTP mode max-age seconds The range is from 6 to 40.
  • Page 585: Configuring An Edgeport

    The following lists the default values for port cost by interface. Table 60. Default Values for Port Costs by Interface Port Cost Default Value 100-Mb/s Ethernet interfaces 200000 1-Gigabit Ethernet interfaces 20000 10-Gigabit Ethernet interfaces 2000 Port Channel with 100 Mb/s Ethernet interfaces 180000 Port Channel with 1-Gigabit Ethernet interfaces 18000...
  • Page 586: Flush Mac Addresses After A Topology Change

    Dell(conf-if-te-3/11/1)# Flush MAC Addresses after a Topology Change Dell Networking OS has an optimized MAC address flush mechanism for RSTP, MSTP, and PVST+ that flushes addresses only when necessary, which allows for faster convergence during topology changes. However, you may activate the flushing mechanism defined by 802.1Q-2003 using the tc-flush- standard command, which flushes MAC addresses after every topology change notification.
  • Page 587: Router 1 Running-Configurationrouter 2 Running-Configurationrouter 3 Running-Configurationsftos Example Running-Configuration

    Figure 89. MSTP with Three VLANs Mapped to Two Spanning Tree Instances Router 1 Running-Configuration This example uses the following steps: Enable MSTP globally and set the region name and revision map MSTP instances to the VLANs. Assign Layer-2 interfaces to the MSTP topology. Create VLANs mapped to MSTP instances tag interfaces to the VLANs.
  • Page 588 no shutdown interface Vlan 300 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 1/21,31/1 no shutdown Router 2 Running-Configuration This example uses the following steps: Enable MSTP globally and set the region name and revision map MSTP instances to the VLANs. Assign Layer-2 interfaces to the MSTP topology. Create VLANs mapped to MSTP instances tag interfaces to the VLANs.
  • Page 589 name Tahiti revision 123 MSTI 1 VLAN 100 MSTI 2 VLAN 200,300 (Step 2) interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/11/1 no ip address switchport no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/21/1 no ip address switchport no shutdown (Step 3) interface Vlan 100 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/11/1,21/1 no shutdown interface Vlan 200...
  • Page 590: Debugging And Verifying Mstp Configurations

    (Step 3) interface vlan 100 tagged 1/0/31 tagged 1/0/32 exit interface vlan 200 tagged 1/0/31 tagged 1/0/32 exit interface vlan 300 tagged 1/0/31 tagged 1/0/32 exit Debugging and Verifying MSTP Configurations To debut and verify MSTP configuration, use the following commands. •...
  • Page 591 – Are there “extra” MSTP instances in the Sending or Received logs? This may mean that an additional MSTP instance was configured on one router but not the others. The following example shows the show run spanning-tree mstp command. Dell#show run spanning-tree mstp protocol spanning-tree mstp name Tahiti...
  • Page 592 INST 2: Flags: 0x70, Reg Root: 32768:0001.e8d5.cbbd, Int Root Cost Brg/Port Prio: 32768/128, Rem Hops: 20 Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (MSTP)
  • Page 593: Multicast Features

    Implementation Information Because protocol control traffic in the Dell Networking OS is redirected using the MAC address, and multicast control traffic and multicast data traffic might map to the same MAC address, the Dell Networking OS might forward data traffic with certain MAC addresses to the CPU in addition to control traffic.
  • Page 594: Multicast Policies

    Limiting the Number of Multicast Routes When the total number of multicast routes on a system limit is reached, the Dell Networking OS does not process any IGMP or multicast listener discovery protocol (MLD) joins to PIM — though it still processes leave messages —...
  • Page 595 Dell Networking OS Behavior: Do not enter the ip igmp access-group command before creating the access-list. If you do, after entering your first deny rule, Dell Networking OS clears the multicast routing table and re-learns all groups, even those not covered by the rules in the access-list, because there is an implicit deny all rule at the end of all access-lists.
  • Page 596 Figure 90. Preventing a Host from Joining a Group The following table lists the location and description shown in the previous illustration. Table 61. Preventing a Host from Joining a Group — Description Location Description • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/21/1 1/21/1 •...
  • Page 597 Location Description • ip address 10.11.13.1/24 • no shutdown • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/1/1 2/1/1 • ip pim sparse-mode • ip address 10.11.1.1/24 • no shutdown • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/11/1 2/11/1 • ip pim sparse-mode • ip address 10.11.12.2/24 • no shutdown •...
  • Page 598 Preventing a PIM Router from Forming an Adjacency To prevent a router from participating in PIM (for example, to configure stub multicast routing), use the following command. • Prevent a router from participating in PIM. INTERFACE mode ip pim neighbor-filter Setting a Threshold for Switching to the SPT The functionality to specify a threshold for switchover to the shortest path trees (SPTs) is available on the platform.
  • Page 599 Figure 91. Preventing a Source from Transmitting to a Group The following table lists the location and description shown in the previous illustration. Table 63. Preventing a Source from Transmitting to a Group — Description Location Description • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/21/1 1/21/1 •...
  • Page 600 Location Description • ip address 10.11.13.1/24 • no shutdown • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/1/1 2/1/1 • ip pim sparse-mode • ip address 10.11.1.1/24 • no shutdown • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/11/1 2/11/1 • ip pim sparse-mode • ip address 10.11.12.2/24 • no shutdown •...
  • Page 601 To permit or deny PIM Join/Prune messages on an interface using an extended IP access list, use the following command. NOTE: Dell Networking recommends not using the ip pim join-filter command on an interface between a source and the RP router. Using this command in this scenario could cause problems with the PIM-SM source registration process resulting in excessive traffic being sent to the CPU of both the RP and PIM DR of the source.
  • Page 602: Object Tracking

    (VRRP), to monitor tracked objects (for example, interface or link status) and take appropriate action when the state of an object changes. NOTE: In Dell Networking OS release version 8.4.1.0, object tracking is supported only on VRRP. Object Tracking Overview Object tracking allows you to define objects of interest, monitor their state, and report to a client when a change in an object’s state occurs.
  • Page 603: Track Layer 2 Interfaces

    Figure 92. Object Tracking Example When you configure a tracked object, such as an IPv4/IPv6 a route or interface, you specify an object number to identify the object. Optionally, you can also specify: • UP and DOWN thresholds used to report changes in a route metric. •...
  • Page 604: Track Ipv4 And Ipv6 Routes

    Track IPv4 and IPv6 Routes You can create an object that tracks an IPv4 or IPv6 route entry in the routing table. Specify a tracked route by its IPv4 or IPv6 address and prefix-length. Optionally specify a tracked route by a virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) instance name if the route to be tracked is part of a VRF.
  • Page 605: Set Tracking Delays

    Track Layer 3 Interfaces • Track an IPv4/IPv6 Route For a complete listing of all commands related to object tracking, refer to the Dell Networking OS Command Line Interface Reference Guide. Tracking a Layer 2 Interface You can create an object that tracks the line-protocol state of a Layer 2 interface and monitors its operational status (UP or DOWN).
  • Page 606: Tracking A Layer 3 Interface

    The text string can be up to 80 characters. (Optional) Display the tracking configuration and the tracked object’s status. EXEC Privilege mode show track object-id Example of Configuring Object Tracking Dell(conf)#track 100 interface tengigabitethernet 7/1/1 line-protocol Dell(conf-track-100)#delay up 20 Dell(conf-track-100)#description San Jose data center Dell(conf-track-100)#end Dell#show track 100...
  • Page 607 • For a 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword TenGigabitEthernet then the slot/port/ subport information. • For a port channel interface, enter the keywords port-channel then a number. • For a VLAN interface, enter the keyword vlan then a number from 1 to 4094. For an IPv4 interface, a routing object only tracks the UP/DOWN status of the specified IPv4 interface (the track interface ip-routing command).
  • Page 608: Track An Ipv4/Ipv6 Route

    Examples of Configuring Object Tracking for an IPv4 or IPv6 Interface Examples of Configuring Object Tracking for an IPv4 or IPv6 Interface The following is an example of configuring object tracking for an IPv4 interface: Dell(conf)#track 101 interface tengigabitethernet 7/2/1 ip routing Dell(conf-track-101)#delay up 20 Dell(conf-track-101)#description NYC metro...
  • Page 609 – For OSPF, you can set the resolution in the range from 1 to 1592, where the default is 1. – The resolution value used to map static routes is not configurable. By default, Dell Networking OS assigns a metric of 0 to static routes.
  • Page 610 Reachability is Down (route not in route table) 2 changes, last change 00:02:49 Tracked by: Dell#configure Dell(conf)#track 4 ip route 3.1.1.0/24 reachability vrf vrf1 The following example configures object tracking on the reachability of an IPv6 route: Dell(conf)#track 105 ipv6 route 1234::/64 reachability...
  • Page 611 The range of resolution values is: • ISIS routes - 1 to 1000. The default is 1. • OSPF routes - 1 to 1592. The efault is 1. Configure object tracking on the metric of an IPv4 or IPv6 route. CONFIGURATION mode track object-id {ip route ip-address/prefix-len | ipv6 route ipv6-address/ prefix-len} metric threshold [vrf vrf-name]...
  • Page 612: Displaying Tracked Objects

    Example of IPv4 and IPv6 Tracking Metric Thresholds Example of IPv4 and IPv6 Tracking Metric Thresholds The following example configures object tracking on the metric threshold of an IPv4 route: Dell(conf)#track 6 ip route 2.1.1.0/24 metric threshold Dell(conf-track-6)#delay down 20 Dell(conf-track-6)#delay up 20...
  • Page 613 IP Route Resolution ISIS OSPF IPv6 Route Resolution ISIS Example of the show track vrf Command Dell#show track vrf red Track 5 IP route 192.168.0.0/24 reachability, Vrf: red Reachability is Up (CONNECTED) 3 changes, last change 00:02:39 First-hop interface is TenGigabitEthernet 1/4/1...
  • Page 614: Open Shortest Path First (Ospfv2 And Ospfv3)

    Open Shortest Path First (OSPFv2 and OSPFv3) Open shortest path first (OSPFv2 for IPv4) and OSPF version 3 (OSPF for IPv6) are supported on Dell Networking OS. This chapter provides a general description of OSPFv2 (OSPF for IPv4) and OSPFv3 (OSPF for IPv6) as supported in the Dell Networking Operating System (OS).
  • Page 615: Area Types

    Areas allow you to further organize your routers within in the AS. One or more areas are required within the AS. Areas are valuable in that they allow sub-networks to "hide" within the AS, thus minimizing the size of the routing tables on all routers. An area within the AS may not see the details of another area’s topology.
  • Page 616: Networks And Neighbors

    AS information from the backbone or other areas. However, a virtual link can traverse it. • Totally stubby areas are referred to as no summary areas in the Dell Networking OS. Networks and Neighbors As a link-state protocol, OSPF sends routing information to other OSPF routers concerning the state of the links between them.
  • Page 617 Figure 94. OSPF Routing Examples Backbone Router (BR) A backbone router (BR) is part of the OSPF Backbone, Area 0. This includes all ABRs. It can also include any routers that connect only to the backbone and another ABR, but are only part of Area 0, such as Router I in the previous example. Area Border Router (ABR) Within an AS, an area border router (ABR) connects one or more areas to the backbone.
  • Page 618: Designated And Backup Designated Routers

    These router designations are not the same ad the router IDs described earlier. The DRs and BDRs are configurable in Dell Networking OS. If you do not define DR or BDR, the system assigns them. OSPF looks at the priority of the routers on the segment to determine which routers are the DR and BDR. The router with the highest priority is elected the DR.
  • Page 619 • Type 5: LSA — These LSAs contain information imported into OSPF from other routing processes. They are flooded to all areas, except stub areas. The link-state ID of the Type 5 LSA is the external network number. • Type 7: External LSA — Routers in an NSSA do not receive external LSAs from ABRs, but are allowed to send external routing information for redistribution.
  • Page 620: Router Priority And Cost

    Figure 95. Priority and Cost Examples OSPF with Dell Networking OS The Dell Networking OS supports up to 10,000 OSPF routes for OSPFv2. Within the that 10,000 routes, you can designate up to 8,000 routes as external and up to 2,000 as inter/intra area routes.
  • Page 621: Graceful Restart

    Dell Networking OS supports stub areas, totally stub (no summary) and not so stubby areas (NSSAs) and supports the following LSAs, as described earlier. • Router (type 1) • Network (type 2) • Network Summary (type 3) • AS Boundary (type 4) •...
  • Page 622: Fast Convergence (Ospfv2, Ipv4 Only)

    Fast convergence allows you to define the speeds at which LSAs are originated and accepted, and reduce OSPFv2 end-to-end convergence time. Dell Networking OS allows you to accept and originate LSAs as soon as they are available to speed up route information propagation.
  • Page 623: Rfc-2328 Compliant Ospf Flooding

    Enabling RFC-2328 Compliant OSPF Flooding To enable OSPF flooding, use the following command. When you enable this command, it configures Dell Networking OS to flood LSAs on all interfaces. • Enable RFC 2328 flooding.
  • Page 624: Ospf Ack Packing

    In Dell Networking OS, the OSPF dead interval value is, by default, set to 40 seconds, and is independent of the OSPF hello interval. Configuring a hello interval does not change the dead interval in Dell Networking OS.
  • Page 625: Configuration Information

    Adjacent with neighbor 1.1.1.1 (Backup Designated Router) Dell (conf-if-te-2/2/1)# Configuration Information The interfaces must be in Layer 3 mode (assigned an IP address) and enabled so that they can send and receive traffic. The OSPF process must know about these interfaces.
  • Page 626 Dell(conf-router_ospf-1)# Dell(conf-router_ospf-1)#end Dell# For a complete list of the OSPF commands, refer to the OSPF section in the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide document. Enabling OSPFv2 To enable Layer 3 routing, assign an IP address to an interface (physical or Loopback). By default, OSPF, similar to all routing protocols, is disabled.
  • Page 627 In CONFIGURATION ROUTER OSPF mode, assign the router ID. The router ID is not required to be the router’s IP address. However, Dell Networking recommends using the IP address as the router ID for easier management and troubleshooting. Optional process-id commands are also described.
  • Page 628 Dell(conf-router_ospf-1)#network 20.20.20.20/24 area 2 Dell(conf-router_ospf-1)# Dell# Dell Networking recommends using the interface IP addresses for the OSPFv2 router ID for easier management and troubleshooting. To view the configuration, use the show config command in CONFIGURATION ROUTER OSPF mode. OSPF, by default, sends hello packets out to all physical interfaces assigned an IP address that is a subset of a network on which OSPF is enabled.
  • Page 629 Loopback interface address has a higher precedence than other interface addresses. Example of Viewing OSPF Status on a Loopback Interface Dell#show ip ospf 1 int TenGigabitEthernet 1/23/1 is up, line protocol is up Internet Address 10.168.0.1/24, Area 0.0.0.1 Process ID 1, Router ID 10.168.253.2, Network Type BROADCAST, Cost: 1...
  • Page 630 Example of the show ip ospf database database-summary Command To view which LSAs are transmitted, use the show ip ospf database process-id database- summary command in EXEC Privilege mode. Dell#show ip ospf 34 database database-summary OSPF Router with ID (10.1.2.100) (Process ID 34) Area ID Router Network S-Net S-ASBR Type-7 Subtotal 2.2.2.2...
  • Page 631 When you configure a passive interface, the show ip ospf process-id interface command adds the words passive interface to indicate that the hello packets are not transmitted on that interface (shown in bold). Dell#show ip ospf 34 int TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 is up, line protocol is down Internet Address 10.1.2.100/24, Area 1.1.1.1 Process ID 34, Router ID 10.1.2.100, Network Type BROADCAST, Cost: 10...
  • Page 632 Dell# Changing OSPFv2 Parameters on Interfaces In Dell Networking OS, you can modify the OSPF settings on the interfaces. Some interface parameter values must be consistent across all interfaces to avoid routing errors. For example, set the same time interval for the hello packets on all routers in the OSPF network to prevent misconfiguration of OSPF neighbors.
  • Page 633 – cost: The range is from 1 to 65535 (the default depends on the interface speed). • Change the time interval the router waits before declaring a neighbor dead. CONFIG-INTERFACE mode ip ospf dead-interval seconds – seconds: the range is from 1 to 65535 (the default is 40 seconds). The dead interval must be four times the hello interval.
  • Page 634 10.1.2.100 255.255.255.0 no shutdown ip ospf cost 45 Dell(conf-if)#end Dell#show ip ospf 34 interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 is up, line protocol is up Internet Address 10.1.2.100/24, Area 2.2.2.2 Process ID 34, Router ID 10.1.2.100, Network Type BROADCAST, Cost: 45 Transmit Delay is 1 sec, State DR, Priority 1 Designated Router (ID) 10.1.2.100, Interface address 10.1.2.100...
  • Page 635 Enabling OSPFv2 Graceful Restart Graceful restart is enabled for the global OSPF process. The Dell Networking implementation of OSPFv2 graceful restart enables you to specify: • grace period — the length of time the graceful restart process can last before OSPF terminates it.
  • Page 636 After you enable restart mode the router advertises the neighbor as fully adjacent during a restart. For more information about OSPF graceful restart, refer to the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide. Example of the show run ospf Command When you configure a graceful restart on an OSPFv2 router, the show run ospf command displays information similar to the following.
  • Page 637 Example of Viewing OSPF Configuration after Redistributing Routes To view the current OSPF configuration, use the show running-config ospf command in EXEC mode or the show config command in ROUTER OSPF mode. Dell(conf-router_ospf)#show config router ospf 34 network 10.1.2.32 0.0.0.255 area 2.2.2.2 network 10.1.3.24 0.0.0.255 area 3.3.3.3...
  • Page 638 Troubleshooting OSPFv2 Use the information in this section to troubleshoot OSPFv2 operation on the switch. Be sure to check the following, as these questions represent typical issues that interrupt an OSPFv2 process. NOTE: The following tasks are not a comprehensive; they provide some examples of typical troubleshooting checks.
  • Page 639 – packet: view OSPF packet information. – spf: view SPF information. – database-timers rate-limit: view the LSAs currently in the queue. Example of Viewing OSPF Configuration Dell#show run ospf router ospf 4 router-id 4.4.4.4 network 4.4.4.0/28 area 1 ipv6 router ospf 999 default-information originate always router-id 10.10.10.10...
  • Page 640 Figure 96. Basic Topology and CLI Commands for OSPFv2 OSPF Area 0 — Te 1/1/1 and 1/2/1 router ospf 11111 network 10.0.11.0/24 area 0 network 10.0.12.0/24 area 0 network 192.168.100.0/24 area 0 interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 ip address 10.1.11.1/24 no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/2/1 ip address 10.2.12.2/24 no shutdown...
  • Page 641: Configuration Task List For Ospfv3 (Ospf For Ipv6)

    OSPF Area 0 — Te 2/1/1 and 2/2/1 router ospf 22222 network 192.168.100.0/24 area 0 network 10.2.21.0/24 area 0 network 10.2.22.0/24 area 0 interface Loopback 20 ip address 192.168.100.20/24 no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/1/1 ip address 10.2.21.2/24 no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/2/1 ip address 10.2.22.2/24 no shutdown Configuration Task List for OSPFv3 (OSPF for IPv6)
  • Page 642: Enabling Ipv6 Unicast Routing

    Example Dell#conf Dell(conf)#ipv6 router ospf 1 Dell(conf-ipv6-router_ospf)#timer spf 2 5 Dell(conf-ipv6-router_ospf)# Dell(conf-ipv6-router_ospf)#show config ipv6 router ospf 1 timers spf 2 5 Dell(conf-ipv6-router_ospf)# Dell(conf-ipv6-router_ospf)#end Dell# Enabling IPv6 Unicast Routing To enable IPv6 unicast routing, use the following command. • Enable IPv6 unicast routing globally.
  • Page 643: Assigning Area Id On An Interface

    The format is A:B:C::F/128. Bring up the interface. CONF-INT-type slot/port mode no shutdown Assigning Area ID on an Interface To assign the OSPFv3 process to an interface, use the following command. The ipv6 ospf area command enables OSPFv3 on an interface and places the interface in the specified area.
  • Page 644: Assigning Ospfv3 Process Id And Router Id To A Vrf

    Assigning OSPFv3 Process ID and Router ID to a VRF To assign, disable, or reset OSPFv3 on a non-default VRF, use the following commands. • Enable the OSPFv3 process on a non-default VRF and enter OSPFv3 mode. CONFIGURATION mode ipv6 router ospf {process ID}} The process ID range is from 0 to 65535.
  • Page 645: Redistributing Routes

    – For a 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword TenGigabitEthernet then the slot/port/ subport information. – For a 40-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword fortyGigE then the slot/port information. – For a port channel interface, enter the keywords port-channel then a number. –...
  • Page 646: Enabling Ospfv3 Graceful Restart

    – route-map map-name: enter a name of a configured route map. Enabling OSPFv3 Graceful Restart Follow the procedure in this section to configure graceful restart for OSPFv3. By default, OSPFv3 graceful restart is disabled and functions only in a helper role to help restarting neighbor routers in their graceful restarts when it receives a Grace LSA.
  • Page 647 30.1.1.0/24 area 0 ipv6 router ospf 1 log-adjacency-changes graceful-restart grace-period 180 The following example shows the show ipv6 ospf database database-summary command. Dell#show ipv6 ospf database database-summary OSPFv3 Router with ID (200.1.1.1) (Process ID 1) Process 1 database summary Type Count/Status...
  • Page 648: Ospfv3 Authentication Using Ipsec

    Tunnel mode — is more secure and encrypts both the header and payload. On the receiving side, an IPsec-compliant device decrypts each packet. NOTE: Dell Networking OS supports only Transport Encryption mode in OSPFv3 authentication with IPsec. With IPsec-based authentication, Crypto images are used to include the IPsec secure socket application programming interface (API) required for use with OSPFv3.
  • Page 649 ESP header between the next layer protocol header and encapsulated IP header in Tunnel mode. However, Tunnel mode is not supported in Dell Networking OS. For detailed information about the IP ESP protocol, refer to RFC 4303.
  • Page 650 NOTE: To encrypt all keys on a router, use the service password-encryption command in Global Configuration mode. However, this command does not provide a high level of network security. To enable key encryption in an IPsec security policy at an interface or area level, specify 7 for [key-encryption-type] when you enter the ipv6 ospf authentication ipsec or ipv6 ospf encryption ipsec command.
  • Page 651 Configuring IPsec Encryption on an Interface To configure, remove, or display IPsec encryption on an interface, use the following commands. Prerequisite: Before you enable IPsec encryption on an OSPFv3 interface, first enable IPv6 unicast routing globally, configure an IPv6 address and enable OSPFv3 on the interface, and assign it to an area (refer to Configuration Task List for OSPFv3 (OSPF for IPv6)).
  • Page 652 Configuring IPSec Authentication for an OSPFv3 Area To configure, remove, or display IPSec authentication for an OSPFv3 area, use the following commands. Prerequisite: Before you enable IPsec authentication on an OSPFv3 area, first enable OSPFv3 globally on the router (refer to Configuration Task List for OSPFv3 (OSPF for IPv6)).
  • Page 653 The configuration of IPsec encryption on an interface-level takes precedence over an area-level configuration. If you remove an interface configuration, an area encryption policy that has been configured is applied to the interface. • Enable IPsec encryption for OSPFv3 packets in an area. CONF-IPV6-ROUTER-OSPF mode area area-id encryption ipsec spi number esp encryption-algorithm [key- encryption-type] key authentication-algorithm [key-authentication-type] key...
  • Page 654 Inbound ESP Cipher Key bbdd96e6eb4828e2e27bc3f9ff541e43faa759c9ef5706ba10345a1039ba8f8a Outbound ESP Cipher Key : bbdd96e6eb4828e2e27bc3f9ff541e43faa759c9ef5706ba10345a1039ba8f8a Transform set : esp-128-aes esp-sha1-hmac The following example shows the show crypto ipsec sa ipv6 command. Dell#show crypto ipsec sa ipv6 Open Shortest Path First (OSPFv2 and OSPFv3)
  • Page 655: Troubleshooting Ospfv3

    Interface: TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 Link Local address: fe80::201:e8ff:fe40:4d10 IPSecv6 policy name: OSPFv3-1-500 inbound ah sas spi : 500 (0x1f4) transform : ah-md5-hmac in use settings : {Transport, } replay detection support : N STATUS : ACTIVE outbound ah sas spi : 500 (0x1f4) transform : ah-md5-hmac in use settings : {Transport, } replay detection support : N...
  • Page 656 • show ipv6 interfaces • show ipv6 protocols • debug ipv6 ospf events and/or packets • show ipv6 neighbors • show virtual links • show ipv6 routes Viewing Summary Information To get general route, configuration, links status, and debug information, use the following commands. •...
  • Page 657: Policy-Based Routing (Pbr)

    Policy-based Routing (PBR) Policy-based Routing (PBR) allows a switch to make routing decisions based on policies applied to an interface. Overview When a router receives a packet it normally decides where to forward it based on the destination address in the packet, which is used to look up an entry in a routing table. However, in some cases, there may be a need to forward the packet based on other criteria: size, source, protocol type, destination, and so on.
  • Page 658: Implementing Policy-Based Routing With Dell Networking Os

    • If the specified next-hops are not reachable, the normal routing table is used to forward the traffic. • Dell Networking OS supports multiple next-hop entries in the redirect lists. • Redirect-lists are applied at Ingress. PBR with Redirect-to-Tunnel Option: The user can provide a tunnel id for a redirect rule.
  • Page 659: Configuration Task List For Policy-Based Routing

    Dell Networking OS assigns the first available sequence number to a rule configured without a sequence number and inserts the rule into the PBR CAM region next to the existing entries. Because the order of rules is important, ensure that you configure any necessary sequence numbers.
  • Page 660: Create A Rule For A Redirect-List

    16 characters. To delete the redirect list, use the no ip redirect-list command. The following example creates a redirect list by the name of xyz. Dell(conf)#ip redirect-list ? WORD Redirect-list name (max 16 chars) Dell(conf)#ip redirect-list xyz Create a Rule for a Redirect-list To set the rules for the redirect list, use the following command.
  • Page 661 15 redirect 10.1.1.3 ip 20.1.1.0/25 any seq 20 redirect 10.1.1.3 ip 20.1.1.0/24 any Dell(conf-redirect-list)# NOTE: Starting with the Dell Networking OS version 9.4(0.0), the use of multiple recursive routes with the same source-address and destination-address combination in a redirect policy on an router.
  • Page 662: Apply A Redirect-List To An Interface Using A Redirect-Group

    Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)# In addition to supporting multiple redirect-lists in a redirect-group, multiple redirect-groups are supported on a single interface. Dell Networking OS has the capability to support multiple groups on an interface for backup purposes. Show Redirect List Configuration To view the configuration redirect list configuration, use the following commands.
  • Page 663 List the redirect list configuration using the show ip redirect-list redirect-list-name command. The non-contiguous mask displays in dotted format (x.x.x.x). The contiguous mask displays in /x format. Dell#show ip redirect-list explicit_tunnel IP redirect-list explicit_tunnel: Defined as: seq 5 redirect tunnel 1 track 1 tcp 155.55.2.0/24 222.22.2.0/24, Track 1...
  • Page 664: Sample Configuration

    Example: Showing CAM PBR Configuration Dell#show cam pbr stack-unit 1 port-set 0 TCP Flag: Bit 5 - URG, Bit 4 - ACK, Bit 3 - PSH, Bit 2 - RST, Bit 1 - SYN,...
  • Page 665 Policy-based Routing (PBR)
  • Page 666: Pim Sparse-Mode (Pim-Sm)

    The SPT-Threshold is zero, which means that the last-hop designated router (DR) joins the shortest path tree (SPT) to the source after receiving the first multicast packet. • Dell Networking OS reduces the number of control messages sent between multicast routers by bundling Join and Prune requests in the same message. •...
  • Page 667: Refuse Multicast Traffic

    Prune message. Dell Networking OS Behavior: When the router creates an SPT to the source, there are then two paths between the receiver and the source, the SPT and the RPT. Until the router can prune itself from the RPT, the receiver receives duplicate multicast packets which may cause disruption.
  • Page 668: Configuring Pim-Sm

    Enable PIM-Sparse mode. INTERFACE mode ip pim sparse-mode Examples of Viewing PIM-SM Information To display which interfaces are enabled with PIM-SM, use the show ip pim interface command from EXEC Privilege mode. Dell#show ip pim interface Address Interface Ver/ Query Mode Count...
  • Page 669: Configuring S,G Expiry Timers

    To display PIM neighbors for each interface, use the show ip pim neighbor command EXEC Privilege mode. Dell#show ip pim neighbor Neighbor Interface Uptime/Expires Address Prio/Mode 127.87.5.5 Te 1/11/1 01:44:59/00:01:16 1 / S 127.87.3.5 Te 1/12/1 01:45:00/00:01:16 1 / DR 127.87.50.5...
  • Page 670: Configuring A Static Rendezvous Point

    10 permit ip any 232.1.1.0/24 seq 15 permit ip 100.1.0.0/16 any Dell(config-ext-nacl)#exit Dell(conf)#ip pim sparse-mode sg-expiry-timer 1800 sg-list SGtimer To display the expiry time configuration, use the show running-configuration pim command from EXEC Privilege mode. Configuring a Static Rendezvous Point The rendezvous point (RP) is a PIM-enabled interface on a router that acts as the root a group-specific tree;...
  • Page 671: Configuring A Designated Router

    226.1.1.1 165.87.50.5 To display the assigned RP for a group range (group-to-RP mapping), use the show ip pim rp mapping command in EXEC privilege mode. Dell#show ip pim rp mapping PIM Group-to-RP Mappings Group(s): 224.0.0.0/4, Static RP: 165.87.50.5, v2 Configuring a Designated Router Multiple PIM-SM routers might be connected to a single local area network (LAN) segment.
  • Page 672 ip pim bsr-border • Remove candidate RP advertisements. clear ip pim rp-mapping PIM Sparse-Mode (PIM-SM)
  • Page 673: Pim Source-Specific Mode (Pim-Ssm)

    SPT. PIM-SSM uses IGMPv3. Because receivers subscribe to a source and group, the RP and shared tree is unnecessary; only SPTs are used. On Dell Networking systems, it is possible to use PIM-SM with IGMPv3 to achieve the same result, but PIM-SSM eliminates the unnecessary protocol overhead.
  • Page 674: Configure Pim-Ssm

    Then, specify the multicast source. • When an SSM map is in place and Dell Networking OS cannot find any matching access lists for a group, it continues to create (*,G) entries because there is an implicit deny for unspecified groups in the ACL.
  • Page 675: Configuring Pim-Ssm With Igmpv2

    When an extended ACL is associated with this command, Dell Networking OS displays an error message. If you apply an extended ACL before you create it, Dell Networking OS accepts the configuration, but when the ACL is later defined, Dell Networking OS ignores the ACL and the stated mapping has no effect.
  • Page 676 Uptime 00:00:05 Expires Never Router mode INCLUDE Last reporter 10.11.4.2 Last reporter mode INCLUDE Last report received ALLOW Group source list Source address Uptime Expires 10.11.5.2 00:00:05 00:02:04 Member Ports: Te 1/2 PIM Source-Specific Mode (PIM-SSM)
  • Page 677: Port Monitoring

    In general, a monitoring port should have no ip address and no shutdown as the only configuration; Dell Networking OS permits a limited set of commands for monitoring ports. You can display these commands using the ? command. A monitoring port also may not be a member of a VLAN.
  • Page 678: Port Monitoring

    Te 1/1/1 Te 2/5/1 both Port Dell(conf-mon-sess-5)# Dell(conf)#mon ses 300 Dell(conf-mon-sess-300)#source tengig 1/17/1 destination tengig 1/4/1 direction % Error: Exceeding max MG ports for this MD port pipe. Dell(conf-mon-sess-300)# Dell(conf-mon-sess-300)#source tengig 1/17/1 destination tegnig 1/1/1 direction Dell(conf-mon-sess-300)#do show mon session...
  • Page 679: Configuring Port Monitoring

    Figure 97. Port Monitoring Configurations Dell Networking OS Behavior: All monitored frames are tagged if the configured monitoring direction is egress (TX), regardless of whether the monitored port (MD) is a Layer 2 or Layer 3 port. If the MD port is a Layer 2 port, the frames are tagged with the VLAN ID of the VLAN to which the MD belongs.
  • Page 680 To display information on currently configured port-monitoring sessions, use the show monitor session command from EXEC Privilege mode. Dell(conf)#monitor session 0 Dell(conf-mon-sess-0)#$source ten 1/1/1 dest ten 1/2/1 dir rx Dell(conf-mon-sess-0)#show c monitor session 0 source TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 destination TenGigabitEthernet 1/2/1 direction...
  • Page 681: Configuring Monitor Multicast Queue

    To configure monitor QoS multicast queue ID, use the following commands. Configure monitor QoS multicast queue ID. CONFIGURATION mode monitor multicast-queue queue-id Dell(conf)#monitor multicast-queue 7 Verify information about monitor configurations. EXEC mode EXEC Privilege mode show run monitor session Dell#show run monitor session monitor multicast-queue 7 Dell# Port Monitoring...
  • Page 682: Enabling Flow-Based Monitoring

    Enable flow-based monitoring for a monitoring session. MONITOR SESSION mode flow-based enable Define in access-list rules that include the keyword monitor. For port monitoring, Dell Networking OS only considers traffic matching rules with the keyword monitor. CONFIGURATION mode ip access-list...
  • Page 683: Remote Port Mirroring

    Remote Port Mirroring While local port monitoring allows you to monitor traffic from one or more source ports by directing it to a destination port on the same switch/router, remote port mirroring allows you to monitor Layer 2 and Layer 3 ingress and/or egress traffic on multiple source ports on different switches and forward the mirrored traffic to multiple destination ports on different switches.
  • Page 684: Configuring Remote Port Mirroring

    Figure 99. Remote Port Mirroring Configuring Remote Port Mirroring Remote port mirroring requires a source session (monitored ports on different source switches), a reserved tagged VLAN for transporting mirrored traffic (configured on source, intermediate, and destination switches), and a destination session (destination ports connected to analyzers on destination switches).
  • Page 685 • The L3 interface configuration should be blocked for RPM VLAN. • The member port of the reserved VLAN should have MTU and IPMTU value as MAX+4 (to hold the VLAN tag parameter). • To associate with source session, the reserved VLAN can have at max of only 4 member ports. •...
  • Page 686: Displaying Remote-Port Mirroring Configurations

    Port-channel 10 destination remote-vlan 300 direction rx no disable To display the currently configured source and destination sessions for remote port mirroring on a switch, enter the show monitor session command in EXEC Privilege mode. Dell(conf)#do show monitor session SessID Source Destination...
  • Page 687 Configuring the sample Source Remote Port Mirroring Dell(conf)#interface vlan 10 Dell(conf-if-vl-10)#mode remote-port-mirroring Dell(conf-if-vl-10)#tagged te 1/4/1 Dell(conf-if-vl-10)#exit Dell(conf)#monitor session 1 type rpm Dell(conf-mon-sess-1)#source te 1/5/1 destination remote-vlan 10 dir rx Dell(conf-mon-sess-1)#no disable Dell(conf-mon-sess-1)#exit Dell(conf)#inte vlan 100 Dell(conf-if-vl-100)#tagged te 1/7/1 Dell(conf-if-vl-100)#exit Dell(conf)#interface vlan 20...
  • Page 688 Dell(conf-if-vl-30)#mode remote-port-mirroring Dell(conf-if-vl-30)#tagged te 1/30/1 Dell(conf-if-vl-30)#exit Dell(conf)#interface port-channel 10 Dell(conf-if-po-10)#channel-member te 1/28/1 - 1/28/2 Dell(conf-if-po-10)#no shutdown Dell(conf-if-po-10)#exit Dell(conf)#monitor session 3 type rpm Dell(conf-mon-sess-3)#source port-channel 10 dest remote-vlan 30 dir both Dell(conf-mon-sess-3)#no disable Dell(conf-mon-sess-3)# Dell(conf-mon-sess-3)#exit Dell(conf)#end Dell# Dell#show monitor session SessID...
  • Page 689 Dell(conf)#monitor session 1 type rpm Dell(conf-mon-sess-1)#source remote-vlan 10 dest te 1/4/1 Dell(conf-mon-sess-1)#exit Dell(conf)#monitor session 2 type rpm Dell(conf-mon-sess-2)#source remote-vlan 20 destination te 1/5/1 Dell(conf-mon-sess-2)#tagged destination te 1/5/1 Dell(conf-mon-sess-2)#exit Dell(conf)#monitor session 3 type rpm Dell(conf-mon-sess-3)#source remote-vlan 30 destination te 1/6/1 Dell(conf-mon-sess-3)#tagged destination te 1/6/1...
  • Page 690: Encapsulated Remote Port Monitoring

    Important: When configuring ERPM, follow these guidelines • The Dell Networking OS supports ERPM source session only. Encapsulated packets terminate at the destination IP address or at the analyzer. • You can configure up to four ERPM source sessions on switch.
  • Page 691 The next example shows the configuration of an ERPM session in which VLAN 11 is monitored as the source interface and a MAC ACL filters the monitored ingress traffic. Dell(conf)#mac access-list standard flow Dell(config-std-macl)#seq 5 permit 00:00:0a:00:00:0b count monitor Dell#show running-config interface vlan 11 interface Vlan 11...
  • Page 692: Erpm Behavior On A Typical Dell Networking Os

    ERPM Behavior on a typical Dell Networking OS The Dell Networking OS is designed to support only the Encapsulation of the data received / transmitted at the specified source port (Port A). An ERPM destination session / decapsulation of the ERPM packets at the destination Switch are not supported.
  • Page 693 – This script erpm.zip is available for download at the following location: http:// en.community.dell.com/techcenter/networking/m/force10_networking_scripts/ 20438882.aspx – Unzip the erpm.zip and copy the erpm.py file to the Linux server.
  • Page 694: Per-Vlan Spanning Tree Plus (Pvst+)

    For more information about spanning tree, refer to the Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) chapter. Figure 101. Per-VLAN Spanning Tree The Dell Networking OS supports three other variations of spanning tree, as shown in the following table. Per-VLAN Spanning Tree Plus (PVST+)
  • Page 695: Implementation Information

    The Dell Networking OS implementation of PVST+ uses IEEE 802.1s costs as the default costs (as shown in the following table). Other implementations use IEEE 802.1w costs as the default costs. If you are using Dell Networking systems in a multivendor network, verify that the costs are values you intended.
  • Page 696: Disabling Pvst

    PROTOCOL PVST mode no disable Disabling PVST+ To disable PVST+ globally or on an interface, use the following commands. • Disable PVST+ globally. PROTOCOL PVST mode disable • Disable PVST+ on an interface, or remove a PVST+ parameter configuration. INTERFACE mode no spanning-tree pvst Example of Viewing PVST+ Configuration To display your PVST+ configuration, use the show config command from PROTOCOL PVST mode.
  • Page 697 Figure 102. Load Balancing with PVST+ The bridge with the bridge value for bridge priority is elected root. Because all bridges use the default priority (until configured otherwise), the lowest MAC address is used as a tie-breaker. To increase the likelihood that a bridge is selected as the STP root, assign bridges a low non-default value for bridge priority.
  • Page 698: Modifying Global Pvst+ Parameters

    The default is 15 seconds. • Change the hello-time parameter. PROTOCOL PVST mode vlan hello-time NOTE: With large configurations (especially those configurations with more ports), Dell Networking recommends increasing the hello-time. The range is from 1 to 10. The default is 2 seconds. •...
  • Page 699: Modifying Interface Pvst+ Parameters

    NOTE: The Dell Networking OS implementation of PVST+ uses IEEE 802.1s costs as the default costs. Other implementations use IEEE 802.1w costs as the default costs. If you are using Dell Networking systems in a multi-vendor network, verify that the costs are values you intended.
  • Page 700: Configuring An Edgeport

    BPDUs: an 802.1D BPDU and an untagged PVST+ BPDU. Dell Networking systems do not expect PVST+ BPDU (tagged or untagged) on an untagged port. If this situation occurs, Dell Networking OS places the port in an Error-Disable state. This behavior might result...
  • Page 701: Enabling Pvst+ Extend System Id

    PVST+ to avoid potential misconfigurations. If you enable PVST+ on the Dell Networking switch in this network, P1 and P2 receive BPDUs from each other. Ordinarily, the Bridge ID in the frame matches the Root ID, a loop is detected, and the rules of convergence require that P2 move to blocking state because it has the lowest port ID.
  • Page 702: Pvst+ Sample Configurations

    PVST+ Sample Configurations The following examples provide the running configurations for the topology shown in the previous illustration. Example of PVST+ Configuration (R1) interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/22/1 no ip address switchport no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/32/1 no ip address switchport no shutdown protocol spanning-tree pvst no disable vlan 100 bridge-priority 4096...
  • Page 703 no shutdown protocol spanning-tree pvst no disable vlan 200 bridge-priority 4096 Example of PVST+ Configuration (R3) interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/12/1 no ip address switchport no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/22/1 no ip address switchport no shutdown interface Vlan 100 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/12,22/1 no shutdown interface Vlan 200...
  • Page 704: Quality Of Service (Qos)

    This chapter describes how to use and configure Quality of Service service (QoS) features on the switch. Differentiated service is accomplished by classifying and queuing traffic, and assigning priorities to those queues. Table 68. Dell Networking Operating System (OS) Support for Port-Based, Policy-Based Features Feature Direction...
  • Page 705 Feature Direction Configure a Scheduler to Queue Egress Specify WRED Drop Precedence Egress Create Policy Maps Ingress + Egress Create Input Policy Maps Ingress Honor DSCP Values on Ingress Packets Ingress Honoring dot1p Values on Ingress Packets Ingress Create Output Policy Maps Egress Specify an Aggregate QoS Policy Egress...
  • Page 706: Implementation Information

    Figure 104. Dell Networking QoS Architecture Implementation Information The Dell Networking QoS implementation complies with IEEE 802.1p User Priority Bits for QoS Indication. It also implements these Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) documents: • RFC 2474, Definition of the Differentiated Services Field (DS Field) in the IPv4 Headers •...
  • Page 707: Setting Dot1P Priorities For Incoming Traffic

    Setting dot1p Priorities for Incoming Traffic Dell Networking OS places traffic marked with a priority in a queue based on the following table. If you set a dot1p priority for a port-channel, all port-channel members are configured with the same value.
  • Page 708: Configuring Port-Based Rate Policing

    VLAN is 0. Dell Networking OS Behavior: Hybrid ports can receive untagged, tagged, and priority tagged frames. The rate metering calculation might be inaccurate for untagged ports because an internal assumption is made that all frames are treated as tagged.
  • Page 709: Configuring Port-Based Rate Shaping

    Dell Networking OS Behavior: Rate shaping is effectively rate limiting because of its smaller buffer size. Rate shaping on tagged ports is slightly greater than the configured rate and rate shaping on untagged ports is slightly less than configured rate.
  • Page 710: Policy-Based Qos Configurations

    Class maps differentiate traffic so that you can apply separate quality of service policies to different types of traffic. For both class maps, Layer 2 and Layer 3, Dell Networking OS matches packets against match criteria in the order that you configure them.
  • Page 711 CLASS MAP mode match {ip | ipv6 | ip-any} After you create a class-map, Dell Networking OS places you in CLASS MAP mode. Match-any class maps allow up to five ACLs. Match-all class-maps allow only one ACL. Link the class-map to a queue.
  • Page 712 4. In cases such as these, where class-maps with overlapping ACL rules are applied to different queues, use the keyword order. Dell Networking OS writes to the CAM ACL rules with lower order numbers (order Quality of Service (QoS)
  • Page 713 To display all class-maps or a specific class map, use the following command. Dell Networking OS Behavior: An explicit “deny any" rule in a Layer 3 ACL used in a (match any or match all) class-map creates a "default to Queue 0" entry in the CAM, which causes unintended traffic classification.
  • Page 714: Dot1P To Queue Mapping Requirement

    • Because this functionality forcibly marks all the packets matching the specific match criteria as ‘yellow’, Dell Networking OS does not support Policer based coloring and this feature concurrently. • If single rate two color policer is configured along with this feature, then by default all packets less than PIR would be considered as “Green”...
  • Page 715: Create A Qos Policy

    Matched Packets value shown in the show qos statistics command is reset. NOTE: To avoid issues misconfiguration causes, Dell Networking recommends configuring either DCBX or Egress QoS features, but not both simultaneously. If you enable both DCBX and Egress QoS at the same time, the DCBX configuration is applied and unexpected behavior occurs on the Egress QoS.
  • Page 716 rate-police Setting a dot1p Value for Egress Packets To set a dot1p value for egress packets, use the following command. • Set a dscp or dot1p value for egress packets. QOS-POLICY-IN mode set mac-dot1p Constraints The systems supporting this feature should use only the default global dot1p to queue mapping configuration as described in Dot1p to Queue Mapping Requirement.
  • Page 717: Dscp Color Maps

    26.67% 53.33% NOTE: In Dell Networking OS we support 8 data queues in S4048, S6000, Z9500 and 4 data queues in S3048, S4810. S4820T and, S5000. When you assign a percentage to one queue, note that this change also affects the amount of bandwidth that is allocated to other queues.
  • Page 718 1/11. Create the DSCP color map profile, bat-enclave-map, with a yellow drop precedence , and set the DSCP values to 9,10,11,13,15,16 Dell(conf)# qos dscp-color-map bat-enclave-map Dell(conf-dscp-color-map)# dscp yellow 9,10,11,13,15,16 Dell (conf-dscp-color-map)# exit Assign the color map, bat-enclave-map to interface te 1/11/1.
  • Page 719: Create Policy Maps

    TE 1/10/1 mapONE TE 1/11/1 mapTWO Display summary information about a color policy for a specific interface. Dell# show qos dscp-color-policy summary tengigabitethernet 1/10/1 Interface dscp-color-map TE 1/10/1 mapONE Display detailed information about a color policy for a specific interface...
  • Page 720 <number> qos-polcy Honoring DSCP Values on Ingress Packets Dell Networking OS provides the ability to honor DSCP values on ingress packets using Trust DSCP feature. The following table lists the standard DSCP definitions and indicates to which queues Dell Networking OS maps DSCP values.
  • Page 721 Honoring dot1p Values on Ingress Packets Dell Networking OS honors dot1p values on ingress packets with the Trust dot1p feature. The following table specifies the queue to which the classified traffic is sent based on the dot1p value.
  • Page 722 • If you apply a service policy that contains an ACL to more than one interface, Dell Networking OS uses ACL optimization to conserve CAM space. The ACL optimization behavior detects when an ACL exists in the CAM rather than writing it to the CAM multiple times.
  • Page 723: Enabling Qos Rate Adjustment

    Enabling QoS Rate Adjustment By default while rate limiting, policing, and shaping, Dell Networking OS does not include the Preamble, SFD, or the IFG fields. These fields are overhead; only the fields from MAC destination address to the CRC are used for forwarding and are included in these rate metering calculations.
  • Page 724: Enabling Strict-Priority Queueing

    • Cyclic redundancy check (CRC): 4 bytes • Inter-frame gap (IFG): (variable) You can optionally include overhead fields in rate metering calculations by enabling QoS rate adjustment. QoS rate adjustment is disabled by default. • Specify the number of bytes of packet overhead to include in rate limiting, policing, and shaping calculations.
  • Page 725: Support For Marking Dot1P Value In L3 Input Qos Policy

    A. You will not get the below CLI errors after adding this support: Dell(conf)#qos-policy-input qos-input Dell(conf-qos-policy-in)#set mac-dot1p 5 % Error: Dot1p marking is not allowed on L3 Input Qos Policy. Dell(conf-qos-policy-in)# You will also be able to mark both DSCP and Dot1p in the L3 Input Qos Policy:...
  • Page 726: Weighted Random Early Detection

    Weighted Random Early Detection Weighted random early detection (WRED) is a congestion avoidance mechanism that drops packets to prevent buffering resources from being consumed. The WRED congestion avoidance mechanism drops packets to prevent buffering resources from being consumed. Traffic is a mixture of various kinds of packets. The rate at which some types of packets arrive might be greater than others.
  • Page 727: Applying A Wred Profile To Traffic

    Dell Networking OS assigns a color (also called drop precedence) — red, yellow, or green — to each packet based on it DSCP value before queuing it. DSCP is a 6–bit field. Dell Networking uses the first three bits (LSB) of this field (DP) to determine the drop precedence.
  • Page 728: Displaying Egress-Queue Statistics

    Pre-Calculating Available QoS CAM Space Before Dell Networking OS version 7.3.1, there was no way to measure the number of CAM entries a policy-map would consume (the number of CAM entries that a rule uses is not predictable; from 1 to 16 entries might be used per rule depending upon its complexity).
  • Page 729: Specifying Policy-Based Rate Shaping In Packets Per Second

    • Verify that there are enough available CAM entries. test cam-usage Example of the test cam-usage Command Dell# test cam-usage service-policy input pmap_l2 port-set 0 | port pipe Port-pipe | CAM Partition | Available CAM | Estimated CAM | Status...
  • Page 730: Configuring Policy-Based Rate Shaping

    This aggregated bandwidth enables brief durations of burst traffic that exceeds the peak rate and committed burst. In releases of Dell Networking OS earlier than Release 9.3(0.0), you can configure only the maximum shaping attributes, such as the peak rate and the peak burst settings. You can now specify the committed or minimum burst and committed rate attributes.
  • Page 731: Configuring Weights And Ecn For Wred

    Alternatively, configure the committed rate and committed burst size in bytes. QOS-POLICY-OUT mode Dell(config-qos-policy-out)# rate shape Kbps peak-rate burst-KB committed Kbps committed-rate burst-KB Configuring Weights and ECN for WRED The WRED congestion avoidance functionality drops packets to prevent buffering resources from being consumed.
  • Page 732: Global Service Pools With Wred And Ecn Settings

    Global Service Pools With WRED and ECN Settings Support for global service pools is now available. You can configure global service pools that are shared buffer pools accessed by multiple queues when the minimum guaranteed buffers for the queue are consumed.
  • Page 733: Configuring Wred And Ecn Attributes

    Configure a WRED profile, and specify the threshold and maximum drop rate. WRED mode Dell(conf-wred) #wred—profile thresh-1 Dell(conf-wred) #threshold min 100 max 200 max-drop-rate 40 Configure another WRED profile, and specify the threshold and maximum drop rate. WRED mode Dell(conf-wred) #wred—profile thresh-2...
  • Page 734: Guidelines For Configuring Ecn For Classifying And Color-Marking Packets

    Consider the example where there are no different traffic classes that is all the packets are egressing on the default ‘queue0’. Dell Networking OS can be configured as below to mark the non-ecn packets as yellow packets. ip access-list standard ecn_0...
  • Page 735: Classifying Incoming Packets Using Ecn And Color-Marking

    This way the entire 8-bit ToS field of the IPv4 header shall be used to classify traffic. The Dell Networking OS Release 9.3(0.0) supports the following QOS actions in the ingress policy based QOS: Rate Policing...
  • Page 736 • • You can now use the ‘ecn’ match qualifier along with the above TCP flag for classification. The following combination of match qualifiers is acceptable to be configured for the Dell Networking OS software through L3 ACL command: •...
  • Page 737: Sample Configuration To Mark Non-Ecn Packets As "Yellow" With Single Traffic Class

    • set the packet color as ‘yellow’ • set the packet color as ‘yellow’ and set a new DSCP for the packet This marking action to set the color of the packet is allowed only on the ‘match-any’ logical operator of the class-map.
  • Page 738: Applying Layer 2 Match Criteria On A Layer 3 Interface

    Configure a Layer 2 QoS policy with Layer 2 (Dot1p or source MAC-based) match criteria. CONFIGURATION mode Dell(conf)# policy-map-input l2p layer2 Apply the Layer 2 policy on a Layer 3 interface. INTERFACE mode Dell(conf-if-fo-1/4)# service-policy input l2p layer2 Quality of Service (QoS)
  • Page 739: Managing Hardware Buffer Statistics

    Software-based triggers are supported, which are the values derived from the show command output in the Max Use count mode. In Dell Networking OS Release 9.3(0.0), only the Max Use count mode of operation is supported for the computation of maximum counter values.
  • Page 740 <id> buffer- stats-snapshot unit <id> resource x EXEC/EXEC Privilege mode Dell#show hardware stack-unit 1 buffer-stats-snapshot unit 3 resource interface all queue mcast 3 Unit 1 unit: 3 port: 1 (interface Fo 1/144)
  • Page 741 { id | all } | queue { ucast{id | all}{ mcast {id | all} | all} to view buffer statistics tracking resource information for a specific interface. EXEC/EXEC Privilege mode Dell# show hardware buffer-stats-snapshot resource interface fortyGigE 0/0 queue all Unit 0 unit: 0 port: 1 (interface Fo 0/0)
  • Page 742: Routing Information Protocol (Rip)

    Routing Information Protocol (RIP) The Routing Information Protocol (RIP) tracks distances or hop counts to nearby routers when establishing network connections and is based on a distance-vector algorithm. RIP is based on a distance-vector algorithm; it tracks distances or hop counts to nearby routers when establishing network connections.
  • Page 743: Implementation Information

    Implementation Information Dell Networking OS supports both versions of RIP and allows you to configure one version globally and the other version on interfaces or both versions on the interfaces. The following table lists the defaults for RIP in Dell Networking OS.
  • Page 744 After designating networks with which the system is to exchange RIP information, ensure that all devices on that network are configured to exchange RIP information. The Dell Networking OS default is to send RIPv1 and to receive RIPv1 and RIPv2. To change the RIP version globally, use the version command in ROUTER RIP mode.
  • Page 745 [120/1] via 29.10.10.12, 00:00:27, Fa 1/4 192.161.1.0/24 auto-summary 192.162.3.0/24 [120/1] via 29.10.10.12, 00:01:22, Fa 1/4 192.162.3.0/24 auto-summary Dell#show ip rip database Total number of routes in RIP database: 978 160.160.0.0/16 [120/1] via 29.10.10.12, 00:00:26, Fa 1/49 160.160.0.0/16 auto-summary 2.0.0.0/8 [120/1] via 29.10.10.12, 00:01:22, Fa 1/49 2.0.0.0/8...
  • Page 746 A prefix list is applied to incoming or outgoing routes. Those routes must meet the conditions of the prefix list; if not, Dell Networking OS drops the route. Prefix lists are globally applied on all interfaces running RIP. Configure the prefix list in PREFIX LIST mode prior to assigning it to the RIP process.
  • Page 747 Setting the Send and Receive Version To change the RIP version globally or on an interface in Dell Networking OS, use the following command. To specify the RIP version, use the version command in ROUTER RIP mode. To set an interface to receive only one or the other version, use the ip rip send version or the ip rip receive version commands in INTERFACE mode.
  • Page 748 Dell(conf-if)#ip rip receive version 2 The following example of the show ip protocols command confirms that both versions are sent out that interface. This interface no longer sends and receives the same RIP versions as Dell Networking OS does globally (shown in bold).
  • Page 749 • Specify the generation of a default route in RIP. ROUTER RIP mode default-information originate [always] [metric value] [route-map route-map- name] – always: Enter the keyword always to always generate a default route. – value The range is from 1 to 16. –...
  • Page 750: Rip Configuration Example

    Enable debugging of RIP. Example of the debug ip rip Command The following example shows the confirmation when you enable the debug function. Dell#debug ip rip RIP protocol debug is ON Dell# To disable RIP, use the no debug ip rip command.
  • Page 751 Figure 107. RIP Topology Example RIP Configuration on Core2 The following example shows how to configure RIPv2 on a host named Core2. Example of Configuring RIPv2 on Core 2 Core2(conf-if-te-2/3/1)# Core2(conf-if-te-2/3/1)#router rip Core2(conf-router_rip)#ver 2 Core2(conf-router_rip)#network 10.200.10.0 Core2(conf-router_rip)#network 10.300.10.0 Core2(conf-router_rip)#network 10.11.10.0 Core2(conf-router_rip)#network 10.11.20.0 Core2(conf-router_rip)#show config router rip...
  • Page 752 192.168.2.0/24 auto-summary Core2# The following example shows the show ip route command to show the RIP setup on Core 2. Core2#show ip route Codes: C - connected, S - static, R - RIP, B - BGP, IN - internal BGP, EX - external BGP,LO - Locally Originated, O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1, E2 - OSPF external type 2, i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1,...
  • Page 753 RIP Configuration on Core3 The following example shows how to configure RIPv2 on a host named Core3. Example of Configuring RIPv2 on Core3 Core3(conf-if-te-3/21/1)#router rip Core3(conf-router_rip)#version 2 Core3(conf-router_rip)#network 192.168.1.0 Core3(conf-router_rip)#network 192.168.2.0 Core3(conf-router_rip)#network 10.11.30.0 Core3(conf-router_rip)#network 10.11.20.0 Core3(conf-router_rip)#show config router rip network 10.0.0.0 network 192.168.1.0 network 192.168.2.0 version 2...
  • Page 754 Gateway of last resort is not set Destination Gateway Dist/Metric Last Change ----------- ------- ----------- ----------- 10.11.10.0/24 via 10.11.20.2, Te 3/21/1 120/1 00:01:14 10.11.20.0/24 Direct, Te 3/21/1 00:01:53 10.11.30.0/24 Direct, Te 3/11/1 00:06:00 10.200.10.0/24 via 10.11.20.2, Te 3/21/1 120/1 00:01:14 10.300.10.0/24 via 10.11.20.2, Te 3/21/1 120/1 00:01:14 192.168.1.0/24 Direct, Te...
  • Page 755 interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/5/1 ip address 10.250.10.1/24 no shutdown router rip version 2 10.200.10.0 10.300.10.0 10.11.10.0 10.11.20.0 The following example shows viewing the RIP configuration on Core 3. interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/1/1 ip address 10.11.30.1/24 no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/2/1 ip address 10.11.20.1/24 no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/4/1 ip address 192.168.1.1/24...
  • Page 756: Remote Monitoring (Rmon)

    RMON is an industry-standard implementation that monitors network traffic by sharing network monitoring information. RMON provides both 32-bit and 64-bit monitoring facility and long-term statistics collection on Dell Networking Ethernet interfaces. RMON operates with the simple network management protocol (SNMP) and monitors all nodes on a local area network (LAN) segment.
  • Page 757: Setting The Rmon Alarm

    The sampling process continues after the chassis returns to operation. • Platform Adaptation — RMON supports all Dell Networking chassis and all Dell Networking Ethernet interfaces. Setting the RMON Alarm To set an alarm on any MIB object, use the rmon alarm or rmon hc-alarm command in GLOBAL CONFIGURATION mode.
  • Page 758: Configuring An Rmon Event

    This configuration also generates an SNMP trap when the event is triggered using the SNMP community string “eventtrap”. Dell(conf)#rmon event 1 log trap eventtrap description “High ifOutErrors” owner nms1 Configuring RMON Collection Statistics To enable RMON MIB statistics collection on an interface, use the RMON collection statistics command in INTERFACE CONFIGURATION mode.
  • Page 759: Configuring The Rmon Collection History

    The following command example enables the RMON statistics collection on the interface, with an ID value of 20 and an owner of john. Dell(conf-if-mgmt)#rmon collection statistics controlEntry 20 owner john Configuring the RMON Collection History To enable the RMON MIB history group of statistics collection on an interface, use the rmon collection history command in INTERFACE CONFIGURATION mode.
  • Page 760: Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (Rstp)

    (STP) but provides faster convergence and interoperability with switches configured with STP and multiple spanning tree protocol (MSTP). The Dell Networking OS supports three other variations of spanning tree, as shown in the following table. Table 76. Spanning Tree Variations Dell Networking OS Supports...
  • Page 761: Important Points To Remember

    Adding a group of ports to a range of VLANs sends multiple messages to the rapid spanning tree protocol (RSTP) task, avoid using the range command. When using the range command, Dell Networking recommends limiting the range to five ports and 40 VLANs.
  • Page 762: Enabling Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol Globally

    To verify that an interface is in Layer 2 mode and enabled, use the show config command from INTERFACE mode. The bold lines indicate that the interface is in Layer 2 mode. Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)#show config interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 no ip address...
  • Page 763 If a physical interface is part of a port channel, only the port channel is listed in the command output. Dell#show spanning-tree rstp Root Identifier has priority 32768, Address 0001.e801.cbb4 Root Bridge hello time 2, max age 20, forward delay 15, max hops 0 Bridge Identifier has priority 32768, Address 0001.e801.cbb4...
  • Page 764: Adding And Removing Interfaces

    The port is not in the Edge port mode Port 379 (TenGigabitEthernet 2/3/1) is designated Forwarding Port path cost 20000, Port priority 128, Port Identifier 128.379 Designated root has priority 32768, address 0001.e801.cbb4 Designated bridge has priority 32768, address 0001.e801.cbb4 Designated port id is 128.379, designated path cost 0 Number of transitions to forwarding state 1 BPDU : sent 121, received 5...
  • Page 765: Modifying Global Parameters

    Max-age — the length of time the bridge maintains configuration information before it refreshes that information by recomputing the RST topology. NOTE: Dell Networking recommends that only experienced network administrators change the Rapid Spanning Tree group parameters. Poorly planned modification of the RSTP parameters can negatively affect network performance.
  • Page 766: Enabling Snmp Traps For Root Elections And Topology Changes

    NOTE: With large configurations (especially those configurations with more ports) Dell Networking recommends increasing the hello-time. The range is from 1 to 10. The default is 2 seconds. • Change the max-age parameter. PROTOCOL SPANNING TREE RSTP mode max-age seconds The range is from 6 to 40.
  • Page 767: Enabling Snmp Traps For Root Elections And Topology Changes

    CAUTION: Configure EdgePort only on links connecting to an end station. If you enable EdgePort on an interface connected to a network, it can cause loops. Dell Networking OS Behavior: Regarding bpduguard shutdown-on-violation behavior: • If the interface to be shut down is a port channel, all the member ports are disabled in the hardware.
  • Page 768: Configuring Fast Hellos For Link State Detection

    To verify that EdgePort is enabled on a port, use the show spanning-tree rstp command from EXEC privilege mode or the show config command from INTERFACE mode. NOTE: Dell Networking recommends using the show config command from INTERFACE mode. In the following example, the bold line indicates that the interface is in EdgePort mode.
  • Page 769 The range is from 50 to 950 milliseconds. Example of Verifying Hello-Time Interval Dell(conf-rstp)#do show spanning-tree rstp brief Executing IEEE compatible Spanning Tree Protocol Root ID Priority 0, Address 0001.e811.2233 Root Bridge hello time 50 ms, max age 20, forward delay 15 Bridge ID Priority 0, Address 0001.e811.2233...
  • Page 770: Software-Defined Networking (Sdn)

    Software-Defined Networking (SDN) Dell Networking operating software supports Software-Defined Networking (SDN). For more information, refer to the SDN Deployment Guide. Software-Defined Networking (SDN)
  • Page 771: Security

    Security This chapter describes several ways to provide security to the Dell Networking system. For details about all the commands described in this chapter, refer to the Security chapter in the Dell Networking OS Command Reference Guide. AAA Accounting Accounting, authentication, and authorization (AAA) accounting is part of the AAA security model.
  • Page 772 – tacacs+: designate the security service. Currently, Dell Networking OS supports only TACACS+. Suppressing AAA Accounting for Null Username Sessions When you activate AAA accounting, the Dell Networking OS software issues accounting records for all users on the system, including users whose username string is NULL because of protocol translation.
  • Page 773: Aaa Authentication

    With AAA, you can specify the security protocol or mechanism for different login methods and different users. In Dell Networking OS, AAA uses a list of authentication methods, called method lists, to define the types of authentication and the sequence in which they are applied. You can define a method list or use the default method list.
  • Page 774: Configuration Task List For Aaa Authentication

    If the first method list does not respond or returns an error, Dell Networking OS applies the next method list until the user either passes or fails the authentication. If the user fails a method list, Dell Networking OS does not apply the next method list.
  • Page 775 To view the configuration, use the show config command in LINE mode or the show running- config in EXEC Privilege mode. NOTE: Dell Networking recommends using the none method only as a backup. This method does not authenticate users. The none and enable methods do not work with secure shell (SSH).
  • Page 776: Obscuring Passwords And Keys

    TACACS+ or RADIUS server. • TACACS+ — When using TACACS+, Dell Networking sends an initial packet with service type SVC_ENABLE, and then sends a second packet with just the password. The TACACS server must have an entry for username $enable$.
  • Page 777: Aaa Authorization

    Every command in Dell Networking OS is assigned a privilege level of 0, 1, or 15. You can configure up to 16 privilege levels in Dell Networking OS. Dell Networking OS is pre-configured with three privilege levels and you can configure 13 more.
  • Page 778 Security chapter in the Dell Networking OS Command Reference Guide. Configuring a Username and Password In Dell Networking OS, you can assign a specific username to limit user access to the system. To configure a username and password, use the following command.
  • Page 779 In addition to assigning privilege levels to the user, you can configure the privilege levels of commands so that they are visible in different privilege levels. Within Dell Networking OS, commands have certain privilege levels. With the privilege command, you can change the default level or you can reset their privilege level back to the default.
  • Page 780 • command: an Dell Networking OS CLI keyword (up to five keywords allowed). • reset: return the command to its default privilege mode. Examples of Privilege Level Commands To view the configuration, use the show running-config command in EXEC Privilege mode.
  • Page 781: Radius

    • Set a user’s security level. EXEC Privilege mode enable or enable privilege-level If you do not enter a privilege level, Dell Networking OS sets it to 15 by default. • Move to a lower privilege level. EXEC Privilege mode disable level-number –...
  • Page 782: Radius Authentication

    For more information about RADIUS, refer to RFC 2865, Remote Authentication Dial-in User Service. RADIUS Authentication Dell Networking OS supports RADIUS for user authentication (text password) at login and can be specified as one of the login authentication methods in the aaa authentication login command.
  • Page 783: Configuration Task List For Radius

    Monitoring RADIUS (optional) For a complete listing of all Dell Networking OS commands related to RADIUS, refer to the Security chapter in the Dell Networking OS Command Reference Guide. NOTE: RADIUS authentication and authorization are done in a single step. Hence, authorization cannot be used independent of authentication.
  • Page 784 • Enter a text string (up to 16 characters long) as the name of the method list you wish to use with the RADIUS authentication method. CONFIGURATION mode aaa authentication login method-list-name radius • Create a method list with RADIUS and TACACS+ as authorization methods. CONFIGURATION mode aaa authorization exec {method-list-name | default} radius tacacs+ Typical order of methods: RADIUS, TACACS+, Local, None.
  • Page 785 To specify multiple RADIUS server hosts, configure the radius-server host command multiple times. If you configure multiple RADIUS server hosts, Dell Networking OS attempts to connect with them in the order in which they were configured. When Dell Networking OS attempts to authenticate a user, the software connects with the RADIUS server hosts one at a time, until a RADIUS server host responds with an accept or reject response.
  • Page 786: Tacacs

    TACACS+ Remote Authentication • Specifying a TACACS+ Server Host For a complete listing of all commands related to TACACS+, refer to the Security chapter in the Dell Networking OS Command Reference Guide. Choosing TACACS+ as the Authentication Method One of the login authentication methods available is TACACS+ and the user’s name and password are sent for authentication to the TACACS hosts specified.
  • Page 787 For example, if the TACACS+ server is reachable, but the server key is invalid, Dell Networking OS proceeds to the next authentication method. In the following example, the TACACS+ is incorrect, but the user is still authenticated by the secondary method.
  • Page 788: Tacacs+ Remote Authentication

    Example of Connecting with a TACACS+ Server Host To specify multiple TACACS+ server hosts, configure the tacacs-server host command multiple times. If you configure multiple TACACS+ server hosts, Dell Networking OS attempts to connect with them in the order in which they were configured.
  • Page 789: Command Authorization

    Secure shell (SSH) is a protocol for secure remote login and other secure network services over an insecure network. Dell Networking OS is compatible with SSH versions 1.5 and 2, in both the client and server modes. SSH sessions are encrypted and use authentication. SSH is enabled by default.
  • Page 790: Using Scp With Ssh To Copy A Software Image

    Specifying an SSH Version The following example uses the ip ssh server version 2 command to enable SSH version 2 and the show ip ssh command to confirm the setting. Dell(conf)#ip ssh server version 2 Dell(conf)#do show ip ssh SSH server : enabled.
  • Page 791: Removing The Rsa Host Keys And Zeroizing Storage

    To remove the generated RSA host keys and zeroize the key storage location, use the crypto key zeroize rsa command in CONFIGURATION mode. Dell(conf)#crypto key zeroize rsa Security...
  • Page 792: Configuring When To Re-Generate An Ssh Key

    The default is 1024 megabytes. Examples The following example configures the time-based rekey threshold for an SSH session to 30 minutes. Dell(conf)#ip ssh rekey time 30 The following example configures the volume-based rekey threshold for an SSH session to 4096 megabytes.
  • Page 793: Configuring The Hmac Algorithm For The Ssh Server

    Example of Configuring a HMAC Algorithm The following example shows you how to configure a HMAC algorithm list. Dell(conf)# ip ssh server mac hmac-sha1-96 Configuring the SSH Server Cipher List To configure the cipher list supported by the SSH server, use the ip ssh server cipher cipher-list command in CONFIGURATION mode.
  • Page 794: Secure Shell Authentication

    Secure Shell (SSH) is enabled by default using the SSH Password Authentication method. Enabling SSH Authentication by Password Authenticate an SSH client by prompting for a password when attempting to connect to the Dell Networking system. This setup is the simplest method of authentication and uses SSH version 1.
  • Page 795 Create a list of IP addresses and usernames that are permitted to SSH in a file called rhosts. Refer to the second example. Copy the file shosts and rhosts to the Dell Networking system. Disable password authentication and RSA authentication, if configured...
  • Page 796: Troubleshooting Ssh

    No username set for this term. Enable host-based authentication on the server (Dell Networking system) and the client (Unix machine). The following message appears if you attempt to log in via SSH and host-based is disabled on the client.
  • Page 797: Telnet

    Dell(conf)#ip telnet server enable Dell(conf)#no ip telnet server enable VTY Line and Access-Class Configuration Various methods are available to restrict VTY access in Dell Networking OS. These depend on which authentication scheme you use — line, local, or remote. Table 78. VTY Access...
  • Page 798: Vty Line Remote Authentication And Authorization

    Dell Networking OS can assign different access classes to different users by username. Until users attempt to log in, Dell Networking OS does not know if they will be assigned a VTY line. This means that incoming users always see a login prompt even if you have excluded them from the VTY line with a deny- all access class.
  • Page 799: Vty Mac-Sa Filter Support

    (same applies for radius and line authentication) VTY MAC-SA Filter Support Dell Networking OS supports MAC access lists which permit or deny users based on their source MAC address. With this approach, you can implement a security policy based on the source MAC address.
  • Page 800: Overview Of Rbac

    When you enable role-based only AAA authorization using the aaa authorization role-only command in Configuration mode, the Dell Networking OS checks to ensure that you do not lock yourself out and that the user authentication is available for all terminal lines.
  • Page 801 NOTE: The authentication method list should be in the same order as the authorization method list. For example, if you configure the authentication method list in the following order (TACACS+, local), Dell Networking recommends that authorization method list is configured in the same order (TACACS+, local).
  • Page 802: User Roles

    System-Defined RBAC User Roles By default, the Dell Networking OS provides 4 system defined user roles. You can create up to 8 additional user roles. NOTE: You cannot delete any system defined roles. The system defined user roles are as follows: •...
  • Page 803 (secadmin) permissions. Create a new user role, myrole and inherit security administrator permissions. Dell(conf)#userrole myrole inherit secadmin Verify that the user role, myrole, has inherited the security administrator permissions. The output highlighted in bold indicates that the user role has successfully inherited the security administrator permissions.
  • Page 804 Note that the netadmin role is not listed in the Role access: secadmin,sysadmin, which means the netadmin cannot access the show users command. Dell(conf)#role exec deleterole netadmin show users Dell#show role mode exec show users Role access: secadmin,sysadmin...
  • Page 805 However, the secadmin can only access 10-Gigabit Ethernet interfaces. Dell(conf)#role configure addrole secadmin ? LINE Initial keywords of the command to modify Dell(conf)#role configure addrole secadmin interface tengigabitethernet Dell(conf)#show role mode configure interface Role access: netadmin, secadmin, sysadmin Example: Verify that the Security Administrator Can Access Interface Mode The following example shows that the secadmin role can now access Interface mode (highlighted in bold).
  • Page 806: Aaa Authentication And Authorization For Roles

    Example The following example creates a user name that is authenticated based on a user role. Dell (conf) #username john password 0 password role secadmin The following example deletes a user role. NOTE: If you already have a user ID that exists with a privilege level, you can add the user role to...
  • Page 807 NOTE: Authentication services only validate the user ID and password combination. To determine which commands are permitted for users, configure authorization. For information about how to configure authorization for roles, see Configure AAA Authorization for Roles. To configure AAA authentication, use the aaa authentication command in CONFIGURATION mode. aaa authentication login {method-list-name | default} method […...
  • Page 808 For RBAC and privilege levels, the Dell Networking OS RADIUS and TACACS+ implementation supports two vendor-specific options: privilege level and roles. The Dell Networking vendor-ID is 6027 and the supported option has attribute of type string, which is titled “Force10-avpair”. The value is a string in the...
  • Page 809: Role Accounting

    The format to create a Dell Network OS AV pair for privilege level is shell:priv-lvl=<number> where number is a value between 0 and 15. Force10-avpair= ”shell:priv-lvl=15“ Example for Creating a AVP Pair for System Defined or User-Defined Role The following section shows you how to create an AV pair to allow a user to login from a network access server to have access to commands based on the user’s role.
  • Page 810: Display Information About User Roles

    The following example applies the accounting default method to the user role secadmin (security administrator). Dell(conf-vty-0)# accounting commands role secadmin default Displaying Active Accounting Sessions for Roles To display active accounting sessions for each user role, use the show accounting command in EXEC mode.
  • Page 811 Line Configuration mode route-map Route map configuration mode router Router configuration mode Dell#show role mode configure username Role access: sysadmin Dell##show role mode configure password-attributes Role access: secadmin,sysadmin Dell#show role mode configure interface Role access: netadmin, sysadmin Dell#show role mode configure line...
  • Page 812: Service Provider Bridging

    Service Provider Bridging Service provider bridging provides the ability to add a second VLAN ID tag in an Ethernet frame and is referred to as VLAN stacking in the Dell Networking OS. VLAN Stacking VLAN stacking, also called Q-in-Q, is defined in IEEE 802.1ad — Provider Bridges, which is an amendment to IEEE 802.1Q —...
  • Page 813: Important Points To Remember

    To switch traffic, add these interfaces to a non-default VLAN- Stack-enabled VLAN. • Dell Networking cautions against using the same MAC address on different customer VLANs, on the same VLAN-Stack VLAN. • This limitation becomes relevant if you enable the port as a multi-purpose port (carrying single- tagged and double-tagged traffic).
  • Page 814: Configure Vlan Stacking

    Enabling VLAN-Stacking for a VLAN. Related Configuration Tasks • Configuring the Protocol Type Value for the Outer VLAN Tag • Configuring Dell Networking OS Options for Trunk Ports • Debugging VLAN Stacking • VLAN Stacking in Multi-Vendor Networks Creating Access and Trunk Ports To create access and trunk ports, use the following commands.
  • Page 815: Enable Vlan-Stacking For A Vlan

    The default is 9100. To display the S-Tag TPID for a VLAN, use the show running-config command from EXEC privilege mode. Dell Networking OS displays the S-Tag TPID only if it is a non-default value. Configuring Dell Networking OS Options for Trunk Ports 802.1ad trunk ports may also be tagged members of a VLAN so that it can carry single and double-tagged...
  • Page 816: Debugging Vlan Stacking

    In the following example, TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 is a trunk port that is configured as a hybrid port and then added to VLAN 100 as untagged VLAN 101 as tagged, and VLAN 103, which is a stacking VLAN. Dell(conf)#interface tenigabitethernet 1/1/1 Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)#portmode hybrid Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)#switchport...
  • Page 817: Vlan Stacking In Multi-Vendor Networks

    While 802.1Q requires that the inner tag TPID is 0x8100, it does not require a specific value for the outer tag TPID. Systems may use any 2-byte value; Dell Networking OS uses 0x9100 (shown in the following) while non-Dell Networking systems might use a different value.
  • Page 818 Figure 110. Single and Double-Tag TPID Match Service Provider Bridging...
  • Page 819 Figure 111. Single and Double-Tag First-byte TPID Match Service Provider Bridging...
  • Page 820: Vlan Stacking Packet Drop Precedence

    Figure 112. Single and Double-Tag TPID Mismatch VLAN Stacking Packet Drop Precedence VLAN stacking packet-drop precedence is supported on the switch. The drop eligible indicator (DEI) bit in the S-Tag indicates to a service provider bridge which packets it should prefer to drop when congested. Enabling Drop Eligibility Enable drop eligibility globally before you can honor or mark the DEI value.
  • Page 821: Honoring The Incoming Dei Value

    By default, packets are colored green, and DEI is marked 0 on egress. Honoring the Incoming DEI Value To honor the incoming DEI value, you must explicitly map the DEI bit to an Dell Networking OS drop precedence. Precedence can have one of three colors.
  • Page 822: Marking Egress Packets With A Dei Value

    {green | yellow} {0 | 1} Example of Viewing DEI-Marking Configuration To display the DEI-marking configuration, use the show interface dei-mark [interface slot/ port/subport | linecard number port-set number] in EXEC Privilege mode. Dell#show interface dei-mark Default CFI/DEI Marking: 0 Interface Drop precedence CFI/DEI --------------------------------...
  • Page 823 1:8 expansion in these content addressable memory (CAM) tables. Dell Networking OS Behavior: For Option A shown in the previous illustration, when there is a conflict between the queue selected by Dynamic Mode CoS (vlan-stack dot1p-mapping) and a QoS configuration, the queue selected by Dynamic Mode CoS takes precedence.
  • Page 824: Mapping C-Tag To S-Tag Dot1P Values

    Mapping C-Tag to S-Tag dot1p Values To map C-Tag dot1p values to S-Tag dot1p values and mark the frames accordingly, use the following commands. Allocate CAM space to enable queuing frames according to the C-Tag or the S-Tag. CONFIGURATION mode cam-acl l2acl number ipv4acl number ipv6acl number ipv4qos number l2qos number l2pt number ipmacacl number ecfmacl number {vman-qos | vman-qos-dual- fp} number...
  • Page 825 MAC address rewritten to the original MAC address and forwarded to the opposing network region (shown in the following illustration). Dell Networking OS Behavior: In Dell Networking OS versions prior to 8.2.1.0, the MAC address that Dell Networking systems use to overwrite the Bridge Group Address on ingress was non-configurable. The value of the L2PT MAC address was the Dell Networking-unique MAC address, 01-01-e8-00-00-00.
  • Page 826: Implementation Information

    Dell Networking OS could recognize the significance of the destination MAC address and rewrite it to the original Bridge Group Address. In Dell Networking OS version 8.2.1.0 and later, the L2PT MAC address is user-configurable, so you can specify an address that non-Dell Networking systems can recognize and rewrite the address at egress edge.
  • Page 827: Enabling Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling

    Specifying a Destination MAC Address for BPDUs By default, Dell Networking OS uses a Dell Networking-unique MAC address for tunneling BPDUs. You can configure another value. To specify a destination MAC address for BPDUs, use the following command.
  • Page 828: Debugging Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling

    Set a maximum rate at which the RPM processes BPDUs for L2PT. VLAN STACKING mode protocol-tunnel rate-limit The default is: no rate limiting. The range is from 64 to 320 kbps. Debugging Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling To debug Layer 2 protocol tunneling, use the following command. •...
  • Page 829: Sflow

    Implementation Information Dell Networking sFlow is designed so that the hardware sampling rate is per line card port-pipe and is decided based on all the ports in that port-pipe. If you do not enable sFlow on any port specifically, the global sampling rate is downloaded to that port and is to calculate the port-pipe’s lowest sampling rate.
  • Page 830: Important Points To Remember

    Configuration and EIS modes respectively. • Dell Networking OS exports all sFlow packets to the collector. A small sampling rate can equate to many exported packets. A backoff mechanism is automatically applied to reduce this amount. Some sampled packets may be dropped when the exported packet rate is high and the backoff mechanism is about to or is starting to take effect.
  • Page 831: Enabling And Disabling Sflow On An Interface

    Examples of Verifying Extended sFlow The bold line shows that extended sFlow settings are enabled on all three types. Dell#show sflow sFlow services are enabled Egress Management Interface sFlow services are disabled Global default sampling rate: 32768 Global default counter polling interval: 20...
  • Page 832 Collector IP addr: 100.1.1.12, Agent IP addr: 100.1.1.1, UDP port: 6343 VRF: Default 0 UDP packets exported 0 UDP packets dropped 0 sFlow samples collected Example of viewing the sflow max-header-size extended on an Interface Mode Dell#show sflow interface tengigabitethernet 1/1/1 Te 1/1/1 sFlow type :Ingress Configured sampling rate :16384...
  • Page 833: Sflow Show Commands

    Show Commands Dell Networking OS includes the following sFlow display commands. • Displaying Show sFlow Globally • Displaying Show sFlow on an Interface • Displaying Show sFlow on a Line Card Displaying Show sFlow Global To view sFlow statistics, use the following command.
  • Page 834: Displaying Show Sflow On A Stack-Unit

    Extended max header size :128 Samples rcvd from h/w The following example shows the show running-config interface command. Dell#show running-config interface tengigabitethernet 1/16/1 interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/16/1 no ip address mtu 9252 ip mtu 9234 switchport sflow ingress-enable sflow sample-rate 8192...
  • Page 835: Back-Off Mechanism

    To configure the polling intervals globally (in CONFIGURATION mode) or by interface (in INTERFACE mode), use the following command. • Change the global default counter polling interval. CONFIGURATION mode or INTERFACE mode sflow polling-interval interval value – interval value: in seconds. The range is from 15 to 86400 seconds.
  • Page 836: Important Points To Remember

    • To export extended-gateway data, BGP must learn the IP destination address. • If the IP destination address is not learned via BGP the Dell Networking system does not export extended-gateway data. • If the IP source address is learned via IGP, srcAS and srcPeerAS are zero.
  • Page 837 Exported src_as and connected/IGP src_peer_as are zero because there is no AS information for IGP. — — Prior to Dell static/ Networking OS connected/IGP Exported Exported version 7.8.1.0, extended gateway data is not exported because IP DA is not learned via BGP.
  • Page 838: Simple Network Management Protocol (Snmp)

    The following describes SNMP implementation information. • Dell Networking OS supports SNMP version 1 as defined by RFC 1155, 1157, and 1212, SNMP version 2c as defined by RFC 1901, and SNMP version 3 as defined by RFC 2571. •...
  • Page 839 AES-CFB 128 encryption algorithm needs to be used. Dell(conf)#snmp-server user snmpguy snmpmon 3 auth sha AArt61wq priv aes128 jntRR59a In this example, for a specified user and a group, the AES128-CFB algorithm, the authentication password to enable the server to receive packets from the host, and the privacy password to encode the message contents are configured.
  • Page 840: Configuration Task List For Snmp

    NOTE: The configurations in this chapter use a UNIX environment with net-snmp version 5.4. This environment is only one of many RFC-compliant SNMP utilities you can use to manage your Dell Networking system using SNMP. Also, these configurations use SNMP version 2c.
  • Page 841: Creating A Community

    Dell Networking OS enables SNMP automatically when you create an SNMP community and displays the following message. You must specify whether members of the community may only retrieve values (read), or retrieve and alter values (read-write).
  • Page 842: Reading Managed Object Values

    You may only retrieve (read) managed object values if your management station is a member of the same community as the SNMP agent. Dell Networking supports RFC 4001, Textual Conventions for Internet Work Addresses that defines values representing a type of internet address. These values display for ipAddressTable objects using the snmpwalk command.
  • Page 843: Writing Managed Object Values

    > snmpwalk -v 2c -c mycommunity 10.11.131.161 .1.3.6.1.2.1.1 SNMPv2-MIB::sysDescr.0 = STRING: Dell Real Time Operating System Software Dell Operating System Version: 1.0 Dell Application Software Version: E_MAIN4.9.4.0.0 Copyright (c) 1999-2014 by Dell Build Time: Mon May 12 14:02:22 PDT 2008 SNMPv2-MIB::sysObjectID.0 = OID: SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.6027.1.3.1...
  • Page 844: Configuring Contact And Location Information Using Snmp

    You may use up to 55 characters. The default is None. • (From a Dell Networking system) Identify the physical location of the system (for example, San Jose, 350 Holger Way, 1st floor lab, rack A1-1). CONFIGURATION mode snmp-server location text You may use up to 55 characters.
  • Page 845: Subscribing To Managed Object Value Updates Using Snmp

    Subscribing to Managed Object Value Updates using SNMP By default, the Dell Networking system displays some unsolicited SNMP messages (traps) upon certain events and conditions. You can also configure the system to send the traps to a management station. Traps cannot be saved on the system.
  • Page 846: Enabling A Subset Of Snmp Traps

    PORT_LINKUP:changed interface state to up:%d Enabling a Subset of SNMP Traps You can enable a subset of Dell Networking enterprise-specific SNMP traps using one of the following listed command options. To enable a subset of Dell Networking enterprise-specific SNMP traps, use the following command.
  • Page 847 MAJOR_TEMP_CLR: Major alarm cleared: chassis temperature lower (%s %d temperature is within threshold of %dC) envmon fan FAN_TRAY_BAD: Major alarm: fantray %d is missing or down FAN_TRAY_OK: Major alarm cleared: fan tray %d present FAN_BAD: Minor alarm: some fans in fan tray %d are down FAN_OK: Minor alarm cleared: all fans in fan tray %d are good Enable VLT traps.
  • Page 848: Enabling An Snmp Agent To Notify Syslog Server Failure

    SNMP OID <oid> %RPM0-P:CP %SNMP-4-RMON_HC_RISING_THRESHOLD: STACKUNIT0 high-capacity rising threshold alarm from SNMP OID <oid> Enabling an SNMP Agent to Notify Syslog Server Failure You can configure a network device to send an SNMP trap if an audit processing failure occurs due to loss of connectivity with the syslog server.
  • Page 849: Copy Configuration Files Using Snmp

    • copy the running-config file to the startup-config file • copy configuration files from the Dell Networking system to a server • copy configuration files from a server to the Dell Networking system You can perform all of these tasks using IPv4 or IPv6 addresses. The examples in this section use IPv4 addresses;...
  • Page 850 MIB Object Object Values Description is set to running- config or startup- config, copySrcFileName is not required. 1 = Dell Networking OS copyDestFileType Specifies the type of file file 1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.5.1.1.1. to copy to. • 2 = running-config copySourceFileType is running-config or...
  • Page 851: Copying A Configuration File

    CONFIGURATION mode snmp-server community community-name rw Copy the f10-copy-config.mib MIB from the Dell iSupport web page to the server to which you are copying the configuration file. On the server, use the snmpset command as shown in the following example.
  • Page 852: Copying The Startup-Config Files To The Running-Config

    • Copy the running-config to the startup-config from the UNIX machine. snmpset -v 2c -c public force10system-ip-address copySrcFileType.index i 2 copyDestFileType.index i 3 Examples of Copying Configuration Files The following examples show the command syntax using MIB object names and the same command using the object OIDs.
  • Page 853: Copying The Startup-Config Files To The Server Via Tftp

    /home/myfilename copyServerAddress.4 a 11.11.11.11 Copy a Binary File to the Startup-Configuration To copy a binary file from the server to the startup-configuration on the Dell Networking system via FTP, use the following command. • Copy a binary file from the server to the startup-configuration on the Dell Networking system via FTP.
  • Page 854: Additional Mib Objects To View Copy Statistics

    172.16.1.56 copyUserName.10 s mylogin copyUserPassword. 10 s mypass Additional MIB Objects to View Copy Statistics Dell Networking provides more MIB objects to view copy statistics, as shown in the following table. Table 84. Additional MIB Objects for Copying Configuration Files via SNMP MIB Object...
  • Page 855: Mib Support To Display The Available Memory Size On Flash

    MIB Support to Display the Available Memory Size on Flash Dell Networking provides more MIB objects to display the available memory size on flash memory. The following table lists the MIB object that contains the available memory size on flash memory.
  • Page 856: Mib Support To Display The Software Core Files Generated By The System

    MIB Support to Display the Software Core Files Generated by the System Dell Networking provides MIB objects to display the software core files generated by the system. The chSysSwCoresTable contains the list of software core files generated by the system. The following table lists the related MIB objects.
  • Page 857: Manage Vlans Using Snmp

    1.3.6.1.2.1.17.7.1.4.3.1.1.1107787786 s "My VLAN" SNMPv2-SMI::mib-2.17.7.1.4.3.1.1.1107787786 = STRING: "My VLAN" [Dell system output] Dell#show int vlan 10 Vlan 10 is down, line protocol is down Vlan alias name is: My VLAN Address is 00:01:e8:cc:cc:ce, Current address is 00:01:e8:cc:cc:ce Interface index is 1107787786...
  • Page 858: Displaying The Ports In A Vlan

    Displaying the Ports in a VLAN Dell Networking OS identifies VLAN interfaces using an interface index number that is displayed in the output of the show interface vlan command. Add Tagged and Untagged Ports to a VLAN The value dot1qVlanStaticEgressPorts object is an array of all VLAN members.
  • Page 859: Managing Overload On Startup

    To enable and disable a port using SNMP, use the following commands. Create an SNMP community on the Dell system. CONFIGURATION mode snmp-server community From the Dell Networking system, identify the interface index of the port for which you want to change the admin status. EXEC Privilege mode show interface Or, from the management system, use the snmpwwalk command to identify the interface index.
  • Page 860: Fetch Dynamic Mac Entries Using Snmp

    Choose integer 1 to change the admin status to Up, or 2 to change the admin status to Down. Fetch Dynamic MAC Entries using SNMP Dell Networking supports the RFC 1493 dot1d table for the default VLAN and the dot1q table for all other VLANs.
  • Page 861: Deriving Interface Indices

    The interface index is a binary number with bits that indicate the slot number, port number, interface type, and card type of the interface. Dell Networking OS converts this binary index number to decimal, and displays it in the output of the show interface command.
  • Page 862: Monitor Port-Channels

    Flash Partition B. The system image can also be retrieved by performing an SNMP walk on the following OID: MIB Object is chSysSwModuleTable and the OID is 1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.10.1.2.8. Dell#show interface Tengigabitethernet 1/21/1 TenGigabitEthernet 1/21/1 is up, line protocol is up Monitor Port-Channels To check the status of a Layer 2 port-channel, use f10LinkAggMib (.1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.2).
  • Page 863 SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.6027.3.2.1.1.1.1.5.2 = Hex-STRING: 00 00 SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.6027.3.2.1.1.1.1.6.1 = STRING: "Gi 5/84 " << Channel member for Po1 SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.6027.3.2.1.1.1.1.6.2 = STRING: "Gi 5/85 " << Channel member for Po2 dot3aCommonAggFdbIndex SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.6027.3.2.1.1.6.1.1.1107755009.1 = INTEGER: 1107755009 dot3aCommonAggFdbVlanId SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.6027.3.2.1.1.6.1.2.1107755009.1 = INTEGER: 1 dot3aCommonAggFdbTagConfig SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.6027.3.2.1.1.6.1.3.1107755009.1 = INTEGER: 2 (Tagged 1 or Untagged 2) dot3aCommonAggFdbStatus SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.6027.3.2.1.1.6.1.4.1107755009.1 = INTEGER: 1 <<...
  • Page 864: Troubleshooting Snmp Operation

    Troubleshooting SNMP Operation When you use SNMP to retrieve management data from an SNMP agent on a Dell Networking router, take into account the following behavior. • When you query an IPv4 icmpMsgStatsInPkts object in the ICMP table by using the snmpwalk command, the output for echo replies may be incorrectly displayed.
  • Page 865: Storm Control

    Storm control allows you to control unknown-unicast, muticast, and broadcast traffic on Layer 2 and Layer 3 physical interfaces. Dell Networking Operating System (OS) Behavior: Dell Networking OS supports unknown-unicast, muticast, and broadcast control (the storm-control broadcast command) for Layer 2 and Layer 3 traffic.
  • Page 866: Configuring Storm Control From Configuration Mode

    • The storm control is calculated in packets per second. • Configure storm control. INTERFACE mode • Configure the packets per second of broadcast traffic allowed on an interface (ingress only). INTERFACE mode storm-control broadcast packets_per_second in • Configure the packets per second of multicast traffic allowed on C-Series or S-Series interface (ingress only) network only.
  • Page 867: Spanning Tree Protocol (Stp)

    CPU utilization and memory consumption. Dell Networking OS supports three other variations of spanning tree, as shown in the following table. Table 89. Dell Networking OS Supported Spanning Tree Protocols...
  • Page 868: Important Points To Remember

    STP is disabled by default. • The Dell Networking OS supports only one spanning tree instance (0). For multiple instances, enable the multiple spanning tree protocol (MSTP) or per-VLAN spanning tree plus (PVST+). You may only enable one flavor of spanning tree at any one time.
  • Page 869: Enabling Spanning Tree Protocol Globally

    INTERFACE mode no shutdown Example of the show config Command To verify that an interface is in Layer 2 mode and enabled, use the show config command from INTERFACE mode. Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)#show config interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 no ip address switchport no shutdown...
  • Page 870 To disable STP globally for all Layer 2 interfaces, use the disable command from PROTOCOL SPANNING TREE mode. To verify that STP is enabled, use the show config command from PROTOCOL SPANNING TREE mode. Dell(conf)#protocol spanning-tree 0 Dell(config-span)#show config protocol spanning-tree 0...
  • Page 871: Adding An Interface To The Spanning Tree Group

    The port is not in the portfast mode To confirm that a port is participating in Spanning Tree, use the show spanning-tree 0 brief command from EXEC privilege mode. Dell#show spanning-tree 0 brief Executing IEEE compatible Spanning Tree Protocol Root ID Priority 32768, Address 0001.e80d.2462...
  • Page 872: Modifying Global Parameters

    You can modify the spanning tree parameters. The root bridge sets the values for forward-delay, hello- time, and max-age and overwrites the values set on other bridges participating in STP. NOTE: Dell Networking recommends that only experienced network administrators change the spanning tree parameters. Poorly planned modification of the spanning tree parameters can negatively affect network performance.
  • Page 873: Modifying Interface Stp Parameters

    PROTOCOL SPANNING TREE mode max-age seconds The range is from 6 to 40. The default is 20 seconds. To view the current values for global parameters, use the show spanning-tree 0 command from EXEC privilege mode. Refer to the second example in Enabling Spanning Tree Protocol Globally.
  • Page 874: Prevent Network Disruptions With Bpdu Guard

    The following example shows a scenario in which an edgeport might unintentionally receive a BPDU. The port on the Dell Networking system is configured with Portfast. If the switch is connected to the hub, the BPDUs that the switch generates might trigger an undesirable topology change. If you enable BPDU Guard, when the edge port receives the BPDU, the BPDU is dropped, the port is blocked, and a console message is generated.
  • Page 875 – Disable spanning tree on the interface (the no spanning-tree command in INTERFACE mode). – Disabling global spanning tree (the no spanning-tree in CONFIGURATION mode). Figure 118. Enabling BPDU Guard Dell Networking OS Behavior: BPDU guard and BPDU filtering both block BPDUs, but are two separate features. BPDU guard: •...
  • Page 876: Selecting Stp Root

    Te 1/6/1 Root 128.263 128 20000 FWD 20000 P2P Te 1/7/1 ErrDis 128.264 128 20000 EDS 20000 P2P Dell(conf-if-te-1/7/1)#do show ip interface brief tengigabitEthernet 1/7/1 Interface IP-Address OK Method Status Protocol TenGigabitEthernet 1/7/1 unassigned YES Manual up Selecting STP Root The STP determines the root bridge, but you can assign one bridge a lower priority to increase the likelihood that it becomes the root bridge.
  • Page 877: Stp Root Guard

    STP Root Guard Use the STP root guard feature in a Layer 2 network to avoid bridging loops. In STP, the switch in the network with the lowest priority (as determined by STP or set with the bridge-priority command) is selected as the root bridge.
  • Page 878: Configuring Root Guard

    Configuring Root Guard Enable STP root guard on a per-port or per-port-channel basis. Dell Networking OS Behavior: The following conditions apply to a port enabled with STP root guard: • Root guard is supported on any STP-enabled port or port-channel interface except when used as a stacking port.
  • Page 879: Enabling Snmp Traps For Root Elections And Topology Changes

    • Configure all spanning tree types to be hitless. CONFIGURATION mode redundancy protocol xstp Example of Configuring all Spanning Tree Types to be Hitless Dell(conf)#redundancy protocol xstp Dell#show running-config redundancy redundancy protocol xstp Dell# Spanning Tree Protocol (STP)
  • Page 880: Stp Loop Guard

    STP Loop Guard The STP loop guard feature provides protection against Layer 2 forwarding loops (STP loops) caused by a hardware failure, such as a cable failure or an interface fault. When a cable or interface fails, a participating STP link may become unidirectional (STP requires links to be bidirectional) and an STP port does not receive BPDUs.
  • Page 881: Configuring Loop Guard

    Figure 120. STP Loop Guard Prevents Forwarding Loops Configuring Loop Guard Enable STP loop guard on a per-port or per-port channel basis. The following conditions apply to a port enabled with loop guard: • Loop guard is supported on any STP-enabled port or port-channel interface. •...
  • Page 882: Displaying Stp Guard Configuration

    BPDU guard is enabled on a port that is shut down (Error Disabled state) after receiving a BPDU. • Verify the STP guard configured on port or port-channel interfaces. show spanning-tree 0 guard [interface interface] Example of Viewing STP Guard Configuration Dell#show spanning-tree 0 guard Interface Name Instance Sts Guard type...
  • Page 883: Supportassist

    SupportAssist SupportAssist sends troubleshooting data securely to Dell. SupportAssist in this Dell Networking OS release does not support automated email notification at the time of hardware fault alert, automatic case creation, automatic part dispatch, or reports. SupportAssist requires Dell Networking OS 9.9(0.0) and SmartScripts 9.7 or later to be installed on the Dell Networking device.
  • Page 884: Configuring Supportassist Using A Configuration Wizard

    Dell end user license agreement, available at: www.dell.com/aeula, you agree to allow Dell to provide remote monitoring services of your IT environment and you give Dell the right to collect the Collected Data in accordance with Dells Privacy Policy, available at: www.dell.com/privacypolicycountryspecific,...
  • Page 885 Collected Data from SupportAssist in accordance with these terms. You agree that the provision of SupportAssist may involve international transfers of data from you to Dell and/or to Dells affiliates, subcontractors or business partners. When making such transfers, Dell shall ensure appropriate protection is in place to safeguard the Collected Data being transferred in connection with SupportAssist.
  • Page 886: Configuring Supportassist Activity

    Dell(conf-supportassist)#enable all Trigger an activity event immediately. EXEC Privilege mode support-assist activity {full-transfer} start now Dell#support-assist activity full-transfer start now Configuring SupportAssist Activity SupportAssist Activity mode allows you to configure and view the action-manifest file for a specific activity. To configure SupportAssist activity, use the following commands.
  • Page 887: Configuring Supportassist Company

    "show tech-support" : "tech-support_records" Configure the action-manifest to use for a specific activity. SUPPORTASSIST ACTIVITY mode [no] action-manifest install {default | <local-file-name>} Dell(conf-supportassist-act-full-transfer)#action-manifest install default Dell(conf-supportassist-act-full-transfer)# Remove the action-manifest file for an activity. SUPPORTASSIST ACTIVITY mode action-manifest remove <local-file-name> Dell(conf-supportassist-act-full-transfer)#action-manifest remove file Dell(conf-supportassist-act-full-transfer)# View the list of action-manifest for a specific activity.
  • Page 888: Configuring Supportassist Person

    [no] address [city company-city] [{province | region | state} name] [country company-country] [{postalcode | zipcode] company-code] Dell(conf-supportassist-cmpy-test)#address city MyCity state MyState country MyCountry Dell(conf-supportassist-cmpy-test)# Configure the street address information for the company. SUPPORTASSIST COMPANY mode [no] street-address {address1}[address2]…[address8] Dell(conf-supportassist-cmpy-test)#street-address 123 Main Street Dell(conf-supportassist-cmpy-test)# Configure the territory and set the coverage for the company site.
  • Page 889: Configuring Supportassist Server

    SupportAssist Server mode allows you to configure server name and the means of reaching the server. By default, a SupportAssist server URL has been configured on the device. Configuring a URL to reach the SupportAssist remote server should be done only under the direction of Dell SupportChange. To configure SupportAssist server, use the following commands.
  • Page 890: Viewing Supportassist Configuration

    Aug 10 2015 11:15:26 PST Aug 10 2015 11:15:28 PST Display the current configuration and changes from the default values. EXEC Privilege mode show running-config support-assist Dell# show running-config support-assist support-assist activity full-transfer enable activity-manifest install testing contact-company name My Company...
  • Page 891 SupportAssist. If you are downloading SupportAssist on behalf of a company or other legal entity, you are further certifying to Dell that have appropriate authority to provide this consent on behalf of that entity. If you...
  • Page 892: System Time And Date

    System time and date settings and the network time protocol (NTP) are supported on Dell Networking You can set system times and dates and maintained through the NTP. They are also set through the Dell Networking Operating System (OS) command line interfaces (CLIs) and hardware settings.
  • Page 893: Protocol Overview

    (secondary servers) in the hierarchy assigned as one greater than the preceding level. Dell Networking OS synchronizes with a time-serving host to get the correct time. You can set Dell Networking OS to poll specific NTP time-serving hosts for the current time. From those time-serving hosts, the system chooses one NTP host with which to synchronize and serve as a client to the NTP host.
  • Page 894: Configure The Network Time Protocol

    Enabling NTP NTP is disabled by default. To enable NTP, specify an NTP server to which the Dell Networking system synchronizes. To specify multiple servers, enter the command multiple times. You may specify an unlimited number of servers at the expense of CPU resources.
  • Page 895: Disabling Ntp On An Interface

    2w1d11h : NTP: Maximum Slew:-0.000470, Remainder = -0.496884 Disabling NTP on an Interface By default, NTP is enabled on all active interfaces. If you disable NTP on an interface, Dell Networking OS drops any NTP packets sent to that interface.
  • Page 896 Dell Networking OS Behavior: Dell Networking OS uses an encryption algorithm to store the authentication key that is different from previous Dell Networking OS versions; Dell Networking OS uses data encryption standard (DES) encryption to store the key in the startup-config when you enter the ntp authentication-key command.
  • Page 897 ntp master <stratum> To configure the switch as NTP Server use the ntp master<stratum> command. stratum number identifies the NTP Server's hierarchy. Examples of Configuring and Viewing an NTP Configuration The following example shows configuring an NTP server. R6_E300(conf)#1w6d23h : NTP: xmit packet to 192.168.1.1: leap 0, mode 3, version 3, stratum 2, ppoll 1024 rtdel 0219 (8.193970), rtdsp AF928 (10973.266602), refid C0A80101 (192.168.1.1)
  • Page 898 To view the NTP configuration, use the show running-config ntp command in EXEC privilege mode. The following example shows an encrypted authentication key (in bold). All keys are encrypted. Dell#show running ntp ntp authenticate ntp authentication-key 345 md5 5A60910F3D211F02 ntp server 11.1.1.1 version 3...
  • Page 899: Dell Networking Os Time And Date

    Dell Networking OS Time and Date You can set the time and date using the Dell Networking OS CLI. Configuration Task List The following is a configuration task list for configuring the time and date settings. • Setting the Time and Date for the Switch Software Clock •...
  • Page 900: Set Daylight Saving Time

    Dell# Set Daylight Saving Time Dell Networking OS supports setting the system to daylight saving time once or on a recurring basis every year. Setting Daylight Saving Time Once Set a date (and time zone) on which to convert the switch to daylight saving time on a one-time basis.
  • Page 901: Setting Recurring Daylight Saving Time

    00:00:00 pacific Sat Nov 7 2009" Setting Recurring Daylight Saving Time Set a date (and time zone) on which to convert the switch to daylight saving time on a specific day every year. If you have already set daylight saving for a one-time setting, you can set that date and time as the recurring setting with the clock summer-time time-zone recurring command.
  • Page 902 Examples of the clock summer-time recurring Command The following example shows the clock summer-time recurring command. Dell(conf)#clock summer-time pacific recurring Mar 14 2009 00:00 Nov 7 2009 00:00 ? Dell(conf)#02:02:13: %RPM0-P:CP %CLOCK-6-TIME CHANGE: Summertime configuration changed from "none" to "Summer time starts 00:00:00 Pacific Sat Mar 14 2009;Summer time ends 00:00:00 pacific Sat Nov 7 2009"...
  • Page 903: Tunneling

    IPv6IP mode, the logical address must be an IPv6 address. The following sample configuration shows a tunnel configured in IPv6 mode (carries IPv6 and IPv4 traffic). Dell(conf)#interface tunnel 1 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel source 30.1.1.1 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel destination 50.1.1.1 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel mode ipip Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#ip address 1.1.1.1/24...
  • Page 904: Configuring Tunnel Keepalive Settings

    Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#ipv6 address 1abd::1/64 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#ip address 1.1.1.1/24 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel source 40.1.1.1 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel destination 40.1.1.2 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel mode ipip Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#no shutdown Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel keepalive 1.1.1.2 attempts 4 interval 6 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#show config interface Tunnel 1 ip address 1.1.1.1/24 ipv6 address 1abd::1/64 tunnel destination 40.1.1.2 tunnel source 40.1.1.1 tunnel keepalive 1.1.1.2 attempts 4 interval 6...
  • Page 905: Configuring A Tunnel Interface

    Dell(conf-if-te-1/1/1)#show config interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 ip address 20.1.1.1/24 ipv6 address 20:1::1/64 no shutdown Dell(conf)#interface tunnel 1 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#ip unnumbered tengigabitethernet 1/1/1 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#ipv6 unnumbered tengigabitethernet 1/1/1 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel source 40.1.1.1 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel mode ipip decapsulate-any Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#no shutdown Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#show config interface Tunnel 1 ip unnumbered TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 ipv6 unnumbered TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 tunnel source 40.1.1.1...
  • Page 906: Configuring Tunnel Source Anylocal Decapsulation

    The following sample configuration shows how to use the tunnel source anylocal command. Dell(conf)#interface tunnel 1 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#ipv6 address 1abd::1/64 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#ip address 1.1.1.1/24 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel source anylocal Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel mode ipip decapsulate-any Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel allow-remote 40.1.1.2 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#no shutdown Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#show config interface Tunnel 1 ip address 1.1.1.1/24...
  • Page 907: Multipoint Receive-Only Tunnels

    Multipoint Receive-Only Tunnels A multipoint receive-only IP tunnel decapsulates packets from remote end-points and never forwards packets on the tunnel. You can configure an additional level of security on a receive-only IP tunnel by specifying a valid prefix or range of remote peers. The operational status of a multipoint receive-only tunnel interface always remains up.
  • Page 908: Upgrade Procedures

    Upgrade Procedures To find the upgrade procedures, go to the Dell Networking OS Release Notes for your system type to see all the requirements needed to upgrade to the desired Dell Networking OS version. To upgrade your system type, follow the procedures in the Dell Networking OS Release Notes.
  • Page 909: Virtual Lans (Vlans)

    Interfaces chapter. • VLAN Stacking in the Service Provider Bridging chapter. For a complete listing of all commands related to Dell Networking OS VLANs, refer to these Dell Networking OS Command Reference Guide chapters: • Interfaces • 802.1X • GARP VLAN Registration Protocol (GVRP) •...
  • Page 910: Port-Based Vlans

    Layer 2 mode, the interface is automatically placed in the Default VLAN. Dell Networking OS supports IEEE 802.1Q tagging at the interface level to filter traffic. When you enable tagging, a tag header is added to the frame after the destination and source MAC addresses. That...
  • Page 911: Configuration Task List

    The VLAN ID is inserted in the tag header. Figure 123. Tagged Frame Format The tag header contains some key information that Dell Networking OS uses: • The VLAN protocol identifier identifies the frame as tagged according to the IEEE 802.1Q specifications (2 bytes).
  • Page 912: Assigning Interfaces To A Vlan

    VLAN 2. The Q column in the show vlan command example notes whether the interface is tagged (T) or untagged (U). For more information about this command, refer to the Layer 2 chapter of the Dell Networking OS Command Reference Guide.
  • Page 913: Moving Untagged Interfaces

    Inactive Active Po1(So 0/0-1) Te 1/1/1 Active Po1(So 0/0-1) Te 1/2/1 Dell#config Dell(conf)#interface vlan 4 Dell(conf-if-vlan)#tagged po 1 Dell(conf-if-vlan)#show conf interface Vlan 4 no ip address tagged Port-channel 1 Dell(conf-if-vlan)#end Dell#show vlan Codes: * - Default VLAN, G - GVRP VLANs...
  • Page 914: Assigning An Ip Address To A Vlan

    NOTE: You cannot assign an IP address to the Default VLAN (VLAN 1). To assign another VLAN ID to the Default VLAN, use the default vlan-id vlan-id command. In Dell Networking OS, you can place VLANs and other logical interfaces in Layer 3 mode to receive and send routed traffic. For more information, refer to Bulk Configuration.
  • Page 915: Configuring Native Vlans

    To assign an IP address, use the following command. • Configure an IP address and mask on the interface. INTERFACE mode ip address ip-address mask [secondary] – ip-address mask — Enter an address in dotted-decimal format (A.B.C.D) and the mask must be in slash format (/24).
  • Page 916: Enabling Null Vlan As The Default Vlan

    This presents a vulnerability because both interfaces are initially placed in the native VLAN, VLAN 1, and for that period customers are able to access each other's networks. Dell Networking OS has a Null VLAN to eliminate this vulnerability. When you enable the Null VLAN, all ports are placed into it by default, so even if you activate the physical ports of multiple customers, no traffic is allowed to traverse the links until each port is place in another VLAN.
  • Page 917: Vlt Proxy Gateway

    L3 packets that are destined to a Layer 3 (L3) end point in another VLT domain. Enable the VLT proxy gateway using the link layer discover protocol (LLDP) method or the static configuration. For more information, refer to Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide. Proxy Gateway in VLT Domains Using a proxy gateway, the VLT peers in a domain can route the L3 packets destined for VLT peers in another domain as long as they have L3 reachability for the IP destinations.
  • Page 918: Guidelines For Enabling The Vlt Proxy Gateway

    Figure 124. Sample Configuration for a VLT Proxy Gateway Guidelines for Enabling the VLT Proxy Gateway Keep the following points in mind when you enable a VLT proxy gateway: • Proxy gateway is supported only for VLT; for example, across a VLT domain. •...
  • Page 919: Enabling The Vlt Proxy Gateway

    You cannot change the link layer discovery protocol (LLDP) port channel interface to a legacy LAG when you enable a proxy gateway. • Dell Networking recommends the vlt-peer-mac transmit command only for square VLTs without diagonal links. • The virtual router redundancy (VRRP) protocol and IPv6 routing is not supported.
  • Page 920: Lldp Organizational Tlv For Proxy Gateway

    TLV. • Dell Networking devices not configured with VLT proxy gateway process standard TLVs and ignore TLVs configured with VLT proxy gateway. The LLDP organizational TLV passes local destination MAC address information to peer VLT domain devices so they can act as a proxy gateway.
  • Page 921 Domain Proxy Gateway LLDP mode, in both C and D (VLT domain 1) and C1 and D1 (VLT domain 2). This behavior is applicable only in the LLDP configuration and not required in the static configuration. Sample Configuration Dell(conf-vlt-domain)#proxy-gateway lldp Dell(conf-vlt-domain-pxy-gw-lldp)#vlt-peer-mac transmit •...
  • Page 922: Configuring A Static Vlt Proxy Gateway

    The configuration has to be done in both the VLT domains [C and D in VLT domain 1 and C1 and D1 in VLT domain 2]. Sample Configuration LLDP Method Dell(conf-vlt-domain)#proxy-gateway ll Dell(conf-vlt-domain-pxy-gw-lldp)#peer-domain-link port-channel 1 exclude- vlan 10 Sample Configuration Static Method Dell(conf-vlt-domain)#proxy-gateway static Dell(conf-vlt-domain-pxy-gw-static)#remote-mac-address <xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx>...
  • Page 923 Sample Dynamic Proxy Configuration on C switch or C1 switch Switch_C#conf Switch_C(conf)#vlt domain 1 Switch_C(conf-vlt-domain1)#proxy-gateway lldp Switch_C(conf-vlt-domain1-pxy-gw-lldp)#peer-domain-link port-channel 1..VLT Proxy Gateway...
  • Page 924: Virtual Link Trunking (Vlt)

    • Assures high availability. CAUTION: Dell Networking does not recommend enabling Stacking and VLT simultaneously. If you enable both features at the same time, unexpected behavior occurs. As shown in the following example, VLT presents a single logical Layer 2 domain from the perspective of attached devices that have a virtual link trunk terminating on separate chassis in the VLT domain.
  • Page 925: Vlt On Core Switches

    The aggregation layer is mostly in the L2/L3 switching/routing layer. For better resiliency in the aggregation, Dell Networking recommends running the internal gateway protocol (IGP) on the VLTi VLAN to synchronize the L3 routing table across the two nodes on a VLT system.
  • Page 926: Vlt Terminology

    Figure 127. Enhanced VLT VLT Terminology The following are key VLT terms. • Virtual link trunk (VLT) — The combined port channel between an attached device and the VLT peer switches. • VLT backup link — The backup link monitors the vitality of VLT peer switches. The backup link sends configurable, periodic keep alive messages between the VLT peer switches.
  • Page 927: Configure Virtual Link Trunking

    PVST Configuration. • Dell Networking strongly recommends that the VLTi (VLT interconnect) be a static LAG and that you disable LACP on the VLTi. • Ensure that the spanning tree root bridge is at the Aggregation layer. If you enable RSTP on the VLT...
  • Page 928: Configuration Notes

    VLT assigns the primary chassis role according to the lowest MAC address. You can configure the primary role. – In a VLT domain, the peer switches must run the same Dell Networking OS software version. – Separately configure each VLT peer switch with the same VLT domain ID and the VLT version. If the system detects mismatches between VLT peer switches in the VLT domain ID or VLT version, the VLT Interconnect (VLTi) does not activate.
  • Page 929 – Port-channel link aggregation (LAG) across the ports in the VLT interconnect is required; individual ports are not supported. Dell Networking strongly recommends configuring a static LAG for VLTi. – The VLT interconnect synchronizes L2 and L3 control-plane information across the two chassis.
  • Page 930 – VLT allows multiple active parallel paths from access switches to VLT chassis. – VLT supports port-channel links with LACP between access switches and VLT peer switches. Dell Networking recommends using static port channels on VLTi.
  • Page 931 – Enable Layer 3 VLAN connectivity VLT peers by configuring a VLAN network interface for the same VLAN on both switches. – Dell Networking does not recommend enabling peer-routing if the CAM is full. To enable peer- routing, a minimum of two local DA spaces for wild card functionality are required.
  • Page 932: Primary And Secondary Vlt Peers

    – If the primary chassis fails, the secondary chassis takes on the operational role of the primary. • The SNMP MIB reports VLT statistics. Primary and Secondary VLT Peers To prevent issues when connectivity between peers is lost, you can designate Primary and Secondary roles for VLT peers .
  • Page 933: Vlt And Igmp Snooping

    When the bandwidth usage drops below the 80% threshold, the system generates another syslog message (shown in the following message) and an SNMP trap. %STKUNIT0-M:CP %VLTMGR-6-VLT-LAG-ICL: Overall Bandwidth utilization of VLT-ICL- LAG (port-channel 25) reaches below threshold. Bandwidth usage (74 )VLT show remote port channel status VLT and IGMP Snooping When configuring IGMP Snooping with VLT, ensure the configurations on both sides of the VLT trunk are...
  • Page 934 Figure 128. PIM-Sparse Mode Support on VLT On each VLAN where the VLT peer nodes act as the first hop or last hop routers, one of the VLT peer nodes is elected as the PIM designated router. If you configured IGMP snooping along with PIM on the VLT VLANs, you must configure VLTi as the static multicast router port on both VLT peer switches.
  • Page 935: Vlt Routing

    To route traffic to and from the multicast source and receiver, enable PIM on the L3 side connected to the PIM router using the ip pim sparse-mode command. Each VLT peer runs its own PIM protocol independently of other VLT peers. To ensure the PIM protocol states or multicast routing information base (MRIB) on the VLT peers are synced, if the incoming interface (IIF) and outgoing interface (OIF) are Spanned, the multicast route table is synced between the VLT peers.
  • Page 936 • L3 routing is enabled on any new IP address / IPv6 address configured for a VLAN interface that is up. • L3 routing is enabled on any VLAN with an admin state of up. NOTE: If the CAM is full, do not enable peer-routing. NOTE: The peer routing and peer-routing-timeout is applicable for both IPv6/ IPv4.
  • Page 937: Non-Vlt Arp Sync

    node to choose a different VLAN or IP route to reach the PIM neighbor. This can result in issues with multicast route syncing between peers. • Both VLT peers require symmetric Layer 2 and Layer 3 configurations on both VLT peers for any spanned VLAN.
  • Page 938: Preventing Forwarding Loops In A Vlt Domain

    Run RSTP on both VLT peer switches. The primary VLT peer controls the RSTP states, such as forwarding and blocking, on both the primary and secondary peers. Dell Networking recommends configuring the primary VLT peer as the RSTP primary root device and configuring the secondary VLT peer as the RSTP secondary root device.
  • Page 939: Configuring Vlt

    Configuring VLT To configure VLT, use the following procedure. Prerequisites: Before you begin, make sure that both VLT peer switches are running the same Dell Networking OS version and are configured for RSTP as described in RSTP Configuration. For VRRP operation, ensure that...
  • Page 940 Add one or more port interfaces to the port channel. INTERFACE PORT-CHANNEL mode channel-member interface interface: specify one of the following interface types: • For a 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword TenGigabitEthernet then the slot/port/ subport information. • For a 40-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword fortyGigE then the slot/port information.
  • Page 941 the election process, use the primary-priority command. Enter a lower value on the primary peer and a higher value on the secondary peer. VLT DOMAIN CONFIGURATION mode primary-priority value The priority values are from 1 to 65535. The default is 32768. If the primary peer fails, the secondary peer (with the higher priority) takes the primary role.
  • Page 942 (with the lower priority) later comes back online, it is assigned the secondary role (there is no preemption). (Optional) When you create a VLT domain on a switch, Dell Networking OS automatically creates a VLT-system MAC address used for internal system operations.
  • Page 943 (Optional) When you create a VLT domain on a switch, Dell Networking OS automatically assigns a unique unit ID (0 or 1) to each peer switch. VLT DOMAIN CONFIGURATION mode unit-id {0 | 1} To explicitly configure the default values on each peer switch, use the unit-id command.
  • Page 944 vlt-peer-lag port-channel id-number The valid port-channel ID numbers are from 1 to 128. Repeat Steps 1 to 6 on the VLT peer switch to configure the same port channel as part of the VLT domain. On an attached switch or server: To connect to the VLT domain and add port channels to it, configure a port channel.
  • Page 945 Use this command to minimize the time required for the VLT system to synchronize the default MAC address of the VLT domain on both peer switches when one peer switch reboots. When you create a VLT domain on a switch, Dell Networking OS automatically assigns a unique unit ID (0 or 1) to each peer switch.
  • Page 946 Configure a different unit ID (0 or 1) on each peer switch. Use this command to minimize the time required for the VLT system to determine the unit ID assigned to each peer switch when one peer switch reboots. Configure enhanced VLT. Configure the port channel to be used for the VLT interconnect on a VLT switch and enter interface configuration mode.
  • Page 947 CONFIGURATION mode interface port-channel port-channel id NOTE: To benefit from the protocol negotiations, Dell Networking recommends configuring VLTs used as facing hosts/switches with LACP. Ensure both peers use the same port channel ID. Configure the peer-link port-channel in the VLT domains of each peer unit.
  • Page 948 Example of Configuring VLT In the following sample VLT configuration steps, VLT peer 1 is Dell-2, VLT peer 2 is Dell-4, and the ToR is S60-1. NOTE: If you use a third-party ToR unit, Dell Networking recommends using static LAGs with VLT peers to avoid potential problems if you reboot the VLT peers.
  • Page 949 In the Top of Rack unit, configure LACP in the physical ports (shown for VLT peer 1 only. Repeat steps for VLT peer 2. The bold vlt-peer-lag port-channel 2 indicates that port-channel 2 is the port-channel id configured in VLT peer 2). Dell-2#show running-config interface tengigabitethernet 1/4/1 interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/4/1 no ip address...
  • Page 950: Pvst+ Configuration

    PVST+ instance running in Secondary peer will not control the VLT-LAGs. Dell Networking recommends configuring the primary VLT peer as the primary root device for all the configured PVST+ Instances and configuring the secondary VLT peer as the secondary root device for all the configured PVST+ Instances.
  • Page 951: Sample Pvst+ Configuration

    Configure both ends of the VLT interconnect trunk with identical PVST+ configurations. When you enable VLT, the show spanning-tree pvst brief command output displays VLT information. Dell#show spanning-tree pvst vlan 1000 brief VLAN 1000 Executing IEEE compatible Spanning Tree Protocol Root ID Priority 0, Address 90b1.1cf4.9b79...
  • Page 952: Evlt Configuration Step Examples

    In Domain 1, configure Peer 1 fist, then configure Peer 2. When that is complete, perform the same steps for the peer nodes in Domain 2. The interface used in this example is TenGigabitEthernet. Figure 129. eVLT Configuration Example eVLT Configuration Step Examples In Domain 1, configure the VLT domain and VLTi on Peer 1.
  • Page 953 Domain_1_Peer2(conf-vlt-domain)# back-up destination 10.16.130.12 Domain_1_Peer2(conf-vlt-domain)# system-mac mac-address 00:0a:00:0a:00:0a Domain_1_Peer2(conf-vlt-domain)# unit-id 1 Configure eVLT on Peer 2. Domain_1_Peer2(conf)#interface port-channel 100 Domain_1_Peer2(conf-if-po-100)# switchport Domain_1_Peer2(conf-if-po-100)# vlt-peer-lag port-channel 100 Domain_1_Peer2(conf-if-po-100)# no shutdown Add links to the eVLT port-channel on Peer 2. Domain_1_Peer2(conf)#interface range tengigabitethernet 1/28/1 - 1/28/2 Domain_1_Peer2(conf-if-range-te-1/28-29/1)# port-channel-protocol LACP Domain_1_Peer2(conf-if-range-te-1/28-29/1)# port-channel 100 mode active Domain_1_Peer2(conf-if-range-te-1/28-29/1)# no shutdown...
  • Page 954: Pim-Sparse Mode Configuration Example

    Add links to the eVLT port-channel on Peer 4. Domain_2_Peer4(conf)#interface range tengigabitethernet 1/31/1 - 1/31/2 Domain_2_Peer4(conf-if-range-te-1/31-32/1)# port-channel-protocol LACP Domain_2_Peer4(conf-if-range-te-1/31-32/1)# port-channel 100 mode active Domain_2_Peer4(conf-if-range-te-1/31-32/1)# no shutdown PIM-Sparse Mode Configuration Example The following sample configuration shows how to configure the PIM Sparse mode designated router functionality on the VLT domain with two VLT port-channels that are members of VLAN 4001.
  • Page 955 show vlt backup-link • Display general status information about VLT domains currently configured on the switch. EXEC mode show vlt brief • Display detailed information about the VLT-domain configuration, including local and peer port- channel IDs, local VLT switch status, and number of active VLANs on each port channel. EXEC mode show vlt detail •...
  • Page 956 HeartBeat Timer Interval: HeartBeat Timeout: UDP Port: 34998 HeartBeat Messages Sent: 1030 HeartBeat Messages Received: 1014 The following example shows the show vlt brief command. Dell#show vlt brief VLT Domain Brief ------------------ Domain ID Role : Secondary Role Priority : 32768...
  • Page 957 Local System Role Priority: 32768 Dell_VLTpeer2# show vlt role VLT Role ---------- VLT Role: Secondary System MAC address: 00:01:e8:8a:df:bc System Role Priority: 32768 Local System MAC address: 00:01:e8:8a:df:e6 Local System Role Priority: 32768 The following example shows the show running-config vlt command. Dell_VLTpeer1# show running-config vlt vlt domain 30 peer-link port-channel 60...
  • Page 958: Additional Vlt Sample Configurations

    ---------- -------- ---- ------- --------- ------- ------------------ Po 1 128.2 128 200000 DIS 4096 0001.e88a.d656 128.2 Po 3 128.4 128 200000 DIS 4096 0001.e88a.d656 128.4 Po 4 128.5 128 200000 DIS 4096 0001.e88a.d656 128.5 Po 100 128.101 128 800 FWD(VLTi) 800 0001.e88a.dff8 128.101 Po 110 128.111 128 00 FWD(vlt)
  • Page 959 Configure the port channel to an attached device. Dell_VLTpeer1(conf)#interface port-channel 110 Dell_VLTpeer1(conf-if-po-110)#no ip address Dell_VLTpeer1(conf-if-po-110)#switchport Dell_VLTpeer1(conf-if-po-110)#channel-member fortyGigE 1/8 Dell_VLTpeer1(conf-if-po-110)#no shutdown Dell_VLTpeer1(conf-if-po-110)#vlt-peer-lag port-channel 110 Dell_VLTpeer1(conf-if-po-110)#end Verify that the port channels used in the VLT domain are assigned to the same VLAN. Dell_VLTpeer1# show vlan id 10 Codes: * - Default VLAN, G - GVRP VLANs, P - Primary, C - Community, I - Isolated...
  • Page 960: Troubleshooting Vlt

    1/5,6 no shutdown Troubleshooting VLT To help troubleshoot different VLT issues that may occur, use the following information. NOTE: For information on VLT Failure mode timing and its impact, contact your Dell Networking representative. Table 91. Troubleshooting VLT Description...
  • Page 961 Peer 1 is unit ID “0”, Peer 2 unit ID must be “1’. Version ID mismatch A syslog error message A syslog error message Verify the Dell and an SNMP trap are and an SNMP trap are Networking OS software generated. generated.
  • Page 962: Reconfiguring Stacked Switches As Vlt

    Reconfiguring Stacked Switches as VLT To convert switches that have been stacked to VLT peers, use the following procedure. Remove the current configuration from the switches. You will need to split the configuration up for each switch. Copy the files to the flash memory of the appropriate switch. Copy the files on the flash drive to the startup-config.
  • Page 963: Association Of Vlti As A Member Of A Pvlan

    Keep the following points in mind when you configure VLT nodes in a PVLAN: • Configure the VLTi link to be in trunk mode. Do not configure the VLTi link to be in access or promiscuous mode. • You can configure a VLT LAG or port channel to be in trunk, access, or promiscuous port modes when you include the VLT LAG in a PVLAN.
  • Page 964: Pvlan Operations When One Vlt Peer Is Down

    and the VLAN is a primary VLT VLAN on one peer and not a primary VLT VLAN on the other peer, MAC synchronization does not occur. Whenever a change occurs in the VLAN mode of one of the peers, this modification is synchronized with the other peers.
  • Page 965: Scenarios For Vlan Membership And Mac Synchronization With Vlt Nodes In Pvlan

    Scenarios for VLAN Membership and MAC Synchronization With VLT Nodes in PVLAN The following table illustrates the association of the VLTi link and PVLANs, and the MAC synchronization of VLT nodes in a PVLAN (for various modes of operations of the VLT peers): Table 92.
  • Page 966: Configuring A Vlt Vlan Or Lag In A Pvlan

    VLT LAG Mode PVLAN Mode of VLT VLAN ICL VLAN Membership Synchronization Peer1 Peer2 Peer1 Peer2 Access Access Secondary Secondary (Community) (Community) - Primary VLAN X - Primary VLAN X Access Access Secondary Secondary (Isolated) (Isolated) - Primary VLAN X - Primary VLAN X Access Access...
  • Page 967: Associating The Vlt Lag Or Vlt Vlan In A Pvlan

    INTERFACE PORT-CHANNEL mode no ip address Add one or more port interfaces to the port channel. INTERFACE PORT-CHANNEL mode channel-member interface interface: specify one of the following interface types: • 1-Gigabit Ethernet: Enter gigabitethernet slot/port. • 10-Gigabit Ethernet: Enter tengigabitethernet slot/port. Ensure that the port channel is active.
  • Page 968: Proxy Arp Capability On Vlt Peer Nodes

    Select the PVLAN mode. INTERFACE mode switchport mode private-vlan {host | promiscuous | trunk} • host (isolated or community VLAN port) • promiscuous (intra-VLAN communication port) • trunk (inter-switch PVLAN hub port) Access INTERFACE VLAN mode for the VLAN to which you want to assign the PVLAN interfaces. CONFIGURATION mode interface vlan vlan-id Enable the VLAN.
  • Page 969: Working Of Proxy Arp For Vlt Peer Nodes

    replace VRRP with routed VLT to route the traffic from Layer 2 access nodes. With proxy ARP, hosts can resolve the MAC address of the VLT node even when VLT node is down. If the ICL link is down when a VLT node receives an ARP request for the IP address of the VLT peer, owing to LAG-level hashing algorithm in the top-of-rack (TOR) switch, the incorrect VLT node responds to the ARP request with the peer MAC address.
  • Page 970: Vlt Nodes As Rendezvous Points For Multicast Resiliency

    When the VLT domain is removed on one of the VLT nodes, the peer routing configuration removal will be notified to the peer. In this case VLT peer node disables the proxy ARP. When the ICL link is removed on one of the VLT nodes by using the no peer-link command, the ICL down event is triggered on the other VLT node, which in turn starts the proxy ARP application.
  • Page 971: Configuring Vlan-Stack Over Vlt

    10.16.151.116 primary-priority 100 system-mac mac-address 00:00:00:11:11:11 unit-id 0 Dell# Configure VLT LAG as VLAN-Stack Access or Trunk Port Dell(conf)#interface port-channel 10 Dell(conf-if-po-10)#switchport Dell(conf-if-po-10)#vlt-peer-lag port-channel 10 Dell(conf-if-po-10)#vlan-stack access Dell(conf-if-po-10)#no shutdown Dell#show running-config interface port-channel 10 Virtual Link Trunking (VLT)
  • Page 972 10 no shutdown Dell# Dell(conf)#interface port-channel 20 Dell(conf-if-po-20)#switchport Dell(conf-if-po-20)#vlt-peer-lag port-channel 20 Dell(conf-if-po-20)#vlan-stack trunk Dell(conf-if-po-20)#no shutdown Dell#show running-config interface port-channel 20 interface Port-channel 20 no ip address switchport vlan-stack trunk vlt-peer-lag port-channel 20 no shutdown Dell# Configure VLAN as VLAN-Stack VLAN and add the VLT LAG as Members to the VLAN...
  • Page 973 Dell# Configure VLT LAG as VLAN-Stack Access or Trunk Port Dell(conf)#interface port-channel 10 Dell(conf-if-po-10)#switchport Dell(conf-if-po-10)#vlt-peer-lag port-channel 10 Dell(conf-if-po-10)#vlan-stack access Dell(conf-if-po-10)#no shutdown Dell#show running-config interface port-channel 10 interface Port-channel 10 no ip address switchport vlan-stack access vlt-peer-lag port-channel 10 no shutdown...
  • Page 974 Dell# Verify that the Port Channels used in the VLT Domain are Assigned to the VLAN-Stack VLAN Dell#show vlan id 50 Codes: * - Default VLAN, G - GVRP VLANs, R - Remote Port Mirroring VLANs, P - Primary, C - Community, I - Isolated...
  • Page 975: Virtual Extensible Lan (Vxlan)

    Virtual Extensible LAN (VXLAN) Virtual Extensible LAN (VXLAN) is supported on Dell Networking OS. Overview The switch acts as the VXLAN gateway and performs the VXLAN Tunnel End Point (VTEP) functionality. VXLAN is a technology where in the data traffic from the virtualized servers is transparently transported over an existing legacy network.
  • Page 976: Components Of Vxlan Network

    Components of VXLAN network VXLAN provides a mechanism to extend an L2 network over an L3 network. In short, VXLAN is an L2 overlay scheme over an L3 network and this overlay is termed as a VXLAN segment. Components of VXLAN network The VXLAN network consists of the following components: •...
  • Page 977: Functional Overview Of Vxlan Gateway

    VXLAN Hypervisor It is the VTEP that connects the Virtual Machines (VM) to the underlay legacy network to the physical infrastructure. Service Node(SN) It is also another VTEP, but it is fully managed by NSX. The purpose of SN is to be the central replication engine for flooded packets Legacy TOR It is a TOR switch, which performs routing or switching decisions.
  • Page 978: Components Of Vxlan Frame Format

    Figure 131. VXLAN Frame Format Components of VXLAN Frame Format Some of the important fields of the VXLAN frame format are described below: Outer Ethernet The Outer Ethernet Header consists of the following components: Header: • Destination Address: Generally, it is a first hop router's MAC address when the VTEP is on a different address.
  • Page 979: Configuring And Controlling Vxlan From The Nvp Controller Gui

    VXLAN Header : • VXLAN Flags : Reserved bits set to zero except bit 3, the first bit, which is set to 1 for a valid VNI • VNI: The 24-bit field that is the VXLAN Network Identifier • Reserved: A set of fields, 24 bits and 8 bits, that are reserved and set to zero . Frame Check Note that the original Ethernet frame's FCS is not included, but new FCS is Sequence (FCS):...
  • Page 980 Figure 134. Create Transport Connector Create Service Node To create service node, the required fields are the IP address and SSL certificate of the server. The Service node is responsible for broadcast/unknown unicast/multicast traffic replication. The following is the snapshot of the user interface for the creation of service node: Figure 135.
  • Page 981: Configuring Vxlan Gateway

    You can create a logical network by creating a logical switch. The logical network acts as the forwarding domain for workloads on the physical as well as virtual infrastructure. Figure 137. Create Logical Switch Create Logical Switch Port A logical switch port provides a logical connection point for a VM interface (VIF) and a L2 gateway connection to an external network.
  • Page 982: Advertising Vxlan Access Ports To Controller

    To advertise the access ports to the controller, use the following command. In INTERFACE mode, vxlan-instance command configures a VXLAN-Access Port into a VXLAN- instance. INTERFACE mode vxlan-instance Examples of the show vxlan-instance Command Dell#show vxlan vxlan-instance 1 Instance Admin State : enabled Management IP : 192.168.200.200 Gateway IP : 3.3.3.3...
  • Page 983 Fo 1/4: VLAN: 0 (0x80000004), The following example shows the show vxlan vxlan-instance statistics interface command. Dell#show vxlan vxlan-instance 1 statistics interface fortyGigE 1/12 100 Port : Fo 1/12 Vlan : 100 Rx Packets : 13 Rx Bytes : 1317...
  • Page 984: Displaying Vxlan Configurations

    Fo 0/124: VLAN: 0 (0x80000004), The following example shows the show vxlan vxlan-instance statistics interface command. Dell#show vxlan vxlan-instance 1 statistics interface fortyGigE 0/124 100 Port : Fo 0/124 Vlan : 100 Rx Packets : 13 Rx Bytes : 1317...
  • Page 985: Vxlan Service Nodes For Bfd

    The following example shows the show vxlan vxlan-instance unicast-mac-local command. Dell# show vxlan vxlan-instance <1> unicast-mac-local Total Local Mac Count: PORT VLAN 4656 00:00:02:00:03:00 Te 0/17 4656 00:00:02:00:03:01 Te 0/17 4656 00:00:02:00:03:02 Te 0/17 4656 00:00:02:00:03:03 Te 0/17 4656 00:00:02:00:03:04 Te 0/17 The following example shows the show vxlan vxlan-instance unicast-mac-remote command.
  • Page 986: Virtual Routing And Forwarding (Vrf)

    Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF) Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF) allows a physical router to partition itself into multiple Virtual Routers (VRs). The control and data plane are isolated in each VR so that traffic does NOT flow across VRs.Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF) allows multiple instances of a routing table to co-exist within the same router at the same time.
  • Page 987: Vrf Configuration Notes

    Figure 139. VRF Network Example VRF Configuration Notes Although there is no restriction on the number of VLANs that can be assigned to a VRF instance, the total number of routes supported in VRF is limited by the size of the IPv4 CAM. VRF is implemented in a network device by using Forwarding Information Bases (FIBs).
  • Page 988 Dell Networking OS uses both the VRF name and VRF ID to manage VRF instances. The VRF name and VRF ID number are assigned using the ip vrf command. The VRF ID is displayed in show ip vrf command output.
  • Page 989 Feature/Capability Support Status for Default VRF Support Status for Non-default NOTE: ACLs supported on all VRF VLAN ports. IPv4 ACLs are supported on non- default-VRFs also. IPv6 ACLs are supported on default- VRF only. PBR supported on default-VRF only. QoS not supported on VLANs.
  • Page 990: Dhcp

    DHCP DHCP requests are not forwarded across VRF instances. The DHCP client and server must be on the same VRF instance. VRF Configuration The VRF configuration tasks are: Enabling VRF in Configuration Mode Creating a Non-Default VRF Assign an Interface to a VRF You can also: •...
  • Page 991: Assigning A Front-End Port To A Management Vrf

    NOTE: You can configure an IP address or subnet on a physical or VLAN interface that overlaps the same IP address or subnet configured on another interface only if the interfaces are assigned to different VRFs. If two interfaces are assigned to the same VRF, you cannot configure overlapping IP subnets or the same IP address on them.
  • Page 992: Assigning An Ospf Process To A Vrf Instance

    Table 98. View VRF Instance Information Task Command Syntax Command Mode Display the interfaces assigned to EXEC show ip vrf [vrf-name] a VRF instance. To display information on all VRF instances (including the default VRF 0), do not enter a value for vrf-name. Assigning an OSPF Process to a VRF Instance OSPF routes are supported on all VRF instances.
  • Page 993: Configuring Management Vrf

    Task Command Syntax Command Mode Configure the VRRP vrrp-group 10 virtual-address 10.1.1.100 group and virtual IP show config address ----------------------------- interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/13/1 ip vrf forwarding vrf1 ip address 10.1.1.1/24 vrrp-group 10 virtual-address 10.1.1.100 no shutdown View VRRP command show vrrp vrf vrf1 ------------------ output for the VRF vrf1 TenGigabitEthernet 1/13/1, IPv4...
  • Page 994: Configuring A Static Route

    • ipv6 nd prefix — Configure IPv6 Routing Prefix Advertisement • ipv6 nd ra-guard — Configure IPv6 ra-guard • ipv6 nd ra-lifetime — Set IPv6 Router Advertisement Lifetime • ipv6 nd reachable-time — Set advertised reachability time • ipv6 nd retrans-timer — Set NS retransmit interval used and advertised in RA •...
  • Page 995 Figure 140. Setup OSPF and Static Routes Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF)
  • Page 996 Figure 141. Setup VRF Interfaces The following example relates to the configuration shown in Figure1 Figure Router 1 ip vrf blue 1 ip vrf orange 2 ip vrf green 3 interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/1/1 no ip address switchport no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1 ip vrf forwarding blue ip address 10.0.0.1/24 no shutdown...
  • Page 997 interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/2/1 ip vrf forwarding orange ip address 20.0.0.1/24 no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/3/1 ip vrf forwarding green ip address 30.0.0.1/24 no shutdown interface Vlan 128 ip vrf forwarding blue ip address 1.0.0.1/24 tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/1/1 no shutdown interface Vlan 192 ip vrf forwarding orange ip address 2.0.0.1/24 tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/1/1...
  • Page 998 2.0.0.0/24 area 0 passive-interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/2/1 ip route vrf green30.0.0.0/24 3.0.0.1 ====================================================================== ================= The following shows the output of the show commands on Router 1. Router 1 Dell#show ip vrf VRF-Name VRF-ID Interfaces default-vrf Te 3/1/1-3/1/4, Te 1/3/1-1/32/4, Te 2/1-2/32/4,...
  • Page 999 Vl 192 green Te 1/3/1, Vl 256 Dell#show ip ospf 1 neighbor Neighbor ID State Dead Time Address Interface Area 1.0.0.2 FULL/DR 00:00:32 1.0.0.2 Vl 128 Dell#sh ip ospf 2 neighbor Neighbor ID State Dead Time Address Interface Area 2.0.0.2 FULL/DR 00:00:37 2.0.0.2...
  • Page 1000 Nu 0, Vl 1 blue Te 2/1/1, Vl 128 orange 2/2/1, Vl 192 green 2/3/1, Vl 256 Dell#show ip ospf 1 neighbor Neighbor ID State Dead Time Address Interface Area 1.0.0.1 1 FULL/BDR 00:00:36 1.0.0.1 Dell#sh ip ospf 2 neighbor...

Table of Contents