Vrf Configuration Notes - Dell S6100 Configuration Manual

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Figure 153. 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).
A network device may have the ability to configure different virtual routers, where entries in the FIB that belong to one VRF cannot be
accessed by another VRF on the same device. Only Layer 3 interfaces can belong to a VRF. VRF is supported on following types of
interface:
Physical Ethernet interfaces
Port-channel interfaces (static & dynamic using LACP)
VLAN interfaces
Loopback interfaces
VRF supports route redistribution between routing protocols (including static routes) only when the routes are within the same VRF.
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.
The VRF ID is not exchanged between routers. VRF IDs are local to a router.
While using /32 route leak, do not use VLAN interface as Next-hop. This would result in packets being soft-forwarded by CPU, which might
lead to latency and packet drop.
Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF)
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