Default Multi-Vrf Ce Configuration - Cisco 3032 Software Configuration Manual

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Configuring Multi-VRF CE

Default Multi-VRF CE Configuration

Table 38-14
Table 38-14
Feature
VRF
Maps
VRF maximum routes
Forwarding table
Multi-VRF CE Configuration Guidelines
To use multi-VRF CE, you must have the IP services feature set enabled on your switch.
These are considerations when configuring multi-VRF CE in your network:
Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 and 3032 for Dell Software Configuration Guide
38-80
VPN forwarding—transports all traffic between all VPN community members across a VPN
service-provider network.
shows the default multi-VRF CE configuration.
Default Multi-VRF CE Configuration
Default Setting
Disabled. No VRFs are defined.
No import maps, export maps, or route maps are defined.
Fast Ethernet switches: 8000
Gigabit Ethernet switches: 12,000.
The default for an interface is the global routing table.
A switch with multi-VRF CE is shared by multiple customers, and each customer has its own routing
table.
Because customers use different VRF tables, the same IP addresses can be reused. Overlapped IP
addresses are allowed in different VPNs.
Multi-VRF CE lets multiple customers share the same physical link between the PE and the CE.
Trunk ports with multiple VLANs separate packets among customers. Each customer has its own
VLAN.
Multi-VRF CE does not support all MPLS-VRF functionality. It does not support label exchange,
LDP adjacency, or labeled packets.
The PE router does not recognize a difference between using multi-VRF CE or using multiple CEs.
In
Figure
38-6, multiple virtual Layer 3 interfaces are connected to the multi-VRF CE device.
The switch supports VRF over physical ports, VLAN SVIs, or a combination of both. The SVIs can
be connected through an access port or a trunk port.
A customer can use multiple VLANs if they do not overlap with those of other customers. A
customer's VLANs are mapped to a specific routing table ID that identifies the appropriate routing
tables stored on the switch.
A switch supports 1 global network and up to 26 VRFs.
Most routing protocols (BGP, OSPF, RIP, and static routing) can be used between the CE and the
PE. However, we recommend using external BGP (EBGP) for these reasons:
BGP does not require multiple algorithms to communicate with multiple CEs.
BGP is designed for passing routing information between systems run by different
administrations.
BGP simplifies the passing of attributes of the routes to the CE.
Chapter 38
Configuring IP Unicast Routing
OL-12247-04

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