H3C LS-3100-52P-OVS-H3 Operation Manual page 862

S5500-ei series ethernet switches
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Address space overlapping
Each VPN independently manages the addresses that it uses. The assembly of such addresses for a
VPN is called an address space.
The address spaces of VPNs may overlap. For example, if both VPN 1 and VPN 2 use the addresses in
network segment 10.110.10.0/24, address space overlapping occurs.
VPN instance
In MPLS VPN, route separation between VPNs is implemented by VPN instance.
A PE creates and maintains a separate VPN instance for each directly connected site. Each VPN
instance contains the VPN membership and routing rules of the corresponding site. If a user at a site
belongs to multiple VPNs at the same time, the VPN instance of the site contains information about all
the VPNs.
For independency and security of VPN data, each VPN instance on a PE maintains a relatively
independent routing table and a separate label forwarding information base (LFIB). VPN instance
information contains these items: the LFIB, IP routing table, interfaces bound to the VPN instance, and
administration information of the VPN instance. The administration information of the VPN instance
includes the route distinguisher (RD), route filtering policy, and member interface list.
LFIBs of VPN instances exist on only PEs supporting MPLS. No LFIBs of VPN instances exist on
MCE-capable devices.
VPN-IPv4 address
Traditional BGP cannot process VPN routes which have overlapping address spaces. If, for example,
both VPN 1 and VPN 2 use addresses in the segment 10.110.10.0/24 and advertise a route to the
segment, BGP selects only one of them, which results in loss of the other route.
PEs use MP-BGP to advertise VPN routes, and use VPN-IPv4 address family to solve the problem with
traditional BGP.
A VPN-IPv4 address consists of 12 bytes. The first eight bytes represent the RD, followed by a 4-byte
IPv4 address prefix, as shown in.
Figure 1-2 Structure of a VPN-IPv4 address
Route Distinguisher ( 8-Byte )
Type Field
Administrator
( 2-Byte )
Subfield
When a PE receives an ordinary IPv4 route from a CE, it must redistribute the VPN route to the peer PE.
The uniqueness of a VPN route is implemented by adding an RD to the route.
A service provider can independently assign RDs provided the assigned RDs are unique. In this way, a
PE can advertise different routes to VPNs even if the VPNs are from different service providers and are
using the same IPv4 address space.
Assigned
IPv4 Address Prefix
Number Subfield
( 4-Byte )
1-3

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