Preventing Creation Of New Destinations, Tunnels, And Sessions; Preventing Creation Of New Destinations, Tunnels, And Sessions On The Router; Preventing Creation Of New Tunnels And Sessions At A Destination - Juniper JUNOSE SOFTWARE 11.2.X - BROADBAND ACCESS CONFIGURATION GUIDE 7-20-2010 Configuration Manual

Software for e series broadband services routers broadband access configuration guide
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JunosE 11.2.x Broadband Access Configuration Guide
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Preventing Creation of New Destinations, Tunnels, and Sessions

Preventing Creation of New Destinations, Tunnels, and Sessions on the Router

Preventing Creation of New Tunnels and Sessions at a Destination

340
Any specific dynamic destination, tunnel, or session may not be maintained for this entire
time period if the resources must be reclaimed early to allow new tunnels to be
established.
TIP: If you use the l2tp destination lockout timeout command to configure an optional
lockout timeout, always configure the destruct timeout to be longer than the lockout
timeout. The destruct timeout overrides the lockout timeout—when the destruct timeout
expires, all information about the locked out destination is deleted, including the lockout
timeout and lockout test settings. See "Managing the L2TP Destination Lockout Process"
on page 359.
To specify a destruct timeout:
host1(config)#l2tp destruct-timeout 1200
l2tp destruct-timeout
You can configure several L2TP drain operations, which determine how the router creates
new L2TP destinations, tunnels, and sessions. You can manage the following features:
1. Preventing Creation of New Destinations, Tunnels, and Sessions on the
Router on page 340
2. Preventing Creation of New Tunnels and Sessions at a Destination on page 340
3. Preventing Creation of New Sessions for a Tunnel on page 341
4. Specifying a Drain Timeout for a Disconnected Tunnel on page 341
You use the l2tp drain command to prevent the creation of new destinations, tunnels,
and sessions on the router.
The l2tp drain command and the l2tp shutdown command both affect the administrative
state of L2TP on the router. Although each command has a different effect, the no version
of each command is equivalent. Each command's no version leaves L2TP in the enabled
state.
To prevent the creation of new destinations, tunnels, and sessions:
host1(config)#l2tp drain
You use the l2tp drain destination command to prevent the creation of new tunnels and
sessions at a specific destination.
The l2tp drain destination command and the l2tp shutdown destination command
both affect the administrative state of L2TP for the destination. Although each command
Copyright © 2010, Juniper Networks, Inc.

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