Enabling Carrier-of-Carriers Support on a VRF
mpls topology-driven-lsp
Copyright © 2010, Juniper Networks, Inc.
Configure LDP.
4.
Configure VRF.
5.
Enable carrier-of-carriers support on the VRF; use the mpls topology-driven-lsp
6.
command in the context of the VRF virtual router to enable MPLS support.
Enable LDP on the interface in the VRF that connects to the customer carrier's PE
7.
router.
Use the show ip bgp vpnv4 vrf vrfname summary command to verify that
8.
carrier-of-carriers support is enabled.
On all of the customer carrier's routers, configure:
MPLS
1.
An IGP
2.
LDP
3.
On the customer carrier's PE router that connects to the end customer's CE router,
additionally configure:
BGP
1.
VRF
2.
In a carrier-of-carriers environment, a provider carrier creates a backbone VPN that is
used by a customer carrier. You must enable carrier-of-carriers support on the VRF of
the provider carrier's PE device that connects to the PE device of the customer carrier.
Use in the context of the VRF virtual router to enable carrier-of-carriers support in a
VRF. The VRF is on a PE router that is in the provider carrier's VPN and that connects
to the customer carrier's PE router.
Use the show ip bgp vpnv4 vrf vrfName summary command to verify whether
carrier-of-carriers mode is enabled on a VRF. The output includes a line indicating the
status:
Carrier's carrier mode is enabled.
Example
host1:vr1:VrfA(config)#mpls topology-driven-lsp
Use the no version to disable carrier-of-carriers mode on the VRF.
See mpls topology-driven-lsp.
Chapter 6: Configuring BGP-MPLS Applications
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