Configuring A Profile; Figure 57: Assigning A Profile To A Static Interface - Juniper JUNOSE SOFTWARE FOR E SERIES 11.3.X - LINK LAYER CONFIGURATION GUIDE 2010-10-13 Configuration Manual

Software for e series broadband services routers link layer configuration guide
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Figure 57: Assigning a Profile to a Static Interface

Configuring a Profile

bridge1483 mtu
Copyright © 2010, Juniper Networks, Inc.
You can create a profile by using CLI commands similar to those used to create the
equivalent static interfaces. You can configure a profile for bridged Ethernet, IP, IPv6,
MLPPP, PPP, PPPoE, or VLAN interfaces.
To configure a profile:
Create a profile by assigning it a name.
1.
host1(config)#profile foo
Specify a VR to which to assign dynamic IP interfaces created with this profile.
2.
host1(config-profile)#ip virtual-router egypt
Specify an IP loopback interface for dynamic IP interfaces created with this profile to
3.
be associated.
host1(config-profile)#ip unnumbered loopback 0
Configure IPCP option 0x90.
4.
host1(config-profile)#ppp ipcp netmask
Optionally set IP, IPv6, MLPPP, PPP, or PPPoE characteristics.
5.
NOTE: When configuring either IP or IPv6 to operate over PPP, you might
want to initiate IP or IPv6 by using the appropriate ppp initiate command,
either ppp initiate-ip or ppp initiate-ipv6. This command initiates either
IPv4 or IPv6 in the event you are connecting to a passive client.
Use to set the maximum allowable size, in bytes, of the MTU for bridged Ethernet
interfaces.
Specify an MTU size in the range 64–9180 bytes.
Chapter 17: Configuring Dynamic Interfaces
565

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