Configuring An Ietf Ds-Te Tunnel Using Mam - Cisco CRS Configuration Manual

Ios xr mpls configuration guide
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Implementing MPLS Traffic Engineering
Command or Action
Step 8
exit
Example:
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router(config-mpls-te)# exit
Step 9
interface tunnel-te tunnel-id
Example:
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface
tunnel-te 4
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router(config-if)#
Step 10
signalled-bandwidth {bandwidth [class-type ct] |
sub-pool bandwidth}
Example:
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router(config-if)#
signalled-bandwidth 10 class-type 1
Step 11
Use the commit or end command.
Related Topics
Configuring Traffic Engineering Tunnel Bandwidth, on page 123
Russian Doll Bandwidth Constraint Model, on page 173

Configuring an IETF DS-TE Tunnel Using MAM

Perform this task to configure an IETF mode differentiated services traffic engineering tunnel using the
Maximum Allocation Model (MAM) bandwidth constraint model.
Purpose
Exits the current configuration mode.
Configures an MPLS-TE tunnel interface.
Configures the bandwidth required for an MPLS TE tunnel.
Because the default tunnel priority is 7, tunnels use the default
TE class map (namely, class-type 1, priority 7).
commit—Saves the configuration changes, and remains within
the configuration session.
end—Prompts user to take one of these actions:
• Yes— Saves configuration changes and exits the
configuration session.
• No—Exits the configuration session without committing
the configuration changes.
• Cancel—Remains in the configuration mode, without
committing the configuration changes.
Cisco IOS XR MPLS Configuration Guide for the Cisco CRS Router, Release 5.1.x
Configuring an IETF DS-TE Tunnel Using MAM
235

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