Dell Configuration Guide for the S4810 System 9.8(0.
Notes, cautions, and warnings NOTE: A NOTE indicates important information that helps you make better use of your computer. CAUTION: A CAUTION indicates either potential damage to hardware or loss of data and tells you how to avoid the problem. WARNING: A WARNING indicates a potential for property damage, personal injury, or death. Copyright, 2009 – 2015 Dell Inc. All rights reserved. This product is protected by U.S. and international copyright and intellectual property laws.
Contents 1 About this Guide............................................................................................................ 33 Audience.......................................................................................................................................................................... 33 Conventions.....................................................................................................................................................................
Using Hashes to Validate Software Images...................................................................................................................... 56 Using HTTP for File Transfers...........................................................................................................................................57 4 Management................................................................................................................. 59 Configuring Privilege Levels.....................
Lock CONFIGURATION Mode..........................................................................................................................................79 Viewing the Configuration Lock Status.......................................................................................................................79 Recovering from a Forgotten Password...........................................................................................................................
Guest and Authentication-Fail VLANs.............................................................................................................................106 Configuring a Guest VLAN........................................................................................................................................107 Configuring an Authentication-Fail VLAN..................................................................................................................
Logging of ACL Processes.............................................................................................................................................. 138 Guidelines for Configuring ACL Logging....................................................................................................................139 Configuring ACL Logging..........................................................................................................................................
BGP4 Management Information Base (MIB)............................................................................................................ 185 Important Points to Remember.................................................................................................................................185 Configuration Information............................................................................................................................................... 186 BGP Configuration..........
Test CAM Usage............................................................................................................................................................ 230 View CAM-ACL Settings................................................................................................................................................230 View CAM Usage..........................................................................................................................................................
Hierarchical Scheduling in ETS Output Policies........................................................................................................ 262 Using ETS to Manage Converged Ethernet Traffic...................................................................................................263 Applying DCB Policies in a Switch Stack........................................................................................................................ 263 Configure a DCBx Operation..................
DHCP MAC Source Address Validation.................................................................................................................... 303 Enabling IP+MAC Source Address Validation............................................................................................................303 Viewing the Number of SAV Dropped Packets.........................................................................................................304 Clearing the Number of SAV Dropped Packets............
Important FRRP Concepts....................................................................................................................................... 328 Implementing FRRP....................................................................................................................................................... 329 FRRP Configuration.......................................................................................................................................................
IGMP Version 3........................................................................................................................................................ 346 Configure IGMP............................................................................................................................................................. 349 Related Configuration Tasks.....................................................................................................................................
Configuring EIS......................................................................................................................................................... 371 Management Interfaces.................................................................................................................................................. 371 Configuring Management Interfaces.........................................................................................................................
Set Auto-Negotiation Options..................................................................................................................................398 View Advanced Interface Information............................................................................................................................ 398 Configuring the Interface Sampling Size.................................................................................................................. 399 Dynamic Counters............
UDP Helper with Configured Broadcast Addresses.........................................................................................................418 UDP Helper with No Configured Broadcast Addresses................................................................................................... 419 Troubleshooting UDP Helper...........................................................................................................................................419 25 IPv6 Routing...................
Default iSCSI Optimization Values.................................................................................................................................. 443 iSCSI Optimization Prerequisites.................................................................................................................................... 444 Configuring iSCSI Optimization......................................................................................................................................
29 Layer 2...................................................................................................................... 485 Manage the MAC Address Table.................................................................................................................................... 485 Clearing the MAC Address Table.............................................................................................................................. 485 Setting the Aging Time for Dynamic Entries...........
Configuring a Time to Live............................................................................................................................................... 511 Debugging LLDP.............................................................................................................................................................512 Relevant Management Objects.......................................................................................................................................
Related Configuration Tasks.....................................................................................................................................546 Enable Multiple Spanning Tree Globally.......................................................................................................................... 547 Adding and Removing Interfaces....................................................................................................................................
Fast Convergence (OSPFv2, IPv4 Only)..................................................................................................................585 Multi-Process OSPFv2 with VRF.............................................................................................................................585 OSPF ACK Packing..................................................................................................................................................
39 PIM Source-Specific Mode (PIM-SSM).................................................................... 631 Implementation Information............................................................................................................................................ 631 Important Points to Remember.................................................................................................................................631 Configure PIM-SMM.....................................................
Configuring an EdgePort................................................................................................................................................664 PVST+ in Multi-Vendor Networks.................................................................................................................................. 664 Enabling PVST+ Extend System ID................................................................................................................................
RIPv1.........................................................................................................................................................................701 RIPv2........................................................................................................................................................................ 701 Implementation Information..................................................................................................................................
TACACS+....................................................................................................................................................................... 740 Configuration Task List for TACACS+....................................................................................................................... 740 TACACS+ Remote Authentication.............................................................................................................................
Setting Rate-Limit BPDUs........................................................................................................................................ 777 Debugging Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling......................................................................................................................778 Provider Backbone Bridging........................................................................................................................................... 778 50 sFlow..........
Obtaining a Value for MIB Objects............................................................................................................................ 801 MIB Support to Display the Available Memory Size on Flash...........................................................................................801 Viewing the Available Flash Memory Size.................................................................................................................
Recover from Stack Link Flaps.................................................................................................................................830 Recover from a Card Problem State on an S-Series Stack........................................................................................831 53 Storm Control........................................................................................................... 832 Configure Storm Control....................................................
56 Tunneling.................................................................................................................. 855 Configuring a Tunnel...................................................................................................................................................... 855 Configuring Tunnel Keepalive Settings........................................................................................................................... 856 Configuring a Tunnel Interface...........
VLT Terminology.............................................................................................................................................................883 Configure Virtual Link Trunking.......................................................................................................................................883 Important Points to Remember................................................................................................................................
Synchronization of IPv6 ND Entries in a VLT Domain............................................................................................... 925 Synchronization of IPv6 ND Entries in a Non-VLT Domain....................................................................................... 926 Tunneling of IPv6 ND in a VLT Domain..................................................................................................................... 926 Sample Configuration of IPv6 Peer Routing in a VLT Domain.
Enabling Environmental Monitoring................................................................................................................................ 978 Recognize an Overtemperature Condition................................................................................................................979 Troubleshoot an Over-temperature Condition...........................................................................................................979 Recognize an Under-Voltage Condition...
1 About this Guide This guide describes the protocols and features the Dell Networking Operating System (OS) supports and provides configuration instructions and examples for implementing them. The S4810 platform is available with Dell Networking OS version 8.3.7.0 and beyond. S4810 stacking is supported with Dell Networking OS version 8.3.7.1 and beyond. Though this guide contains information on protocols, it is not intended to be a complete reference.
2 Configuration Fundamentals The Dell Networking Operating System (OS) command line interface (CLI) is a text-based interface you can use to configure interfaces and protocols. The CLI is largely the same for each platform except for some commands and command outputs. The CLI is structured in modes for security and management purposes. Different sets of commands are available in each mode, and you can limit user access to modes using privilege levels.
• CONFIGURATION mode allows you to configure security features, time settings, set logging and SNMP functions, configure static ARP and MAC addresses, and set line cards on the system. Beneath CONFIGURATION mode are submodes that apply to interfaces, protocols, and features. The following example shows the submode command structure.
ROUTER ISIS ISIS ADDRESS-FAMILY ROUTER OSPF ROUTER OSPFV3 ROUTER RIP SPANNING TREE TRACE-LIST VLT DOMAIN VRRP UPLINK STATE GROUP uBoot Navigating CLI Modes The Dell Networking OS prompt changes to indicate the CLI mode. The following table lists the CLI mode, its prompt, and information about how to access and exit the CLI mode. Move linearly through the command modes, except for the end command which takes you directly to EXEC Privilege mode and the exit command which moves you up one command mode level.
CLI Command Mode Prompt Access Command Tunnel Interface Dell(conf-if-tu-1)# interface (INTERFACE modes) VLAN Interface Dell(conf-if-vl-1)# interface (INTERFACE modes) STANDARD ACCESS-LIST Dell(config-std-nacl)# ip access-list standard (IP ACCESS-LIST Modes) EXTENDED ACCESS-LIST Dell(config-ext-nacl)# ip access-list extended (IP ACCESS-LIST Modes) IP COMMUNITY-LIST Dell(config-community-list)# ip community-list AUXILIARY Dell(config-line-aux)# line (LINE Modes) CONSOLE Dell(config-line-
CLI Command Mode Prompt Access Command ECMP Dell(conf-ecmp-group-ecmpgroup-id)# ecmp-group EIS Dell(conf-mgmt-eis)# management egress-interfaceselection FRRP Dell(conf-frrp-ring-id)# protocol frrp LLDP Dell(conf-lldp)# or Dell(confif—interface-lldp)# protocol lldp (CONFIGURATION or INTERFACE Modes) LLDP MANAGEMENT INTERFACE Dell(conf-lldp-mgmtIf)# management-interface (LLDP Mode) LINE Dell(config-line-console) or Dell(config-line-vty) line console orline vty MONITOR SESSION Dell(conf-m
Reload-Type : normal-reload [Next boot : normal-reload] -- Stack Info -Unit UnitType Status ReqTyp CurTyp Version Ports -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------0 Management online S4810 S4810 9.4(0.
Obtaining Help Obtain a list of keywords and a brief functional description of those keywords at any CLI mode using the ? or help command: • To list the keywords available in the current mode, enter ? at the prompt or after a keyword. • Enter ? after a prompt lists all of the available keywords. The output of this command is the same for the help command.
Short-Cut Key Combination Action CNTL-N Return to more recent commands in the history buffer after recalling commands with CTRL-P or the UP arrow key. CNTL-P Recalls commands, beginning with the last command. CNTL-R Re-enters the previous command. CNTL-U Deletes the line. CNTL-W Deletes the previous word. CNTL-X Deletes the line. CNTL-Z Ends continuous scrolling of command outputs. Esc B Moves the cursor back one word. Esc F Moves the cursor forward one word.
Example of the except Keyword Dell#show system brief | except 0 Slot Status NxtBoot ReqTyp CurTyp Version Ports ----------------------------------------------------2 not present 3 not present 4 not present 5 not present 6 not present The find keyword displays the output of the show command beginning from the first occurrence of specified text. The following example shows this command used in combination with the show linecard all command.
• On the system that telnets into the switch, this message appears: % Warning: The following users are currently configuring the system: User "" on line console0 • On the system that is connected over the console, this message appears: % Warning: User "" on line vty0 "10.11.130.
3 Getting Started This chapter describes how you start configuring your system. When you power up the chassis, the system performs a power-on self test (POST) during which the line card status light emitting diodes (LEDs) blink green. The system then loads the Dell Networking Operating System (OS). Boot messages scroll up the terminal window during this process. No user interaction is required if the boot process proceeds without interruption.
• • • 8 data bits 1 stop bit No flow control Pin Assignments You can connect to the console using a RJ-45 to RJ-45 rollover cable and a RJ-45 to DB-9 female DTE adapter to a terminal server (for example, a PC). The pin assignments between the console and a DTE terminal server are as follows: Table 2.
Following are the points to remember, when you are trying to establish an SSH session to the device to run commands or script files: • There is an upper limit of 10 concurrent sessions in SSH. Therefore, you might expect a failure in executing SSH-related scripts. • To avoid denial of service (DoS) attacks, a rate-limit of 10 concurrent sessions per minute in SSH is devised. Therefore, you might experience a failure in executing SSH-related scripts when multiple short SSH commands are executed.
Configure the Management Port IP Address To access the system remotely, assign IP addresses to the management ports. 1. Enter INTERFACE mode for the Management port. CONFIGURATION mode interface ManagementEthernet slot/port 2. Assign an IP address to the interface. INTERFACE mode ip address ip-address/mask 3. • ip-address: an address in dotted-decimal format (A.B.C.D). • mask: a subnet mask in /prefix-length format (/ xx). Enable the interface.
• enable password stores the password in the running/startup configuration using a DES encryption method. • enable secret is stored in the running/startup configuration in using a stronger, MD5 encryption method. Dell Networking recommends using the enable secret password. To configure an enable password, use the following command. • Create a password to access EXEC Privilege mode.
Example of Copying a File to an FTP Server Dell#copy flash://Dell-EF-8.2.1.0.bin ftp://myusername:mypassword@10.10.10.10/ /Dell/Dell-EF-8.2.1.0 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 27952672 bytes successfully copied Example of Importing a File to the Local System core1#$//copy ftp://myusername:mypassword@10.10.10.10//Dell/ Dell-EF-8.2.1.0.bin flash:// Destination file name [Dell-EF-8.2.1.0.bin.
Dell#copy ftp://10.16.127.35 nfsmount: Source file name []: test.c User name to login remote host: mashutosh Example of Logging in to Copy from NFS Mount Dell#copy nfsmount:///test flash: Destination file name [test]: test2 ! 5592 bytes successfully copied Dell# Dell#copy nfsmount:///test.txt ftp://10.16.127.35 Destination file name [test.txt]: User name to login remote host: mashutosh Password to login remote host: ! Example of Copying to NFS Mount Dell#copy flash://test.
NOTE: When copying to a server, a host name can only be used if a DNS server is configured. Configure the Overload Bit for a Startup Scenario For information about setting the router overload bit for a specific period of time after a switch reload is implemented, refer to the Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) section in the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide. Viewing Files You can only view file information and content on local file systems.
! Startup-config last updated at Tue Mar 11 12:11:00 2014 by default ! boot system stack-unit 1 primary system: B: boot system stack-unit 1 secondary tftp://10.16.127.35/dt-maa-s4810-2 boot system stack-unit 1 default tftp://10.16.127.35/dt-maa-s4810-2 boot system gateway 10.16.130.254 ! Page 57 - Under Managing the File System, the word external Flash must be removed Page 57 - The output of show file-systems must be modified as follows.
interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 no ip address no ip address switchport switchport shutdown shutdown ! ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/2 Interface group TenGigabitEthernet 1/2 – 4 , TenGigabitEthernet 1/10 no ip address shutdown ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/3 no ip address shutdown ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/4 no ip address shutdown ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/10 no ip address shutdown ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/34 ip address 2.1.1.
shutdown ! interface Vlan 4 tagged te 1/1 no ip address shutdown ! interface Vlan 5 tagged te 1/1 no ip address shutdown ! interface Vlan 100 no ip address no shutdown ! interface Vlan 1000 ip address 1.1.1.1/16 no shutdown Uncompressed config size – 52 lines write memory compressed The write memory compressed CLI will write the operating configuration to the startup-config file in the compressed mode. In stacking scenario, it will also take care of syncing it to all the standby and member units.
To view file system information, use the following command. • View information about each file system. EXEC Privilege mode show file-systems The output of the show file-systems command in the following example shows the total capacity, amount of free memory, file structure, media type, read/write privileges for each storage device in use. Dell#show file-systems Size(b) Free(b) Feature Type Flags 520962048 213778432 dosFs2.0 USERFLASH 127772672 21936128 dosFs2.
For a particular target where VRF is enabled, the show output is similar to the following: Feature State -----------------------------VRF enabled View Command History The command-history trace feature captures all commands entered by all users of the system with a time stamp and writes these messages to a dedicated trace log buffer. The system generates a trace message for each executed command. No password information is saved to the file.
To validate the software image on the flash drive after the image has been transferred to the system, but before the image has been installed, use the verify {md5 | sha256} [ flash://]img-file [hash-value] command in EXEC mode. • md5: MD5 message-digest algorithm • sha256: SHA256 Secure Hash Algorithm • flash: (Optional) Specifies the flash drive. The default is to use the flash drive. You can just enter the image file name. • hash-value: (Optional). Specify the relevant hash published on i-Support.
However, these changes are backward-compatible and do not affect existing behavior; meaning, you can still use the ip http source- interface command to communicate with a particular interface even if no VRF is configured on that interface NOTE: If the HTTP service is not VRF-aware, then it uses the global routing table to perform the look-up. To enable an HTTP client to look up the VRF table corresponding to either management VRF or any nondefault VRF, use the ip http vrf command in CONFIGURATION mode.
4 Management This chapter describes the different protocols or services used to manage the Dell Networking system. Configuring Privilege Levels Privilege levels restrict access to commands based on user or terminal line. There are 16 privilege levels, of which three are pre-defined. The default privilege level is 1. Level Description Level 0 Access to the system begins at EXEC mode, and EXEC mode commands are limited to enable, disable, and exit.
level level command. In the command, specify the privilege level of the user or terminal line and specify all the keywords in the command to which you want to allow access. Allowing Access to the Following Modes This section describes how to allow access to the INTERFACE, LINE, ROUTE-MAP, and ROUTER modes. Similar to allowing access to CONFIGURATION mode, to allow access to INTERFACE, LINE, ROUTE-MAP, and ROUTER modes, you must first allow access to the command that enters you into the mode.
Dell#show priv Current privilege level is 3. Dell#? capture Capture packet configure Configuring from terminal disable Turn off privileged commands enable Turn on privileged commands exit Exit from the EXEC ip Global IP subcommands monitor Monitoring feature mtrace Trace reverse multicast path from destination to source ping Send echo messages quit Exit from the EXEC show Show running system information [output omitted] Dell#config [output omitted] Dell(conf)#do show priv Current privilege level is 3.
Applying a Privilege Level to a Terminal Line To set a privilege level for a terminal line, use the following command. • Configure a privilege level for a user. CONFIGURATION mode username username privilege level NOTE: When you assign a privilege level between 2 and 15, access to the system begins at EXEC mode, but the prompt is hostname#, rather than hostname>. Configuring Logging The Dell Networking OS tracks changes in the system using event and error messages.
Audit Logs The audit log contains configuration events and information. The types of information in this log consist of the following: • User logins to the switch. • System events for network issues or system issues. • Users making configuration changes. The switch logs who made the configuration changes and the date and time of the change. However, each specific change on the configuration is not logged. Only that the configuration was modified is logged with the user ID, date, and time of the change.
line vty0 ( 10.14.1.91 ) Clearing Audit Logs To clear audit logs, use the clear logging auditlog command in Exec mode. When RBAC is enabled, only the system administrator user role can issue this command. Example of the clear logging auditlog Command Dell# clear logging auditlog Configuring Logging Format To display syslog messages in a RFC 3164 or RFC 5424 format, use the logging version [0 | 1} command in CONFIGURATION mode. By default, the system log version is set to 0.
%IFMGR-5-CSTATE_UP: changed interface Physical state to up: So 12/8 %IFMGR-5-CSTATE_DN: changed interface Physical state to down: So 12/8 To view any changes made, use the show running-config logging command in EXEC privilege mode. Setting Up a Secure Connection to a Syslog Server You can use reverse tunneling with the port forwarding to securely connect to a syslog server. Pre-requisites To configure a secure connection from the switch to the syslog server: 1.
If you do not, the system displays an error when you attempt to enable role-based only AAA authorization. Dell(conf)# logging localhost tcp port Dell(conf)#logging 127.0.0.1 tcp 5140 Sending System Messages to a Syslog Server To send system messages to a specified syslog server, use the following command. The following syslog standards are supported: RFC 5424 The SYSLOG Protocol, R.Gerhards and Adiscon GmbH, March 2009, obsoletes RFC 3164 and RFC 5426 Transmission of Syslog Messages over UDP.
The following example enables login activity tracking and configures the system to store the login activity details for 12 days. Dell(config)#login statistics enable Dell(config)#login statistics time-period 12 Display Login Statistics To view the login statistics, use the show login statistics command. Example of the show login statistics Command The show login statistics command displays the successful and failed login details of the current user in the last 30 days or the custom defined time period.
Limit Concurrent Login Sessions Dell Networking OS enables you to limit the number of concurrent login sessions of users on VTY, auxiliary, and console lines. You can also clear any of your existing sessions when you reach the maximum permitted number of concurrent sessions. By default, you can use all 10 VTY lines, one console line, and one auxiliary line.
3 vty 1 10.14.1.97 Clear existing session? [line number/Enter to cancel]: When you try to create more than the permitted number of sessions, the following message appears, prompting you to close one of the existing sessions. If you close any of the existing sessions, you are allowed to login. $ telnet 10.11.178.17 Trying 10.11.178.17... Connected to 10.11.178.17. Escape character is '^]'. Login: admin Password: Maximum concurrent sessions for the user reached.
Sending System Messages to a Syslog Server To send system messages to a specified syslog server, use the following command. The following syslog standards are supported: RFC 5424 The SYSLOG Protocol, R.Gerhards and Adiscon GmbH, March 2009, obsoletes RFC 3164 and RFC 5426 Transmission of Syslog Messages over UDP. • Specify the server to which you want to send system messages. You can configure up to eight syslog servers.
logging buffered size • NOTE: When you decrease the buffer size, Dell Networking OS deletes all messages stored in the buffer. Increasing the buffer size does not affect messages in the buffer. Specify the number of messages that Dell Networking OS saves to its logging history table.
Configuring a UNIX Logging Facility Level You can save system log messages with a UNIX system logging facility. To configure a UNIX logging facility level, use the following command. • Specify one of the following parameters.
Synchronizing Log Messages You can configure Dell Networking OS to filter and consolidate the system messages for a specific line by synchronizing the message output. Only the messages with a severity at or below the set level appear. This feature works on the terminal and console connections available on the system. 1. Enter LINE mode.
File Transfer Services With Dell Networking OS, you can configure the system to transfer files over the network using the file transfer protocol (FTP). One FTP application is copying the system image files over an interface on to the system; however, FTP is not supported on virtual local area network (VLAN) interfaces. The FTP and TFTP services are enhanced to support the VRF-aware functionality.
ftp-server username username password [encryption-type] password Configure the following optional and required parameters: – username: enter a text string. – encryption-type: enter 0 for plain text or 7 for encrypted text. – password: enter a text string. NOTE: You cannot use the change directory (cd) command until you have configured ftp-server topdir. To view the FTP configuration, use the show running-config ftp command in EXEC privilege mode.
• To be able to filter access exclusively using either IPv4 or IPv6 rules, use either the ipv4 or ipv6 attribute along with the access-class access-list-name command. Depending on the attribute that you specify (ipv4 or ipv6), the ACL processes either IPv4 or IPv6 rules, but not both. Using this configuration, you can set up two different types of access classes with each class processing either IPv4 or IPv6 rules separately. To apply an IP ACL to a line, Use the following command.
Configuring Login Authentication for Terminal Lines You can use any combination of up to six authentication methods to authenticate a user on a terminal line. A combination of authentication methods is called a method list. If the user fails the first authentication method, Dell Networking OS prompts the next method until all methods are exhausted, at which point the connection is terminated. The available authentication methods are: enable Prompt for the enable password.
• Set the number of minutes and seconds. The default is 10 minutes on the console and 30 minutes on VTY. Disable EXEC time out by setting the time-out period to 0. LINE mode exec-timeout minutes [seconds] • Return to the default time-out values. LINE mode no exec-timeout Example of Setting the Time Out Period for EXEC Privilege Mode The following example shows how to set the time-out period and how to view the configuration using the show config command from LINE mode.
login: admin Dell# Lock CONFIGURATION Mode Dell Networking OS allows multiple users to make configurations at the same time. You can lock CONFIGURATION mode so that only one user can be in CONFIGURATION mode at any time (Message 2). You can set two types of lockst: auto and manual. • Set auto-lock using the configuration mode exclusive auto command from CONFIGURATION mode. When you set auto-lock, every time a user is in CONFIGURATION mode, all other users are denied access.
hit any key NOTE: You must enter the CLI commands. The system rejects them if they are copied and pasted. 4. Set the system parameters to ignore the startup configuration file when the system reloads. uBoot mode setenv stconfigignore true 5. To save the changes, use the saveenv command. uBoot mode saveenv 6. Reload the system. uBoot mode reset 7. Copy startup-config.bak to the running config. EXEC Privilege mode copy flash://startup-config.bak running-config 8.
uBoot mode reset 6. Configure a new enable password. CONFIGURATION mode enable {secret | password} 7. Save the running-config to the startup-config. EXEC Privilege mode copy running-config startup-config Recovering from a Failed Start A system that does not start correctly might be attempting to boot from a corrupted Dell Networking OS image or from a misspecified location. In this case, you can restart the system and interrupt the boot process to point the system to another boot location.
Important Points to Remember • When you restore all the units in a stack, these units are placed in standalone mode. • When you restore a single unit in a stack, only that unit is placed in standalone mode. No other units in the stack are affected. • When you restore the units in standalone mode, the units remain in standalone mode after the restoration. • After the restore is complete, the units power cycle immediately.
press any key 3. Assign the new location to the Dell Networking OS image it uses when the system reloads. uBoot mode => setenv primary_boot f10boot Boot variable (f10boot) can take the following values: 4. • flash0 — to boot from flash partition A. • flash1 — to boot from flash partition B. • tftp://server-ip/image-file-name — to boot from the network. Assign an IP address to the Management Ethernet interface. uBoot mode => setenv ipaddr ip_address For example, 10.16.150.105.
5 802.1ag Ethernet operations, administration, and maintenance (OAM) are a set of tools used to install, monitor, troubleshoot, and manage Ethernet infrastructure deployments. Ethernet OAM consists of three main areas: • Service layer OAM — IEEE 802.1ag connectivity fault management (CFM) • Link layer OAM — IEEE 802.
Maintenance Domains Connectivity fault management (CFM) divides a network into hierarchical maintenance domains, as shown in the following illustration. A CFM maintenance domain is a management space on a network that a single management entity owns and operates. The network administrator assigns a unique maintenance level (from 0 to 7) to each domain to define the hierarchical relationship between domains.
Figure 3. Maintenance Points Maintenance End Points A maintenance end point (MEP) is a logical entity that marks the end point of a domain. There are two types of MEPs defined in 802.1ag for an 802.1 bridge: • Up-MEP — monitors the forwarding path internal to a bridge on the customer or provider edge. On Dell Networking systems, the internal forwarding path is effectively the switch fabric and forwarding engine. • Down-MEP — monitors the forwarding path external another bridge.
Configuring the CFM To configure the CFM, follow these steps: 1. Configure the ecfmacl CAM region using the cam-acl command. 2. Enable Ethernet CFM. 3. Create a Maintenance Domain. 4. Create a Maintenance Association. 5. Create Maintenance Points. 6. Use CFM tools: a. Continuity Check Messages. b. Loopback Message and Response. c. Linktrace Message and Response. Related Configuration Tasks • Enable CFM SNMP Traps. • Display Ethernet CFM Statistics.
Services MA-Name My_MA VLAN 200 CC-Int 10s X-CHK Status enabled Domain Name: praveen Level: 6 Total Service: 1 Services MA-Name VLAN CC-Int Your_MA 100 10s X-CHK Status enabled Creating a Maintenance Association A Maintenance association (MA) is a subdivision of an MD that contains all managed entities corresponding to a single end-to-end service, typically a virtual area network (VLAN). • Create maintenance association.
100 200 300 cfm0 test0 cfm1 test1 cfm2 test2 7 10 6 20 5 30 MEP DOWN MEP DOWN MEP DOWN Te 4/10 Enabled 00:01:e8:59:23:45 Te 4/10 Enabled 00:01:e8:59:23:45 Te 4/10 Enabled 00:01:e8:59:23:45 Creating a Maintenance Intermediate Point Maintenance intermediate point (MIP) is a logical entity configured at a port of a switch that constitutes intermediate points of a maintenance entity (ME). An ME is a point-to-point relationship between two MEPs within a single domain.
MA Name: test0 Level: 7 VLAN: 10 MP ID: 900 Sender Chassis ID: Force10 MEP Interface status: Up MEP Port status: Forwarding Receive RDI: FALSE MP Status: Active Setting the MP Database Persistence To set the database persistence, use the following command. • Set the amount of time that data from a missing MEP is kept in the continuity check database. ECFM DOMAIN database hold-time minutes The default is 100 minutes. The range is from 100 to 65535 minutes.
• Reception of a CCM with an incorrect CCM transmission interval, which indicates a configuration error. • Reception of a CCM with an incorrect MEP ID or MAID, which indicates a configuration or cross-connect error. This error could happen when different VLANs are cross-connected due to a configuration error. • Reception of a CCM with an MD level lower than the receiving MEP, which indicates a configuration or cross-connect error.
Sending Linktrace Messages and Responses Linktrace message and response (LTM, LTR), also called Layer 2 Traceroute, is an administratively sent multicast frames transmitted by MEPs to track, hop-by-hop, the path to another MEP or MIP within the maintenance domain. All MEPs and MIPs in the same domain respond to an LTM with a unicast LTR. Intermediate MIPs forward the LTM toward the target MEP. Figure 5.
• Set the size of the Link Trace Cache. ETHERNET CFM mode traceroute cache size entries The default is 100. • The range is from 1 to 4095 entries. Display the Link Trace Cache. EXEC Privilege mode • show ethernet cfm traceroute-cache Delete all Link Trace Cache entries.
• Enable SNMP trap messages for Ethernet CFM.
Example of viewing CFM statistics by port. Dell#show ethernet cfm port-statistics interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/5 Port statistics for port: Te 1/5 ================================== RX Statistics ============= Total CFM Pkts 75394 CCM Pkts 75394 LBM Pkts 0 LTM Pkts 0 LBR Pkts 0 LTR Pkts 0 Bad CFM Pkts 0 CFM Pkts Discarded 0 CFM Pkts forwarded 102417 TX Statistics ============= Total CFM Pkts 10303 CCM Pkts 0 LBM Pkts 0 LTM Pkts 3 LBR Pkts 0 LTR Pkts 0 802.
6 802.1X 802.1X is a method of port security. A device connected to a port that is enabled with 802.1X is disallowed from sending or receiving packets on the network until its identity can be verified (through a username and password, for example). This feature is named for its IEEE specification. 802.
Figure 7. EAP Frames Encapsulated in Ethernet and RADUIS The authentication process involves three devices: • The device attempting to access the network is the supplicant. The supplicant is not allowed to communicate on the network until the authenticator authorizes the port. It can only communicate with the authenticator in response to 802.1X requests. • The device with which the supplicant communicates is the authenticator. The authenticator is the gate keeper of the network.
6. If the identity information provided by the supplicant is valid, the authentication server sends an Access-Accept frame in which network privileges are specified. The authenticator changes the port state to authorized and forwards an EAP Success frame. If the identity information is invalid, the server sends an Access-Reject frame. If the port state remains unauthorized, the authenticator forwards an EAP Failure frame. Figure 8. EAP Port-Authentication EAP over RADIUS 802.
RADIUS Attributes for 802.1 Support Dell Networking systems include the following RADIUS attributes in all 802.1X-triggered Access-Request messages: Attribute 31 Calling-station-id: relays the supplicant MAC address to the authentication server. Attribute 41 NAS-Port-Type: NAS-port physical port type. 15 indicates Ethernet. Attribute 61 NAS-Port: the physical port number by which the authenticator is connected to the supplicant.
Enabling 802.1X Enable 802.1X globally. Figure 10. 802.1X Enabled 1. Enable 802.1X globally. CONFIGURATION mode dot1x authentication 2. Enter INTERFACE mode on an interface or a range of interfaces. INTERFACE mode interface [range] 3. Enable 802.1X on the supplicant interface only. INTERFACE mode dot1x authentication Examples of Verifying that 802.1X is Enabled Globally and on an Interface Verify that 802.
In the following example, the bold lines show that 802.1X is enabled. Dell#show running-config | find dot1x dot1x authentication ! [output omitted] ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/1 no ip address dot1x authentication no shutdown ! Dell# To view 802.1X configuration information for an interface, use the show dot1x interface command. In the following example, the bold lines show that 802.1X is enabled on all ports unauthorized by default. Dell#show dot1x interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/1/ 802.
• Configure a maximum number of times the authenticator re-transmits a Request Identity frame. INTERFACE mode dot1x max-eap-req number The range is from 1 to 10. The default is 2. The example in Configuring a Quiet Period after a Failed Authentication shows configuration information for a port for which the authenticator re-transmits an EAP Request Identity frame after 90 seconds and re-transmits a maximum of 10 times.
Forcibly Authorizing or Unauthorizing a Port IEEE 802.1X requires that a port can be manually placed into any of three states: • ForceAuthorized — an authorized state. A device connected to this port in this state is never subjected to the authentication process, but is allowed to communicate on the network. Placing the port in this state is same as disabling 802.1X on the port. • ForceUnauthorized — an unauthorized state.
INTERFACE mode dot1x reauthentication [interval] seconds The range is from 1 to 65535. • The default is 3600. Configure the maximum number of times that the supplicant can be re-authenticated. INTERFACE mode dot1x reauth-max number The range is from 1 to 10. The default is 2. Example of Re-Authenticating a Port and Verifying the Configuration The bold lines show that re-authentication is enabled and the new maximum and re-authentication time period.
dot1x server-timeout seconds The range is from 1 to 300. The default is 30. Example of Viewing Configured Server Timeouts The example shows configuration information for a port for which the authenticator terminates the authentication process for an unresponsive supplicant or server after 15 seconds. The bold lines show the new supplicant and server timeouts. Dell(conf-if-Te-1/1)#dot1x port-control force-authorized Dell(conf-if-Te-1/1)#do show dot1x interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 802.
Figure 11. Dynamic VLAN Assignment 1. Configure 8021.x globally (refer to Enabling 802.1X) along with relevant RADIUS server configurations (refer to the illustration inDynamic VLAN Assignment with Port Authentication). 2. Make the interface a switchport so that it can be assigned to a VLAN. 3. Create the VLAN to which the interface will be assigned. 4. Connect the supplicant to the port configured for 802.1X. 5.
• If the supplicant fails authentication a specified number of times, the authenticator places the port in the Authentication-fail VLAN. • If a port is already forwarding on the Guest VLAN when 802.1X is enabled, the port is moved out of the Guest VLAN and the authentication process begins. Configuring a Guest VLAN If the supplicant does not respond within a determined amount of time ([reauth-max + 1] * tx-period, the system assumes that the host does not have 802.
Example of Viewing Configured Authentication View your configuration using the show config command from INTERFACE mode, as shown in the example in Configuring a Guest VLAN or using the show dot1x interface command from EXEC Privilege mode. 802.
7 Access Control List (ACL) VLAN Groups and Content Addressable Memory (CAM) This chapter describes the access control list (ACL) virtual local area network (VLAN) group and content addressable memory (CAM) enhancements. Optimizing CAM Utilization During the Attachment of ACLs to VLANs To minimize the number of entries in CAM, enable and configure the ACL CAM feature. Use this feature when you apply ACLs to a VLAN (or a set of VLANs) and when you apply ACLs to a set of ports.
• The description of the ACL group is added or removed. Guidelines for Configuring ACL VLAN Groups Keep the following points in mind when you configure ACL VLAN groups: • The interfaces where you apply the ACL VLAN group function as restricted interfaces. The ACL VLAN group name identifies the group of VLANs that performs hierarchical filtering. • You can add only one ACL to an interface at a time.
You can have up to eight different ACL VLAN groups at any given time. 2. Add a description to the ACL VLAN group. CONFIGURATION (conf-acl-vl-grp) mode description description 3. Apply an egress IP ACL to the ACL VLAN group. CONFIGURATION (conf-acl-vl-grp) mode ip access-group {group name} out implicit-permit 4. Add VLAN member(s) to an ACL VLAN group. CONFIGURATION (conf-acl-vl-grp) mode member vlan {VLAN-range} 5.
cam-acl-vlan vlanaclopt <0-2> 4. View the number of FP blocks that is allocated for the different VLAN services. EXEC Privilege mode Dell#show cam-usage switch Stackunit|Portpipe| CAM Partition | Total CAM | Used CAM |Available CAM ========|========|=================|============|============|============= 1 | 0 | IN-L2 ACL | 1536 | 0 | 1536 | | OUT-L2 ACL | 206 | 9 | 197 Codes: * - cam usage is above 90%.
========|========|=================|=============|=============|============== 11 | 0 | IN-L2 ACL | 7152 | 0 | 7152 | | IN-L2 FIB | 32768 | 1081 | 31687 | | OUT-L2 ACL | 0 | 0 | 0 11 | 1 | IN-L2 ACL | 7152 | 0 | 7152 | | IN-L2 FIB | 32768 | 1081 | 31687 | | OUT-L2 ACL | 0 | 0 | 0 The following output displays CAM space usage for Layer 3 ACLs: Dell#show cam-usage router Linecard|Portpipe| CAM Partition | Total CAM | Used CAM |Available CAM ========|========|=================|=============|=============|=====
8 Access Control Lists (ACLs) This chapter describes access control lists (ACLs), prefix lists, and route-maps. At their simplest, access control lists (ACLs), prefix lists, and route-maps permit or deny traffic based on MAC and/or IP addresses. This chapter describes implementing IP ACLs, IP prefix lists and route-maps. For MAC ACLS, refer to Layer 2.
NOTE: You can configure VRF-aware ACLs on interfaces either using a range of VLANs or a range of VRFs but not both. IP Access Control Lists (ACLs) In Dell Networking switch/routers, you can create two different types of IP ACLs: standard or extended. A standard ACL filters packets based on the source IP packet.
CAM Optimization When you enable this command, if a policy map containing classification rules (ACL and/or dscp/ ip-precedence rules) is applied to more than one physical interface on the same port-pipe, only a single copy of the policy is written (only one FP entry is used). When you disable this command, the system behaves as described in this chapter. Test CAM Usage This command applies to both IPv4 and IPv6 CAM profiles, but is best used when verifying QoS optimization for IPv6 ACLs.
Determine the Order in which ACLs are Used to Classify Traffic When you link class-maps to queues using the service-queue command, Dell Networking OS matches the class-maps according to queue priority (queue numbers closer to 0 have lower priorities). As shown in the following example, class-map cmap2 is matched against ingress packets before cmap1. ACLs acl1 and acl2 have overlapping rules because the address range 20.1.1.0/24 is within 20.0.0.0/8.
• Configure a route map for route tagging (optional) Creating a Route Map Route maps, ACLs, and prefix lists are similar in composition because all three contain filters, but route map filters do not contain the permit and deny actions found in ACLs and prefix lists. Route map filters match certain routes and set or specify values. To create a route map, use the following command. • Create a route map and assign it a unique name. The optional permit and deny keywords are the action of the route map.
The following example shows a route map with multiple instances. The show config command displays only the configuration of the current route map instance. To view all instances of a specific route map, use the show route-map command.
Configuring Match Routes To configure match criterion for a route map, use the following commands. • Match routes with the same AS-PATH numbers. CONFIG-ROUTE-MAP mode • match as-path as-path-name Match routes with COMMUNITY list attributes in their path. CONFIG-ROUTE-MAP mode • match community community-list-name [exact] Match routes whose next hop is a specific interface.
match origin {egp | igp | incomplete} • Match routes specified as internal or external to OSPF, ISIS level-1, ISIS level-2, or locally generated. CONFIG-ROUTE-MAP mode match route-type {external [type-1 | type-2] | internal | level-1 | level-2 | local } • Match routes with a specific tag. CONFIG-ROUTE-MAP mode match tag tag-value To create route map instances, use these commands.
CONFIG-ROUTE-MAP mode set tag tag-value • Specify a value as the route’s weight. CONFIG-ROUTE-MAP mode set weight value To create route map instances, use these commands. There is no limit to the number of set commands per route map, but the convention is to keep the number of set filters in a route map low. Set commands do not require a corresponding match command.
! set tag 34 Continue Clause Normally, when a match is found, set clauses are executed, and the packet is then forwarded; no more route-map modules are processed. If you configure the continue command at the end of a module, the next module (or a specified module) is processed even after a match is found. The following example shows a continue clause at the end of a route-map module. In this example, if a match is found in the route-map “test” module 10, module 30 is processed.
Dell(conf-ext-nacl)#permit ip any 10.1.1.1/32 Dell(conf-ext-nacl) Layer 4 ACL Rules Examples The following examples show the ACL commands for Layer 4 packet filtering. Permit an ACL line with L3 information only, and the fragments keyword is present: If a packet’s L3 information matches the L3 information in the ACL line, the packet's FO is checked. • If a packet's FO > 0, the packet is permitted. • If a packet's FO = 0, the next ACL entry is processed.
A standard IP ACL uses the source IP address as its match criterion. 1. Enter IP ACCESS LIST mode by naming a standard IP access list. CONFIGURATION mode ip access-list standard access-listname 2. Configure a drop or forward filter. CONFIG-STD-NACL mode seq sequence-number {deny | permit} {source [mask] | any | host ip-address} [count [byte] [dscp] [order] [fragments] NOTE: When assigning sequence numbers to filters, keep in mind that you might need to insert a new filter.
ip access-list standard access-list-name 2. Configure a drop or forward IP ACL filter. CONFIG-STD-NACL mode {deny | permit} {source [mask] | any | host ip-address} [count [byte] [dscp] [order] [fragments] When you use the log keyword, the CP logs details about the packets that match. Depending on how many packets match the log entry and at what rate, the CP may become busy as it has to log these packets’ details.
CONFIG-EXT-NACL mode seq sequence-number {deny | permit} {ip-protocol-number | icmp | ip | tcp | udp} {source mask | any | host ip-address} {destination mask | any | host ip-address} [operator port [port]] [count [byte]] [order] [fragments] When you use the log keyword, the CP logs details about the packets that match. Depending on how many packets match the log entry and at what rate, the CP may become busy as it has to log these packets’ details.
Configuring Filters Without a Sequence Number If you are creating an extended ACL with only one or two filters, you can let Dell Networking OS assign a sequence number based on the order in which the filters are configured. Dell Networking OS assigns filters in multiples of five. To configure a filter for an extended IP ACL without a specified sequence number, use any or all of the following commands: • Configure a deny or permit filter to examine IP packets.
• L2 egress access list If a rule is simply appended, existing counters are not affected. Table 8. L2 and L3 Filtering on Switched Packets L2 ACL Behavior L3 ACL Behavior Decision on Targeted Traffic Deny Deny L3 ACL denies. Deny Permit L3 ACL permits. Permit Deny L3 ACL denies. Permit Permit L3 ACL permits. NOTE: If you configure an interface as a vlan-stack access port, only the L2 ACL filters the packets. The L3 ACL applied to such a port does not affect traffic.
4. Apply rules to the new ACL. INTERFACE mode ip access-list [standard | extended] name To view which IP ACL is applied to an interface, use the show config command in INTERFACE mode, or use the show running-config command in EXEC mode. Example of Viewing ACLs Applied to an Interface Dell(conf-if)#show conf ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 ip address 10.2.1.100 255.255.255.
Extended Ingress IP access list abcd on tengigabitethernet 1/1 seq 5 permit tcp any any seq 10 deny icmp any any seq 15 permit 1.1.1.
seq 5 permit tcp any any seq 10 deny icmp any any seq 15 permit 1.1.1.2 Dell#configure terminal Dell(conf)#interface te 1/2 Dell(conf-if-te-1/2)#ip vrf forwarding blue Dell(conf-if-te-1/2)#show config ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/2 ip vrf forwarding blue no ip address shutdown Dell(conf-if-te-1/2)# Dell(conf-if-te-1/2)# Dell(conf-if-te-1/2)#end Dell# Applying Egress Layer 3 ACLs (Control-Plane) By default, packets originated from the system are not filtered by egress ACLs.
The following examples show permit or deny filters for specific routes using the le and ge parameters, where x.x.x.x/x represents a route prefix: • To deny only /8 prefixes, enter deny x.x.x.x/x ge 8 le 8. • To permit routes with the mask greater than /8 but less than /12, enter permit x.x.x.x/x ge 8. • To deny routes with a mask less than /24, enter deny x.x.x.x/x le 24. • To permit routes with a mask greater than /20, enter permit x.x.x.x/x ge 20.
Example of Assigning Sequence Numbers to Filters If you want to forward all routes that do not match the prefix list criteria, configure a prefix list filter to permit all routes (permit 0.0.0.0/0 le 32). The “permit all” filter must be the last filter in your prefix list. To permit the default route only, enter permit 0.0.0.0/0. The following example shows how the seq command orders the filters according to the sequence number assigned.
Viewing Prefix Lists To view all configured prefix lists, use the following commands. • Show detailed information about configured prefix lists. EXEC Privilege mode show ip prefix-list detail [prefix-name] • Show a table of summarized information about configured Prefix lists. EXEC Privilege mode show ip prefix-list summary [prefix-name] Examples of the show ip prefix-list detail and show ip prefix-list summary Commands The following example shows the show ip prefix-list detail command.
CONFIG-ROUTER-RIP mode distribute-list prefix-list-name out [interface | connected | static | ospf] Example of Viewing Configured Prefix Lists (ROUTER RIP mode) To view the configuration, use the show config command in ROUTER RIP mode, or the show running-config rip command in EXEC mode. Dell(conf-router_rip)#show config ! router rip distribute-list prefix juba out network 10.0.0.
NOTE: ACL resequencing does not affect the rules, remarks, or order in which they are applied. Resequencing merely renumbers the rules so that you can place new rules within the list as needed. Table 9. ACL Resequencing Rules Resquencing Rules Before Resequencing: seq 5 permit any host 1.1.1.1 seq 6 permit any host 1.1.1.2 seq 7 permit any host 1.1.1.3 seq 10 permit any host 1.1.1.4 Rules After Resequencing: seq 5 permit any host 1.1.1.1 seq 10 permit any host 1.1.1.2 seq 15 permit any host 1.1.1.
remark 8 this remark corresponds to permit ip any host 1.1.1.2 seq 8 permit ip any host 1.1.1.2 seq 10 permit ip any host 1.1.1.3 seq 12 permit ip any host 1.1.1.4 Remarks that do not have a corresponding rule are incremented as a rule. These two mechanisms allow remarks to retain their original position in the list. The following example shows remark 10 corresponding to rule 10 and as such, they have the same number before and after the command is entered.
When ACL logging is configured, and a frame reaches an ACL-enabled interface and matches the ACL, a log is generated to indicate that the ACL entry matched the packet. When you enable ACL log messages, at times, depending on the volume of traffic, it is possible that a large number of logs might be generated that can impact the system performance and efficiency. To avoid an overload of ACL logs from being recorded, you can configure the rate-limiting functionality.
• If you enabled the count of packets for the ACL entry for which you configured logging, and if the logging is deactivated in a specific interval owing to the threshold having exceeded, the count of packets that exceeded the logging threshold value during that interval is logged when the subsequent log record (in the next interval) is generated for that ACL entry. • When you delete an ACL entry, the logging settings associated with it are also removed.
When a stack unit is reset or a stack unit undergoes a failure, the ACL agent registers with the port mirroring application. The port mirroring utility downloads the monitoring configuration to the ACL agent. The interface manager notifies the port mirroring application about the removal of an interface when an ACL entry associated with that interface to is deleted.
Example Output of the show Command Dell# show ip accounting access-list ! Extended Ingress IP access list kar on TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 Total cam count 1 seq 5 permit ip 192.168.20.0/24 173.168.20.0/24 monitor Dell#show ipv6 accounting access-list ! Ingress IPv6 access list kar on TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 Total cam count 1 seq 5 permit ipv6 22::/24 33::/24 monitor Enabling Flow-Based Monitoring Flow-based monitoring is supported on the S4810 platform.
seq 10 permit ip 102.1.1.
9 Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD) BFD is a protocol that is used to rapidly detect communication failures between two adjacent systems. It is a simple and lightweight replacement for existing routing protocol link state detection mechanisms. It also provides a failure detection solution for links on which no routing protocol is used. BFD is a simple hello mechanism. Two neighboring systems running BFD establish a session using a three-way handshake.
BFD Packet Format Control packets are encapsulated in user datagram protocol (UDP) packets. The following illustration shows the complete encapsulation of a BFD control packet inside an IPv4 packet. Figure 12. BFD in IPv4 Packet Format Field Description Diagnostic Code The reason that the last session failed. State The current local session state. Refer to BFD Sessions. Flag A bit that indicates packet function.
Field Description My Discriminator A random number generated by the local system to identify the session. Your Discriminator A random number generated by the remote system to identify the session. Discriminator values are necessary to identify the session to which a control packet belongs because there can be many sessions running on a single interface. Desired Min TX Interval The minimum rate at which the local system would like to send control packets to the remote system.
Administratively Down The local system does not participate in a particular session. Down The remote system is not sending control packets or at least not within the detection time for a particular session. Init The local system is communicating. Up Both systems are exchanging control packets. The session is declared down if: • A control packet is not received within the detection time. • Sufficient echo packets are lost.
Figure 13.
Session State Changes The following illustration shows how the session state on a system changes based on the status notification it receives from the remote system. For example, if a session on a system is down and it receives a Down status notification from the remote system, the session state on the local system changes to Init. Figure 14.
• Configure BFD for IS-IS • Configure BFD for BGP • Configure BFD for VRRP • Configuring Protocol Liveness • Troubleshooting BFD Configure BFD for Physical Ports Configuring BFD for physical ports is supported on the C-Series and E-Series platforms only. BFD on physical ports is useful when you do not enable the routing protocol. Without BFD, if the remote system fails, the local system does not remove the connected route until the first failed attempt to send a packet.
Establishing a Session on Physical Ports To establish a session, enable BFD at the interface level on both ends of the link, as shown in the following illustration. The configuration parameters do not need to match. Figure 15. Establishing a BFD Session on Physical Ports 1. Enter interface mode. CONFIGURATION mode interface 2. Assign an IP address to the interface if one is not already assigned. INTERFACE mode ip address ip-address 3.
Neighbor parameters: TX: 100ms, RX: 100ms, Multiplier: 3 Actual parameters: TX: 100ms, RX: 100ms, Multiplier: 3 Role: Active Delete session on Down: False Client Registered: CLI Uptime: 00:03:57 Statistics: Number of packets received from neighbor: 1775 Number of packets sent to neighbor: 1775 Number of state changes: 1 Number of messages from IFA about port state change: 0 Number of messages communicated b/w Manager and Agent: 4 Log messages display when you configure both interfaces for BFD.
• Disable BFD on an interface. INTERFACE mode no bfd enable • Enable BFD on an interface. INTERFACE mode bfd enable If you disable BFD on a local interface, this message displays: R1(conf-if-te-4/24)#01:00:52: %RPM0-P:RP2 %BFDMGR-1-BFD_STATE_CHANGE: Changed session state to Ad Dn for neighbor 2.2.2.
ip route bfd Example of the show bfd neighbors Command to Verify Static Routes To verify that sessions have been created for static routes, use the show bfd neighbors command. R1(conf)#ip route 2.2.3.0/24 2.2.2.2 R1(conf)#ip route bfd R1(conf)#do show bfd neighbors * - Active session role Ad Dn - Admin Down C - CLI I - ISIS O - OSPF R - Static Route (RTM) LocalAddr RemoteAddr Interface State Rx-int Tx-int Mult Clients 2.2.2.1 2.2.2.
Related Configuration Tasks • Changing OSPF Session Parameters • Disabling BFD for OSPF Establishing Sessions with OSPF Neighbors BFD sessions can be established with all OSPF neighbors at once or sessions can be established with all neighbors out of a specific interface. Sessions are only established when the OSPF adjacency is in the Full state. Figure 17.
Example of Verifying Sessions with OSPF Neighbors To view the established sessions, use the show bfd neighbors command. The bold line shows the OSPF BFD sessions. R2(conf-router_ospf)#bfd all-neighbors R2(conf-router_ospf)#do show bfd neighbors * - Active session role Ad Dn - Admin Down C - CLI I - ISIS O - OSPF R - Static Route (RTM) LocalAddr * 2.2.2.2 * 2.2.3.1 RemoteAddr Interface State Rx-int Tx-int Mult Clients 2.2.2.1 Te 2/1 Up 100 100 3 O 2.2.3.
Configure BFD for OSPFv3 BFD for OSPFv3 provides support for IPV6. Configuring BFD for OSPFv3 is a two-step process: 1. Enable BFD globally. 2. Establish sessions with OSPFv3 neighbors. Related Configuration Tasks • • Changing OSPFv3 Session Parameters Disabling BFD for OSPFv3 Establishing Sessions with OSPFv3 Neighbors You can establish BFD sessions with all OSPFv3 neighbors at once or with all neighbors out of a specific interface.
• Disable BFD sessions with all OSPF neighbors. ROUTER-OSPF mode no bfd all-neighbors • Disable BFD sessions with all OSPF neighbors on an interface. INTERFACE mode ip ospf bfd all-neighbors disable Configure BFD for IS-IS When using BFD with IS-IS, the IS-IS protocol registers with the BFD manager on the RPM. BFD sessions are then established with all neighboring interfaces participating in IS-IS.
Establishing Sessions with IS-IS Neighbors BFD sessions can be established for all IS-IS neighbors at once or sessions can be established for all neighbors out of a specific interface. Figure 18. Establishing Sessions with IS-IS Neighbors To establish BFD with all IS-IS neighbors or with IS-IS neighbors on a single interface, use the following commands. • Establish sessions with all IS-IS neighbors. ROUTER-ISIS mode • bfd all-neighbors Establish sessions with IS-IS neighbors on a single interface.
I O R - ISIS - OSPF - Static Route (RTM) LocalAddr * 2.2.2.2 RemoteAddr Interface State Rx-int Tx-int Mult Clients 2.2.2.1 Te 2/1 Up 100 100 3 I Changing IS-IS Session Parameters BFD sessions are configured with default intervals and a default role. The parameters that you can configure are: Desired TX Interval, Required Min RX Interval, Detection Multiplier, and system role. These parameters are configured for all IS-IS sessions or all IS-IS sessions out of an interface.
Establishing Sessions with BGP Neighbors Before configuring BFD for BGP, you must first configure BGP on the routers that you want to interconnect. For more information, refer to Border Gateway Protocol IPv4 (BGPv4). For example, the following illustration shows a sample BFD configuration on Router 1 and Router 2 that use eBGP in a transit network to interconnect AS1 and AS2.
response is to terminate the peering session for the routing protocol and reconverge by bypassing the failed neighboring router. A log message is generated whenever BFD detects a failure condition. 1. Enable BFD globally. CONFIGURATION mode bfd enable 2. Specify the AS number and enter ROUTER BGP configuration mode. CONFIGURATION mode router bgp as-number 3. Add a BGP neighbor or peer group in a remote AS. CONFIG-ROUTERBGP mode neighbor {ip-address | peer-group name} remote-as as-number 4.
Use BFD in a BGP Peer Group You can establish a BFD session for the members of a peer group (the neighbor peer-group-name bfd command in ROUTER BGP configuration mode). Members of the peer group may have BFD: • Explicitly enabled (the neighbor ip-address bfd command) • Explicitly disabled (the neighbor ip-address bfd disable command) • Inherited (neither explicitly enabled or disabled) according to the current BFD configuration of the peer group.
The following example shows viewing all BFD neighbors. R2# show bfd neighbors * - Active session role Ad Dn - Admin Down B - BGP C - CLI I - ISIS O - OSPF R - Static Route (RTM) M - MPLS V - VRRP LocalAddr * 1.1.1.3 * 2.2.2.3 * 3.3.3.3 RemoteAddr 1.1.1.2 2.2.2.2 3.3.3.2 Interface Te 6/1 Te 6/2 Te 6/3 State Up Up Up Rx-int 100 100 100 Tx-int 100 100 100 Mult 3 3 3 Clients B B B The following example shows viewing BFD neighbors with full detail.
Uptime: 00:02:22 Statistics: Number of packets received from neighbor: 1428 Number of packets sent to neighbor: 1428 Number of state changes: 1 Number of messages from IFA about port state change: 0 Number of messages communicated b/w Manager and Agent: 4 The following example shows viewing configured BFD counters.
• Message displays when you enable a BFD session with a BGP neighbor using the neighbor ip-address bfd command. • Message displays when you enable a BGP neighbor in a peer group for which you enabled a BFD session using the neighbor peer-group-name bfd command R2# show ip bgp neighbors 2.2.2.2 BGP neighbor is 2.2.2.2, remote AS 1, external link BGP version 4, remote router ID 12.0.0.
Configure BFD for VRRP When using BFD with VRRP, the VRRP protocol registers with the BFD manager on the route processor module (RPM). BFD sessions are established with all neighboring interfaces participating in VRRP. If a neighboring interface fails, the BFD agent on the line card notifies the BFD manager, which in turn notifies the VRRP protocol that a link state change occurred. Configuring BFD for VRRP is a three-step process: 1. Enable BFD globally. Refer to Enabling BFD Globally. 2.
To establish a session with a particular VRRP neighbor, use the following command. • Establish a session with a particular VRRP neighbor. INTERFACE mode vrrp bfd neighbor ip-address Examples of Viewing VRRP Sessions with Neighbors or State Information To view the established sessions, use the show bfd neighbors command. The bold line shows that VRRP BFD sessions are enabled.
• Change parameters for all VRRP sessions. INTERFACE mode vrrp bfd all-neighbors interval milliseconds min_rx milliseconds multiplier value role [active | passive] • Change parameters for a particular VRRP session.
debug bfd packet Examples of Output from the debug bfd Commands The following example shows a three-way handshake using the debug bfd detail command. R1(conf-if-te-4/24)#00:54:38: %RPM0-P:RP2 %BFDMGR-1-BFD_STATE_CHANGE: Changed session state to Down for neighbor 2.2.2.2 on interface Te 4/24 (diag: 0) 00:54:38 : Sent packet for session with neighbor 2.2.2.
10 Border Gateway Protocol IPv4 (BGPv4) This chapter provides a general description of BGPv4 as it is supported in the Dell Networking Operating System (OS). BGP protocol standards are listed in the Standards Compliance chapter. BGP is an external gateway protocol that transmits interdomain routing information within and between autonomous systems (AS). The primary function of the BGP is to exchange network reachability information with other BGP systems.
Figure 21. Internal BGP BGP version 4 (BGPv4) supports classless interdomain routing and aggregate routes and AS paths. BGP is a path vector protocol — a computer network in which BGP maintains the path that updated information takes as it diffuses through the network. Updates traveling through the network and returning to the same node are easily detected and discarded.
Figure 22. BGP Routers in Full Mesh The number of BGP speakers each BGP peer must maintain increases exponentially. Network management quickly becomes impossible. Sessions and Peers When two routers communicate using the BGP protocol, a BGP session is started. The two end-points of that session are Peers. A Peer is also called a Neighbor. Establish a Session Information exchange between peers is driven by events and timers. The focus in BGP is on the traffic routing policies.
State Description Idle BGP initializes all resources, refuses all inbound BGP connection attempts, and initiates a TCP connection to the peer. Connect In this state the router waits for the TCP connection to complete, transitioning to the OpenSent state if successful. If that transition is not successful, BGP resets the ConnectRetry timer and transitions to the Active state when the timer expires. Active The router resets the ConnectRetry timer to zero and returns to the Connect state.
Figure 23. BGP Router Rules 1. Router B receives an advertisement from Router A through eBGP. Because the route is learned through eBGP, Router B advertises it to all its iBGP peers: Routers C and D. 2. Router C receives the advertisement but does not advertise it to any peer because its only other peer is Router D, an iBGP peer, and Router D has already learned it through iBGP from Router B. 3.
reduce the options. If a number of best paths is determined, this selection criteria is applied to group’s best to determine the ultimate best path. In non-deterministic mode (the bgp non-deterministic-med command is applied), paths are compared in the order in which they arrive. This method can lead to Dell Networking OS choosing different best paths from a set of paths, depending on the order in which they were received from the neighbors because MED may or may not get compared between the adjacent paths.
b. A path with no AS_PATH configured has a path length of 0. c. AS_CONFED_SET is not included in the AS_PATH length. d. AS_CONFED_SEQUENCE has a path length of 1, no matter how many ASs are in the AS_CONFED_SEQUENCE. 5. Prefer the path with the lowest ORIGIN type (IGP is lower than EGP, and EGP is lower than INCOMPLETE). 6. Prefer the path with the lowest multi-exit discriminator (MED) attribute. The following criteria apply: a.
Figure 25. BGP Local Preference Multi-Exit Discriminators (MEDs) If two ASs connect in more than one place, a multi-exit discriminator (MED) can be used to assign a preference to a preferred path. MED is one of the criteria used to determine the best path, so keep in mind that other criteria may impact selection, as shown in the illustration in Best Path Selection Criteria. One AS assigns the MED a value and the other AS uses that value to decide the preferred path.
Figure 26. Multi-Exit Discriminators NOTE: Configuring the set metric-type internal command in a route-map advertises the IGP cost as MED to outbound EBGP peers when redistributing routes. The configured set metric value overwrites the default IGP cost. If the outbound route-map uses MED, it overwrites IGP MED. Origin The origin indicates the origin of the prefix, or how the prefix came into BGP. There are three origin codes: IGP, EGP, INCOMPLETE.
NOTE: Any update that contains the AS path number 0 is valid. The AS path is shown in the following example. The origin attribute is shown following the AS path information (shown in bold).
Implement BGP with Dell Networking OS The following sections describe how to implement BGP on Dell Networking OS. Additional Path (Add-Path) Support The add-path feature reduces convergence times by advertising multiple paths to its peers for the same address prefix without replacing existing paths with new ones. By default, a BGP speaker advertises only the best path to its peers for a given address prefix.
Ignore Router-ID for Some Best-Path Calculations Dell Networking OS allows you to avoid unnecessary BGP best-path transitions between external paths under certain conditions. The bgp bestpath router-id ignore command reduces network disruption caused by routing and forwarding plane changes and allows for faster convergence. Four-Byte AS Numbers Dell Networking OS supports 4-Byte (32-bit) format when configuring autonomous system numbers (ASNs).
Dynamic AS Number Notation Application Dell Networking OS applies the ASN notation type change dynamically to the running-config statements. When you apply or change an asnotation, the type selected is reflected immediately in the running-configuration and the show commands (refer to the following two examples).
Dell(conf-router_bgp)#do show ip bgp BGP table version is 28093, local router ID is 172.30.1.57 AS Number Migration With this feature you can transparently change the AS number of an entire BGP network and ensure that the routes are propagated throughout the network while the migration is in progress. When migrating one AS to another, perhaps combining ASs, an eBGP network may lose its routing to an iBGP if the ASN changes.
If you use the “no prepend” option, the Local-AS does not prepend to the updates received from the eBGP peer. If you do not select “no prepend” (the default), the Local-AS is added to the first AS segment in the AS-PATH. If an inbound route-map is used to prepend the as-path to the update from the peer, the Local-AS is added first. For example, consider the topology described in the previous illustration.
• To avoid SNMP timeouts with a large-scale configuration (large number of BGP neighbors and a large BGP Loc-RIB), Dell Networking recommends setting the timeout and retry count values to a relatively higher number. For example, t = 60 or r = 5. • To return all values on an snmpwalk for the f10BgpM2Peer sub-OID, use the -C c option, such as snmpwalk -v 2c -C c c public. • An SNMP walk may terminate pre-maturely if the index does not increment lexicographically.
Item Default Graceful Restart feature Disabled Local preference 100 MED 0 Route Flap Damping Parameters half-life = 15 minutes reuse = 750 suppress = 2000 max-suppress-time = 60 minutes external distance = 20 Distance internal distance = 200 local distance = 200 keepalive = 60 seconds Timers holdtime = 180 seconds Add-path Disabled Enabling BGP By default, BGP is not enabled on the system. Dell Networking OS supports one autonomous system (AS) and assigns the AS number (ASN).
CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode bgp four-octet-as-support NOTE: Use it only if you support 4-Byte AS numbers or if you support AS4 number representation. If you are supporting 4-Byte ASNs, enable this command. Disable 4-Byte support and return to the default 2-Byte format by using the no bgp four-octet-as-support command. You cannot disable 4-Byte support if you currently have a 4-Byte ASN configured. Disabling 4-Byte AS numbers also disables ASDOT and ASDOT+ number representation.
100.10.92.9 65192 0 192.168.10.1 65123 0 192.168.12.2 65123 0 R2# 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 never 0 never 0 never Active Active Active The following example shows the show ip bgp summary command output (4–byte AS number displays). R2#show ip bgp summary BGP router identifier 192.168.10.2, local AS number 48735.
Local host: 10.114.8.39, Local port: 1037 Foreign host: 10.114.8.60, Foreign port: 179 BGP neighbor is 10.1.1.1, remote AS 65535, internal link Administratively shut down BGP version 4, remote router ID 10.0.0.
Only one form of AS number representation is supported at a time. You cannot combine the types of representations within an AS. To configure AS4 number representations, use the following commands. • Enable ASPLAIN AS Number representation. CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode bgp asnotation asplain NOTE: ASPLAIN is the default method Dell Networking OS uses and does not appear in the configuration display. • Enable ASDOT AS Number representation.
Configuring Peer Groups To configure multiple BGP neighbors at one time, create and populate a BGP peer group. An advantage of peer groups is that members of a peer group inherit the configuration properties of the group and share same update policy. A maximum of 256 peer groups are allowed on the system. Create a peer group by assigning it a name, then adding members to the peer group. After you create a peer group, you can configure route policies for it.
When you add a peer to a peer group, it inherits all the peer group’s configured parameters.
Peer-group zanzibar, remote AS 65535 BGP version 4 Minimum time between advertisement runs is 5 seconds For address family: IPv4 Unicast BGP neighbor is zanzibar, peer-group internal, Number of peers in this group 26 Peer-group members (* - outbound optimized): 10.68.160.1 10.68.161.1 10.68.162.1 10.68.163.1 10.68.164.1 10.68.165.1 10.68.166.1 10.68.167.1 10.68.168.1 10.68.169.1 10.68.170.1 10.68.171.1 10.68.172.1 10.68.173.1 10.68.174.1 10.68.175.1 10.68.176.1 10.68.177.1 10.68.178.1 10.68.179.1 10.68.180.
BGP neighbor is 100.100.100.100, remote AS 65517, internal link Member of peer-group test for session parameters BGP version 4, remote router ID 30.30.30.
neighbor 100.100.100.100 no shutdown Dell# Configuring Passive Peering When you enable a peer-group, the software sends an OPEN message to initiate a TCP connection. If you enable passive peering for the peer group, the software does not send an OPEN message, but it responds to an OPEN message. When a BGP neighbor connection with authentication configured is rejected by a passive peer-group, Dell Networking OS does not allow another passive peer-group on the same subnet to connect with the BGP neighbor.
Example of the Verifying that Local AS Numbering is Disabled The first line in bold shows the actual AS number. The second two lines in bold show the local AS number (6500) maintained during migration. To disable this feature, use the no neighbor local-as command in CONFIGURATION ROUTER BGP mode. R2(conf-router_bgp)#show conf ! router bgp 65123 bgp router-id 192.168.10.2 network 10.10.21.0/24 network 10.10.32.0/24 network 100.10.92.0/24 network 192.168.10.0/24 bgp four-octet-as-support neighbor 10.10.21.
network 192.168.10.0/24 bgp four-octet-as-support neighbor 10.10.21.1 remote-as 65123 neighbor 10.10.21.1 filter-list Laura in neighbor 10.10.21.1 no shutdown neighbor 10.10.32.3 remote-as 65123 neighbor 10.10.32.3 no shutdown neighbor 100.10.92.9 remote-as 65192 neighbor 100.10.92.9 local-as 6500 neighbor 100.10.92.9 no shutdown neighbor 192.168.10.1 remote-as 65123 neighbor 192.168.10.1 update-source Loopback 0 neighbor 192.168.10.1 no shutdown neighbor 192.168.12.2 remote-as 65123 neighbor 192.168.12.
bgp graceful-restart [stale-path-time time-in-seconds] • The default is 360 seconds. Local router supports graceful restart as a receiver only. CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode bgp graceful-restart [role receiver-only] Enabling Neighbor Graceful Restart BGP graceful restart is active only when the neighbor becomes established. Otherwise, it is disabled. Graceful-restart applies to all neighbors with established adjacency.
ip as-path access-list as-path-name 2. Enter the parameter to match BGP AS-PATH for filtering. CONFIG-AS-PATH mode {deny | permit} filter parameter This is the filter that is used to match the AS-path. The entries can be any format, letters, numbers, or regular expressions. You can enter this command multiple times if multiple filters are desired. For accepted expressions, refer to Regular Expressions as Filters. 3. Return to CONFIGURATION mode. AS-PATH ACL mode exit 4. Enter ROUTER BGP mode.
Regular Expressions as Filters Regular expressions are used to filter AS paths or community lists. A regular expression is a special character used to define a pattern that is then compared with an input string. For an AS-path access list, as shown in the previous commands, if the AS path matches the regular expression in the access list, the route matches the access list. The following lists the regular expressions accepted in Dell Networking OS.
Dell(config-as-path)#deny 32$ Dell(config-as-path)#ex Dell(conf)#router bgp 99 Dell(conf-router_bgp)#neighbor AAA filter-list Eagle in Dell(conf-router_bgp)#show conf ! router bgp 99 neighbor AAA peer-group neighbor AAA filter-list Eaglein neighbor AAA no shutdown neighbor 10.155.15.2 remote-as 32 neighbor 10.155.15.2 filter-list 1 in neighbor 10.155.15.
Enabling Additional Paths The add-path feature is disabled by default. NOTE: Dell Networking OS recommends not using multipath and add path simultaneously in a route reflector. To allow multiple paths sent to peers, use the following commands. 1. Allow the advertisement of multiple paths for the same address prefix without the new paths replacing any previous ones. CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode bgp add-path [both|received|send] path-count count The range is from 2 to 64. 2.
• • • no-export: routes with the COMMUNITY attribute of NO_EXPORT. quote-regexp: then any number of regular expressions. The software applies all regular expressions in the list. regexp: then a regular expression. Example of the show ip community-lists Command To view the configuration, use the show config command in CONFIGURATION COMMUNITY-LIST or CONFIGURATION EXTCOMMUNITY LIST mode or the show ip {community-lists | extcommunity-list} command in EXEC Privilege mode.
deny deny deny deny deny deny deny deny deny deny deny deny deny deny deny deny deny deny Dell# 701:20 702:20 703:20 704:20 705:20 14551:20 701:112 702:112 703:112 704:112 705:112 14551:112 701:667 702:667 703:667 704:666 705:666 14551:666 Filtering Routes with Community Lists To use an IP community list or IP extended community list to filter routes, you must apply a match community filter to a route map and then apply that route map to a BGP neighbor or peer group. 1.
To send the COMMUNITY attribute to BGP neighbors, use the following command. • Enable the software to send the router’s COMMUNITY attribute to the BGP neighbor or peer group specified. CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode neighbor {ip-address | peer-group-name} send-community To view the BGP configuration, use the show config command in CONFIGURATION ROUTER BGP mode.
Origin codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete Network * i 3.0.0.0/8 *>i 4.2.49.12/30 * i 4.21.132.0/23 *>i 4.24.118.16/30 *>i 4.24.145.0/30 *>i 4.24.187.12/30 *>i 4.24.202.0/30 *>i 4.25.88.0/30 *>i 6.1.0.0/16 *>i 6.2.0.0/22 *>i 6.3.0.0/18 *>i 6.4.0.0/16 *>i 6.5.0.0/19 *>i 6.8.0.0/20 *>i 6.9.0.0/20 *>i 6.10.0.0/15 *>i 6.14.0.0/15 *>i 6.133.0.0/21 *>i 6.151.0.0/16 --More-- Next Hop Metric 195.171.0.16 195.171.0.16 195.171.0.16 195.171.0.16 195.171.0.16 195.171.0.16 195.171.0.16 195.171.0.16 195.171.0.
A more flexible method for manipulating the LOCAL_PREF attribute value is to use a route map. 1. Enter the ROUTE-MAP mode and assign a name to a route map. CONFIGURATION mode route-map map-name [permit | deny] [sequence-number] 2. Change LOCAL_PREF value for routes meeting the criteria of this route map. CONFIG-ROUTE-MAP mode set local-preference value 3. Return to CONFIGURATION mode. CONFIG-ROUTE-MAP mode exit 4. Enter ROUTER BGP mode. CONFIGURATION mode router bgp as-number 5.
• Sets weight for the route. CONFIG-ROUTE-MAP mode set weight weight – weight: the range is from 0 to 65535. To view BGP configuration, use the show config command in CONFIGURATION ROUTER BGP mode or the show runningconfig bgp command in EXEC Privilege mode. Enabling Multipath By default, the software allows one path to a destination. You can enable multipath to allow up to 64 parallel paths to a destination.
• ge: minimum prefix length to be matched. • le: maximum prefix length to me matched. For information about configuring prefix lists, refer to Access Control Lists (ACLs). 3. Return to CONFIGURATION mode. CONFIG-PREFIX LIST mode exit 4. Enter ROUTER BGP mode. CONFIGURATION mode router bgp as-number 5. Filter routes based on the criteria in the configured prefix list.
5. Filter routes based on the criteria in the configured route map. CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode neighbor {ip-address | peer-group-name} route-map map-name {in | out} Configure the following parameters: • ip-address or peer-group-name: enter the neighbor’s IP address or the peer group’s name. • map-name: enter the name of a configured route map. • in: apply the route map to inbound routes. • out: apply the route map to outbound routes.
With route reflection configured properly, IBGP routers are not fully meshed within a cluster but all receive routing information. Configure clusters of routers where one router is a concentration router and the others are clients who receive their updates from the concentration router. To configure a route reflector, use the following commands. • Assign an ID to a router reflector cluster. CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode bgp cluster-id cluster-id • You can have multiple clusters in an AS.
the confederations appear as one AS. Within the confederation sub-AS, the IBGP neighbors are fully meshed and the MED, NEXT_HOP, and LOCAL_PREF attributes are maintained between confederations. To configure BGP confederations, use the following commands. • Specifies the confederation ID. CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode bgp confederation identifier as-number – as-number: from 0 to 65535 (2 Byte) or from 1 to 4294967295 (4 Byte). • Specifies which confederation sub-AS are peers.
– half-life: the range is from 1 to 45. Number of minutes after which the Penalty is decreased. After the router assigns a Penalty of 1024 to a route, the Penalty is decreased by half after the half-life period expires. The default is 15 minutes. – reuse: the range is from 1 to 20000. This number is compared to the flapping route’s Penalty value. If the Penalty value is less than the reuse value, the flapping route is once again advertised (or no longer suppressed).
The following example shows how to configure values to reuse or restart a route. In the following example, default = 15 is the set time before the value decrements, bgp dampening 2 ? is the set re-advertise value, bgp dampening 2 2000 ? is the suppress value, and bgp dampening 2 2000 3000 ? is the time to suppress a route. Default values are also shown.
– keepalive: the range is from 1 to 65535. Time interval, in seconds, between keepalive messages sent to the neighbor routers. The default is 60 seconds. – holdtime: the range is from 3 to 65536. Time interval, in seconds, between the last keepalive message and declaring the router dead. The default is 180 seconds. To view non-default values, use the show config command in CONFIGURATION ROUTER BGP mode or the show runningconfig bgp command in EXEC Privilege mode.
Example of Soft-Reconfigration of a BGP Neighbor The example enables inbound soft reconfiguration for the neighbor 10.108.1.1. All updates received from this neighbor are stored unmodified, regardless of the inbound policy. When inbound soft reconfiguration is done later, the stored information is used to generate a new set of inbound updates. Dell>router bgp 100 neighbor 10.108.1.1 remote-as 200 neighbor 10.108.1.
• Exchange of IPv4 multicast route information occurs through the use of two new attributes called MP_REACH_NLRI and MP_UNREACH_NLRI, for feasible and withdrawn routes, respectively. • If the peer has not been activated in any AFI/SAFI, the peer remains in Idle state. Most Dell Networking OS BGP IPv4 unicast commands are extended to support the IPv4 multicast RIB using extra options to the command.
• debug ip bgp [ip-address | peer-group peer-group-name] updates [in | out] [prefix-list name] Enable soft-reconfiguration debug. EXEC Privilege mode debug ip bgp {ip-address | peer-group-name} soft-reconfiguration To enhance debugging of soft reconfig, use the bgp soft-reconfig-backup command only when route-refresh is not negotiated to avoid the peer from resending messages. In-BGP is shown using the show ip protocols command. Dell Networking OS displays debug messages on the console.
'UPDATE error/Missing well-known attr' Sent : 1 Recv: 0 'Connection Reset' Sent : 1 Recv: 0 Last notification (len 21) sent 00:26:02 ago ffffffff ffffffff ffffffff ffffffff 00160303 03010000 Last notification (len 21) received 00:26:20 ago ffffffff ffffffff ffffffff ffffffff 00150306 00000000 Last PDU (len 41) received 00:26:02 ago that caused notification to be issued ffffffff ffffffff ffffffff ffffffff 00290200 00000e01 02040201 00024003 04141414 0218c0a8 01000000 Local host: 1.1.1.
PDU[4] : len 19, captured 00:34:20 ago ffffffff ffffffff ffffffff ffffffff 00130400 [. . .] The following example shows how to view space requirements for storing all the PDUs. With full internet feed (205K) captured, approximately 11.8MB is required to store all of the PDUs. Dell(conf-router_bgp)#do show capture bgp-pdu neighbor 172.30.1.250 Incoming packet capture enabled for BGP neighbor 172.30.1.250 Available buffer size 29165743, 192991 packet(s) captured using 11794257 bytes [. . .
Figure 28. Sample Configurations Example of Enabling BGP (Router 1) R1# conf R1(conf)#int loop 0 R1(conf-if-lo-0)#ip address 192.168.128.1/24 R1(conf-if-lo-0)#no shutdown R1(conf-if-lo-0)#show config ! interface Loopback 0 ip address 192.168.128.1/24 no shutdown R1(conf-if-lo-0)#int te 1/21 R1(conf-if-te-1/21)#ip address 10.0.1.21/24 R1(conf-if-te-1/21)#no shutdown R1(conf-if-te-1/21)#show config ! interface TengigabitEthernet 1/21 ip address 10.0.1.
R1(conf-router_bgp)#neighbor 192.168.128.3 remote 100 R1(conf-router_bgp)#neighbor 192.168.128.3 no shut R1(conf-router_bgp)#neighbor 192.168.128.3 update-source loop 0 R1(conf-router_bgp)#show config ! router bgp 99 network 192.168.128.0/24 neighbor 192.168.128.2 remote-as 99 neighbor 192.168.128.2 update-source Loopback 0 neighbor 192.168.128.2 no shutdown neighbor 192.168.128.3 remote-as 100 neighbor 192.168.128.
R3(conf-if-te-3/11)#show config ! interface TengigabitEthernet 3/11 ip address 10.0.3.33/24 no shutdown R3(conf-if-lo-0)#int te 3/21 R3(conf-if-te-3/21)#ip address 10.0.2.3/24 R3(conf-if-te-3/21)#no shutdown R3(conf-if-te-3/21)#show config ! interface TengigabitEthernet 3/21 ip address 10.0.2.3/24 no shutdown R3(conf-if-te-3/21)# R3(conf-if-te-3/21)#router bgp 100 R3(conf-router_bgp)#show config ! router bgp 100 R3(conf-router_bgp)#network 192.168.128.0/24 R3(conf-router_bgp)#neighbor 192.168.128.
CISCO_ROUTE_REFRESH(128) Capabilities advertised to neighbor for IPv4 Unicast : MULTIPROTO_EXT(1) ROUTE_REFRESH(2) CISCO_ROUTE_REFRESH(128) Update source set to Loopback 0 Peer active in peer-group outbound optimization For address family: IPv4 Unicast BGP table version 1, neighbor version 1 Prefixes accepted 1 (consume 4 bytes), withdrawn 0 by peer Prefixes advertised 1, denied 0, withdrawn 0 from peer Connections established 2; dropped 1 Last reset 00:00:57, due to user reset Notification History 'Connect
2 BGP path attribute entrie(s) using 128 bytes of memory 2 BGP AS-PATH entrie(s) using 90 bytes of memory 2 neighbor(s) using 9216 bytes of memory Neighbor AS MsgRcvd MsgSent TblVer InQ OutQ Up/Down State/Pfx 192.168.128.1 99 140 136 2 0 (0) 00:11:24 1 192.168.128.
Member of peer-group BBB for session parameters BGP version 4, remote router ID 192.168.128.
11 Content Addressable Memory (CAM) CAM is a type of memory that stores information in the form of a lookup table. On Dell Networking systems, CAM stores Layer 2 (L2) and Layer 3 (L3) forwarding information, access-lists (ACLs), flows, and routing policies. CAM Allocation CAM Allocation for Ingress To allocate the space for regions such has L2 ingress ACL, IPV4 ingress ACL, IPV6 ingress ACL, IPV4 QoS, L2 QoS, PBR, VRF ACL, and so forth, use the cam-acl command in CONFIGURATION mode.
NOTE: When you reconfigure CAM allocation, use the nlbclusteracl number command to change the number of NLB ARP entries. The range is from 0 to 2. The default value is 0. At the default value of 0, eight NLB ARP entries are available for use. This platform supports upto 256 CAM entries. Select 1 to configure 128 entries. Select 2 to configure 256 entries.
cam-acl {default | l2acl number ipv4acl number ipv6acl number ipv4qos number l2qos number l2pt number ipmacacl number vman-qos | vman-dual-qos number ecfmacl number nlbcluster number ipv4pbr number openflow number | fcoe number iscsioptacl number [vrfv4acl number] NOTE: If you do not enter the allocation values for the CAM regions, the value is 0. 3. Execute write memory and verify that the new settings are written to the CAM on the next boot. EXEC Privilege mode show cam-acl 4. Reload the system.
Ipv6Acl Ipv4Qos L2Qos L2PT IpMacAcl VmanQos VmanDualQos EcfmAcl FcoeAcl iscsiOptAcl ipv4pbr vrfv4Acl Openflow fedgovacl : : : : : : : : : : : : : : 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 Dell(conf)# Example of Viewing CAM-ACL Settings NOTE: If you change the cam-acl setting from CONFIGURATION mode, the output of this command does not reflect any changes until you save the running-configuration and reload the chassis.
L2Acl Ipv4Acl Ipv6Acl Ipv4Qos L2Qos L2PT IpMacAcl VmanQos VmanDualQos EcfmAcl FcoeAcl iscsiOptAcl ipv4pbr vrfv4Acl Openflow fedgovacl : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : 6 4 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Dell# View CAM Usage View the amount of CAM space available, used, and remaining in each ACL partition using the show cam-usage command from EXEC Privilege mode.
• Use the eg-default CAM profile in a chassis that has only EG Series line cards. If this profile is used in a chassis with non-EG line cards, the non-EG line cards enter a problem state. • Before moving a card to a new chassis, change the CAM profile on a card to match the new system profile. • After installing a secondary RPM into a chassis, copy the running-configuration to the startup-configuration. • Change to the default profile if downgrading to a Dell Networking OS version earlier than 6.3.1.
12 Control Plane Policing (CoPP) Control plane policing (CoPP) uses access control list (ACL) rules and quality of service (QoS) policies to create filters for a system’s control plane. That filter prevents traffic not specifically identified as legitimate from reaching the system control plane, rate-limits, traffic to an acceptable level.
Figure 30. CoPP Implemented Versus CoPP Not Implemented Configure Control Plane Policing The system can process a maximum of 4200 packets per second (PPS). Protocols that share a single queue may experience flaps if one of the protocols receives a high rate of control traffic even though per protocol CoPP is applied. This happens because queuebased rate limiting is applied first.
Configuring CoPP for Protocols This section lists the commands necessary to create and enable the service-policies for CoPP. For complete information about creating ACLs and QoS rules, refer to Access Control Lists (ACLs) and Quality of Service (QoS). The basics for creating a CoPP service policy are to create a Layer 2, Layer 3, and/or an IPv6 ACL rule for the desired protocol type. Then, create a QoS input policy to rate-limit the protocol traffics according to the ACL.
Dell(conf)#mac access-list extended lacp cpu-qos Dell(conf-mac-acl-cpuqos)#permit lacp Dell(conf-mac-acl-cpuqos)#exit Dell(conf)#ipv6 access-list ipv6-icmp cpu-qos Dell(conf-ipv6-acl-cpuqos)#permit icmp Dell(conf-ipv6-acl-cpuqos)#exit Dell(conf)#ipv6 access-list ipv6-vrrp cpu-qos Dell(conf-ipv6-acl-cpuqos)#permit vrrp Dell(conf-ipv6-acl-cpuqos)#exit The following example shows creating the QoS input policy.
The basics for creating a CoPP service policy is to create QoS policies for the desired CPU bound queue and associate it with a particular rate-limit. The QoS policies are assigned to a control-plane service policy for each port-pipe. 1. Create a QoS input policy for the router and assign the policing. CONFIGURATION mode qos-policy-input name cpu-qos 2. Create an input policy-map to assign the QoS policy to the desired service queues.l.
Prior to the release 9.4.(0.0), all IPv6 packets are taken to same queues there is no priority between the ICMPv6 packets and unknown IPv6 packets. Due to this NS/NA/RS/RA packets not given high priority leads to the session establishment problem. To solve this issue, starting from release 9.4.(0.0), IPv6 NDP packets use different CPU queues when compared to the Generic IPv6 multicast traffic. These entries are installed in system when application is triggered..
– IPv6 Multicast – 33:33:0:0:0:0 – Q1 • Add/remove specific ICMPv6 NDP protocol entry when user configures the first ipv6 address in the front panel port – Distribute ICMPv6 NS/RS packets to Q5. – Distribute ICMPv6 NA/RA packets to Q6. FP is installed for all Front panel ports. NDP Packets Neighbor discovery protocol has 4 types of packets NS, NA, RA, RS. These packets need to be taken to CPU for neighbor discovery.
CPU Queue Weights Rate (pps) Protocol 5 16 300 ARP Request, NS, RS, iSCSI OPT Snooping 6 16 400 ICMP, ARP Reply, NTP, Local terminated L3, NA, RA,ICMPv6 (other Than NDP and MLD) 7 64 400 xSTP, FRRP, LACP, 802.
Dell(conf-in-qos-policy-cpuqos)#rate-police 1500 16 peak 1500 16 3. Create a QoS class map to differentiate the control-plane traffic and assign to the ACL. CONFIGURATION mode Dell(conf)#class-map match-any ospfv3 cpu-qos Dell(conf-class-map-cpuqos)#match ipv6 access-group ospfv3 4. Create a QoS input policy map to match to the class-map and qos-policy for each desired protocol.
VRRP Dell# any any _ Q7 CP _ To view the queue mapping for the MAC protocols, use the show mac protocol-queue-mapping command.
13 Data Center Bridging (DCB) Ethernet Enhancements in Data Center Bridging The following section describes DCB. The S4810 system supports loading two DCB_Config files: FCoE_DCB_Config and iSCSI_DCB_Config. These files are located in the root directory flash:/CONFIG_TEMPLATE. After copying the configuration files to the startup config and reloading the system.
InterProcess Communication (IPC) traffic InterProcess Communication (IPC) traffic within high-performance computing clusters to share information. Server traffic is extremely sensitive to latency requirements. To ensure lossless delivery and latency-sensitive scheduling of storage and service traffic and I/O convergence of LAN, storage, and server traffic over a unified fabric, IEEE data center bridging adds the following extensions to a classical Ethernet network: • 802.
• PFC is supported on specified 802.1p priority traffic (dot1p 0 to 7) and is configured per interface. However, only two lossless queues are supported on an interface: one for Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) converged traffic and one for Internet Small Computer System Interface (iSCSI) storage traffic. Configure the same lossless queues on all ports.
– No bandwidth limit or no ETS processing • ETS uses the DCB MIB IEEE 802.1azd2.5. Data Center Bridging Exchange Protocol (DCBx) The data center bridging exchange (DCBx) protocol is disabled by default on the S4810; ETS is also disabled. DCBx allows a switch to automatically discover DCB-enabled peers and exchange configuration information. PFC and ETS use DCBx to exchange and negotiate parameters with peer devices. DCBx capabilities include: • Discovery of DCB capabilities on peer-device connections.
• FCoE initialization protocol (FIP) snooping DCB processes virtual local area network (VLAN)-tagged packets and dot1p priority values. Untagged packets are treated with a dot1p priority of 0. For DCB to operate effectively, you can classify ingress traffic according to its dot1p priority so that it maps to different data queues. The dot1p-queue assignments used are shown in the following table. To enable DCB, enable either the iSCSI optimization configuration or the FCoE configuration.
Important Points to Remember • If you remove a dot1p priority-to-priority group mapping from a DCB map (no priority pgid command), the PFC and ETS parameters revert to their default values on the interfaces on which the DCB map is applied. By default, PFC is not applied on specific 802.1p priorities; ETS assigns equal bandwidth to each 802.1p priority. As a result, PFC and lossless port queues are disabled on 802.
dot1p Value in the Incoming Frame Egress Queue Assignment 7 3 dot1p Value in the Incoming Frame Egress Queue Assignment 0 2 1 0 2 1 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7 7 Data Center Bridging: Default Configuration Before you configure PFC and ETS on a switch see the priority group setting taken into account the following default settings: DCB is enabled. PFC and ETS are globally enabled by default.
When traffic congestion occurs, PFC sends a pause frame to a peer device with the CoS priority values of the traffic that is to be stopped. Data Center Bridging Exchange protocol (DCBx) provides the link-level exchange of PFC parameters between peer devices. PFC allows network administrators to create zero-loss links for Storage Area Network (SAN) traffic that requires no-drop service, while retaining packet-drop congestion management for Local Area Network (LAN) traffic.
During the congestion, [traffic pump on priorities 3 and 4 from PORT A and PORT C is at full line rate], PORT A and C send out the PFCs to rate the traffic limit. Egress drops are not observed on Port B since traffic flow on priorities is mapped to loss less queues. Port B acting as Ingress If the traffic congestion is on PORT B , Egress DROP is on PORT A or C, as the PFC is not enabled on PORT B.
When traffic congestion occurs, PFC sends a pause frame to a peer device with the CoS priority values of the traffic that needs to be stopped. DCBx provides the link-level exchange of PFC parameters between peer devices. PFC allows network administrators to create zero-loss links for SAN traffic that requires no-drop service, while at the same time retaining packet-drop congestion management for LAN traffic. On switch, PFC is enabled by default on Ethernet ports (pfc mode on command).
The following prerequisites and restrictions apply when you configure PFC in a DCB map: • You can enable PFC on a maximum of two priority queues on an interface. Enabling PFC for dot1p priorities configures the corresponding port queue as lossless. • You cannot enable PFC and link-level flow control at the same time on an interface. Applying a DCB Map on a Port When you apply a DCB map with PFC enabled on a switch interface, a memory buffer for PFC-enabled priority traffic is automatically allocated.
Buffer Sizes for Lossless or PFC Packets You can configure up to a maximum of 4 lossless (PFC) queues. By configuring 4 lossless queues, you can configure 4 different priorities and assign a particular priority to each application that your network is used to process. For example, you can assign a higher priority for time-sensitive applications and a lower priority for other services, such as file transfers.
Configuring Lossless Queues DCB also supports the manual configuration of lossless queues on an interface when PFC mode is disabled in a DCB map, apply the map on the interface. The configuration of no-drop queues provides flexibility for ports on which PFC is not needed, but lossless traffic should egress from the interface. Configuring no-drop queues is applicable only on the interfaces which do not need PFC.
Step Task Command Command Mode 4 Return to interface configuration mode. exit DCB MAP 5 Apply the DCB map, created to disable the PFC operation, on the interface dcb-map {name | default} INTERFACE 6 Configure the port queues that still function as no-drop queues for lossless traffic. For the dot1p-queue assignments. pfc no-drop queuesqueue-range INTERFACE The maximum number of lossless queues globally supported on a port is 2.
1. Create class-maps to group the DSCP subsets class-map match ip ! class-map match ip 2. match-any dscp-pfc-1 dscp 0-5,10-15 match-any dscp-pfc-2 dscp 20-25,30-35 Associate above class-maps to Queues Queue assignment to be based on the below table . NOTE: Although, each port on the S4810, S4820T, and S5000 devices support 8 QoS queues, you can configure only 4 QoS queues (0-3)to manage data traffic. The remaining 4 queues (4-7) are reserved for control traffic. Table 15. 3.
ETS Prerequisites and Restrictions The following prerequisites and restrictions apply when you configure ETS bandwidth allocation or queue scheduling. • Configuring ETS bandwidth allocation or a queue scheduler for dot1p priorities in a priority group is applicable if the DCBx version used on a port is CIN (refer to Configuring DCBx).
Leave a space between each priority group number. For example: priority-pgid 0 0 0 1 2 4 4 4 in which priority group 0 maps to dot1p priorities 0, 1, and 2; priority group 1 maps to dot1p priority 3; priority group 2 maps to dot1p priority 4; priority group 4 maps to dot1p priorities 5, 6, and 7. Dell Networking OS Behavior: A priority group consists of 802.1p priority values that are grouped for similar bandwidth allocation and scheduling, and that share latency and loss requirements. All 802.
The maximum 32 alphanumeric characters. 2. Configure the percentage of bandwidth to allocate to the dot1p priority/queue traffic in the associated L2 class map. QoS OUTPUT POLICY mode Dell(conf-qos-policy-out)#bandwidth-percentage 100 The default is none. 3. Repeat Step 2 to configure bandwidth percentages for other priority queues on the port. QoS OUTPUT POLICY mode Dell(conf-qos-policy-out)#bandwidth-percentage 100 4. Exit QoS Output Policy Configuration mode.
• Scheduling of priority traffic: dot1p priority traffic on the switch is scheduled to the current queue mapping. dot1p priorities within the same queue must have the same traffic properties and scheduling method.
Strict-priority groups: • If priority group 3 has free bandwidth, it is distributed as follows: 20% of the free bandwidth to priority group 1 and 30% of the free bandwidth to priority group 2. • If priority group 1 or 2 has free bandwidth, (20 + 30)% of the free bandwidth is distributed to priority group 3. Priority groups 1 and 2 retain whatever free bandwidth remains up to the (20+ 30)%.
• Detects DCB mis-configuration in a peer device; that is, when DCB features are not compatibly configured on a peer device and the local switch. Mis-configuration detection is feature-specific because some DCB features support asymmetric configuration. • Reconfigures a peer device with the DCB configuration from its configuration source if the peer device is willing to accept configuration.
configuration source, all PFC and application priority TLVs are enabled. ETS recommend TLVs are disabled and ETS configuration TLVs are enabled. Manual The port is configured to operate only with administrator-configured settings and does not auto-configure with DCB settings received from a DCBx peer or from an internally propagated configuration from the configuration source.
• If there is no configuration source, a port may elect itself as the configuration source. A port may become the configuration source if the following conditions exist: – No other port is the configuration source. – The port role is auto-upstream. – The port is enabled with link up and DCBx enabled. – The port has performed a DCBx exchange with a DCBx peer. – The switch is capable of supporting the received DCB configuration values through either a symmetric or asymmetric parameter exchange.
DCBx Example The following figure shows how to use DCBx. The external 40GbE 40GbE ports on the base module (ports 33 and 37) of two switches are used for uplinks configured as DCBx auto-upstream ports. The device is connected to third-party, top-of-rack (ToR) switches through 40GbE uplinks. The ToR switches are part of a Fibre Channel storage network. The internal ports (ports 1-32) connected to the 10GbE backplane are configured as auto-downstream ports.
interface type slot/port 2. Enter LLDP Configuration mode to enable DCBx operation. INTERFACE mode [no] protocol lldp 3. Configure the DCBx version used on the interface, where: auto configures the port to operate using the DCBx version received from a peer. PROTOCOL LLDP mode [no] DCBx version {auto | cee | cin | ieee-v2.5} • cee: configures the port to use CEE (Intel 1.01). • cin: configures the port to use Cisco-Intel-Nuova (DCBx 1.0). • ieee-v2.5: configures the port to use IEEE 802.
NOTE: To disable TLV transmission, use the no form of the command; for example, no advertise DCBx-applntlv iscsi. For information about how to use iSCSI, refer to iSCSI Optimization To verify the DCBx configuration on a port, use the show interface DCBx detail command. Configuring DCBx Globally on the Switch To globally configure the DCBx operation on a switch, follow these steps. 1. Enter Global Configuration mode. EXEC PRIVILEGE mode configure 2. Enter LLDP Configuration mode to enable DCBx operation.
NOTE: To disable TLV transmission, use the no form of the command; for example, no advertise DCBx-applntlv iscsi. 6. Configure the FCoE priority advertised for the FCoE protocol in Application Priority TLVs. PROTOCOL LLDP mode [no] fcoe priority-bits priority-bitmap The priority-bitmap range is from 1 to FF. The default is 0x8. 7. Configure the iSCSI priority advertised for the iSCSI protocol in Application Priority TLVs.
– tlv: enables traces for DCBx TLVs. Verifying the DCB Configuration To display DCB configurations, use the following show commands. Table 16. Displaying DCB Configurations Command Output show qos dot1p-queue mapping Displays the current 802.1p priority-queue mapping. show dcb [stack-unit unit-number] Displays the data center bridging status, number of PFC-enabled ports, and number of PFC-enabled queues. On the master switch in a stack, you can specify a stack-unit number. The range is from 0 to 5.
The following example shows the output of the show qos dcb-map test command. Dell#show qos dcb-map test ----------------------State :Complete PfcMode:ON -------------------PG:0 TSA:ETS BW:50 PFC:OFF Priorities:0 1 2 5 6 7 PG:1 TSA:ETS BW:50 Priorities:3 4 PFC:ON The following example shows the show interfaces pfc summary command.
Table 17. show interface pfc summary Command Description Fields Description Interface Interface type with stack-unit and port number. Admin mode is on; Admin is enabled PFC Admin mode is on or off with a list of the configured PFC priorities . When PFC admin mode is on, PFC advertisements are enabled to be sent and received from peers; received PFC configuration takes effect. The admin operational status for a DCBx exchange of PFC configuration is enabled or disabled.
Fields Description PFC TLV Statistics: Output TLV pkts Number of PFC TLVs transmitted. PFC TLV Statistics: Error pkts Number of PFC error packets received. PFC TLV Statistics: Pause Tx pkts Number of PFC pause frames transmitted. PFC TLV Statistics: Pause Rx pkts Number of PFC pause frames received The following example shows the show interface pfc statistics command.
Oper status is init ETS DCBx Oper status is Down State Machine Type is Asymmetric Conf TLV Tx Status is enabled Reco TLV Tx Status is enabled 0 Input Conf TLV Pkts, 1955 Output Conf TLV Pkts, 0 Error Conf TLV Pkts 0 Input Reco TLV Pkts, 1955 Output Reco TLV Pkts, 0 Error Reco TLV Pkts Dell(conf)# show interfaces tengigabitethernet 1/1 ets detail Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 Max Supported TC Groups is 4 Number of Traffic Classes is 8 Admin mode is on Admin Parameters : -----------------Admin is enabled T
Max Supported TC Groups is 4 Number of Traffic Classes is 8 Admin mode is on Admin Parameters : -----------------Admin is enabled TC-grp Priority# Bandwidth 0 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7 100% 1 0% 2 0% 3 0% 4 0% 5 0% 6 0% 7 0% Priority# Bandwidth TSA 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Remote Parameters: ------------------Remote is disabled Local Parameters : -----------------Local is enabled TC-grp Priority# 0 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 TSA ETS ETS ETS ETS ETS ETS ETS ETS 13% 13% 13% 13% 12% 12% 12% 12% ETS ETS ETS ETS ETS ETS ETS
Field Description Admin mode ETS mode: on or off. Admin Parameters ETS configuration on local port, including priority groups, assigned dot1p priorities, and bandwidth allocation. Remote Parameters ETS configuration on remote peer port, including Admin mode (enabled if a valid TLV was received or disabled), priority groups, assigned dot1p priorities, and bandwidth allocation.
Max Supported TC Groups is 4 Number of Traffic Classes is 1 Admin mode is on Admin Parameters: -------------------Admin is enabled TC-grp Priority# Bandwidth TSA -----------------------------------------------0 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7 100% ETS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Stack unit 1 stack port all Max Supported TC Groups is 4 Number of Traffic Classes is 1 Admin mode is on Admin Parameters: -------------------Admin is enabled TC-grp Priority# Bandwidth TSA -----------------------------------------------0 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7 100%
P-PFC Configuration TLV enabled p-PFC Configuration TLV disabled F-Application priority for FCOE enabled f-Application Priority for FCOE disabled I-Application priority for iSCSI enabled i-Application Priority for iSCSI disabled ----------------------------------------------------------------------Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/14 Remote Mac Address 00:01:e8:8a:df:a0 Port Role is Auto-Upstream DCBx Operational Status is Enabled Is Configuration Source? FALSE Local DCBx Compatibility mode is CEE Local DCBx C
Field Description Local DCBx Status: DCBx Max Version Supported Highest DCBx version supported in Control TLVs. Local DCBx Status: Sequence Number Sequence number transmitted in Control TLVs. Local DCBx Status: Acknowledgment Number Acknowledgement number transmitted in Control TLVs. Local DCBx Status: Protocol State Current operational state of DCBx protocol: ACK or IN-SYNC. Peer DCBx Status: DCBx Operational Version DCBx version advertised in Control TLVs received from peer device.
dot1p Value in the Incoming Frame Egress Queue Assignment 2 0 3 1 4 2 5 3 6 3 7 3 dot1p Value in the Incoming Frame Egress Queue Assignment 0 2 1 0 2 1 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7 7 Configuring the Dynamic Buffer Method Priority-based flow control using dynamic buffer spaces is supported on the S4810 platform. To configure the dynamic buffer capability, perform the following steps: 1. Enable the DCB application.
For each priority, you can specify the shared buffer threshold limit, the ingress buffer size, buffer limit for pausing the acceptance of packets, and the buffer offset limit for resuming the acceptance of received packets. 4. Configure the profile name for the DCB buffer threshold CONFIGURATION mode dcb-buffer-threshold dcb-buffer-threshold 5. DCB-BUFFER-THRESHOLD mode priority 0 buffer-size 52 pause-threshold 16 resume-offset 10 shared-threshold-weight 7 6.
Figure 34. PFC and ETS Applied to LAN, IPC, and SAN Priority Traffic QoS Traffic Classification: The service-class dynamic dot1p command has been used in Global Configuration mode to map ingress dot1p frames to the queues shown in the following table. For more information, refer to QoS dot1p Traffic Classification and Queue Assignment.
dot1p Value in the Incoming Frame Priority Group Assignment 6 LAN 7 LAN The following describes the priority group-bandwidth assignment. Priority Group Bandwidth Assignment IPC 5% SAN 50% LAN 45% PFC and ETS Configuration Command Examples The following examples show PFC and ETS configuration commands to manage your data center traffic. 1. Enabling DCB Dell(conf)#dcb enable 2.
14 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) DHCP is an application layer protocol that dynamically assigns IP addresses and other configuration parameters to network endstations (hosts) based on configuration policies determined by network administrators.
Option Number and Description Domain Name Server Option 6 Domain Name Option 15 Specifies the domain name servers (DNSs) that are available to the client. Specifies the domain name that clients should use when resolving hostnames via DNS. IP Address Lease Time Option 51 DHCP Message Type Option 53 Specifies the amount of time that the client is allowed to use an assigned IP address.
Assign an IP Address using DHCP The following section describes DHCP and the client in a network. When a client joins a network: 1. The client initially broadcasts a DHCPDISCOVER message on the subnet to discover available DHCP servers. This message includes the parameters that the client requires and might include suggested values for those parameters. 2. Servers unicast or broadcast a DHCPOFFER message in response to the DHCPDISCOVER that offers to the client values for the requested parameters.
you configure IP source address validation on a member port of a virtual local area network (VLAN) and then attempt to apply an access list to the VLAN, Dell Networking OS displays the first line in the following message. If you first apply an ACL to a VLAN and then attempt enable IP source address validation on one of its member ports, Dell Networking OS displays the second line in the following message. % Error: Vlan member has access-list configured. % Error: Vlan has an access-list configured.
ip dhcp server 2. Create an address pool and give it a name. DHCP mode pool name 3. Specify the range of IP addresses from which the DHCP server may assign addresses. DHCP mode network network/prefix-length • network: the subnet address. • prefix-length: specifies the number of bits used for the network portion of the address you specify. The prefix-length range is from 17 to 31. 4. Display the current pool configuration.
The default is 24 hours. Specifying a Default Gateway The IP address of the default router should be on the same subnet as the client. To specify a default gateway, follow this step. • Specify default gateway(s) for the clients on the subnet, in order of preference. DHCP default-router address Configure a Method of Hostname Resolution Dell systems are capable of providing DHCP clients with parameters for two methods of hostname resolution—using DNS or NetBIOS WINS.
DHCP mode pool name 2. Specify the client IP address. DHCP host address 3. Specify the client hardware address. DHCP hardware-address hardware-address type • hardware-address: the client MAC address. • type: the protocol of the hardware platform. The default protocol is Ethernet. Debugging the DHCP Server To debug the DHCP server, use the following command. • Display debug information for DHCP server.
Figure 37. Configuring a Relay Agent To view the ip helper-address configuration for an interface, use the show ip interface command from EXEC privilege mode. Example of the show ip interface Command R1_E600#show ip int tengigabitethernet 1/3 TenGigabitEthernet 1/3 is up, line protocol is down Internet address is 10.11.0.1/24 Broadcast address is 10.11.0.255 Address determined by user input IP MTU is 1500 bytes Helper address is 192.168.0.1 192.168.0.
Configure the System to be a DHCP Client A DHCP client is a network device that requests an IP address and configuration parameters from a DHCP server. Implement the DHCP client functionality as follows: • The switch can obtain a dynamically assigned IP address from a DHCP server. A start-up configuration is not received. Use bare metal provisioning (BMP) to receive configuration parameters (Dell Networking OS version and a configuration file). BMP is enabled as a factory-default setting on a switch.
To manually configure a static IP address on an interface, use the ip address command. A prompt displays to release an existing dynamically acquired IP address. If you confirm, the ability to receive a DHCP server-assigned IP address is removed. To enable acquiring a dynamic IP address from a DHCP server on an interface configured with a static IP address, use the ip address dhcp command. A prompt displays to confirm the IP address reconfiguration.
DHCP client and server are in the same or different subnets. The management default route is deleted if the management IP address is released like other DHCP client management routes. • ip route for 0.0.0.0 takes precedence if it is present or added later. • Management routes added by a DHCP client display with Route Source as DHCP in the show ip management route and show ip management-route dynamic command output.
Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) Do not enable the DHCP client on an interface and set the priority to 255 or assign the same DHCP interface IP address to a VRRP virtual group. Doing so guarantees that this router becomes the VRRP group owner. To use the router as the VRRP owner, if you enable a DHCP client on an interface that is added to a VRRP group, assign a priority less than 255 but higher than any other priority assigned in the group.
• Insert Option 82 into DHCP packets. CONFIGURATION mode ip dhcp relay information-option [trust-downstream] • For routers between the relay agent and the DHCP server, enter the trust-downstream option. Manually reset the remote ID for Option 82. CONFIGURATION mode ip dhcp relay information-option remote-id DHCP Snooping DHCP snooping protects networks from spoofing. In the context of DHCP snooping, ports are either trusted or not trusted. By default, all ports are not trusted.
3. Enable DHCP snooping on a VLAN. CONFIGURATION mode ip dhcp snooping vlan name Enabling IPv6 DHCP Snooping To enable IPv6 DHCP snooping, use the following commands. 1. Enable IPv6 DHCP snooping globally. CONFIGURATION mode ipv6 dhcp snooping 2. Specify ports connected to IPv6 DHCP servers as trusted. INTERFACE mode ipv6 dhcp snooping trust 3. Enable IPv6 DHCP snooping on a VLAN or range of VLANs.
Displaying the Contents of the Binding Table To display the contents of the binding table, use the following command. • Display the contents of the binding table. EXEC Privilege mode show ip dhcp snooping Example of the show ip dhcp snooping Command View the DHCP snooping statistics with the show ip dhcp snooping command. Dell#show ip dhcp snooping IP IP IP IP DHCP DHCP DHCP DHCP Snooping Snooping Mac Verification Relay Information-option Relay Trust Downstream : : : : Enabled. Disabled. Disabled.
IPv6 DHCP Snooping MAC-Address Verification Configure to enable verify source mac-address in the DHCP packet against the mac address stored in the snooping binding table. • Enable IPV6 DHCP snooping . CONFIGURATION mode ipv6 dhcp snooping verify mac-address Drop DHCP Packets on Snooped VLANs Only Binding table entries are deleted when a lease expires or the relay agent encounters a DHCPRELEASE. Line cards maintain a list of snooped VLANs.
Denial of service An attacker can send a fraudulent ARP messages to a client to associate a false MAC address with the gateway address, which would blackhole all internet-bound packets from the client. NOTE: Dynamic ARP inspection (DAI) uses entries in the L2SysFlow CAM region, a sub-region of SystemFlow. One CAM entry is required for every DAI-enabled VLAN. You can enable DAI on up to 16 VLANs on a system.
Bypassing the ARP Inspection You can configure a port to skip ARP inspection by defining the interface as trusted, which is useful in multi-switch environments. ARPs received on trusted ports bypass validation against the binding table. All ports are untrusted by default. To bypass the ARP inspection, use the following command. • Specify an interface as trusted so that ARPs are not validated against the binding table.
• Enable IP source address validation with VLAN option. INTERFACE mode ip dhcp source-address-validation vlan vlan-id NOTE: Before enabling SAV With VLAN option, allocate at least one FP block to the ipmacacl CAM region. DHCP MAC Source Address Validation DHCP MAC source address validation (SAV) validates a DHCP packet’s source hardware address against the client hardware address field (CHADDR) in the payload.
Viewing the Number of SAV Dropped Packets The following output of the show ip dhcp snooping source-address-validation discard-counters command displays the number of SAV dropped packets.
15 Equal Cost Multi-Path (ECMP) This chapter describes configuring ECMP. Configuring the Hash Algorithm TeraScale has one algorithm that is used for link aggregation groups (LAGs), ECMP, and NH-ECMP, and ExaScale can use three different algorithms for each of these features. To adjust the ExaScale behavior to match TeraScale, use the following command. • Change the ExaScale hash-algorithm for LAG, ECMP, and NH-ECMP to match TeraScale. CONFIGURATION mode.
NOTE: While the seed is stored separately on each port-pipe, the same seed is used across all CAMs. NOTE: You cannot separate LAG and ECMP, but you can use different algorithms across the chassis with the same seed. If LAG member ports span multiple port-pipes and line cards, to achieve deterministic behavior, set the seed to the same value on each port-pipe. NOTE: If you remove the hash algorithm configuration, the hash seed does not return to the original factory default setting.
NOTE: For the new settings to take effect, save the new ECMP settings to the startup-config (write-mem) then reload the system. • Configure the maximum number of paths per ECMP group. CONFIGURATION mode. ip ecmp-group maximum-paths {2-64} • Enable ECMP group path management. CONFIGURATION mode. ip ecmp-group path-fallback Example of the ip ecmp-group maximum-paths Command Dell(conf)#ip ecmp-group maximum-paths 3 User configuration has been changed.
The range is from 1 to 64. Viewing an ECMP Group NOTE: An ecmp-group index generates automatically for each unique ecmp-group when you configure multipath routes to the same network. The system can generate a maximum of 512 unique ecmp-groups. The ecmp-group indices are generated in even numbers (0, 2, 4, 6... 1022) and are for information only. You can configure ecmp-group with id 2 for link bundle monitoring.
16 FCoE Transit The Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) Transit feature is supported on Ethernet interfaces. When you enable the switch for FCoE transit, the switch functions as a FIP snooping bridge. NOTE: FIP snooping is not supported on Fibre Channel interfaces or in a S4810 switch stack.
Table 22. FIP Functions FIP Function Description FIP VLAN discovery FCoE devices (ENodes) discover the FCoE VLANs on which to transmit and receive FIP and FCoE traffic. FIP discovery FCoE end-devices and FCFs are automatically discovered. Initialization FCoE devices learn ENodes from the FLOGI and FDISC to allow immediate login and create a virtual link with an FCoE switch. Maintenance A valid virtual link between an FCoE device and an FCoE switch is maintained and the LOGO functions properly.
Dynamic ACL generation on the switch operating as a FIP snooping bridge function as follows: Port-based ACLs These ACLs are applied on all three port modes: on ports directly connected to an FCF, server-facing ENode ports, and bridge-to-bridge links. Port-based ACLs take precedence over global ACLs. FCoE-generated ACLs These take precedence over user-configured ACLs. A user-configured ACL entry cannot deny FCoE and FIP snooping frames.
• Perform FIP snooping (allowing and parsing FIP frames) globally on all VLANs or on a per-VLAN basis. • To assign a MAC address to an FCoE end-device (server ENode or storage device) after a server successfully logs in, set the FCoE MAC address prefix (FC-MAP) value an FCF uses. The FC-MAP value is used in the ACLs installed in bridge-to-bridge links on the switch.
Important Points to Remember • Enable DCBx on the switch before enabling the FIP Snooping feature. • To enable the feature on the switch, configure FIP Snooping. • To allow FIP frames to pass through the switch on all VLANs, enable FIP snooping globally on a switch. • A switch can support a maximum eight VLANs. Configure at least one FCF/bridge-to-bridge port mode interface for any FIP snooping-enabled VLAN. • You can configure multiple FCF-trusted interfaces in a VLAN.
If you disable FCoE transit, FIP and FCoE traffic are handled as normal Ethernet frames and no FIP snooping ACLs are generated. The VLAN-specific and FIP snooping configuration is disabled and stored until you re-enable FCoE transit and the configurations are re-applied. Enable FIP Snooping on VLANs You can enable FIP snooping globally on a switch on all VLANs or on a specified VLAN.
Table 23. Impact of Enabling FIP Snooping Impact Description MAC address learning MAC address learning is not performed on FIP and FCoE frames, which are denied by ACLs dynamically created by FIP snooping on server-facing ports in ENode mode. MTU auto-configuration MTU size is set to mini-jumbo (2500 bytes) when a port is in Switchport mode, the FIP snooping feature is enabled on the switch, and FIP snooping is enabled on all or individual VLANs.
5. Enable FIP snooping on all VLANs or on a specified VLAN. CONFIGURATION mode or VLAN INTERFACE mode. fip-snooping enable 6. Configure the port for bridge-to-FCF links. INTERFACE mode or CONFIGURATION mode fip-snooping port-mode fcf NOTE: To disable the FCoE transit feature or FIP snooping on VLANs, use the no version of a command; for example, no feature fip-snooping or no fip-snooping enable. Displaying FIP Snooping Information Use the following show commands to display information on FIP snooping, .
aa:bb:cc:00:00:00 aa:bb:cc:00:00:00 Te 1/42 Te 1/42 FCoE MAC 0e:fc:00:01:00:01 0e:fc:00:01:00:02 0e:fc:00:01:00:03 0e:fc:00:01:00:04 0e:fc:00:01:00:05 FC-ID 01:00:01 01:00:02 01:00:03 01:00:04 01:00:05 aa:bb:cd:00:00:00 aa:bb:cd:00:00:00 Te 1/43 Te 1/43 Port WWPN 31:00:0e:fc:00:00:00:00 41:00:0e:fc:00:00:00:00 41:00:0e:fc:00:00:00:01 41:00:0e:fc:00:00:00:02 41:00:0e:fc:00:00:00:03 100 100 Port WWNN 21:00:0e:fc:00:00:00:00 21:00:0e:fc:00:00:00:00 21:00:0e:fc:00:00:00:00 21:00:0e:fc:00:00:00:00 21:00:
The following example shows the show fip-snooping fcf command. Dell# show fip-snooping fcf FCF MAC FCF Interface VLAN FC-MAP FKA_ADV_PERIOD No. of Enodes ------------------- ---- ------------------- ------------54:7f:ee:37:34:40 Po 22 100 0e:fc:00 4000 2 The following table describes the show fip-snooping fcf command fields. Table 27. show fip-snooping fcf Command Description Field Description FCF MAC MAC address of the FCF.
Number Number Number Number Number Number Number Number Number of of of of of of of of of FLOGI Rejects FDISC Accepts FDISC Rejects FLOGO Accepts FLOGO Rejects CVL FCF Discovery Timeouts VN Port Session Timeouts Session failures due to Hardware Config :0 :0 :0 :0 :0 :0 :0 :0 :0 The following example shows the show fip-snooping statistics port-channel command.
Field Description Number of Multicast Discovery Advertisements Number of FIP-snooped multicast discovery advertisements received on the interface. Number of Unicast Discovery Advertisements Number of FIP-snooped unicast discovery advertisements received on the interface. Number of FLOGI Accepts Number of FIP FLOGI accept frames received on the interface. Number of FLOGI Rejects Number of FIP FLOGI reject frames received on the interface.
FCoE Transit Configuration Example The following illustration shows a switch used as a FIP snooping bridge for FCoE traffic between an ENode (server blade) and an FCF (ToR switch). The ToR switch operates as an FCF and FCoE gateway. Figure 40. Configuration Example: FIP Snooping on a Switch In this example, DCBx and PFC are enabled on the FIP snooping bridge and on the FCF ToR switch.
Example of Configuring the ENode Server-Facing Port Dell(conf)# interface tengigabitethernet 1/1 Dell(conf-if-te-1/1)# portmode hybrid Dell(conf-if-te-1/1)# switchport Dell(conf-if-te-1/1)# protocol lldp Dell(conf-if-te-1/1-lldp)# dcbx port-role auto-downstream NOTE: A port is enabled by default for bridge-ENode links.
17 FIPS Cryptography This chapter describes how to enable FIPS cryptography requirements on Dell Networking platforms. This feature provides cryptographic algorithms conforming to various FIPS standards published by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), a non-regulatory agency of the US Department of Commerce. FIPS mode is also validated for numerous platforms to meet the FIPS-140-2 standard for a software-based cryptographic module.
• • Any existing host keys (both RSA and RSA1) are deleted from system memory and NVRAM storage. FIPS mode is enabled. – If you enable the SSH server when you enter the fips mode enable command, it is re-enabled for version 2 only. – If you re-enable the SSH server, a new RSA host key-pair is generated automatically. You can also manually create this keypair using the crypto key generate command. NOTE: Under certain unusual circumstances, it is possible for the fips enable command to indicate a failure.
-- Unit 0 -Unit Type Status Next Boot Required Type Current Type Master priority Hardware Rev Num Ports Up Time Dell Networking Jumbo Capable POE Capable FIPS Mode Burned In MAC No Of MACs ... : Management Unit : online : online : S4810 - 52-port GE/TE/FG (SE) : S4810 - 52-port GE/TE/FG (SE) : 0 : 3.0 : 64 : 7 hr, 3 min OS Version : 4810-8-3-7-1061 : yes : no : enabled : 00:01:e8:8a:ff:0c : 3 Disabling FIPS Mode When you disable FIPS mode, the following changes occur: • The SSH server disables.
18 Force10 Resilient Ring Protocol (FRRP) FRRP provides fast network convergence to Layer 2 switches interconnected in a ring topology, such as a metropolitan area network (MAN) or large campuses. FRRP is similar to what can be achieved with the spanning tree protocol (STP), though even with optimizations, STP can take up to 50 seconds to converge (depending on the size of network and node of failure) may require 4 to 5 seconds to reconverge.
Ring Checking At specified intervals, the Master node sends a ring health frame (RHF) through the ring. If the ring is complete, the frame is received on its secondary port and the Master node resets its fail-period timer and continues normal operation. If the Master node does not receive the RHF before the fail-period timer expires (a configurable timer), the Master node moves from the Normal state to the Ring-Fault state and unblocks its Secondary port.
• You can run multiple physical rings on the same switch. • One Master node per ring — all other nodes are Transit. • Each node has two member interfaces — primary and secondary. • There is no limit to the number of nodes on a ring. • Master node ring port states — blocking, pre-forwarding, forwarding, and disabled. • Transit node ring port states — blocking, pre-forwarding, forwarding, and disabled. • STP disabled on ring interfaces.
Concept Explanation • Hello RHF (HRHF) — These frames are processed only on the Master node’s Secondary port. The Transit nodes pass the HRHF through without processing it. An HRHF is sent at every Hello interval. • Topology Change RHF (TCRHF) — These frames contains ring status, keepalive, and the control and member VLAN hash. The TCRHF is processed at each node of the ring.
Configuring the Control VLAN Control and member VLANS are configured normally for Layer 2. Their status as control or member is determined at the FRRP group commands. For more information about configuring VLANS in Layer 2 mode, refer to Layer 2. Be sure to follow these guidelines: • All VLANS must be in Layer 2 mode. • You can only add ring nodes to the VLAN. • A control VLAN can belong to one FRRP group only. • Tag control VLAN ports.
VLAN-ID, Range: VLAN IDs for the ring’s member VLANS. 6. Enable FRRP. CONFIG-FRRP mode. no disable Configuring and Adding the Member VLANs Control and member VLANS are configured normally for Layer 2. Their status as Control or Member is determined at the FRRP group commands. For more information about configuring VLANS in Layer 2 mode, refer to the Layer 2 chapter. Be sure to follow these guidelines: • All VLANS must be in Layer 2 mode. • Tag control VLAN ports.
VLAN-ID, Range: VLAN IDs for the ring’s Member VLANs. 6. Enable this FRRP group on this switch. CONFIG-FRRP mode. no disable Setting the FRRP Timers To set the FRRP timers, use the following command. NOTE: Set the Dead-Interval time 3 times the Hello-Interval. • Enter the desired intervals for Hello-Interval or Dead-Interval times. CONFIG-FRRP mode. timer {hello-interval|dead-interval} milliseconds – Hello-Interval: the range is from 50 to 2000, in increments of 50 (default is 500).
Ring ID: the range is from 1 to 255. Troubleshooting FRRP To troubleshoot FRRP, use the following information. Configuration Checks • Each Control Ring must use a unique VLAN ID. • Only two interfaces on a switch can be Members of the same control VLAN. • There can be only one Master node for any FRRP group. • You can configure FRRP on Layer 2 interfaces only. • Spanning Tree (if you enable it globally) must be disabled on both Primary and Secondary interfaces when you enable FRRP.
no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 2/14,31 no shutdown ! interface Vlan 201 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 2/14,31 no shutdown ! protocol frrp 101 interface primary TenGigabitEthernet 2/14 secondary TenGigabitEthernet 2/31 control-vlan 101 member-vlan 201 mode transit no disable Example of R3 TRANSIT interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/14 no ip address switchport no shutdown ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/21 no ip address switchport no shutdown ! interface Vlan 101 no ip address tagged TenGigabi
19 GARP VLAN Registration Protocol (GVRP) GARP VLAN registration protocol (GVRP) is supported on Dell Networking OS. Typical virtual local area network (VLAN) implementation involves manually configuring each Layer 2 switch that participates in a given VLAN. GVRP, defined by the IEEE 802.1q specification, is a Layer 2 network protocol that provides for automatic VLAN configuration of switches. GVRP-compliant switches use GARP to register and de-register attribute values, such as VLAN IDs, with each other.
example, that type of port is referred to as a VLAN trunk port, but it is not necessary to specifically identify to the Dell Networking OS that the port is a trunk port. Figure 41. Global GVRP Configuration Example Basic GVRP configuration is a two-step process: 1. Enabling GVRP Globally 2. Enabling GVRP on a Layer 2 Interface Related Configuration Tasks • • Configure GVRP Registration Configure a GARP Timer Enabling GVRP Globally To configure GVRP globally, use the following command.
Dell(config-gvrp)#show config ! protocol gvrp no disable Dell(config-gvrp)# To inspect the global configuration, use the show gvrp brief command. Enabling GVRP on a Layer 2 Interface To enable GVRP on a Layer 2 interface, use the following command. • Enable GVRP on a Layer 2 interface.
gvrp registration forbidden 45-46 no shutdown Dell(conf-if-te-1/21)# Configure a GARP Timer Set GARP timers to the same values on all devices that are exchanging information using GVRP. There are three GARP timer settings. • Join — A GARP device reliably transmits Join messages to other devices by sending each Join message two times. To define the interval between the two sending operations of each Join message, use this parameter. The Dell Networking OS default is 200ms.
20 High Availability (HA) High availability (HA) is supported on Dell Networking OS. HA is a collection of features that preserves system continuity by maximizing uptime and minimizing packet loss during system disruptions. To support all the features within the HA collection, you should have the latest boot code. The following table lists the boot code requirements as of this Dell Networking OS release. Table 29. Boot Code Requirements Component Boot Code S4810 1 2.0.
-- Stack-unit Redundancy Configuration ------------------------------------------------Primary Stack-unit: mgmt-id 0 Auto Data Sync: Full Failover Type: Hot Failover Auto reboot Stack-unit: Enabled Auto failover limit: 3 times in 60 minutes -- Stack-unit Failover Record ------------------------------------------------Failover Count: 0 Last failover timestamp: None Last failover Reason: None Last failover type: None -- Last Data Block Sync Record: ------------------------------------------------Stack Unit Co
CONFIGURATION mode redundancy auto-failover-limit • Re-Enable the auto-failover-limit with its default parameters. CONFIGURATION mode redundancy auto-failover-limit (no parameters) Disabling Auto-Reboot To disable auto-reboot, use the following command. • Prevent a failed stack unit from rebooting after a failover.
Dell(conf)#interface tengigabitethernet 1/0 Dell(conf-if-te-1/0)# Removing a Provisioned Logical Stack Unit To remove the line card configuration, use the following command. • To remove a logical stack-unit configuration, use the following command: CONFIGURATION mode no stack-unit unit_id provision Hitless Behavior Hitless behavior is supported only on the S4810 platform. Hitless is a protocol-based system behavior that makes a stack unit failover on the local system transparent to remote systems.
Software Resiliency During normal operations, Dell Networking OS monitors the health of both hardware and software components in the background to identify potential failures, even before these failures manifest. Software Component Health Monitoring On each of the line cards and the stack unit, there are a number of software components.
Hot-Lock Behavior Dell Networking OS hot-lock features allow you to append and delete their corresponding content addressable memory (CAM) entries dynamically without disrupting traffic. Existing entries are simply shuffled to accommodate new entries. Hot-Lock IP ACLs allows you to append rules to and delete rules from an access control list (ACL) that is already written to CAM. This behavior is enabled by default and is available for both standard and extended ACLs on ingress and egress.
21 Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) Internet group management protocol (IGMP) is supported on Dell Networking OS. Multicast is premised on identifying many hosts by a single destination IP address; hosts represented by the same IP address are a multicast group. IGMP is a Layer 3 multicast protocol that hosts use to join or leave a multicast group.
Figure 42. IGMP Messages in IP Packets Join a Multicast Group There are two ways that a host may join a multicast group: it may respond to a general query from its querier or it may send an unsolicited report to its querier. Responding to an IGMP Query The following describes how a host can join a multicast group. 1. One router on a subnet is elected as the querier. The querier periodically multicasts (to all-multicast-systems address 224.0.0.1) a general query to all hosts on the subnet. 2.
• To enable filtering, routers must keep track of more state information, that is, the list of sources that must be filtered. An additional query type, the Group-and-Source-Specific Query, keeps track of state changes, while the Group-Specific and General queries still refresh the existing state.
3. The host’s third message indicates that it is only interested in traffic from sources 10.11.1.1 and 10.11.1.2. Because this request again prevents all other sources from reaching the subnet, the router sends another group-and-source query so that it can satisfy all other hosts. There are no other interested hosts so the request is recorded. Figure 45.
Figure 46. Membership Queries: Leaving and Staying Configure IGMP Configuring IGMP is a two-step process. 1. Enable multicast routing using the ip multicast-routing command. 2. Enable a multicast routing protocol.
Viewing IGMP Enabled Interfaces Interfaces that are enabled with PIM-SM are automatically enabled with IGMP. To view IGMP-enabled interfaces, use the following command. • View IGMP-enabled interfaces. EXEC Privilege mode show ip igmp interface Example of the show ip igmp interface Command Dell#show ip igmp interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/10 Inbound IGMP access group is not set Internet address is 165.87.34.
• View both learned and statically configured IGMP groups. EXEC Privilege mode show ip igmp groups Example of the show ip igmp groups Command Dell# show ip igmp groups Total Number of Groups: 2 IGMP Connected Group Membership Group Address Interface 225.1.1.1 TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 225.1.2.1 TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 Mode IGMPV2 IGMPV2 Uptime 00:11:19 00:10:19 Expires 00:01:50 00:01:50 Last Reporter 165.87.34.100 165.87.31.
Preventing a Host from Joining a Group You can prevent a host from joining a particular group by blocking specific IGMP reports. Create an extended access list containing the permissible source-group pairs. NOTE: For rules in IGMP access lists, source is the multicast source, not the source of the IGMP packet. For IGMPv2, use the keyword any for source (as shown in the following example) because the IGMPv2 hosts do not know in advance who the source is for the group in which they are interested.
Figure 47. Preventing a Host from Joining a Group The following table lists the location and description shown in the previous illustration. Table 30. Preventing a Host from Joining a Group — Description Location Description 1/21 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/21 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.12.1/24 no shutdown 1/31 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/31 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.13.
Location Description • • ip address 10.11.1.1/24 no shutdown 2/11 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/11 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.12.2/24 no shutdown 2/31 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/31 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.23.1/24 no shutdown 3/1 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/1 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.5.1/24 no shutdown 3/11 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/11 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.13.
show ip igmp interface View the enable status of this feature using the command from EXEC Privilege mode, as shown in the example in Selecting an IGMP Version. IGMP Snooping IGMP snooping enables switches to use information in IGMP packets to generate a forwarding table that associates ports with multicast groups so that when they receive multicast frames, they can forward them only to interested receivers.
Removing a Group-Port Association To configure or view the remove a group-port association feature, use the following commands. • Configure the switch to remove a group-port association after receiving an IGMP Leave message. INTERFACE VLAN mode • ip igmp fast-leave View the configuration.
ip igmp snooping querier IGMP snooping querier does not start if there is a statically configured multicast router interface in the VLAN. The switch may lose the querier election if it does not have the lowest IP address of all potential queriers on the subnet. When enabled, IGMP snooping querier starts after one query interval in case no IGMP general query (with IP SA lower than its VLAN IP address) is received on any of its VLAN members.
In customer deployment topologies, it might be required that the traffic for certain management applications needs to exit out of the management port only. You can use EIS to control and the traffic can exit out of any port based on the route lookup in the IP stack. One typical example is an SSH session to an unknown destination or an SSH connection that is destined to the management port IP address. The management default route can coexist with front-end default routes.
Egress Interface Selection table contains all management routes (connected, static and default route). The default routing table contains all management routes (connected, static and default route) and all front-end port routes. Enabling and Disabling Management Egress Interface Selection You can enable or disable egress-interface-selection using the management egress-interface-selection command. NOTE: Egress Interface Selection (EIS) works only with IPv4 routing.
• As per existing behavior, for routes in the default routing table, conflicting front-end port routes if configured has higher precedence over management routes. So there can be scenarios where the same management route is present in the EIS routing table but not in the default routing table. • Routes in the EIS routing table are displayed using the show ip management-eis-route command.
management port. In this case, the source IP address is a management port IP address only if the traffic was originally destined to the management port IP. • ICMP-based applications like ping and traceroute are exceptions to the preceding logic since we do not have TCP/UDP port number. So if source IP address of the packet matches the management port IP address EIS route lookup is done.
Traffic type / Application type Switch initiated traffic Switch-destined traffic Transit Traffic management port is down or route lookup fails, packets are dropped Non-EIS management application Front-end default route will take higher precedence over management default route and SSH session to an unknown destination uses the front-end default route only. No change in the existing behavior.
EIS Behavior for ICMP: ICMP packets do not have TCP/UDP ports. To do an EIS route lookup for ICMP-based applications (ping and traceroute) using the source ip option, the management port IP address should be specified as the source IP address. If management port is down or route lookup fails, packets are dropped. Default Behavior: Route lookup is done in the default routing table and appropriate egress port is selected.
Protocol Behavior when EIS is Enabled Behavior when EIS is Disabled ftp EIS Behavior Default Behavior http EIS Behavior Default Behavior ssh EIS Behavior Default Behavior Snmp (snmp mib response) EIS Behavior Default Behavior telnet EIS Behavior Default Behavior icmp (ping and traceroute) EIS Behavior for ICMP Default Behavior Interworking of EIS With Various Applications Stacking • The management EIS is enabled on the master and the standby unit.
22 Interfaces This chapter describes interface types, both physical and logical, and how to configure them with Dell Networking Operating System (OS). • 10 Gigabit Ethernet / 40 Gigabit Ethernet interfaces are supported on the S4810 platform.
Interface Type Modes Possible Default Mode Requires Creation Default State Port Channel L2, L3 L3 Yes Shutdown (disabled) VLAN L2, L3 L2 Yes (except default) L2 - Shutdown (disabled) L3 - No Shutdown (enabled) Fibre Channel Interface TF, F, EPort TFport No Shutdown View Basic Interface Information To view basic interface information, use the following command. You have several options for viewing interface status and configuration parameters.
0 over 255-byte pkts, 0 over 511-byte pkts, 0 over 1023-byte pkts 0 Multicasts, 3 Broadcasts, 0 Unicasts 0 Vlans, 0 throttles, 0 discarded, 0 collisions Rate info (interval 299 seconds): Input 00.00 Mbits/sec, 0 packets/sec, 0.00% of line-rate Output 00.00 Mbits/sec, 0 packets/sec, 0.00% of line-rate Time since last interface status change: 00:00:31 Dell# To view which interfaces are enabled for Layer 3 data transmission, use the show ip interfaces brief command in EXEC Privilege mode.
• For the Management interface on the RPM, enter the keyword ManagementEthernet then the slot/port information. The slot range is from 0 to 1. The port range is 0. Enable the interface. 2. INTERFACE mode no shutdown To confirm that the interface is enabled, use the show config command in INTERFACE mode. To leave INTERFACE mode, use the exit command or end command. You cannot delete a physical interface.
Type of Interface Possible Modes Requires Creation Default State Yes, except for the default VLAN. No shutdown (disabled for Layer 2) Layer 3 VLAN Layer 2 Layer 3 Shutdown (active for Layer 3 ) Configuring Layer 2 (Data Link) Mode Do not configure switching or Layer 2 protocols such as spanning tree protocol (STP) on an interface unless the interface has been set to Layer 2 mode. To set Layer 2 data transmissions through an individual interface, use the following command.
no shutdown Example of Error Due to Issuing a Layer 3 Command on a Layer 2 Interface If an interface is in the incorrect layer mode for a given command, an error message is displayed (shown in bold). In the following example, the ip address command triggered an error message because the interface is in Layer 2 mode and the ip address command is a Layer 3 command only. Dell(conf-if)#show config ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/2 no ip address switchport no shutdown Dell(conf-if)#ip address 10.10.1.
Egress Interface Selection (EIS) EIS allows you to isolate the management and front-end port domains by preventing switch-initiated traffic routing between the two domains. This feature provides additional security by preventing flooding attacks on front-end ports. The following protocols support EIS: DNS, FTP, NTP, RADIUS, sFlow, SNMP, SSH, Syslog, TACACS, Telnet, and TFTP. This feature does not support sFlow on stacked units.
• The slot range is 0. Configure an IP address and mask on a Management interface. INTERFACE mode ip address ip-address mask – ip-address mask: enter an address in dotted-decimal format (A.B.C.D). The mask must be in /prefix format (/x). Viewing Two Global IPv6 Addresses Important Points to Remember — virtual-ip You can configure two global IPv6 addresses on the system in EXEC Privilege mode. To view the addresses, use the show interface managementethernet command, as shown in the following example.
• A duplicate IP address message is printed for the management port’s virtual IP address on an RPM failover. This behavior is a harmless error that is generated due to a brief transitory moment during failover when both RPMs’ management ports own the virtual IP address, but have different MAC addresses. • The primary management interface uses only the virtual IP address if it is configured. The system cannot be accessed through the native IP address of the primary RPM’s management interface.
VLAN Interfaces VLANs are logical interfaces and are, by default, in Layer 2 mode. Physical interfaces and port channels can be members of VLANs. For more information about VLANs and Layer 2, refer to Layer 2 and Virtual LANs (VLANs). NOTE: To monitor VLAN interfaces, use Management Information Base for Network Management of TCP/IP-based internets: MIB-II (RFC 1213). NOTE: You cannot simultaneously use egress rate shaping and ingress rate policing on the same VLAN.
show interface loopback number • Delete a Loopback interface. CONFIGURATION mode no interface loopback number Many of the same commands found in the physical interface are also found in the Loopback interfaces. Null Interfaces The Null interface is another virtual interface. There is only one Null interface. It is always up, but no traffic is transmitted through this interface. To enter INTERFACE mode of the Null interface, use the following command. • Enter INTERFACE mode of the Null interface.
• Dynamic — Port channels that are dynamically configured using the link aggregation control protocol (LACP). For details, refer to Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP). There are 128 port-channels with 16 members per channel. As soon as you configure a port channel, Dell Networking OS treats it like a physical interface. For example, IEEE 802.1Q tagging is maintained while the physical interface is in the port channel.
• Reassigning an Interface to a New Port Channel (optional) • Configuring the Minimum Oper Up Links in a Port Channel (optional) • Adding or Removing a Port Channel from a VLAN (optional) • Assigning an IP Address to a Port Channel (optional) • Deleting or Disabling a Port Channel (optional) • Load Balancing Through Port Channels (optional) Creating a Port Channel You can create up to 512 port channels with up to 16 port members per group on the platform.
INTERFACE PORT-CHANNEL mode channel-member interface The interface variable is the physical interface type and slot/port information. 2. Double check that the interface was added to the port channel. INTERFACE PORT-CHANNEL mode show config Examples of the show interfaces port-channel Commands To view the port channel’s status and channel members in a tabular format, use the show interfaces port-channel brief command in EXEC Privilege mode, as shown in the following example.
that port channel. In the following example, interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/6 is part of port channel 5, which is in Layer 2 mode, and an error message appeared when an IP address was configured. Dell(conf-if-portch)#show config ! interface Port-channel 5 no ip address switchport channel-member TenGigabitEthernet 1/6 Dell(conf-if-portch)#int Te 1/6 Dell(conf-if)#ip address 10.56.4.4 /24 % Error: Port is part of a LAG Te 1/6.
• Enter the number of links in a LAG that must be in “oper up” status. INTERFACE mode minimum-links number The default is 1. Example of Configuring the Minimum Oper Up Links in a Port Channel Dell#config t Dell(conf)#int po 1 Dell(conf-if-po-1)#minimum-links 5 Dell(conf-if-po-1)# Configuring VLAN Tags for Member Interfaces To configure and verify VLAN tags for individual members of a port channel, perform the following: 1.
– secondary: the IP address is the interface’s backup IP address. You can configure up to eight secondary IP addresses. Deleting or Disabling a Port Channel To delete or disable a port channel, use the following commands. • Delete a port channel. CONFIGURATION mode no interface portchannel channel-number • Disable a port channel. shutdown When you disable a port channel, all interfaces within the port channel are operationally down also.
– tunnel— Set the tunnel key fields to use in hash computation. Changing the Hash Algorithm The load-balance command selects the hash criteria applied to port channels. If you do not obtain even distribution with the load-balance command, you can use the hash-algorithm command to select the hash scheme for LAG, ECMP and NH-ECMP. You can rotate or shift the 12–bit Lag Hash until the desired hash is achieved.
• xor16 — uses 16 bit XOR. Bulk Configuration Bulk configuration allows you to determine if interfaces are present for physical interfaces or configured for logical interfaces. Interface Range An interface range is a set of interfaces to which other commands may be applied and may be created if there is at least one valid interface within the range. Bulk configuration excludes from configuration any non-existing interfaces from an interface range.
Exclude Duplicate Entries The following is an example showing how duplicate entries are omitted from the interface-range prompt.
Define the Interface Range The following example shows how to define an interface-range macro named “test” to select Fast Ethernet interfaces 5/1 through 5/4. Example of the define interface-range Command for Macros Dell(config)# define interface-range test tengigabitethernet 5/1 - 4 Choosing an Interface-Range Macro To use an interface-range macro, use the following command. • Selects the interfaces range to be configured using the values saved in a named interface-range macro.
Traffic statistics: Current Input bytes: 0 Output bytes: 0 Input packets: 0 Output packets: 0 64B packets: 0 Over 64B packets: 0 Over 127B packets: 0 Over 255B packets: 0 Over 511B packets: 0 Over 1023B packets: 0 Error statistics: Input underruns: 0 Input giants: 0 Input throttles: 0 Input CRC: 0 Input IP checksum: 0 Input overrun: 0 Output underruns: 0 Output throttles: 0 m l T q - Change mode Page up Increase refresh interval Quit Rate 0 Bps 0 Bps 0 pps 0 pps 0 pps 0 pps 0 pps 0 pps 0 pps 0 pps 0 0 0
Splitting QSFP Ports to SFP+ Ports The platform supports splitting a single 40G QSFP port into four 10G SFP+ ports using one of the supported breakout cables (for a list of supported cables, refer to the Installation Guide or the Release Notes). NOTE: When you split a 40G port (such as fo 1/4) into four 10G ports, the 40G interface configuration is still available in the startup configuration when you save the running configuration by using the write memory command.
NOTE: Although it is possible to configure the remaining three 10 Gigabit ports, the Link UP event does not occur for these ports leaving the lanes unusable. Dell Networking OS perceives these ports to be in a Link Down state. You must not try to use these remaining three 10 Gigabit ports for actual data transfer or for any other related configurations. NOTE: Trident2 chip sets do not work at 1G speeds with auto-negotiation enabled.
NOTE: In the following show interfaces tengigbitethernet commands, the ports 1,2, and 3 are inactive and no physical SFP or SFP+ connection actually exists on these ports. However, Dell Networking OS still perceives these ports as valid and the output shows that pluggable media (optical cables) is inserted into these ports. This is a software limitation for this release.
……………… Dell#show interfaces tengigabitethernet 0/7 transceiver SFP 0 Serial ID Base Fields SFP 0 Id = 0x0d SFP 0 Ext Id = 0x00 SFP 0 Connector = 0x23 SFP 0 Transceiver Code = 0x08 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 SFP 0 Encoding = 0x00 ……………… Dell#show interfaces tengigabitethernet 0/8 transceiver QSFP 0 Serial ID Base Fields QSFP 0 Id = 0x0d QSFP 0 Ext Id = 0x00 QSFP 0 Connector = 0x23 QSFP 0 Transceiver Code = 0x08 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 QSFP 0 Encoding = 0x00 ……………… ……………… QSFP 0 Diagnostic
tengigabitethernet 0/1 is up, line protocol is down Hardware is DellEth, address is 90:b1:1c:f4:9a:fa Current address is 90:b1:1c:f4:9a:fa Pluggable media present, SFP+ type is 10GBASE-SX ………. LineSpeed 10000 Mbit Dell#show interfaces tengigabitethernet 0/3 tengigabitethernet 0/1 is up, line protocol is down Hardware is DellEth, address is 90:b1:1c:f4:9a:fa Current address is 90:b1:1c:f4:9a:fa Pluggable media present, SFP+ type is 10GBASE-SX ……….
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 SFP SFP SFP SFP QSFP QSFP QSFP QSFP QSFP 10GBASE-SX 10GBASE-SX 10GBASE-SX 10GBASE-SX 4x10GBASE-CR1-3M 4x10GBASE-CR1-3M 4x10GBASE-CR1-3M 4x10GBASE-CR1-3M 40GBASE-SR4 APF12420031B3P APF12420031B3P APF12420031B3P APF12420031B3P APF12420031B3P APF12420031B3P APF12420031B3P APF12420031B3P Link Dampening Interface state changes occur when interfaces are administratively brought up or down or if an interface state changes.
Te 1/2Up21200205001500300 Te 1/2Down4850306002000120 To view a dampening summary for the entire system, use the show interfaces dampening summary command from EXEC Privilege mode. Dell# show interfaces dampening summary 20 interfaces are configured with dampening. 3 interfaces are currently suppressed. Following interfaces are currently suppressed: Te 1/2 Te 3/1 Te 4/2 Dell# Clearing Dampening Counters To clear dampening counters and accumulated penalties, use the following command.
consecutive instances. Any deviation within that time sends Syslog and an alarm event generates. When the deviation clears, another Syslog sends and a clear alarm event generates. The link bundle utilization is calculated as the total bandwidth of all links divided by the total bytes-per-second of all links. If you enable monitoring, the utilization calculation is performed when the utilization of the link-bundle (not a link within a bundle) exceeds 60%.
Enabling Pause Frames Enable Ethernet pause frames flow control on all ports on a chassis or a line card. If not, the system may exhibit unpredictable behavior. NOTE: Changes in the flow-control values may not be reflected automatically in the show interface output. As a workaround, apply the new settings, execute shut then no shut on the interface, and then check the running-config of the port. NOTE: If you disable rx flow control, Dell Networking recommends rebooting the system.
• The port channel link MTU and IP MTU must be less than or equal to the link MTU and IP MTU values configured on the channel members. For example, if the members have a link MTU of 2100 and an IP MTU 2000, the port channel’s MTU values cannot be higher than 2100 for link MTU or 2000 bytes for IP MTU. VLANs: • All members of a VLAN must have the same IP MTU value. • Members can have different Link MTU values.
3. Access CONFIGURATION mode. EXEC Privilege mode config 4. Access the port. CONFIGURATION mode interface interface slot/port 5. Set the local port speed. INTERFACE mode speed {10 | 100 | 1000 | auto} 6. Optionally, set full- or half-duplex. INTERFACE mode duplex {half | full} 7. Disable auto-negotiation on the port. INTERFACE mode no negotiation auto If the speed was set to 1000, do not disable auto-negotiation. 8. Verify configuration changes.
speed 100 duplex full no shutdown Set Auto-Negotiation Options The negotiation auto command provides a mode option for configuring an individual port to forced master/ forced slave once auto-negotiation is enabled. CAUTION: Ensure that only one end of the node is configured as forced-master and the other is configured as forcedslave.
Dell#show ip interface br tengigabitEthernet 1 configured Dell#show running-config interfaces configured Dell#show running-config interface tengigabitEthernet 1 configured In EXEC mode, the show interfaces switchport command displays only interfaces in Layer 2 mode and their relevant configuration information. The show interfaces switchport command displays the interface, whether it supports IEEE 802.1Q tagging or not, and the VLANs to which the interface belongs.
0 IP Packets, 0 Vlans, 0 MPLS 0 throttles, 0 discarded Rate info (interval 299 seconds): Input 00.00 Mbits/sec, 0 packets/sec, 0.00% of line-rate Output 00.00 Mbits/sec, 0 packets/sec, 0.
Clearing Interface Counters The counters in the show interfaces command are reset by the clear counters command. This command does not clear the counters any SNMP program captures. To clear the counters, use the following the command. • Clear the counters used in the show interface commands for all VRRP groups, VLANs, and physical interfaces or selected ones. Without an interface specified, the command clears all interface counters.
23 Internet Protocol Security (IPSec) IPSec is an end-to-end security scheme for protecting IP communications by authenticating and encrypting all packets in a communication session. Use IPSec between hosts, between gateways, or between hosts and gateways. IPSec is compatible with Telnet and file transfer protocols (FTPs). It supports two operational modes: Transport and Tunnel. • Transport mode — (default) Use to encrypt only the payload of the packet. Routing information is unchanged.
CONFIGURATION mode crypto ipsec policy myCryptoPolicy 10 ipsec-manual transform-set myXform-set session-key inbound esp 256 auth encrypt session-key outbound esp 257 auth encrypt match 0 tcp a::1 /128 0 a::2 /128 23 match 1 tcp a::1 /128 23 a::2 /128 0 match 2 tcp a::1 /128 0 a::2 /128 21 match 3 tcp a::1 /128 21 a::2 /128 0 match 4 tcp 1.1.1.1 /32 0 1.1.1.2 /32 23 match 5 tcp 1.1.1.1 /32 23 1.1.1.2 /32 0 match 6 tcp 1.1.1.1 /32 0 1.1.1.2 /32 21 match 7 tcp 1.1.1.1 /32 21 1.1.1.
24 IPv4 Routing The Dell Networking Operating System (OS) supports various IP addressing features. This chapter describes the basics of domain name service (DNS), address resolution protocol (ARP), and routing principles and their implementation in the Dell Networking OS. IP Feature Default DNS Disabled Directed Broadcast Disabled Proxy ARP Enabled ICMP Unreachable Disabled ICMP Redirect Disabled IP Addresses Dell Networking OS supports IP version 4, as described in RFC 791.
For a complete listing of all commands related to IP addressing, refer to the Dell Networking OS Command Line Interface Reference Guide. Assigning IP Addresses to an Interface Assign primary and secondary IP addresses to physical or logical (for example, [virtual local area network [VLAN] or port channel) interfaces to enable IP communication between the system and hosts connected to that interface.
ip route [vrf vrf-name] ip-address mask {ip-address | interface [ip-address]} [distance] [permanent] [tag tag-value] [vrf vrf-name] Use the following required and optional parameters: – vrf vrf-name : use the VRF option after the ip route keyword to configure a static route on that particular VRF, use the VRF option after the next hop to specify which VRF the next hop belongs to. This will be used in route leaking cases.
S 6.1.2.15/32 S 6.1.2.16/32 S 6.1.2.17/32 S 11.1.1.0/24 Direct, Lo 0 --More-- via 6.1.20.2, Gi 5/1 via 6.1.20.2, Gi 5/1 via 6.1.20.2, Gi 5/1 Direct, Nu 0 Dell#show ip route static Destination Gateway ----------------S 2.1.2.0/24 Direct, Nu 0 S 6.1.2.0/24 via 6.1.20.2, S 6.1.2.2/32 via 6.1.20.2, S 6.1.2.3/32 via 6.1.20.2, S 6.1.2.4/32 via 6.1.20.2, S 6.1.2.5/32 via 6.1.20.2, S 6.1.2.6/32 via 6.1.20.2, S 6.1.2.7/32 via 6.1.20.2, S 6.1.2.8/32 via 6.1.20.2, S 6.1.2.9/32 via 6.1.20.2, S 6.1.2.10/32 via 6.1.20.
----------10.16.0.0/16 172.16.1.0/24 ------ManagementEthernet 1/1 10.16.151.4 ----Connected Active -----------Connected Static IPv4 Path MTU Discovery Overview This functionality is supported on the S4810 platform. The size of the packet that can be sent across each hop in the network path without being fragmented is called the path maximum transmission unit (PMTU).
Configuring the Duration to Establish a TCP Connection This functionality is supported on the S4810 platform. You can configure the amount of time for which the device must wait before it attempts to establish a TCP connection. Using this capability, you can limit the wait times for TCP connection requests.
Name server, Domain name, and Domain list are VRF specific. The maximum number of Name servers and Domain lists per VRF is six. Enabling Dynamic Resolution of Host Names By default, dynamic resolution of host names (DNS) is disabled. To enable DNS, use the following commands. • Enable dynamic resolution of host names. CONFIGURATION mode ip domain-lookup • Specify up to six name servers. CONFIGURATION mode ip name-server ip-address [ip-address2 ...
Configuring DNS with Traceroute To configure your switch to perform DNS with traceroute, use the following commands. • Enable dynamic resolution of host names. CONFIGURATION mode ip domain-lookup • Specify up to six name servers. CONFIGURATION mode ip name-server ip-address [ip-address2 ... ip-address6] • The order you entered the servers determines the order of their use.
Configuration Tasks for ARP For a complete listing of all ARP-related commands, refer to the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.
Clearing ARP Cache To clear the ARP cache of dynamically learnt ARP information, use the following command. • Clear the ARP caches for all interfaces or for a specific interface by entering the following information. EXEC privilege clear arp-cache [interface | ip ip-address] [no-refresh] – ip ip-address (OPTIONAL): enter the keyword ip then the IP address of the ARP entry you wish to clear. – no-refresh (OPTIONAL): enter the keywords no-refresh to delete the ARP entry from CAM.
ARP Learning via ARP Request In Dell Networking OS versions prior to 8.3.1.0, Dell Networking OS learns via ARP requests only if the target IP specified in the packet matches the IP address of the receiving router interface. This is the case when a host is attempting to resolve the gateway address. If the target IP does not match the incoming interface, the packet is dropped. If there is an existing entry for the requesting host, it is updated. Figure 48.
CONFIGURATION mode arp retries number The default is 5. • The range is from 1 to 20. Set the exponential timer for resending unresolved ARPs. CONFIGURATION mode arp backoff-time The default is 30. • The range is from 1 to 3600. Display all ARP entries learned via gratuitous ARP.
UDP Helper User datagram protocol (UDP) helper allows you to direct the forwarding IP/UDP broadcast traffic by creating special broadcast addresses and rewriting the destination IP address of packets to match those addresses. Configure UDP Helper Configuring Dell Networking OS to direct UDP broadcast is a two-step process: 1. Enable UDP helper and specify the UDP ports for which traffic is forwarded. Refer to Enabling UDP Helper. 2.
! interface Vlan 100 ip address 1.1.0.1/24 ip udp-broadcast-address 1.1.255.255 untagged GigabitEthernet 1/2 no shutdown To view the configured broadcast address for an interface, use show interfaces command. R1_E600(conf)#do show interfaces vlan 100 Vlan 100 is up, line protocol is down Address is 00:01:e8:0d:b9:7a, Current address is 00:01:e8:0d:b9:7a Interface index is 1107787876 Internet address is 1.1.0.1/24 IP UDP-Broadcast address is 1.1.255.
Figure 50. UDP Helper with Broadcast-All Addresses UDP Helper with Subnet Broadcast Addresses When the destination IP address of an incoming packet matches the subnet broadcast address of any interface, the system changes the address to the configured broadcast address and sends it to matching interface. In the following illustration, Packet 1 has the destination IP address 1.1.1.255, which matches the subnet broadcast address of VLAN 101.
Figure 52. UDP Helper with Configured Broadcast Addresses UDP Helper with No Configured Broadcast Addresses The following describes UDP helper with no broadcast addresses configured. • If the incoming packet has a broadcast destination IP address, the unaltered packet is routed to all Layer 3 interfaces. • If the Incoming packet has a destination IP address that matches the subnet broadcast address of any interface, the unaltered packet is routed to the matching interfaces.
25 IPv6 Routing Internet protocol version 6 (IPv6) routing is the successor to IPv4. Due to the rapid growth in internet users and IP addresses, IPv4 is reaching its maximum usage. IPv6 will eventually replace IPv4 usage to allow for the constant expansion. This chapter provides a brief description of the differences between IPv4 and IPv6, and the Dell Networking support of IPv6. This chapter is not intended to be a comprehensive description of IPv6.
Dell Networking OS manipulation of IPv6 stateless autoconfiguration supports the router side only. Neighbor discovery (ND) messages are advertised so the neighbor can use this information to auto-configure its address. However, received ND messages are not used to create an IPv6 address. NOTE: Inconsistencies in router advertisement values between routers are logged per RFC 4861.
Version (4 bits) The Version field always contains the number 6, referring to the packet’s IP version. Traffic Class (8 bits) The Traffic Class field deals with any data that needs special handling. These bits define the packet priority and are defined by the packet Source. Sending and forwarding routers use this field to identify different IPv6 classes and priorities. Routers understand the priority settings and handle them appropriately during conditions of congestion.
Hop Limit (8 bits) The Hop Limit field shows the number of hops remaining for packet processing. In IPv4, this is known as the Time to Live (TTL) field and uses seconds rather than hops. Each time the packet moves through a forwarding router, this field decrements by 1. If a router receives a packet with a Hop Limit of 1, it decrements it to 0 (zero). The router discards the packet and sends an ICMPv6 message back to the sending router indicating that the Hop Limit was exceeded in transit.
10 Discard the packet and send an ICMP Parameter Problem Code 2 message to the packet’s Source IP Address identifying the unknown option type. 11 Discard the packet and send an ICMP Parameter Problem, Code 2 message to the packet’s Source IP Address only if the Destination IP Address is not a multicast address. The second byte contains the Option Data Length. The third byte specifies whether the information can change en route to the destination.
In IPv6, every interface, whether using static or dynamic address assignments, also receives a local-link address automatically in the fe80::/64 subnet. Implementing IPv6 with Dell Networking OS Dell Networking OS supports both IPv4 and IPv6 and both may be used simultaneously in your system. The following table lists the Dell Networking OS version in which an IPv6 feature became available for each platform. The sections following the table give greater detail about the feature.
Feature and Functionality Dell Networking OS Release Introduction Documentation and Chapter Location S4810 IPv6 IS-IS in the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide. ISIS for IPv6 support for distribute lists and administrative distance 8.3.10 OSPF for IPv6 (OSPFv3) 9.1(0.0) Equal Cost Multipath for IPv6 8.3.10 Intermediate System to Intermediate System IPv6 IS-IS in the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide. OSPFv3 in the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.
• Error reporting messages indicate when the forwarding or delivery of the packet failed at the destination or intermediate node. These messages include Destination Unreachable, Packet Too Big, Time Exceeded and Parameter Problem messages. • Informational messages provide diagnostic functions and additional host functions, such as Neighbor Discovery and Multicast Listener Discovery. These messages also include Echo Request and Echo Reply messages.
Figure 55. NDP Router Redirect IPv6 Neighbor Discovery of MTU Packets You can set the MTU advertised through the RA packets to incoming routers, without altering the actual MTU setting on the interface. The ipv6 nd mtu command sets the value advertised to routers. It does not set the actual MTU rate. For example, if you set ipv6 nd mtu to 1280, the interface still passes 1500-byte packets, if that is what is set with the mtu command.
• multicast addresses • invalid host addresses If you specify this information in the IPv6 RDNSS configuration, a DNS error is displayed. Example for Configuring an IPv6 Recursive DNS Server The following example configures a RDNNS server with an IPv6 address of 1000::1 and a lifetime of 1 second.
ff02::1 ff02::2 ff02::1:ff00:12 ff02::1:ff8b:7570 ND MTU is 0 ICMP redirects are not sent DAD is enabled, number of DAD attempts: 3 ND reachable time is 20120 milliseconds ND base reachable time is 30000 milliseconds ND advertised reachable time is 0 milliseconds ND advertised retransmit interval is 0 milliseconds ND router advertisements are sent every 198 to 600 seconds ND router advertisements live for 1800 seconds ND advertised hop limit is 64 IPv6 hop limit for originated packets is 64 ND dns-server ad
The default option sets the CAM Profile as follows: • L3 ACL (ipv4acl): 6 • L2 ACL(l2acl): 5 • IPv6 L3 ACL (ipv6acl): 0 • L3 QoS (ipv4qos): 1 • L2 QoS (l2qos): 1 To have the changes take effect, save the new CAM settings to the startup-config (write-mem or copy run start) then reload the system for the new settings. • Allocate space for IPV6 ACLs. Enter the CAM profile name then the allocated amount.
Assigning a Static IPv6 Route To configure IPv6 static routes, use the ipv6 route command. NOTE: After you configure a static IPv6 route (the ipv6 route command) and configure the forwarding router’s address (specified in the ipv6 route command) on a neighbor’s interface, the IPv6 neighbor does not display in the show ipv6 route command output. • Set up IPv6 static routes. CONFIGURATION mode ipv6 route [vrf vrf-name] prefix type {slot/port} forwarding router tag – vrf vrf-name:(OPTIONAL) name of the VRF.
• snmp-server community access-list-name ipv6 • snmp-server group ipv6 • snmp-server group access-list-name ipv6 Showing IPv6 Information View specific IPv6 configuration with the following commands. • List the IPv6 show options.
400::/64 onlink autoconfig Valid lifetime: 2592000, Preferred lifetime: 604800 Advertised by: fe80::201:e8ff:fe8b:3166 412::/64 onlink autoconfig Valid lifetime: 2592000, Preferred lifetime: 604800 Advertised by: fe80::201:e8ff:fe8b:3166 Global Anycast address(es): Joined Group address(es): ff02::1 ff02::1:ff8b:386e ND MTU is 0 ICMP redirects are not sent DAD is enabled, number of DAD attempts: 3 ND reachable time is 32000 milliseconds ND base reachable time is 30000 milliseconds ND retransmit interval is 1
L2 - IS-IS level-2, IA - IS-IS inter area, * - candidate default, Gateway of last resort is not set Destination Dist/Metric, Gateway, Last Change ----------------------------------------------------C 600::/64 [0/0] Direct, Te 1/24, 00:34:42 C 601::/64 [0/0] Direct, Te 1/24, 00:34:18 C 912::/64 [0/0] Direct, Lo 2, 00:02:33 O IA 999::1/128 [110/2] via fe80::201:e8ff:fe8b:3166, Te 1/24, 00:01:30 L fe80::/10 [0/0] Direct, Nu 0, 00:34:42 Dell# The following example shows the show ipv6 route static command.
– ipv6 address: the format is x:x:x:x::x. – mask: the prefix length is from 0 to 128. NOTE: IPv6 addresses are normally written as eight groups of four hexadecimal digits, where each group is separated by a colon (:). Omitting zeros is accepted as described in Addressing. Configuring IPv6 RA Guard The IPv6 Router Advertisement (RA) guard allows you to block or reject the unwanted router advertisement guard messages that arrive at the network device platform.
router-preference maximum {high | low | medium} 10. Set the router lifetime. POLICY LIST CONFIGURATION mode router—lifetime value The router lifetime range is from 0 to 9,000 seconds. 11. Apply the policy to trusted ports. POLICY LIST CONFIGURATION mode trusted-port 12. Set the maximum transmission unit (MTU) value. POLICY LIST CONFIGURATION mode mtu value The MTU range is from 1,280 to 11,982 bytes. 13. Set the advertised reachability time.
INTERFACE mode ipv6 nd ra-guard attach policy policy-name [vlan [vlan 1, vland 2, vlan 3.....]] 3. Display the configurations applied on all the RA guard policies or a specific RA guard policy. EXEC Privilege mode show ipv6 nd ra-guard policy policy-name The policy name string can be up to 140 characters.
26 iSCSI Optimization iSCSI optimization is supported on Dell Networking OS. This chapter describes how to configure internet small computer system interface (iSCSI) optimization, which enables quality-ofservice (QoS) treatment for iSCSI traffic.
switch is configured to use dot1p priority-queue assignments to ensure that iSCSI traffic in these sessions receives priority treatment when forwarded on stacked switch hardware. Figure 56. iSCSI Optimization Example Monitoring iSCSI Traffic Flows The switch snoops iSCSI session-establishment and termination packets by installing classifier rules that trap iSCSI protocol packets to the CPU for examination.
You can configure whether the iSCSI optimization feature uses the VLAN priority or IP DSCP mapping to determine the traffic class queue. By default, iSCSI flows are assigned to dot1p priority 4. To map incoming iSCSI traffic on an interface to a dot1p priority-queue other than 4, use the CoS dot1p-priority command (refer to QoS dot1p Traffic Classification and Queue Assignment). Dell Networking recommends setting the CoS dot1p priority-queue to 0 (zero).
The following message displays the first time a Dell EqualLogic array is detected and describes the configuration changes that are automatically performed: %STKUNIT0-M:CP %IFMGR-5-IFM_ISCSI_AUTO_CONFIG: This switch is being configured for optimal conditions to support iSCSI traffic which will cause some automatic configuration to occur including jumbo frames and flow-control on all ports; no storm control and spanning-tree port fast to be enabled on the port of detection.
Enable and Disable iSCSI Optimization The following describes enabling and disabling iSCSI optimizaiton. NOTE: iSCSI monitoring is disabled by default. iSCSI auto-configuration and auto-detection is enabled by default. If you enable iSCSI, flow control is automatically enabled on all interfaces. To disable flow control on all interfaces, use the no flow control rx on tx off command and save the configuration.
iSCSI Optimization Prerequisites The following are iSCSI optimization prerequisites. • iSCSI optimization requires LLDP on the switch. LLDP is enabled by default (refer to Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP)). • iSCSI optimization requires configuring two ingress ACL groups The ACL groups are allocated after iSCSI Optimization is configured. Configuring iSCSI Optimization To configure iSCSI optimization, use the following commands. 1. For a non-DCB environment: Enable session monitoring.
• tcp-port-n is the TCP port number or a list of TCP port numbers on which the iSCSI target listens to requests. You can configure up to 16 target TCP ports on the switch in one command or multiple commands. The default is 860, 3260. Separate port numbers with a comma. If multiple IP addresses are mapped to a single TCP port, use the no iscsi target port tcp-port-n command to remove all IP addresses assigned to the TCP number.
INTERFACE mode [no] iscsi profile-compellent. The default is: Compellent disk arrays are not detected. Displaying iSCSI Optimization Information To display information on iSCSI optimization, use the following show commands. • • • • Display the currently configured iSCSI settings. show iscsi Display information on active iSCSI sessions on the switch. show iscsi sessions Display detailed information on active iSCSI sessions on the switch .
Up Time:00:00:01:28(DD:HH:MM:SS) Time for aging out:00:00:09:34(DD:HH:MM:SS) ISID:806978696102 Initiator Initiator Target Target Connection IP Address TCP Port IP Address TCPPort ID 10.10.0.44 33345 10.10.0.101 3260 0 VLT PEER2 Session 0: ------------------------------------------------------------Target:iqn.2010-11.com.ixia:ixload:iscsi-TG1 Initiator:iqn.2010-11.com.ixia.
27 Intermediate System to Intermediate System Intermediate system to intermediate system (Is-IS) is supported on Dell Networking OS. • • • • IS-IS is supported on the S4810 with Dell Networking Operating System (OS) 8.3(10.0). The IS-IS protocol is an interior gateway protocol (IGP) that uses a shortest-path-first algorithm. Dell Networking supports both IPv4 and IPv6 versions of IS-IS. The IS-IS protocol standards are listed in the Standards Compliance chapter.
Figure 57. ISO Address Format Multi-Topology IS-IS Multi-topology IS-IS (MT IS-IS) allows you to create multiple IS-IS topologies on a single router with separate databases. Use this feature to place a virtual physical topology into logical routing domains, which can each support different routing and security policies. All routers on a LAN or point-to-point must have at least one common supported topology when operating in Multi-Topology IS-IS mode.
neighbor within its LSPs. The local router does not form an adjacency if both routers do not have at least one common MT over the interface. Graceful Restart Both Helper and Restart modes of Graceful restart are supported on the device. Graceful restart is a protocol-based mechanism that preserves the forwarding table of the restarting router and its neighbors for a specified period to minimize the loss of packets.
• MT Reachable IPv6 Prefixes TLV — appears for each IPv6 an IS announces for a given MT ID. Its structure is aligned with the extended IS Reachability TLV Type 236 and add an MT ID. By default, Dell Networking OS supports dynamic host name exchange to assist with troubleshooting and configuration. By assigning a name to an IS-IS NET address, you can track IS-IS information on that address easier. Dell Networking OS does not support ISO CLNS routing; however, the ISO NET format is supported for addressing.
• Controlling Routing Updates • Configuring Authentication Passwords • Setting the Overload Bit • Debuging IS-IS Enabling IS-IS By default, IS-IS is not enabled. The system supports one instance of IS-IS. To enable IS-IS globally, create an IS-IS routing process and assign a NET address. To exchange protocol information with neighbors, enable IS-IS on an interface, instead of on a network as with other routing protocols. In IS-IS, neighbors form adjacencies only when they are same IS type.
ipv6 address ipv6-address mask • • ipv6 address: x:x:x:x::x mask: The prefix length is from 0 to 128. The IPv6 address must be on the same subnet as other IS-IS neighbors, but the IP address does not need to relate to the NET address. 6. Enable IS-IS on the IPv4 interface. ROUTER ISIS mode ip router isis [tag] If you configure a tag variable, it must be the same as the tag variable assigned in step 1. 7. Enable IS-IS on the IPv6 interface.
IS-IS: IS-IS: IS-IS: IS-IS: Dell# Level-1 SPF Calculations : 29 Level-2 SPF Calculations : 29 LSP checksum errors received : 0 LSP authentication failures : 0 You can assign more NET addresses, but the System ID portion of the NET address must remain the same. Dell Networking OS supports up to six area addresses. Some address considerations are: • In order to be neighbors, configure Level 1 routers with at least one common area address.
ROUTER-ISIS mode graceful-restart interval minutes The range is from 1 to 120 minutes. • The default is 5 minutes. Enable the graceful restart maximum wait time before a restarting peer comes up. ROUTER-ISIS mode graceful-restart restart-wait seconds When implementing this command, be sure to set the t3 timer to adjacency on the restarting router. The range is from 1 to 120 minutes. • The default is 30 seconds.
====================== Graceful Restart Interval/Blackout time T3 Timer T3 Timeout Value T2 Timeout Value T1 Timeout Value Adjacency wait time : : : : : : : Operational Timer Value ====================== Current Mode/State : T3 Time left : T2 Time left : Restart ACK rcv count : Restart Req rcv count : Suppress Adj rcv count : Restart CSNP rcv count : Database Sync count : Enabled 1 min Manual 30 30 (level-1), 30 (level-2) 5, retry count: 1 30 Normal/RUNNING 0 0 (level-1), 0 0 (level-1), 0 0 (level-1), 0
The default is 5 seconds. • The default level is Level 1. Set the LSP size. ROUTER ISIS mode lsp-mtu size – size: the range is from 128 to 9195. • The default is 1497. Set the LSP refresh interval. ROUTER ISIS mode lsp-refresh-interval seconds – seconds: the range is from 1 to 65535. • The default is 900 seconds. Set the maximum time LSPs lifetime. ROUTER ISIS mode max-lsp-lifetime seconds – seconds: the range is from 1 to 65535. The default is 1200 seconds.
Table 36. Metric Styles Metric Style Characteristics Cost Range Supported on IS-IS Interfaces narrow Sends and accepts narrow or old TLVs (Type, Length, Value). 0 to 63 wide Sends and accepts wide or new TLVs. 0 to 16777215 transition Sends both wide (new) and narrow (old) TLVs. 0 to 63 narrow transition Sends narrow (old) TLVs and accepts both narrow (old) and wide (new) TLVs. 0 to 63 wide transition Sends wide (new) TLVs and accepts both narrow (old) and wide (new) TLVs.
– default-metric: the range is from 0 to 63 if the metric-style is narrow, narrow-transition, or transition. • The range is from 0 to 16777215 if the metric style is wide or wide transition. Assign a metric for an IPv6 link or interface. INTERFACE mode isis ipv6 metric default-metric [level-1 | level-2] – default-metric: the range is from 0 to 63 for narrow and transition metric styles. The range is from 0 to 16777215 for wide metric styles. The default is 10. The default level is level-1.
Example of the show isis database Command to View Level 1-2 Link State Databases To view which IS-type is configured, use the show isis protocol command in EXEC Privilege mode. The show config command in ROUTER ISIS mode displays only non-default information. If you do not change the IS-type, the default value (level-1-2) is not displayed. The default is Level 1-2 router. When the IS-type is Level 1-2, the software maintains two Link State databases, one for each level.
Enter the type of interface and slot/port information: – For a 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword TenGigabitEthernet then the slot/port information. – For a 40-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword fortyGigE then the slot/port information. – For a Loopback interface, enter the keyword loopback then a number from 0 to 16383. – For a port channel interface, enter the keywords port-channel then a number. • – For a VLAN interface, enter the keyword vlan then a number from 1 to 4094.
– static: for user-configured routes. – bgp: for BGP routes only. • Deny RTM download for pre-existing redistributed IPv6 routes. ROUTER ISIS-AF IPV6 mode distribute-list redistributed-override in Redistributing IPv4 Routes In addition to filtering routes, you can add routes from other routing instances or protocols to the IS-IS process. With the redistribute command syntax, you can include BGP, OSPF, RIP, static, or directly connected routes in the IS-IS process.
redistribute {bgp as-number | connected | rip | static} [level-1 level-1-2 | level-2] [metric metric-value] [metric-type {external | internal}] [route-map map-name] Configure the following parameters: – level-1, level-1-2, or level-2: assign all redistributed routes to a level. The default is level-2. – metric-value: the range is from 0 to 16777215. The default is 0. – metric-type: choose either external or internal. The default is internal. • – map-name: enter the name of a configured route map.
To remove a password, use either the no area-password or no domain-password commands in ROUTER ISIS mode. Setting the Overload Bit Another use for the overload bit is to prevent other routers from using this router as an intermediate hop in their shortest path first (SPF) calculations. For example, if the IS-IS routing database is out of memory and cannot accept new LSPs, Dell Networking OS sets the overload bit and IS-IS traffic continues to transit the system.
To view specific information, enter the following optional parameter: – interface: Enter the type of interface and slot/port information to view IS-IS information on that interface only. • View IS-IS SNP packets, include CSNPs and PSNPs. EXEC Privilege mode debug isis snp-packets [interface] To view specific information, enter the following optional parameter: – interface: Enter the type of interface and slot/port information to view IS-IS information on that interface only.
Metric Style Correct Value Range for the isis metric Command wide 0 to 16777215 narrow 0 to 63 wide transition 0 to 16777215 narrow transition 0 to 63 transition 0 to 63 Maximum Values in the Routing Table IS-IS metric styles support different cost ranges for the route. The cost range for the narrow metric style is 0 to 1023, while all other metric styles support a range of 0 to 0xFE000000. Change the IS-IS Metric Style in One Level Only By default, the IS-IS metric style is narrow.
Beginning Metric Style Final Metric Style Resulting IS-IS Metric Value narrow transition wide original value narrow transition narrow original value narrow transition wide transition original value narrow transition transition original value wide transition wide original value wide transition narrow default value (10) if the original value is greater than 63. A message is sent to the console.
Level-1 Metric Style Level-2 Metric Style Resulting Metric Value wide wide transition original value wide transition truncated value narrow transition wide original value narrow transition narrow original value narrow transition wide transition original value narrow transition transition original value transition wide original value transition narrow original value transition wide transition original value transition narrow transition original value wide transition wide or
Figure 58. IPv6 IS-IS Sample Topography IS-IS Sample Configuration — Congruent Topology IS-IS Sample Configuration — Multi-topology IS-IS Sample Configuration — Multi-topology Transition The following is a sample configuration for enabling IPv6 IS-IS. Dell(conf-if-te-3/17)#show config ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/17 ip address 24.3.1.
exit-address-family Dell (conf-router_isis)# Dell (conf-if-te-3/17)#show config ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/17 ipv6 address 24:3::1/76 ipv6 router isis no shutdown Dell (conf-if-te-3/17)# Dell (conf-router_isis)#show config ! router isis net 34.0000.0000.AAAA.
28 Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) Link aggregation control protocol (LACP) is supported on Dell Networking OS. Introduction to Dynamic LAGs and LACP A link aggregation group (LAG), referred to as a port channel by Dell Networking OS, can provide both load-sharing and port redundancy across line cards. You can enable LAGs as static or dynamic. The benefits and constraints are basically the same, as described in Port Channel Interfaces in the Interfaces chapter.
• You can configure a maximum of 128 port-channels with up to 16 members per channel. LACP Modes Dell Networking OS provides three modes for configuration of LACP — Off, Active, and Passive. • Off — In this state, an interface is not capable of being part of a dynamic LAG. LACP does not run on any port that is configured to be in this state. • Active — In this state, the interface is said to be in the “active negotiating state.” LACP runs on any link that is configured to be in this state.
LACP Configuration Tasks The following are LACP configuration tasks. • Creating a LAG • Configuring the LAG Interfaces as Dynamic • Setting the LACP Long Timeout • Monitoring and Debugging LACP • Configuring Shared LAG State Tracking Creating a LAG To create a dynamic port channel (LAG), use the following command. First you define the LAG and then the LAG interfaces. • Create a dynamic port channel (LAG). CONFIGURATION mode • interface port-channel Create a dynamic port channel (LAG).
Dell(conf)#interface Gigabitethernet 4/16 Dell(conf-if-gi-4/16)#no shutdown Dell(conf-if-gi-4/16)#port-channel-protocol lacp Dell(conf-if-gi-4/16-lacp)#port-channel 32 mode active The port-channel 32 mode active command shown here may be successfully issued as long as there is no existing static channelmember configuration in LAG 32. Setting the LACP Long Timeout PDUs are exchanged between port channel (LAG) interfaces to maintain LACP sessions.
Shared LAG State Tracking Shared LAG state tracking provides the flexibility to bring down a port channel (LAG) based on the operational state of another LAG. At any time, only two LAGs can be a part of a group such that the fate (status) of one LAG depends on the other LAG. As shown in the following illustration, the line-rate traffic from R1 destined for R4 follows the lowest-cost route via R2. Traffic is equally distributed between LAGs 1 and 2.
As shown in the following illustration, LAGs 1 and 2 are members of a failover group. LAG 1 fails and LAG 2 is brought down after the failure. This effect is logged by Message 1, in which a console message declares both LAGs down at the same time. Figure 60.
LACP Basic Configuration Example The screenshots in this section are based on the following example topology. Two routers are named ALPHA and BRAVO, and their hostname prompts reflect those names. Figure 61. LACP Basic Configuration Example Configure a LAG on ALPHA The following example creates a LAG on ALPHA.
0 runts, 0 giants, 0 throttles 0 CRC, 0 overrun, 0 discarded Output Statistics 136 packets, 16718 bytes, 0 underruns 0 64-byte pkts, 15 over 64-byte pkts, 121 over 127-byte pkts 0 over 255-byte pkts, 0 over 511-byte pkts, 0 over 1023-byte pkts 136 Multicasts, 0 Broadcasts, 0 Unicasts 0 Vlans, 0 throttles, 0 discarded, 0 collisions, 0 wreddrops Rate info (interval 299 seconds): Input 00.00 Mbits/sec,0 packets/sec, 0.00% of line-rate Output 00.00 Mbits/sec,0 packets/sec, 0.
Figure 63.
Figure 64.
Bravo(conf-if-po-10)#switch Bravo(conf-if-po-10)#no shut Bravo(conf-if-po-10)#show config ! interface Port-channel 10 no ip address switchport no shutdown ! Bravo(conf-if-po-10)#exit Bravo(conf)#int gig 3/21 Bravo(conf)#no ip address Bravo(conf)#no switchport Bravo(conf)#shutdown Bravo(conf-if-gi-3/21)#port-channel-protocol lacp Bravo(conf-if-gi-3/21-lacp)#port-channel 10 mode active Bravo(conf-if-gi-3/21-lacp)#no shut Bravo(conf-if-gi-3/21)#end ! interface GigabitEthernet 3/21 no ip address ! port-channel-
Figure 65.
Figure 66.
Figure 67. Inspecting the LAG Status Using the show lacp command The point-to-point protocol (PPP) is a connection-oriented protocol that enables layer two links over various different physical layer connections. It is supported on both synchronous and asynchronous lines, and can operate in Half-Duplex or Full-Duplex mode. It was designed to carry IP traffic but is general enough to allow any type of network layer datagram to be sent over a PPP connection.
29 Layer 2 Layer 2 features are supported on Dell Networking OS. Manage the MAC Address Table Dell Networking OS provides the following management activities for the MAC address table. • Clearing the MAC Address Table • Setting the Aging Time for Dynamic Entries • Configuring a Static MAC Address • Displaying the MAC Address Table Clearing the MAC Address Table You may clear the MAC address table of dynamic entries. To clear a MAC address table, use the following command.
• Create a static MAC address entry in the MAC address table. CONFIGURATION mode mac-address-table static Displaying the MAC Address Table To display the MAC address table, use the following command. • Display the contents of the MAC address table. EXEC Privilege mode show mac-address-table [address | aging-time [vlan vlan-id]| count | dynamic | interface | static | vlan] – address: displays the specified entry. – aging-time: displays the configured aging-time.
Setting the MAC Learning Limit To set a MAC learning limit on an interface, use the following command. • Specify the number of MAC addresses that the system can learn off a Layer 2 interface. INTERFACE mode mac learning-limit address_limit Three options are available with the mac learning-limit command: – dynamic – no-station-move – station-move NOTE: An SNMP trap is available for mac learning-limit station-move. No other SNMP traps are available for MAC Learning Limit, including limit violations.
mac learning-limit no-station-move The no-station-move option, also known as “sticky MAC,” provides additional port security by preventing a station move. When you configure this option, the first entry in the table is maintained instead of creating an entry on the new interface. nostation-move is the default behavior. Entries created before you set this option are not affected. To display a list of all interfaces with a MAC learning limit, use the following command.
station-move-violation shutdown-offending • Shut down both the first and second port to learn the MAC address. INTERFACE mode station-move-violation shutdown-both • Display a list of all of the interfaces configured with MAC learning limit or station move violation. CONFIGURATION mode show mac learning-limit violate-action NOTE: When the MAC learning limit (MLL) is configured as no-station-move, the MLL will be processed as static entries internally.
Figure 68. Redundant NICs with NIC Teaming When you use NIC teaming, consider that the server MAC address is originally learned on Port 0/1 of the switch (shown in the following) and Port 0/5 is the failover port. When the NIC fails, the system automatically sends an ARP request for the gateway or host NIC to resolve the ARP and refresh the egress interface.
(as shown in the following illustration). The redundant pairs feature allows you to create redundant links in networks that do not use STP by configuring backup interfaces for the interfaces on either side of the primary link. NOTE: For more information about STP, refer to Spanning Tree Protocol (STP). Assign a backup interface to an interface using the switchport backup command. The backup interface remains in a Down state until the primary fails, at which point it transitions to Up state.
In a redundant pair, any combination of physical and port-channel interfaces is supported as the two interfaces in a redundant pair. For example, you can configure a static (without LACP) or dynamic (with LACP) port-channel interface as either the primary or backup link in a redundant pair with a physical interface.
LAG Mode Status Uptime Ports 1 L2 up 00:08:33 Te 1/1 (Up) 2 L2 up 00:00:02 Te 2/1 (Up) Dell#configure Dell(conf)#interface port-channel 1 Dell(conf-if-po-1)#switchport backup interface port-channel 2 Apr 9 00:15:13: %STKUNIT0-M:CP %IFMGR-5-L2BKUP_WARN: Do not run any Layer2 protocols on Po 1 and Po 2 Apr 9 00:15:13: %STKUNIT0-M:CP %IFMGR-5-OSTATE_DN: Changed interface state to down: Po 2 Apr 9 00:15:13: %STKUNIT0-M:CP %IFMGR-5-STATE_ACT_STBY: Changed interface state to standby: Po 2 Dell(conf-if-po-1)# Dell
The report consists of several packets in SNAP format that are sent to the nearest known MAC address. In the event of a far-end failure, the device stops receiving frames and, after the specified time interval, assumes that the far-end is not available. The connecting line protocol is brought down so that upper layer protocols can detect the neighbor unavailability faster. FEFD State Changes FEFD has two operational modes, Normal and Aggressive.
• Enable FEFD globally on all interfaces. CONFIGURATION mode fefd-global To report interval frequency and mode adjustments, use the following commands. 1. Setup two or more connected interfaces for Layer 2 or Layer 3. INTERFACE mode ip address ip address, switchport 2. Activate the necessary ports administratively. INTEFACE mode no shutdown 3. Enable fefd globally.
To set up and activate two or more connected interfaces, use the following commands. 1. Setup two or more connected interfaces for Layer 2 or Layer 3. INTERFACE mode ip address ip address, switchport 2. Activate the necessary ports administratively. INTERFACE mode no shutdown 3.
Sender info -- Mgmt Mac(00:01:e8:14:89:25), Slot-Port(Te 1/1) Peer info -- Mgmt Mac (00:01:e8:14:89:25), Slot-Port(Te 4/1) Sender hold time -- 3 (second) An RPM Failover In the event that an RPM failover occurs, FEFD becomes operationally down on all enabled ports for approximately 8-10 seconds before automatically becoming operational again. 02-05-2009 12:40:38 Local7.Debug 10.16.151.12 Feb 5 07:06:09: %RPM1-S:CP %RAM-6-FAILOVER_REQ: RPM failover request from active peer: User request.
30 Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) The link layer discovery protocol (LLDP) is supported on Dell Networking OS. 802.1AB (LLDP) Overview LLDP — defined by IEEE 802.1AB — is a protocol that enables a local area network (LAN) device to advertise its configuration and receive configuration information from adjacent LLDP-enabled LAN infrastructure devices.
Type TLV Description 2 Port ID An administratively assigned name that identifies a port through which TLVs are sent and received. 3 Time to Live An administratively assigned name that identifies a port through which TLVs are sent and received. — Optional Includes sub-types of TLVs that advertise specific configuration information. These sub-types are Management TLVs, IEEE 802.1, IEEE 802.3, and TIA-1057 Organizationally Specific TLVs. Figure 73.
IEEE Organizationally Specific TLVs Eight TLV types have been defined by the IEEE 802.1 and 802.3 working groups as a basic part of LLDP; the IEEE OUI is 00-80-C2. You can configure the Dell Networking system to advertise any or all of these TLVs. Table 42. Optional TLV Types Type TLV Description 4 Port description A user-defined alphanumeric string that describes the port. Dell Networking OS does not currently support this TLV.
Type TLV Description 127 Link Aggregation Indicates whether the link is capable of being aggregated, whether it is currently in a LAG, and the port identification of the LAG. Dell Networking OS does not currently support this TLV. 127 Maximum Frame Size Indicates the maximum frame size capability of the MAC and PHY.
Type SubType TLV Description 127 3 Location Identification Indicates that the physical location of the device expressed in one of three possible formats: • • • 127 4 Inventory Management TLVs Implementation of this set of TLVs is optional in LLDP-MED devices. None or all TLVs must be supported. Dell Networking OS does not currently support these TLVs.
Figure 75. LLDP-MED Capabilities TLV Table 44. Dell Networking OS LLDP-MED Capabilities Bit Position TLV Dell Networking OS Support 0 LLDP-MED Capabilities Yes 1 Network Policy Yes 2 Location Identification Yes 3 Extended Power via MDI-PSE Yes 4 Extended Power via MDI-PD No 5 Inventory No 6–15 reserved No Table 45.
Table 46. Network Policy Applications Type Application Description 0 Reserved — 1 Voice Specify this application type for dedicated IP telephony handsets and other appliances supporting interactive voice services. 2 Voice Signaling Specify this application type only if voice control packets use a separate network policy than voice data.
Figure 77. Extended Power via MDI TLV Configure LLDP Configuring LLDP is a two-step process. 1. Enable LLDP globally. 2. Advertise TLVs out of an interface. Related Configuration Tasks • Viewing the LLDP Configuration • Viewing Information Advertised by Adjacent LLDP Agents • Configuring LLDPDU Intervals • Configuring Transmit and Receive Mode • Configuring a Time to Live • Debugging LLDP Important Points to Remember • LLDP is enabled by default.
multiplier no show LLDP multiplier configuration Negate a command or set its defaults Show LLDP configuration Dell(conf-lldp)#exit Dell(conf)#interface tengigabitethernet 1/3 Dell(conf-if-te-1/3)#protocol lldp Dell(conf-if-te-1/3-lldp)#? advertise Advertise TLVs disable Disable LLDP protocol on this interface end Exit from configuration mode exit Exit from LLDP configuration mode hello LLDP hello configuration mode LLDP mode configuration (default = rx and tx) multiplier LLDP multiplier configuration no N
Disabling and Undoing LLDP on Management Ports To disable or undo LLDP on management ports, use the following command. 1. Enter Protocol LLDP mode. CONFIGURATION mode. protocol lldp 2. Enter LLDP management-interface mode. LLDP-MANAGEMENT-INTERFACE mode. management-interface 3. Enter the disable command. LLDP-MANAGEMENT-INTERFACE mode. To undo an LLDP management port configuration, precede the relevant command with the keyword no.
– voice – voice-signaling In the following example, LLDP is enabled globally. R1 and R2 are transmitting periodic LLDPDUs that contain management, 802.1, and 802.3 TLVs. Figure 78. Configuring LLDP Viewing the LLDP Configuration To view the LLDP configuration, use the following command. • Display the LLDP configuration.
Viewing Information Advertised by Adjacent LLDP Agents To view brief information about adjacent devices or to view all the information that neighbors are advertising, use the following commands. • • Display brief information about adjacent devices. show lldp neighbors Display all of the information that neighbors are advertising.
• Configure a non-default transmit interval.
advertise management-tlv system-capabilities system-description no disable R1(conf-lldp)#mode ? rx Rx only tx Tx only R1(conf-lldp)#mode tx R1(conf-lldp)#show config ! protocol lldp advertise dot1-tlv port-protocol-vlan-id port-vlan-id advertise dot3-tlv max-frame-size advertise management-tlv system-capabilities system-description mode tx no disable R1(conf-lldp)#no mode R1(conf-lldp)#show config ! protocol lldp advertise dot1-tlv port-protocol-vlan-id port-vlan-id advertise dot3-tlv max-frame-size adverti
no disable R1(conf-lldp)# Debugging LLDP You can view the TLVs that your system is sending and receiving. To view the TLVs, use the following commands. • View a readable version of the TLVs. debug lldp brief • View a readable version of the TLVs plus a hexadecimal version of the entire LLDPDU. debug lldp detail Figure 79. The debug lldp detail Command — LLDPDU Packet Dissection Relevant Management Objects Dell Networking OS supports all IEEE 802.1AB MIB objects.
Table 47. LLDP Configuration MIB Objects MIB Object Category LLDP Variable LLDP MIB Object Description LLDP Configuration adminStatus lldpPortConfigAdminStatus Whether you enable the local LLDP agent for transmit, receive, or both. msgTxHold lldpMessageTxHoldMultiplier Multiplier value. msgTxInterval lldpMessageTxInterval Transmit Interval value. rxInfoTTL lldpRxInfoTTL Time to live for received TLVs. txInfoTTL lldpTxInfoTTL Time to live for transmitted TLVs.
TLV Type TLV Name TLV Variable System LLDP MIB Object 4 Port Description port description Local lldpLocPortDesc Remote lldpRemPortDesc Local lldpLocSysName Remote lldpRemSysName Local lldpLocSysDesc Remote lldpRemSysDesc Local lldpLocSysCapSupported Remote lldpRemSysCapSupported Local lldpLocSysCapEnabled Remote lldpRemSysCapEnabled Local lldpLocManAddrLen Remote lldpRemManAddrLen Local lldpLocManAddrSubtype Remote lldpRemManAddrSubtype Local lldpLocManAddr Remote lldp
TLV Type 127 TLV Name VLAN Name TLV Variable System LLDP MIB Object PPVID Local lldpXdot1LocProtoVlanId Remote lldpXdot1RemProtoVlanId Local lldpXdot1LocVlanId Remote lldpXdot1RemVlanId Local lldpXdot1LocVlanName Remote lldpXdot1RemVlanName Local lldpXdot1LocVlanName Remote lldpXdot1RemVlanName VID VLAN name length VLAN name Table 50.
TLV Sub-Type TLV Name TLV Variable DSCP Value 3 Location Identifier Location Data Format Location ID Data 4 Extended Power via MDI Power Device Type Power Source System LLDP-MED MIB Object Remote lldpXMedRemMediaPolicy Priority Local lldpXMedLocMediaPolicy Dscp Remote lldpXMedRemMediaPolicy Dscp Local lldpXMedLocLocationSubt ype Remote lldpXMedRemLocationSub type Local lldpXMedLocLocationInfo Remote lldpXMedRemLocationInfo Local lldpXMedLocXPoEDevice Type Remote lldpXMedRemXPo
31 Microsoft Network Load Balancing Network load balancing (NLB) is a clustering functionality that is implemented by Microsoft on Windows 2000 Server and Windows Server 2003 operating systems (OSs). NLB uses a distributed methodology or pattern to equally split and balance the network traffic load across a set of servers that are part of the cluster or group.
In Multicast NLB mode, configure a static ARP configuration command to associate the cluster IP address with a multicast cluster MAC address.
Configuring a Switch for NLB To enable a switch for Unicast NLB mode, perform the following steps: Enter the ip vlan-flooding command to specify that all Layer 3 unicast routed data traffic going through a VLAN member port floods across all the member ports of that VLAN. CONFIGURATION mode ip vlan-flooding There might be some ARP table entries that are resolved through ARP packets, which had the Ethernet MAC SA different from the MAC information inside the ARP packet.
32 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) Multicast source discovery protocol (MSDP) is supported on Dell Networking OS. Protocol Overview MSDP is a Layer 3 protocol that connects IPv4 protocol-independent multicast-sparse mode (PIM-SM) domains. A domain in the context of MSDP is a contiguous set of routers operating PIM within a common boundary defined by an exterior gateway protocol, such as border gateway protocol (BGP).
Figure 81. MSDP SA Message Format Anycast RP Using MSDP, anycast RP provides load sharing and redundancy in PIM-SM networks. Anycast RP allows two or more rendezvous points (RPs) to share the load for source registration and the ability to act as hot backup routers for each other. Anycast RP allows you to configure two or more RPs with the same IP address on Loopback interfaces. The Anycast RP Loopback address are configured with a 32-bit mask, making it a host address.
3. Enable MSDP. 4. Peer the RPs in each routing domain with each other. Refer to Enable MSDP. Related Configuration Tasks The following lists related MSDP configuration tasks.
Figure 82.
Figure 83.
Figure 84.
Figure 85. Configuring MSDP Enable MSDP Enable MSDP by peering RPs in different administrative domains. 1. Enable MSDP. CONFIGURATION mode ip multicast-msdp 2. Peer PIM systems in different administrative domains. CONFIGURATION mode ip msdp peer connect-source Examples of Configuring and Viewing MSDP R3_E600(conf)#ip multicast-msdp R3_E600(conf)#ip msdp peer 192.168.0.
Peer Addr Description Local Addr State Source SA Up/Down To view details about a peer, use the show ip msdp peer command in EXEC privilege mode. Multicast sources in remote domains are stored on the RP in the source-active cache (SA cache). The system does not create entries in the multicast routing table until there is a local receiver for the corresponding multicast group. R3_E600#show ip msdp peer Peer Addr: 192.168.0.1 Local Addr: 192.168.0.
If the total number of active sources is already larger than the limit when limiting is applied, the sources that are already in Dell Networking OS are not discarded. To enforce the limit in such a situation, use the clear ip msdp sa-cache command to clear all existing entries. Clearing the Source-Active Cache To clear the source-active cache, use the following command. • Clear the SA cache of all, local, or rejected entries, or entries for a specific group.
Figure 86.
Figure 87.
Figure 88.
Figure 89. MSDP Default Peer, Scenario 4 Specifying Source-Active Messages To specify messages, use the following command. • Specify the forwarding-peer and originating-RP from which all active sources are accepted without regard for the RPF check. CONFIGURATION mode ip msdp default-peer ip-address list If you do not specify an access list, the peer accepts all sources that peer advertises. All sources from RPs that the ACL denies are subject to the normal RPF check.
GroupAddr 229.0.50.2 229.0.50.3 229.0.50.4 SourceAddr 24.0.50.2 24.0.50.3 24.0.50.4 RPAddr 200.0.0.50 200.0.0.50 200.0.0.50 LearnedFrom 10.0.50.2 10.0.50.2 10.0.50.2 Dell#ip msdp sa-cache rejected-sa MSDP Rejected SA Cache 3 rejected SAs received, cache-size 32766 UpTime GroupAddr SourceAddr RPAddr 00:33:18 229.0.50.64 24.0.50.64 200.0.1.50 00:33:18 229.0.50.65 24.0.50.65 200.0.1.50 00:33:18 229.0.50.66 24.0.50.66 200.0.1.50 Expire 73 73 73 UpTime 00:13:49 00:13:49 00:13:49 LearnedFrom 10.0.50.2 10.
seq 10 deny ip any any R1_E600(conf)#do show ip msdp sa-cache R1_E600(conf)#do show ip msdp sa-cache rejected-sa MSDP Rejected SA Cache 1 rejected SAs received, cache-size 1000 UpTime GroupAddr SourceAddr RPAddr LearnedFrom 00:02:20 239.0.0.1 10.11.4.2 192.168.0.1 local Reason Redistribute Preventing MSDP from Caching a Remote Source To prevent MSDP from caching a remote source, use the following commands. 1. OPTIONAL: Cache sources that the SA filter denies in the rejected SA cache.
Example of Verifying the System is not Advertising Local Sources In the following example, R1 stops advertising source 10.11.4.2. Because it is already in the SA cache of R3, the entry remains there until it expires. [Router 1] R1_E600(conf)#do show run msdp ! ip multicast-msdp ip msdp peer 192.168.0.3 connect-source Loopback 0 ip msdp sa-filter out 192.168.0.3 list mylocalfilter R1_E600(conf)#do show run acl ! ip access-list extended mylocalfilter seq 5 deny ip host 239.0.0.1 host 10.11.4.
SAs learned from this peer: 0 SA Filtering: Input (S,G) filter: myremotefilter Output (S,G) filter: none [Router 1] R1_E600(conf)#do show ip msdp peer Peer Addr: 192.168.0.3 Local Addr: 0.0.0.0(0) Connect Source: Lo 0 State: Inactive Up/Down Time: 00:00:03 Timers: KeepAlive 30 sec, Hold time 75 sec SourceActive packet count (in/out): 0/0 SAs learned from this peer: 0 SA Filtering: Clearing Peer Statistics To clear the peer statistics, use the following command.
03:16:09 : MSDP-0: Peer 192.168.0.3, 03:16:27 : MSDP-0: Peer 192.168.0.3, 03:16:38 : MSDP-0: Peer 192.168.0.3, 03:16:39 : MSDP-0: Peer 192.168.0.3, 03:17:09 : MSDP-0: Peer 192.168.0.3, 03:17:10 : MSDP-0: Peer 192.168.0.3, 03:17:27 : MSDP-0: Peer 192.168.0.
Figure 90. MSDP with Anycast RP Configuring Anycast RP To configure anycast RP, use the following commands. 1. In each routing domain that has multiple RPs serving a group, create a Loopback interface on each RP serving the group with the same IP address. CONFIGURATION mode interface loopback 2. Make this address the RP for the group. CONFIGURATION mode ip pim rp-address 3.
CONFIGURATION mode ip msdp peer 5. Advertise the network of each of the unique Loopback addresses throughout the network. ROUTER OSPF mode network Reducing Source-Active Message Flooding RPs flood source-active messages to all of their peers away from the RP. When multiple RPs exist within a domain, the RPs forward received active source information back to the originating RP, which violates the RFP rule. You can prevent this unnecessary flooding by creating a mesh-group.
network 10.11.1.0/24 area 0 network 10.11.3.0/24 area 0 network 192.168.0.11/32 area 0 ! ip ip ip ip ip multicast-msdp msdp peer 192.168.0.3 connect-source Loopback 1 msdp peer 192.168.0.22 connect-source Loopback 1 msdp mesh-group AS100 192.168.0.22 msdp originator-id Loopback 1! ip pim rp-address 192.168.0.1 group-address 224.0.0.0/4 The following example shows an R2 configuration for MSDP with Anycast RP. ip multicast-routing ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/1 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.4.
ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.0.32/24 no shutdown interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/41 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.6.34/24 no shutdown ! interface Loopback 0 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 192.168.0.3/32 no shutdown ! router ospf 1 network 10.11.6.0/24 area 0 network 192.168.0.3/32 area 0 redistribute static redistribute connected redistribute bgp 200 ! router bgp 200 redistribute ospf 1 neighbor 192.168.0.22 remote-as 100 neighbor 192.168.0.22 ebgp-multihop 255 neighbor 192.168.0.
ip ip ip ip ! ip ip ! ip multicast-msdp msdp peer 192.168.0.11 connect-source Loopback 0 msdp peer 192.168.0.22 connect-source Loopback 0 msdp sa-filter out 192.168.0.22 route 192.168.0.1/32 10.11.0.23 route 192.168.0.22/32 10.11.0.23 pim rp-address 192.168.0.3 group-address 224.0.0.0/4 MSDP Sample Configurations The following examples show the running-configurations described in this chapter. For more information, refer to the illustrations in the Related Configuration Tasks section.
interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/31 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.0.23/24 no shutdown ! interface Loopback 0 ip address 192.168.0.2/32 no shutdown ! router ospf 1 network 10.11.1.0/24 area 0 network 10.11.4.0/24 area 0 network 192.168.0.2/32 area 0 redistribute static redistribute connected redistribute bgp 100 ! router bgp 100 redistribute ospf 1 neighbor 192.168.0.3 remote-as 200 neighbor 192.168.0.3 ebgp-multihop 255 neighbor 192.168.0.3 update-source Loopback 0 neighbor 192.168.0.
ip multicast-routing ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 4/1 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.5.1/24 no shutdown ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 4/22 ip address 10.10.42.1/24 no shutdown ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 4/31 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.6.43/24 no shutdown ! interface Loopback 0 ip address 192.168.0.4/32 no shutdown ! router ospf 1 network 10.11.5.0/24 area 0 network 10.11.6.0/24 area 0 network 192.168.0.4/32 area 0 ! ip pim rp-address 192.168.0.3 group-address 224.0.0.
33 Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (MSTP) Multiple spanning tree protocol (MSTP) is supported on Dell Networking OS. Protocol Overview MSTP — specified in IEEE 802.1Q-2003 — is a rapid spanning tree protocol (RSTP)-based spanning tree variation that improves on per-VLAN spanning tree plus (PVST+). MSTP allows multiple spanning tree instances and allows you to map many VLANs to one spanning tree instance to reduce the total number of required instances.
Spanning Tree Variations The Dell Networking OS supports four variations of spanning tree, as shown in the following table. Table 51. Spanning Tree Variations Dell Networking Term IEEE Specification Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) 802 .1d Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP) 802 .1w Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (MSTP) 802 .1s Per-VLAN Spanning Tree Plus (PVST+) Third Party Implementation Information The following describes the MSTP implementation information.
Enable Multiple Spanning Tree Globally MSTP is not enabled by default. To enable MSTP globally, use the following commands. When you enable MSTP, all physical, VLAN, and port-channel interfaces that are enabled and in Layer 2 mode are automatically part of the MSTI 0. • Within an MSTI, only one path from any bridge to any other bridge is enabled. • Bridges block a redundant path by disabling one of the link ports. 1. Enter PROTOCOL MSTP mode. CONFIGURATION mode protocol spanning-tree mstp 2.
Dell(conf-mstp)#msti 2 vlan 200-300 Dell(conf-mstp)#show config ! protocol spanning-tree mstp no disable MSTI 1 VLAN 100 MSTI 2 VLAN 200-300 All bridges in the MSTP region must have the same VLAN-to-instance mapping. To view which instance a VLAN is mapped to, use the show spanning-tree mst vlan command from EXEC Privilege mode.
The range is from 0 to 61440, in increments of 4096. The default is 32768. Example of Assigning and Verifying the Root Bridge Priority By default, the simple configuration shown previously yields the same forwarding path for both MSTIs. The following example shows how R3 is assigned bridge priority 0 for MSTI 2, which elects a different root bridge than MSTI 2. To view the bridge priority, use the show config command from PROTOCOL MSTP mode.
MST region name: my-mstp-region Revision: 0 MSTI VID 1 100 2 200-300 Modifying Global Parameters The root bridge sets the values for forward-delay, hello-time, max-age, and max-hops and overwrites the values set on other MSTP bridges. • Forward-delay — the amount of time an interface waits in the Listening state and the Learning state before it transitions to the Forwarding state. • Hello-time — the time interval in which the bridge sends MSTP bridge protocol data units (BPDUs).
Example of the forward-delay Parameter To view the current values for MSTP parameters, use the show running-config spanning-tree mstp command from EXEC privilege mode.
To view the current values for these interface parameters, use the show config command from INTERFACE mode. Configuring an EdgePort The EdgePort feature enables interfaces to begin forwarding traffic approximately 30 seconds sooner. In this mode, an interface forwards frames by default until it receives a BPDU that indicates that it should behave otherwise; it does not go through the Learning and Listening states.
To view the enable status of this feature, use the show running-config spanning-tree mstp command from EXEC Privilege mode. MSTP Sample Configurations The running-configurations support the topology shown in the following illustration. The configurations are from Dell Networking OS systems. Figure 92. MSTP with Three VLANs Mapped to Two Spanning Tree Instances Router 1 Running-Configuration This example uses the following steps: 1.
! interface Vlan 200 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 1/21,31 no shutdown ! interface Vlan 300 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 1/21,31 no shutdown Router 2 Running-Configuration This example uses the following steps: 1. Enable MSTP globally and set the region name and revision map MSTP instances to the VLANs. 2. Assign Layer-2 interfaces to the MSTP topology. 3. Create VLANs mapped to MSTP instances tag interfaces to the VLANs.
MSTI 1 VLAN 100 MSTI 2 VLAN 200,300 ! (Step 2) interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/11 no ip address switchport no shutdown ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/21 no ip address switchport no shutdown ! (Step 3) interface Vlan 100 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/11,21 no shutdown ! interface Vlan 200 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/11,21 no shutdown ! interface Vlan 300 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/11,21 no shutdown SFTOS Example Running-Configuration This example uses the following
tagged 1/0/31 tagged 1/0/32 exit interface vlan 300 tagged 1/0/31 tagged 1/0/32 exit Debugging and Verifying MSTP Configurations To debut and verify MSTP configuration, use the following commands. • Display BPDUs. EXEC Privilege mode debug spanning-tree mstp bpdu • Display MSTP-triggered topology change messages.
The following example shows viewing the debug log of a successful MSTP configuration. Dell#debug spanning-tree mstp bpdu MSTP debug bpdu is ON Dell# 4w0d4h : MSTP: Sending BPDU on Te 2/21 : ProtId: 0, Ver: 3, Bpdu Type: MSTP, Flags 0x6e CIST Root Bridge Id: 32768:0001.e806.953e, Ext Path Cost: 0 Regional Bridge Id: 32768:0001.e806.
34 Multicast Features NOTE: Multicast routing is supported on secondary IP addresses; it is not supported on IPv6. NOTE: Multicast routing is supported across default and non-default VRFs. The Dell Networking operating system (OS) supports the following multicast protocols: • PIM Sparse-Mode (PIM-SM) • Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) • Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) Enabling IP Multicast Prior to enabling any multicast protocols, you must enable multicast routing.
• Multicast is not supported on secondary IP addresses. • If you enable multicast routing, Egress L3 ACL is not applied to multicast data traffic. Multicast Policies Dell Networking OS offers parallel multicast features for IPv4. IPv4 Multicast Policies The following sections describe IPv4 multicast policies.
Preventing a Host from Joining a Group You can prevent a host from joining a particular group by blocking specific IGMP reports. Create an extended access list containing the permissible source-group pairs. NOTE: For rules in IGMP access lists, source is the multicast source, not the source of the IGMP packet. For IGMPv2, use the keyword any for source (as shown in the following example) because the IGMPv2 hosts do not know in advance who the source is for the group in which they are interested.
Figure 93. Preventing a Host from Joining a Group The following table lists the location and description shown in the previous illustration. Table 53. Preventing a Host from Joining a Group — Description Location Description 1/21 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/21 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.12.1/24 no shutdown 1/31 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/31 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.13.
Location Description • • ip address 10.11.1.1/24 no shutdown 2/11 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/11 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.12.2/24 no shutdown 2/31 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/31 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.23.1/24 no shutdown 3/1 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/1 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.5.1/24 no shutdown 3/11 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/11 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.13.
Preventing a Source from Registering with the RP To prevent the PIM source DR from sending register packets to RP for the specified multicast source and group, use the following command. If the source DR never sends register packets to the RP, no hosts can ever discover the source and create a shortest path tree (SPT) to it. • Prevent a source from transmitting to a particular group.
Table 54. Preventing a Source from Transmitting to a Group — Description Location Description 1/21 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/21 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.12.1/24 no shutdown 1/31 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/31 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.13.1/24 no shutdown 2/1 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/1 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.1.1/24 no shutdown 2/11 • • • • Interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/11 ip pim sparse-mode ip address 10.11.12.
Location Description • no shutdown Preventing a PIM Router from Processing a Join To permit or deny PIM Join/Prune messages on an interface using an extended IP access list, use the following command. NOTE: Dell Networking recommends not using the ip pim join-filter command on an interface between a source and the RP router.
35 Object Tracking IPv4/IPv6 object tracking is available on Dell Networking OS. Object tracking allows the Dell Networking Operating System (OS) client processes, such as virtual router redundancy protocol (VRRP), to monitor tracked objects (for example, interface or link status) and take appropriate action when the state of an object changes. NOTE: In Dell Networking OS release version 8.4.1.0, object tracking is supported only on VRRP.
Figure 95. Object Tracking Example When you configure a tracked object, such as an IPv4/IPv6 a route or interface, you specify an object number to identify the object. Optionally, you can also specify: • UP and DOWN thresholds used to report changes in a route metric. • A time delay before changes in a tracked object’s state are reported to a client. Track Layer 2 Interfaces You can create an object to track the line-protocol state of a Layer 2 interface.
A tracked route matches a route in the routing table only if the exact address and prefix length match an entry in the routing table. For example, when configured as a tracked route, 10.0.0.0/24 does not match the routing table entry 10.0.0.0/8. If no route-table entry has the exact address and prefix length, the tracked route is considered to be DOWN.
If you do not configure a delay, a notification is sent immediately as soon as a change in the state of a tracked object is detected. The time delay in communicating a state change is specified in seconds. VRRP Object Tracking As a client, VRRP can track up to 20 objects (including route entries, and Layer 2 and Layer 3 interfaces) in addition to the 12 tracked interfaces supported for each VRRP group. You can assign a unique priority-cost value from 1 to 254 to each tracked VRRP object or group interface.
Valid delay times are from 0 to 180 seconds. The default is 0. 3. (Optional) Identify the tracked object with a text description. OBJECT TRACKING mode description text The text string can be up to 80 characters. 4. (Optional) Display the tracking configuration and the tracked object’s status.
Valid object IDs are from 1 to 65535. 2. (Optional) Configure the time delay used before communicating a change in the status of a tracked interface. OBJECT TRACKING mode delay {[up seconds] [down seconds]} Valid delay times are from 0 to 180 seconds. The default is 0. 3. (Optional) Identify the tracked object with a text description. OBJECT TRACKING mode description text The text string can be up to 80 characters. 4. (Optional) Display the tracking configuration and the tracked object’s status.
• By the reachability of the route's next-hop router. The UP/DOWN state of the route is determined by the entry of the next-hop address in the ARP cache. A tracked route is considered to be reachable if there is an ARP cache entry for the route's next-hop address. If the next-hop address in the ARP cache ages out for a route tracked for its reachability, an attempt is made to regenerate the ARP cache entry to see if the nexthop address appears before considering the route DOWN.
The default is 0. 3. (Optional) Identify the tracked object with a text description. OBJECT TRACKING mode description text The text string can be up to 80 characters. 4. (Optional) Display the tracking configuration and the tracked object’s status. EXEC Privilege mode show track object-id Example of the track ip route reachability Command Example of the track ipv6 route reachability Command Dell(conf)#track 104 ip route 10.0.0.
Enter an IPv4 address in dotted decimal format. Valid IPv4 prefix lengths are from /0 to /32. Enter an IPv6 address in X:X:X:X::X format. Valid IPv6 prefix lengths are from /0 to /128. (Optional) E-Series only: For an IPv4 route, you can enter a VRF name. 3. (Optional) Configure the time delay used before communicating a change in the UP and/or DOWN status of a tracked route. OBJECT TRACKING mode delay {[up seconds] [down seconds]} Valid delay times are from 0 to 180 seconds. The default is 0. 4.
• • Display the configuration and status of currently tracked Layer 2 or Layer 3 interfaces, IPv4 or IPv6 routes, and a VRF instance. show track [object-id [brief] | interface [brief] [vrf vrf-name] | ip route [brief] [vrf vrf-name] | resolution | vrf vrf-name [brief] | brief] Use the show running-config track command to display the tracking configuration of a specified object or all objects that are currently configured on the router.
Example of Viewing Object Tracking Configuration Dell#show running-config track track 1 ip route 23.0.0.0/8 reachability track 2 ipv6 route 2040::/64 metric threshold delay down 3 delay up 5 threshold metric up 200 track 3 ipv6 route 2050::/64 reachability track 4 interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/4 ip routing track 5 ip route 192.168.0.
36 Open Shortest Path First (OSPFv2 and OSPFv3) Open shortest path first (OSPFv2 for IPv4) and OSPF version 3 (OSPF for IPv6) are supported on Dell Networking OS. This chapter provides a general description of OSPFv2 (OSPF for IPv4) and OSPFv3 (OSPF for IPv6) as supported in the Dell Networking Operating System (OS). NOTE: The fundamental mechanisms of OSPF (flooding, DR election, area support, SPF calculations, and so on) are the same between OSPFv2 and OSPFv3.
Figure 96. Autonomous System Areas Area Types The backbone of the network is Area 0. It is also called Area 0.0.0.0 and is the core of any AS. All other areas must connect to Area 0. Areas can be defined in such a way that the backbone is not contiguous. In this case, backbone connectivity must be restored through virtual links. Virtual links are configured between any backbone routers that share a link to a non-backbone area and function as if they were direct links.
Networks and Neighbors As a link-state protocol, OSPF sends routing information to other OSPF routers concerning the state of the links between them. The state (up or down) of those links is important. Routers that share a link become neighbors on that segment. OSPF uses the Hello protocol as a neighbor discovery and keep alive mechanism. After two routers are neighbors, they may proceed to exchange and synchronize their databases, which creates an adjacency.
Figure 97. OSPF Routing Examples Backbone Router (BR) A backbone router (BR) is part of the OSPF Backbone, Area 0. This includes all ABRs. It can also include any routers that connect only to the backbone and another ABR, but are only part of Area 0, such as Router I in the previous example. Area Border Router (ABR) Within an AS, an area border router (ABR) connects one or more areas to the backbone.
Autonomous System Border Router (ASBR) The autonomous system border area router (ASBR) connects to more than one AS and exchanges information with the routers in other ASs. Generally, the ASBR connects to a non-interior gate protocol (IGP) such as BGP or uses static routes. Internal Router (IR) The internal router (IR) has adjacencies with ONLY routers in the same area, as Router E, M, and I shown in the previous example.
For all LSA types, there are 20-byte LSA headers. One of the fields of the LSA header is the link-state ID. Each router link is defined as one of four types: type 1, 2, 3, or 4. The LSA includes a link ID field that identifies, by the network number and mask, the object this link connects to. Depending on the type, the link ID has different meanings. • 1: point-to-point connection to another router/neighboring router. • 2: connection to a transit network IP address of the DR.
Figure 98. Priority and Cost Examples OSPF with Dell Networking OS Dell Networking OS supports up to 10,000 OSPF routes for OSPFv2. Within that 10,000 routes, you can designate up to 8,000 routes as external and up to 2,000 as inter/intra area routes. Dell Networking OS version 9.4(0.0) and later support only one OSPFv2 process per VRF. Dell Networking OS version 9.7(0.0) and later support OSPFv3 in VRF. Also, on OSPFv3, Dell Networking OS supports only one OSPFv3 process per VRF.
Graceful Restart Graceful restart for OSPFv2 and OSPFv3 are supported on the S4810 platform in Helper and Restart modes. When a router goes down without a graceful restart, there is a possibility for loss of access to parts of the network due to ongoing network topology changes. Additionally, LSA flooding and reconvergence can cause substantial delays. It is, therefore, desirable that the network maintains a stable topology if it is possible for data flow to continue uninterrupted.
To display the configuration values for OSPF graceful restart, enter the show run ospf command for OSPFv2 and the show run ospf and show ipv6 ospf [vrf vrf-name] database database-summary commands for OSPFv3. Fast Convergence (OSPFv2, IPv4 Only) Fast convergence allows you to define the speeds at which LSAs are originated and accepted, and reduce OSPFv2 end-to-end convergence time.
Dell(conf-if-te-2/2)#ip ospf dead-interval 80 Dell(conf-if-te-2/2)# In the following example, the dead interval is set at 4x the hello interval (shown in bold). Dell (conf-if-te-2/2)#ip ospf dead-interval 20 Dell (conf-if-te-2/2)#do show ip os int tengigabitethernet 1/3 TenGigabitEthernet 2/2 is up, line protocol is up Internet Address 20.0.0.1/24, Area 0 Process ID 10, Router ID 1.1.1.2, Network Type BROADCAST, Cost: 1 Transmit Delay is 1 sec, State DR, Priority 1 Designated Router (ID) 1.1.1.
Example Dell# Dell#conf Dell(conf)#router ospf 1 Dell(conf-router_ospf-1)#timer spf 2 5 Dell(conf-router_ospf-1)# Dell(conf-router_ospf-1)#show config ! router ospf 1 timers spf 2 5 Dell(conf-router_ospf-1)# Dell(conf-router_ospf-1)#end Dell# For a complete list of the OSPF commands, refer to the OSPF section in the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide document. Enabling OSPFv2 To enable Layer 3 routing, assign an IP address to an interface (physical or Loopback).
Assigning a Router ID In CONFIGURATION ROUTER OSPF mode, assign the router ID. The router ID is not required to be the router’s IP address. However, Dell Networking recommends using the IP address as the router ID for easier management and troubleshooting. Optional process-id commands are also described. • Assign the router ID for the OSPFv2 process. CONFIG-ROUTER-OSPF-id mode • router-id ip address Disable OSPF. CONFIGURATION mode • no router ospf process-id Reset the OSPFv2 process.
After the OSPF process and the VRF are tied together, the OSPF process ID cannot be used again in the system. If you try to enable more OSPF processes than available Layer 3 interfaces, the following message displays: C300(conf)#router ospf 1 % Error: No router ID available. Assigning an OSPFv2 Area After you enable OSPFv2, assign the interface to an OSPF area. Set up OSPF areas and enable OSPFv2 on an interface with the network command. You must have at least one AS area: Area 0.
To view the configuration, use the show config command in CONFIGURATION ROUTER OSPF mode. OSPF, by default, sends hello packets out to all physical interfaces assigned an IP address that is a subset of a network on which OSPF is enabled. To view currently active interfaces and the areas assigned to them, use the show ip ospf interface command. Example of Viewing Active Interfaces and Assigned Areas Dell>show ip ospf 1 interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/17 is up, line protocol is up Internet Address 10.2.2.
To configure a stub area, use the following commands. 1. Review all areas after they were configured to determine which areas are NOT receiving type 5 LSAs. EXEC Privilege mode show ip ospf process-id [vrf] database database-summary 2. Enter CONFIGURATION mode. EXEC Privilege mode configure 3. Enter ROUTER OSPF mode. CONFIGURATION mode router ospf process-id [vrf] Process ID is the ID assigned when configuring OSPFv2 globally. 4. Configure the area as a stub area.
– For a 40-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword fortyGigE then the slot/port information. – For a port channel interface, enter the keywords port-channel then a number. – For a VLAN interface, enter the keyword vlan then a number from 1 to 4094. The keyword default sets all interfaces on this OSPF process as passive. To remove the passive interface from select interfaces, use the no passive-interface interface command while passive interface default is configured.
NOTE: A higher convergence level can result in occasional loss of OSPF adjacency. Generally, convergence level 1 meets most convergence requirements. Only select higher convergence levels following consultation with Dell Technical Support. Examples of the fast-converge Command In the examples below, Convergence Level shows the fast-converge parameter setting and Min LSA origination shows the LSA parameters (shown in bold).
– seconds: the range is from 1 to 65535 (the default is 10 seconds). • The hello interval must be the same on all routers in the OSPF network. Use the MD5 algorithm to produce a message digest or key, which is sent instead of the key. CONFIG-INTERFACE mode ip ospf message-digest-key keyid md5 key – keyid: the range is from 1 to 255. – Key: a character string. NOTE: Be sure to write down or otherwise record the key. You cannot learn the key after it is configured.
Backup Designated Router (ID) 10.1.2.100, Interface address 0.0.0.0 Timer intervals configured, Hello 10, Dead 40, Wait 40, Retransmit 5 Hello due in 00:00:06 Neighbor Count is 0, Adjacent neighbor count is 0 Dell# Enabling OSPFv2 Authentication To enable or change various OSPF authentication parameters, use the following commands. • Set a clear text authentication scheme on the interface.
CONFIG-ROUTEROSPF- id mode graceful-restart helper-reject router-id • • Planned-only — the OSPFv2 router supports graceful-restart for planned restarts only. A planned restart is when you manually enter a fail-over command to force the primary RPM over to the secondary RPM. During a planned restart, OSPF sends out a Grace LSA before the system switches over to the secondary RPM. OSPF also is notified that a planned restart is happening.
• Create a prefix list with a sequence number and a deny or permit action. CONFIG- PREFIX LIST mode seq sequence-number {deny |permit} ip-prefix [ge min-prefix-length] [le max-prefixlength] The optional parameters are: – ge min-prefix-length: is the minimum prefix length to match (from 0 to 32). – le max-prefix-length: is the maximum prefix length to match (from 0 to 32). For configuration information about prefix lists, refer to Access Control Lists (ACLs).
Troubleshooting OSPFv2 Use the information in this section to troubleshoot OSPFv2 operation on the switch. Be sure to check the following, as these questions represent typical issues that interrupt an OSPFv2 process. NOTE: The following tasks are not a comprehensive; they provide some examples of typical troubleshooting checks.
– – – – event: view OSPF event messages. packet: view OSPF packet information. spf: view SPF information. database-timers rate-limit: view the LSAs currently in the queue. Example of Viewing OSPF Configuration Dell#show run ospf ! router ospf 4 router-id 4.4.4.4 network 4.4.4.0/28 area 1 ! ipv6 router ospf 999 default-information originate always router-id 10.10.10.10 Dell# Sample Configurations for OSPFv2 The following configurations are examples for enabling OSPFv2.
! interface Loopback 10 ip address 192.168.100.100/24 no shutdown OSPF Area 0 — Te 3/1 and 3/2 router ospf 33333 network 192.168.100.0/24 area 0 network 10.0.13.0/24 area 0 network 10.0.23.0/24 area 0 ! interface Loopback 30 ip address 192.168.100.100/24 no shutdown ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/1 ip address 10.1.13.3/24 no shutdown ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/2 ip address 10.2.13.3/24 no shutdown OSPF Area 0 — Te 2/1 and 2/2 router ospf 22222 network 192.168.100.0/24 area 0 network 10.2.21.
NOTE: IPv6 and OSPFv3 do not support Multi-Process OSPF. You can only enable a single OSPFv3 process. Set the time interval between when the switch receives a topology change and starts a shortest path first (SPF) calculation.
– process-id: the process ID number assigned. – area-id: the area ID for this interface. Assigning OSPFv3 Process ID and Router ID Globally To assign, disable, or reset OSPFv3 globally, use the following commands. • Enable the OSPFv3 process globally and enter OSPFv3 mode. CONFIGURATION mode ipv6 router ospf {process ID} • The range is from 0 to 65535. Assign the router ID for this OSPFv3 process. CONF-IPV6-ROUTER-OSPF mode router-id {number} – number: the IPv4 address. The format is A.B.C.D.
EXEC Privilege mode clear ipv6 ospf [vrf vrf-name] process Configuring Stub Areas To configure IPv6 stub areas, use the following command. • Configure the area as a stub area. CONF-IPV6-ROUTER-OSPF mode area area-id stub [no-summary] – no-summary: use these keywords to prevent transmission in to the area of summary ASBR LSAs. – Area ID: a number or IP address assigned when creating the area.
– route-map map-name: enter a name of a configured route map. – tag tag-value: The range is from 0 to 4294967295. Configuring a Default Route To generate a default external route into the OSPFv3 routing domain, configure Dell Networking OS. To specify the information for the default route, use the following command. • Specify the information for the default route.
During a planned restart, OSPFv3 sends out a Grace LSA before the system switches over to the secondary RPM. OSPFv3 is notified that a planned restart is happening. – Unplanned-only: the OSPFv3 router supports graceful-restart only for unplanned restarts. During an unplanned restart, OSPFv3 sends out a Grace LSA once the secondary RPM comes online. • The default is both planned and unplanned restarts trigger an OSPFv3 graceful restart.
GR grace-period GR mode 180 planned and unplanned Area 0 database summary Type Brd Rtr Count AS Bdr Rtr Count LSA count Summary LSAs Rtr LSA Count Net LSA Count Inter Area Pfx LSA Count Inter Area Rtr LSA Count Group Mem LSA Count Count/Status 2 2 12010 1 4 3 12000 0 0 The following example shows the show ipv6 ospf database grace-lsa command.
AH and ESP may be used together. The difference between the two mechanisms is the extent of the coverage. ESP only protects IP header fields if they are encapsulated by ESP. You decide the set of IPsec protocols that are employed for authentication and encryption and the ways in which they are employed. When you correctly implement and deploy IPsec, it does not adversely affect users or hosts. AH and ESP are designed to be cryptographic algorithm-independent.
The SPI value must be unique to one IPsec security policy (authentication or encryption) on the router. Configure the same authentication policy (the same SPI and key) on each OSPFv3 interface in a link. • Enable IPsec authentication for OSPFv3 packets on an IPv6-based interface. INTERFACE mode ipv6 ospf authentication {null | ipsec spi number {MD5 | SHA1} [key-encryption-type] key} – null: causes an authentication policy configured for the area to not be inherited on the interface.
• • • • – key: specifies the text string used in authentication. All neighboring OSPFv3 routers must share key to exchange information. For MD5 authentication, the key must be 32 hex digits (non-encrypted) or 64 hex digits (encrypted). For SHA-1 authentication, the key must be 40 hex digits (non-encrypted) or 80 hex digits (encrypted). – key-authentication-type: (optional) specifies if the authentication key is encrypted. The valid values are 0 or 7. Remove an IPsec encryption policy from an interface.
If you have enabled IPsec authentication in an OSPFv3 area using the area authentication command, you cannot use the area encryption command in the area at the same time. The configuration of IPsec encryption on an interface-level takes precedence over an area-level configuration. If you remove an interface configuration, an area encryption policy that has been configured is applied to the interface. • Enable IPsec encryption for OSPFv3 packets in an area.
Examples of the show crypto ipsec Commands In the first example, the keys are not encrypted (shown in bold). In the second and third examples, the keys are encrypted (shown in bold). The following example shows the show crypto ipsec policy command.
outbound esp sas Interface: TenGigabitEthernet 1/2 Link Local address: fe80::201:e8ff:fe40:4d11 IPSecv6 policy name: OSPFv3-1-600 inbound ah sas outbound ah sas inbound esp sas spi : 600 (0x258) transform : esp-des esp-sha1-hmac in use settings : {Transport, } replay detection support : N STATUS : ACTIVE outbound esp sas spi : 600 (0x258) transform : esp-des esp-sha1-hmac in use settings : {Transport, } replay detection support : N STATUS : ACTIVE Troubleshooting OSPFv3 Use the information in this section
show ipv6 ospf [vrf vrf-name] neighbor • View debug messages for all OSPFv3 interfaces. EXEC Privilege mode debug ipv6 ospf [vrf vrf-name] [event | packet] {type slot/port} – For a 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword TenGigabitEthernet then the slot/port information. – For a 40-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword fortyGigE then the slot/port information. – For a port channel interface, enter the keywords port-channel then a number.
37 Policy-based Routing (PBR) Policy-based Routing (PBR) allows a switch to make routing decisions based on policies applied to an interface. Overview When a router receives a packet, the router normally decides where to forward the packet based on the destination address in the packet, which is used to look up an entry in a routing table. However, in some cases, there may be a need to forward the packet based on other criteria: size, source, protocol type, destination, and so forth.
• Destination port • TCP Flags After a redirect-list is applied to an interface, all traffic passing through it is subjected to the rules defined in the redirect-list. The traffic is forwarded based on the following: • Next-hop addresses are verified. If the specified next hop is reachable, the traffic is forwarded to the specified next-hop. • If the specified next-hops are not reachable, the normal routing table is used to forward the traffic.
• Create a Track-id list. For complete tracking information, refer to Object Tracking chapter. • Apply a Redirect-list to an Interface using a Redirect-group PBR Exceptions (Permit) To create an exception to a redirect list, use the permit command. Use exceptions when a forwarding decision is based on the routing table rather than a routing policy.
• ip-address is the Forwarding router’s address • tunnel is used to configure the tunnel settings • tunnel-id is used to redirect the traffic • track is used to track the object-id • track is to enable the tracking • FORMAT: A.B.C.D • FORMAT: slot/port • ip-protocol-number or protocol-type is the type of protocol to be redirected • FORMAT: 0-255 for IP protocol number, or enter protocol type • source ip-address or any or host ip-address is the Source’s IP address • FORMAT: A.B.
Example: Creating Multiple Rules for a Redirect-List Dell(conf)#ip redirect-list test Dell(conf-redirect-list)#seq 10 redirect Dell(conf-redirect-list)#seq 15 redirect Dell(conf-redirect-list)#seq 20 redirect Dell(conf-redirect-list)#show config ! ip redirect-list test seq 10 redirect 10.1.1.2 ip 20.1.1.0/24 seq 15 redirect 10.1.1.3 ip 20.1.1.0/25 seq 20 redirect 10.1.1.3 ip 20.1.1.0/24 Dell(conf-redirect-list)# 10.1.1.2 ip 20.1.1.0/24 any 10.1.1.3 ip 20.1.1.0/25 any 10.1.1.3 ip 20.1.1.
shutdown Dell(conf-if-te-1/2)# Dell(conf-if-gi-1/1)#ip redirect-group test Dell(conf-if-gi-1/1)#ip redirect-group xyz Dell(conf-if-gi-1/1)#show config ! interface GigabitEthernet 1/1 no ip address ip redirect-group test ip redirect-group xyz shutdown Dell(conf-if-te-1/2)# In addition to supporting multiple redirect-lists in a redirect-group, multiple redirect-groups are supported on a single interface. Dell Networking OS has the capability to support multiple groups on an interface for backup purposes.
Use the show ip redirect-list (without the list name) to display all the redirect-lists configured on the device. Dell#show ip redirect-list IP redirect-list rcl0: Defined as: seq 5 permit ip 200.200.200.200 200.200.200.200 199.199.199.199 199.199.199.199 seq 10 redirect 1.1.1.2 tcp 234.224.234.234 255.234.234.234 222.222.222.
Create the Redirect-List GOLD EDGE_ROUTER(conf-if-Te-2/23)#ip redirect-list GOLD EDGE_ROUTER(conf-redirect-list)#description Route GOLD traffic to ISP_GOLD. EDGE_ROUTER(conf-redirect-list)#direct 10.99.99.254 ip 192.168.1.0/24 any EDGE_ROUTER(conf-redirect-list)#redirect 10.99.99.254 ip 192.168.2.0/24 any EDGE_ROUTER(conf-redirect-list)# seq 15 permit ip any any EDGE_ROUTER(conf-redirect-list)#show config ! ip redirect-list GOLD description Route GOLD traffic to ISP_GOLD. seq 5 redirect 10.99.99.254 ip 192.
IP redirect-list GOLD: Defined as: seq 5 redirect 10.99.99.254 ip 192.168.1.0/24 any, Next-hop reachable (via Te 3/23) seq 10 redirect 10.99.99.254 ip 192.168.2.0/24 any, Next-hop reachable (via Te 3/23) seq 15 permit ip any any Applied interfaces: Te 2/11 EDGE_ROUTER# Configuration Tasks for Creating a PBR list using Explicit Track Objects for Redirect IP's Create Track Objects to track the Redirect IP's: Dell#configure terminal Dell(conf)#track 3 ip host 42.1.1.
Configuration Tasks for Creating a PBR list using Explicit Track Objects for Tunnel Interfaces Creating steps for Tunnel Interfaces: Dell#configure terminal Dell(conf)#interface tunnel 1 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel destination 40.1.1.2 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel source 40.1.1.1 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel mode ipip Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel keepalive 60.1.1.2 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#ip address 60.1.1.
IP redirect-list explicit_tunnel: Defined as: seq 5 redirect tunnel 1 track 1 tcp 155.55.2.0/24 222.22.2.0/24, Track 1 [up], Next-hop reachable (via Te 1/32) seq 10 redirect tunnel 1 track 1 tcp any any, Track 1 [up], Next-hop reachable (via Te 1/32) seq 15 redirect tunnel 1 track 1 udp 155.55.0.0/16 host 144.144.144.144, Track 1 [up], Next-hop reachable (via Te 1/32) seq 20 redirect tunnel 2 track 2 tcp 155.55.2.0/24 222.22.2.
38 PIM Sparse-Mode (PIM-SM) Protocol-independent multicast sparse-mode (PIM-SM) is supported on Dell Networking OS. PIM-SM is a multicast protocol that forwards multicast traffic to a subnet only after a request using a PIM Join message; this behavior is the opposite of PIM-Dense mode, which forwards multicast traffic to all subnets until a request to stop. Implementation Information The following information is necessary for implementing PIM-SM.
Refuse Multicast Traffic A host requesting to leave a multicast group sends an IGMP Leave message to the last-hop DR. If the host is the only remaining receiver for that group on the subnet, the last-hop DR is responsible for sending a PIM Prune message up the RPT to prune its branch to the RP. 1. After receiving an IGMP Leave message, the gateway removes the interface on which it is received from the outgoing interface list of the (*,G) entry.
ip multicast-routing Related Configuration Tasks The following are related PIM-SM configuration tasks. • • • • Configuring S,G Expiry Timers Configuring a Static Rendezvous Point Configuring a Designated Router Creating Multicast Boundaries and Domains Enable PIM-SM You must enable PIM-SM on each participating interface. 1. Enable multicast routing on the system. CONFIGURATION mode ip multicast-routing 2. Enable PIM-Sparse mode.
(10.87.31.5, 192.1.2.1), uptime 00:01:24, expires 00:02:26, flags: FT Incoming interface: TenGigabitEthernet 2/11, RPF neighbor 0.0.0.0 Outgoing interface list: TenGigabitEthernet 1/11 TenGigabitEthernet 1/12 TenGigabitEthernet 2/13 --More-- Configuring S,G Expiry Timers By default, S, G entries expire in 210 seconds. You can configure a global expiry time (for all [S,G] entries) or configure an expiry time for a particular entry.
Configuring a Static Rendezvous Point The rendezvous point (RP) is a PIM-enabled interface on a router that acts as the root a group-specific tree; every group must have an RP. • Identify an RP by the IP address of a PIM-enabled or Loopback interface. ip pim rp-address Example of Viewing an RP on a Loopback Interface Dell#sh run int loop0 ! interface Loopback 0 ip address 1.1.1.1/32 ip pim sparse-mode no shutdown Dell#sh run pim ! ip pim rp-address 1.1.1.1 group-address 224.0.0.
• Change the interval at which a router sends hello messages. INTERFACE mode ip pim query-interval seconds • Display the current value of these parameter. EXEC Privilege mode show ip pim interface Creating Multicast Boundaries and Domains A PIM domain is a contiguous set of routers that all implement PIM and are configured to operate within a common boundary defined by PIM multicast border routers (PMBRs). PMBRs connect each PIM domain to the rest of the Internet.
39 PIM Source-Specific Mode (PIM-SSM) PIM source-specific mode (PIM-SSM) is supported on Dell Networking OS. PIM-SSM is a multicast protocol that forwards multicast traffic from a single source to a subnet. In the other versions of protocol independent multicast (PIM), a receiver subscribes to a group only. The receiver receives traffic not just from the source in which it is interested but from all sources sending to that group.
Enabling PIM-SSM To enable PIM-SSM, follow these steps. 1. Create an ACL that uses permit rules to specify what range of addresses should use SSM. CONFIGURATION mode ip access-list standard name 2. Enter the ip pim ssm-range command and specify the ACL you created. CONFIGURATION mode ip pim ssm-range acl-name Enabling PIM-SSM To display address ranges in the PIM-SSM range, use the show ip pim ssm-range command from EXEC Privilege mode. R1(conf)#do show run pim ! ip pim rp-address 10.11.12.
ip pim rp-address 10.11.12.2 group-address 224.0.0.0/4 ip pim ssm-range ssm R1(conf)#do show run acl ! ip access-list standard map seq 5 permit host 239.0.0.2 ! ip access-list standard ssm seq 5 permit host 239.0.0.2 R1(conf)#ip igmp ssm-map map 10.11.5.2 R1(conf)#do show ip igmp groups Total Number of Groups: 2 IGMP Connected Group Membership Group Address Interface Mode Uptime Expires 239.0.0.2 Vlan 300 IGMPv2-Compat 00:00:07 Never Member Ports: Te 1/1 239.0.0.1 Vlan 400 INCLUDE 00:00:10 Never 10.11.4.
Member Ports: Te 1/1/1 R1(conf)#do show ip igmp ssm-map 239.0.0.2 SSM Map Information Group : 239.0.0.2 Source(s) : 10.11.5.2 R1(conf)#do show ip igmp groups detail Interface Group Uptime Expires Router mode Last reporter Last reporter mode Last report Group source Source address 10.11.5.2 00:00:01 Vlan 300 239.0.0.2 00:00:01 Never IGMPv2-Compat 10.11.3.2 IGMPv2 received Join list Uptime Expires Never Interface Vlan 400 Group 239.0.0.1 Uptime 00:00:05 Expires Never Router mode INCLUDE Last reporter 10.11.
40 Port Monitoring Port monitoring is supported on Dell Networking OS. Mirroring is used for monitoring Ingress or Egress or both Ingress and Egress traffic on a specific port(s). This mirrored traffic can be sent to a port where a network sniffer can connect and monitor the traffic.
point to another new destination (for example, 1/4). If you attempt to configure another destination (to create 5 MG port), this message displays: % Error will be thrown in case of RPM and ERPM features.
Figure 100. Port Monitoring Configurations on the S-Series Dell Networking OS Behavior: All monitored frames are tagged if the configured monitoring direction is egress (TX), regardless of whether the monitored port (MD) is a Layer 2 or Layer 3 port. If the MD port is a Layer 2 port, the frames are tagged with the VLAN ID of the VLAN to which the MD belongs. If the MD port is a Layer 3 port, the frames are tagged with VLAN ID 4095.
0 Te 1/1 Te 1/2 rx Port N/A N/A Dell(conf)#monitor session 0 Dell(conf-mon-sess-0)#source po 10 dest ten 1/2 dir rx Dell(conf-mon-sess-0)#do show monitor session SessID Source Destination Dir Mode Source IP ------ ------------------ ---- --------0 Te 1/1 Te 1/2 rx Port N/A 0 Po 10 Te 1/2 rx Port N/A Dest IP -------N/A N/A Dell(conf)#monitor session 1 Dell(conf-mon-sess-1)#source vl 40 dest ten 1/3 dir rx Dell(conf-mon-sess-1)#flow-based enable Dell(conf-mon-sess-1)#exit Dell(conf)#do show monitor s
Enabling Flow-Based Monitoring Flow-based monitoring is supported only on the S-Series platform. Flow-based monitoring conserves bandwidth by monitoring only specified traffic instead of all traffic on the interface. This feature is particularly useful when looking for malicious traffic. It is available for Layer 2 and Layer 3 ingress and egress traffic. You can specify traffic using standard or extended access-lists. 1. Enable flow-based monitoring for a monitoring session.
Remote Port Mirroring While local port monitoring allows you to monitor traffic from one or more source ports by directing it to a destination port on the same switch/router, remote port mirroring allows you to monitor Layer 2 and Layer 3 ingress and/or egress traffic on multiple source ports on different switches and forward the mirrored traffic to multiple destination ports on different switches.
Configuring Remote Port Mirroring Remote port mirroring requires a source session (monitored ports on different source switches), a reserved tagged VLAN for transporting mirrored traffic (configured on source, intermediate, and destination switches), and a destination session (destination ports connected to analyzers on destination switches).
• You can configure additional destination ports in an active session. • You can tunnel the mirrored traffic from multiple remote-port source sessions to the same destination port. • By default, destination port sends the mirror traffic to the probe port by stripping off the rpm header. We can also configure the destination port to send the mirror traffic with the rpm header intact in the original mirror traffic.. • By default, ingress traffic on a destination port is dropped.
Configuring the Sample Remote Port Mirroring Remote port mirroring requires a source session (monitored ports on different source switches), a reserved tagged VLAN for transporting mirrored traffic (configured on source, intermediate, and destination switches), and a destination session (destination ports connected to analyzers on destination switches). Configuration Steps for RPM Step Command Purpose 1 configure terminal Enter global configuration mode.
Dell(conf-if-te-1/30)#exit Dell(conf)#interface vlan 30 Dell(conf-if-vl-30)#mode remote-port-mirroring Dell(conf-if-vl-30)#tagged te 1/30 Dell(conf-if-vl-30)#exit Dell(conf)#interface port-channel 10 Dell(conf-if-po-10)#channel-member te 1/28-29 Dell(conf-if-po-10)#no shutdown Dell(conf-if-po-10)#exit Dell(conf)#monitor session 3 type rpm Dell(conf-mon-sess-3)#source port-channel 10 dest remote-vlan 30 dir both Dell(conf-mon-sess-3)#no disable Dell(conf-mon-sess-3)# Dell(conf-mon-sess-3)#exit Dell(conf)#end
Dell(conf)#monitor session 3 type rpm Dell(conf-mon-sess-3)#source remote-vlan 30 destination te 1/6 Dell(conf-mon-sess-3)#tagged destination te 1/6 Dell(conf-mon-sess-3)#end Dell# Dell#show monitor session SessID Source Destination Dir Mode Source IP ------ ------------------ ---- --------1 remote-vlan 10 Te 1/4 N/A N/A N/A 2 remote-vlan 20 Te 1/5 N/A N/A N/A 3 remote-vlan 30 Te 1/6 N/A N/A N/A Dell# Dest IP -------N/A N/A N/A Configuring RSPAN Source Sessions to Avoid BPD Issues When ever you configure
Configuring the Encapsulated Remote Port Mirroring The ERPM session copies traffic from the source ports/lags or source VLANs and forwards the traffic using routable GREencapsulated packets to the destination ip address specified in the session. Important: The steps to be followed for the ERPM Encapsulation : • Dell Networking OS supports ERPM Source session only. The Encapsulated packets terminate at the destination ip or at the analyzer.
7 no disable No disable command is mandatory in order for a erpm session to be active. The following example shows a sample configuration . Dell(conf)#monitor session 0 type erpm Dell(conf-mon-sess-0)#source tengigabitethernet 1/9 direction rx Dell(conf-mon-sess-0)#source port-channel 1 direction tx Dell(conf-mon-sess-0)#erpm source-ip 1.1.1.1 dest-ip 7.1.1.
ERPM Behavior on a typical Dell Networking OS The Dell Networking OS is designed to support only the Encapsulation of the data received / transmitted at the specified source port (Port A). An ERPM destination session / decapsulation of the ERPM packets at the destination Switch are not supported. As seen in the above figure, the packets received/transmitted on Port A will be encapsulated with an IP/GRE header plus a new L2 header and sent to the destination ip address (Port D’s ip address) on the sniffer.
b. Using Python script – Either have a Linux server's ethernet port ip as the ERPM destination ip or connect the ingress interface of the server to the ERPM MirrorToPort. The analyzer should listen in the forward/egress interface. If there is only one interface, one can choose the ingress and forward interface to be same and listen in the tx direction of the interface. – Download/ Write a small script (for example: erpm.
41 Private VLANs (PVLAN) The private VLAN (PVLAN) feature is supported on Dell Networking OS. For syntax details about the commands described in this chapter, refer to the Private VLANs commands chapter in the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide. Private VLANs extend the Dell Networking OS security suite by providing Layer 2 isolation between ports within the same virtual local area network (VLAN).
– There are two types of secondary VLAN — community VLAN and isolated VLAN. PVLAN port types include: • Community port — a port that belongs to a community VLAN and is allowed to communicate with other ports in the same community VLAN and with promiscuous ports. • Host port — in the context of a private VLAN, is a port in a secondary VLAN: – The port must first be assigned that role in INTERFACE mode. – A port assigned the host role cannot be added to a regular VLAN.
• Display primary-secondary VLAN mapping. EXEC mode or EXEC Privilege mode • show vlan private-vlan mapping Set the PVLAN mode of the selected port. INTERFACE switchport mode private-vlan {host | promiscuous | trunk} NOTE: Secondary VLANs are Layer 2 VLANs, so even if they are operationally down while primary VLANs are operationally up, Layer 3 traffic is still transmitted across secondary VLANs. NOTE: The outputs of the show arp and show vlan commands provide PVLAN data.
Dell#conf Dell(conf)#interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/1 Dell(conf-if-te-2/1)#switchport mode private-vlan promiscuous Dell(conf)#interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/2 Dell(conf-if-te-2/2)#switchport mode private-vlan host Dell(conf)#interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/3 Dell(conf-if-te-2/3)#switchport mode private-vlan trunk Dell(conf)#interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/2 Dell(conf-if-te-2/2)#switchport mode private-vlan host Dell(conf)#interface port-channel 10 Dell(conf-if-po-10)#switchport mode private-vlan promiscuous
7. (OPTIONAL) Enable/disable Layer 3 communication between secondary VLANs. INTERFACE VLAN mode ip local-proxy-arp NOTE: If a promiscuous or host port is untagged in a VLAN and it receives a tagged packet in the same VLAN, the packet is NOT dropped. Creating a Community VLAN A community VLAN is a secondary VLAN of the primary VLAN in a private VLAN. The ports in a community VLAN can talk to each other and with the promiscuous ports in the primary VLAN. 1.
tagged interface or untagged interface You can enter the interfaces singly or in range format, either comma-delimited (slot/port,port,port) or hyphenated (slot/ port-port). You can only add ports defined as host to the VLAN. Example of Configuring Private VLAN Members The following example shows the use of the PVLAN commands that are used in VLAN INTERFACE mode to configure the PVLAN member VLANs (primary, community, and isolated VLANs).
The following configuration is based on the example diagram for the Z9500: • Te 1/1 and Te 1/23 are configured as promiscuous ports, assigned to the primary VLAN, VLAN 4000. • Te 1/25 is configured as a PVLAN trunk port, also assigned to the primary VLAN 4000. • Te 1/24 and Te 1/47 are configured as host ports and assigned to the isolated VLAN, VLAN 4003. • Te 4/1 and Te 23 are configured as host ports and assigned to the community VLAN, VLAN 4001.
This command is specific to the PVLAN feature. • The following examples show the results of using this command without the command options on the C300 and S50V switches in the topology diagram previously shown. Display the primary-secondary VLAN mapping. The following example shows the output from the S50V. show vlan private-vlan mapping This command is specific to the PVLAN feature.
! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/6 no ip address switchport switchport mode private-vlan host no shutdown ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/25 no ip address switchport switchport mode private-vlan trunk no shutdown ! interface Vlan 4000 private-vlan mode primary private-vlan mapping secondary-vlan 4001-4003 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 1/3,25 no shutdown ! interface Vlan 4001 private-vlan mode community 658 Private VLANs (PVLAN)
42 Per-VLAN Spanning Tree Plus (PVST+) Per-VLAN spanning tree plus (PVST+) is supported on Dell Networking OS. Protocol Overview PVST+ is a variation of spanning tree — developed by a third party — that allows you to configure a separate spanning tree instance for each virtual local area network (VLAN). For more information about spanning tree, refer to the Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) chapter. Figure 103.
Dell Networking Term IEEE Specification Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (MSTP) 802 .1s Per-VLAN Spanning Tree Plus (PVST+) Third Party Implementation Information • The Dell Networking OS implementation of PVST+ is based on IEEE Standard 802.1w. • The Dell Networking OS implementation of PVST+ uses IEEE 802.1s costs as the default costs (as shown in the following table). Other implementations use IEEE 802.1w costs as the default costs.
• Disable PVST+ globally. PROTOCOL PVST mode disable • Disable PVST+ on an interface, or remove a PVST+ parameter configuration. INTERFACE mode no spanning-tree pvst Example of Viewing PVST+ Configuration To display your PVST+ configuration, use the show config command from PROTOCOL PVST mode.
The bridge with the bridge value for bridge priority is elected root. Because all bridges use the default priority (until configured otherwise), the lowest MAC address is used as a tie-breaker. To increase the likelihood that a bridge is selected as the STP root, assign bridges a low non-default value for bridge priority. To assign a bridge priority, use the following command. • Assign a bridge priority. PROTOCOL PVST mode vlan bridge-priority The range is from 0 to 61440. The default is 32768.
• The default is 15 seconds. Change the hello-time parameter. PROTOCOL PVST mode vlan hello-time NOTE: With large configurations (especially those configurations with more ports), Dell Networking recommends increasing the hello-time. The range is from 1 to 10. • The default is 2 seconds. Change the max-age parameter. PROTOCOL PVST mode vlan max-age The range is from 6 to 40. The default is 20 seconds. The values for global PVST+ parameters are given in the output of the show spanning-tree pvst command.
• Refer to the table for the default values. Change the port priority of an interface. INTERFACE mode spanning-tree pvst vlan priority. The range is from 0 to 240, in increments of 16. The default is 128. The values for interface PVST+ parameters are given in the output of the show spanning-tree pvst command, as previously shown. Configuring an EdgePort The EdgePort feature enables interfaces to begin forwarding traffic approximately 30 seconds sooner.
Networking OS from executing this action, use the no spanning-tree pvst err-disable cause invalid-pvstbpdu command. After you configure this command, if the port receives a PVST+ BPDU, the BPDU is dropped and the port remains operational. Enabling PVST+ Extend System ID In the following example, ports P1 and P2 are untagged members of different VLANs. These ports are untagged because the hub is VLAN unaware.
switchport no shutdown ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/32 no ip address switchport no shutdown ! protocol spanning-tree pvst no disable vlan 100 bridge-priority 4096 interface Vlan 100 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 1/22,32 no shutdown ! interface Vlan 200 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 1/22,32 no shutdown ! interface Vlan 300 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 1/22,32 no shutdown ! protocol spanning-tree pvst no disable vlan 100 bridge-priority 4096 Example of PVST+ Configuration (
no shutdown ! interface Vlan 100 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/12,22 no shutdown ! interface Vlan 200 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/12,22 no shutdown ! interface Vlan 300 no ip address tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/12,22 no shutdown ! protocol spanning-tree pvst no disable vlan 300 bridge-priority 4096 Per-VLAN Spanning Tree Plus (PVST+) 667
43 Quality of Service (QoS) Quality of service (QoS) is supported on Dell Networking OS. Differentiated service is accomplished by classifying and queuing traffic, and assigning priorities to those queues. Table 57.
Feature Direction Create Input Policy Maps Ingress Honor DSCP Values on Ingress Packets Ingress Honoring dot1p Values on Ingress Packets Ingress Create Output Policy Maps Egress Specify an Aggregate QoS Policy Egress Create Output Policy Maps Egress Enabling QoS Rate Adjustment Enabling Strict-Priority Queueing Egress Weighted Random Early Detection Create WRED Profiles Egress Figure 106.
• • • • RFC 2474, Definition of the Differentiated Services Field (DS Field) in the IPv4 Headers RFC 2475, An Architecture for Differentiated Services RFC 2597, Assured Forwarding PHB Group RFC 2598, An Expedited Forwarding PHB You cannot configure port-based and policy-based QoS on the same interface. Port-Based QoS Configurations You can configure the following QoS features on an interface.
NOTE: You cannot configure service-policy input and service-class dynamic dot1p on the same interface. • Honor dot1p priorities on ingress traffic. INTERFACE mode service-class dynamic dot1p Example of Configuring an Interface to Honor dot1p Priorities on Ingress Traffic Dell#configure terminal Dell(conf)#interface tengigabitethernet 1/1 Dell(conf-if-te-1/1)#service-class dynamic dot1p Dell(conf-if-te-1/1)#end Priority-Tagged Frames on the Default VLAN Priority-tagged frames are 802.
Example of rate shape Command Dell#configure terminal Dell(conf)#interface tengigabitethernet 1/1 Dell(conf-if-te-1/1)#rate shape 500 50 Dell(conf-if-te-1/1)#end Policy-Based QoS Configurations Policy-based QoS configurations consist of the components shown in the following example. Figure 107. Constructing Policy-Based QoS Configurations Classify Traffic Class maps differentiate traffic so that you can apply separate quality of service policies to different types of traffic.
NOTE: IPv6 and IP-any class maps cannot match on ACLs or VLANs. Use step 1 or step 2 to start creating a Layer 3 class map. 1. Create a match-any class map. CONFIGURATION mode class-map match-any 2. Create a match-all class map. CONFIGURATION mode class-map match-all 3. Specify your match criteria. CLASS MAP mode match {ip | ipv6 | ip-any} After you create a class-map, Dell Networking OS places you in CLASS MAP mode. Match-any class maps allow up to five ACLs. Match-all class-maps allow only one ACL.
Creating a Layer 2 Class Map All class maps are Layer 3 by default; however, you can create a Layer 2 class map by specifying the layer2 option with the class-map command. A Layer 2 class map differentiates traffic according to 802.1p value and/or VLAN and/or characteristics defined in a MAC ACL.. Use Step 1 or Step 2 to start creating a Layer 2 class map. 1. Create a match-any class map. CONFIGURATION mode class-map match-any 2. Create a match-all class map. CONFIGURATION mode class-map match-all 3.
EXEC Privilege mode show qos class-map Examples of Traffic Classifications The following example shows incorrect traffic classifications.
Create a QoS Policy There are two types of QoS policies — input and output. Input QoS policies regulate Layer 3 and Layer 2 ingress traffic. The regulation mechanisms for input QoS policies are rate policing and setting priority values. • Layer 3 — QoS input policies allow you to rate police and set a DSCP or dot1p value. In addition, you can configure a drop precedence for incoming packets based on their DSCP value by using a DSCP color map. For more information, see DSCP Color Maps.
CONFIGURATION mode qos-policy-output 2. After you configure an output QoS policy, do one or more of the following: Scheduler Strict — Policy-based Strict-priority Queueing configuration is done through scheduler strict. It is applied to Qospolicy-output. When scheduler strict is applied to multiple Queues, high queue number takes precedence. Allocating Bandwidth to Queue Specifying WRED Drop Precedence Configuring Policy-Based Rate Shaping To configure policy-based rate shaping, use the following command.
Create a Layer 2 input policy map by specifying the keyword layer2 with the policy-map-input command. 2. After you create an input policy map, do one or more of the following: Applying a Class-Map or Input QoS Policy to a Queue Applying an Input QoS Policy to an Input Policy Map Honoring DSCP Values on Ingress Packets Honoring dot1p Values on Ingress Packets 3. Apply the input policy map to an interface.
Honoring dot1p Values on Ingress Packets Dell Networking OS honors dot1p values on ingress packets with the Trust dot1p feature. The following table specifies the queue to which the classified traffic is sent based on the dot1p value. Table 61. Default dot1p to Queue Mapping dot1p Queue ID 0 2 1 0 2 1 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7 7 Table 62. Default dot1p to Queue Mapping dot1p Queue ID 0 0 1 0 2 0 3 1 4 2 5 3 6 3 7 3 The dot1p value is also honored for frames on the default VLAN.
Guaranteeing Bandwidth to dot1p-Based Service Queues To guarantee bandwidth to dot1p-based service queues, use the following command. Apply this command in the same way as the bandwidth-percentage command in an output QoS policy (refer to Allocating Bandwidth to Queue). The bandwidth-percentage command in QOS-POLICY-OUT mode supersedes the service-class bandwidth-percentage command. • Guarantee a minimum bandwidth to queues globally.
Applying an Output Policy Map to an Interface To apply an output policy map to an interface, use the following command. • Apply an input policy map to an interface. INTERFACE mode service-policy output You can apply the same policy map to multiple interfaces, and you can modify a policy map after you apply it. DSCP Color Maps This section describes how to configure color maps and how to display the color map and color map configuration.
qos dscp-color-policy color-map-name Example: Create a DSCP Color Map The following example creates a DSCP color map profile, color-awareness policy, and applies it to interface te 1/11. Create the DSCP color map profile, bat-enclave-map, with a yellow drop precedence , and set the DSCP values to 9,10,11,13,15,16 Dell(conf)# qos dscp-color-map bat-enclave-map Dell(conf-dscp-color-map)# dscp yellow 9,10,11,13,15,16 Dell (conf-dscp-color-map)# exit Assign the color map, bat-enclave-map to interface te 1/11 .
Display detailed information about a color policy for a specific interface Dell# show qos dscp-color-policy detail tengigabitethernet 1/10 Interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/10 Dscp-color-map mapONE yellow 4,7 red 20,30 Enabling QoS Rate Adjustment By default while rate limiting, policing, and shaping, Dell Networking OS does not include the Preamble, SFD, or the IFG fields.
Traffic is a mixture of various kinds of packets. The rate at which some types of packets arrive might be greater than others. In this case, the space on the buffer and traffic manager (BTM) (ingress or egress) can be consumed by only one or a few types of traffic, leaving no space for other types. You can apply a WRED profile to a policy-map so that specified traffic can be prevented from consuming too much of the BTM resources. WRED uses a profile to specify minimum and maximum threshold values.
threshold Applying a WRED Profile to Traffic After you create a WRED profile, you must specify to which traffic Dell Networking OS should apply the profile. Dell Networking OS assigns a color (also called drop precedence) — red, yellow, or green — to each packet based on it DSCP value before queuing it. DSCP is a 6–bit field. Dell Networking uses the first three bits (LSB) of this field (DP) to determine the drop precedence. • DP values of 110 and 100, 101 map to yellow; all other values map to green.
Displaying egress-queue Statistics To display egress-queue statistics of both transmitted and dropped packets and bytes, use the following command. • Display the number of packets and number of bytes on the egress-queue profile.
• The number of interfaces in a port-pipe to which the policy-map can be applied. Specifically: • • • Available CAM — the available number of CAM entries in the specified CAM partition for the specified line card or stack-unit port-pipe. Estimated CAM — the estimated number of CAM entries that the policy will consume when it is applied to an interface. Status — indicates whether the specified policy-map can be completely applied to an interface in the port-pipe.
weight to enable a smooth, seamless averaging of packets to handle the sudden overload of packets based on the previous time sampling performed. You can specify the weight parameter for front-end and backplane ports separately in the range of 0 through 15. You can enable WRED and ECN capabilities per queue for granularity. You can disable these functionality per queue, and you can also specify the minimum and maximum buffer thresholds for each color-coding of the packets.
Queue Configuration Service-Pool Configuration WRED Threshold Relationship Q threshold = Q-T, Service pool threshold = SP-T Expected Functionality 1 0 X X Queue-based ECN marking above queue threshold. 1 X Q-T < SP-T ECN marking to shared buffer limits of the service-pool and then packets are tail dropped. SP-T < Q-T Same as above but ECN marking starts above SP-T.
Guidelines for Configuring ECN for Classifying and Color-Marking Packets Keep the following points in mind while configuring the marking and mapping of incoming packets using ECN fields in IPv4 headers: • Currently Dell Networking OS supports matching only the following TCP flags: – ACK – FIN – SYN – PSH – RST – URG In the existing software, ECE/CWR TCP flag qualifiers are not supported.
CE for end host to take appropriate action. During congestion, ECN enabled packets are not subject to any kind of drops like WRED except tail drops. Though ECN & WRED are independent technologies, BRCM has made WRED a mandatory for ECN to work. On ECN deployment, the non-ECN packets that are transmitted on the ECN-WRED enabled interface will be considered as Green packets and will be subject to the early WRED drops.
• URG You can now use the ‘ecn’ match qualifier along with the above TCP flag for classification.
match ip access-group dscp_40_non_ecn set-color yellow match ip access-group dscp_40 ! class-map match-any class_dscp_50 match ip access-group dscp_50_non_ecn set-color yellow match ip access-group dscp_50 ! policy-map-input pmap_dscp_40_50 service-queue 2 class-map class_dscp_40 service-queue 3 class-map class_dscp_50 Approach with explicit ECN match qualifiers for ECN packets: ! ip access-list standard dscp_50_ecn seq 5 permit any dscp 50 ecn 1 seq 10 permit any dscp 50 ecn 2 seq 15 permit any dscp 50 ec
CONFIGURATION mode Dell(conf)# policy-map-input l2p layer2 3. Apply the Layer 2 policy on a Layer 3 interface. INTERFACE mode Dell(conf-if-fo-1/4)# service-policy input l2p layer2 Applying DSCP and VLAN Match Criteria on a Service Queue You can configure Layer 3 class maps which contain both a Layer 3 Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) and IP VLAN IDs as match criteria to filter incoming packets on a service queue on the switch.
Classifying Incoming Packets Using ECN and Color-Marking Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) is a capability that enhances WRED by marking the packets instead of causing WRED to drop them when the threshold value is exceeded. If you configure ECN for WRED, devices employ this functionality of ECN to mark the packets and reduce the rate of sending packets in a congested, heavily-loaded network.
• ACK • FIN • SYN • PSH • RST • URG You can now use the ‘ecn’ match qualifier along with the above TCP flag for classification.
– URG In the existing software, ECE/CWR TCP flag qualifiers are not supported. • Because this functionality forcibly marks all the packets matching the specific match criteria as ‘yellow’, Dell Networking OS does not support Policer based coloring and this feature concurrently.
seq 5 permit any dscp 40 ecn 0 ! class-map match-any class_dscp_40 match ip access-group dscp_40_non_ecn set-color yellow match ip access-group dscp_40 ! class-map match-any class_dscp_50 match ip access-group dscp_50_non_ecn set-color yellow match ip access-group dscp_50 ! policy-map-input pmap_dscp_40_50 service-queue 2 class-map class_dscp_40 service-queue 3 class-map class_dscp_50 Approach with explicit ECN match qualifiers for ECN packets: ! ip access-list standard dscp_50_ecn seq 5 permit any dscp 50
Enable this utility to be able to configure the parameters for buffer statistics tracking. By default, buffer statistics tracking is disabled. 2. Enable the buffer statistics tracking utility and enter the Buffer Statistics Snapshot configuration mode. CONFIGURATION mode Dell(conf)#buffer-stats-snapshot Dell(conf)#no disable Enable this utility to be able to configure the parameters for buffer statistics tracking. By default, buffer statistics tracking is disabled. 3.
MCAST 3 0 Unit 1 unit: 3 port: 33 (interface Fo 1/176) --------------------------------------Q# TYPE Q# TOTAL BUFFERED CELLS --------------------------------------MCAST 3 0 Unit 1 unit: 3 port: 37 (interface Fo 1/180) --------------------------------------Q# TYPE Q# TOTAL BUFFERED CELLS --------------------------------------4.
44 Routing Information Protocol (RIP) Routing information protocol (RIP) is supported on Dell Networking OS. RIP is based on a distance-vector algorithm; it tracks distances or hop counts to nearby routers when establishing network connections. RIP protocol standards are listed in the Standards Compliance chapter. Protocol Overview RIP is the oldest interior gateway protocol. There are two versions of RIP: RIP version 1 (RIPv1) and RIP version 2 (RIPv2). These versions are documented in RFCs 1058 and 2453.
Table 65. RIP Defaults Feature Default Interfaces running RIP • • Listen to RIPv1 and RIPv2 Transmit RIPv1 RIP timers • • • • update timer = 30 seconds invalid timer = 180 seconds holddown timer = 180 seconds flush timer = 240 seconds Auto summarization Enabled ECMP paths supported 16 Configuration Information By default, RIP is disabled in Dell Networking OS. To configure RIP, you must use commands in two modes: ROUTER RIP and INTERFACE.
Examples of Verifying RIP is Enabled and Viewing RIP Routes After designating networks with which the system is to exchange RIP information, ensure that all devices on that network are configured to exchange RIP information. The Dell Networking OS default is to send RIPv1 and to receive RIPv1 and RIPv2. To change the RIP version globally, use the version command in ROUTER RIP mode.
8.0.0.0/8 auto-summary 12.0.0.0/8 [120/1] via 29.10.10.12, 00:00:26, Fa 12.0.0.0/8 auto-summary 20.0.0.0/8 [120/1] via 29.10.10.12, 00:00:26, Fa 20.0.0.0/8 auto-summary 29.10.10.0/24 directly connected,Fa 1/49 29.0.0.0/8 auto-summary 31.0.0.0/8 [120/1] via 29.10.10.12, 00:00:26, Fa 31.0.0.0/8 auto-summary 192.162.2.0/24 [120/1] via 29.10.10.12, 00:01:21, Fa 192.162.2.0/24 auto-summary 192.161.1.0/24 [120/1] via 29.10.10.12, 00:00:27, Fa 192.161.1.0/24 auto-summary 192.162.3.0/24 [120/1] via 29.10.10.
ROUTER RIP mode distribute-list prefix-list-name in • Assign a configured prefix list to all outgoing RIP routes. ROUTER RIP mode distribute-list prefix-list-name out To view the current RIP configuration, use the show running-config command in EXEC mode or the show config command in ROUTER RIP mode. Adding RIP Routes from Other Instances In addition to filtering routes, you can add routes from other routing instances or protocols to the RIP process.
• version {1 | 2} Set the RIP versions received on that interface. INTERFACE mode • ip rip receive version [1] [2] Set the RIP versions sent out on that interface. INTERFACE mode ip rip send version [1] [2] Examples of the RIP Process To see whether the version command is configured, use the show config command in ROUTER RIP mode. The following example shows the RIP configuration after the ROUTER RIP mode version command is set to RIPv2.
10.0.0.0 Routing Information Sources: Gateway Distance Last Update Distance: (default is 120) Dell# Generating a Default Route Traffic is forwarded to the default route when the traffic’s network is not explicitly listed in the routing table. Default routes are not enabled in RIP unless specified. Use the default-information originate command in ROUTER RIP mode to generate a default route into RIP.
Configure the following parameters: – weight: the range is from 1 to 255. The default is 120. – ip-address mask: the IP address in dotted decimal format (A.B.C.D), and the mask in slash format (/x). • – access-list-name: the name of a configured IP ACL. Apply an additional number to the incoming or outgoing route metrics.
Figure 109. RIP Topology Example RIP Configuration on Core2 The following example shows how to configure RIPv2 on a host named Core2. Example of Configuring RIPv2 on Core 2 Core2(conf-if-te-2/3)# Core2(conf-if-te-2/3)#router rip Core2(conf-router_rip)#ver 2 Core2(conf-router_rip)#network 10.200.10.0 Core2(conf-router_rip)#network 10.300.10.0 Core2(conf-router_rip)#network 10.11.10.0 Core2(conf-router_rip)#network 10.11.20.0 Core2(conf-router_rip)#show config ! router rip network 10.0.0.
Codes: C - connected, S - static, R - RIP, B - BGP, IN - internal BGP, EX - external BGP,LO - Locally Originated, O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1, E2 - OSPF external type 2, i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2, IA - IS-IS inter area, * - candidate default, > - non-active route, + - summary route Gateway of last resort is not set Destination Gateway Dist/Metric Last Change ----------- ------- ----------- -
network 10.0.0.0 network 192.168.1.0 network 192.168.2.0 version 2 Core3(conf-router_rip)# Core 3 RIP Output The examples in this section show the core 2 RIP output. • • • To display Core 3 RIP database, use the show ip rip database command. To display Core 3 RIP setup, use the show ip route command. To display Core 3 RIP activity, use the show ip protocols command.
Incoming filter for all interfaces is Default redistribution metric is 1 Default version control: receive version 2, send version 2 Interface Recv Send TenGigabitEthernet 3/21 2 2 TenGigabitEthernet 3/11 2 2 TenGigabitEthernet 3/24 2 2 TenGigabitEthernet 3/23 2 2 Routing for Networks: 10.11.20.0 10.11.30.0 192.168.2.0 192.168.1.0 Routing Information Sources: Gateway Distance Last Update 10.11.20.
ip address 192.168.2.1/24 no shutdown ! router rip version 2 network 10.11.20.0 network 10.11.30.0 network 192.168.1.0 network 192.168.2.
45 Remote Monitoring (RMON) Remote monitoring (RMON) is supported on Dell Networking OS. RMON is an industry-standard implementation that monitors network traffic by sharing network monitoring information. RMON provides both 32-bit and 64-bit monitoring facility and long-term statistics collection on Dell Networking Ethernet interfaces. RMON operates with the simple network management protocol (SNMP) and monitors all nodes on a local area network (LAN) segment.
Setting the rmon Alarm To set an alarm on any MIB object, use the rmon alarm or rmon hc-alarm command in GLOBAL CONFIGURATION mode. • Set an alarm on any MIB object.
– number: assign an event number in integer format from 1 to 65535. The number value must be unique in the RMON event table. – log: (Optional) enter the keyword log to generate an RMON event log, it sets the eventType to either log or log-andsnmptrap in the RMON event table. The default is None. – trap community: (Optional) enter the keyword trap and SNMP community string to generate SNMP traps for an RMON event entry, it sets the eventType to either snmptrap or log-and-snmptrap in the RMON event table.
– integer: a value from 1 to 65,535 that identifies the RMON group of statistics. The value must be a unique index in the RMON History Table. – owner: (Optional) specifies the name of the owner of the RMON group of statistics. The default is a null-terminated string. – ownername: (Optional) records the name of the owner of the RMON group of statistics. – buckets: (Optional) specifies the maximum number of buckets desired for the RMON collection history group of statistics.
46 Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP) Rapid spanning tree protocol (RSTP) is supported on Dell Networking OS. Protocol Overview RSTP is a Layer 2 protocol — specified by IEEE 802.1w — that is essentially the same as spanning-tree protocol (STP) but provides faster convergence and interoperability with switches configured with STP and multiple spanning tree protocol (MSTP). The Dell Networking OS supports three other variations of spanning tree, as shown in the following table. Table 66.
• Adding a group of ports to a range of VLANs sends multiple messages to the rapid spanning tree protocol (RSTP) task, avoid using the range command. When using the range command, Dell Networking recommends limiting the range to five ports and 40 VLANs. RSTP and VLT Virtual link trunking (VLT) provides loop-free redundant topologies and does not require RSTP. RSTP can cause temporary port state blocking and may cause topology changes after link or node failures.
• Bridges block a redundant path by disabling one of the link ports. To enable RSTP globally for all Layer 2 interfaces, use the following commands. 1. Enter PROTOCOL SPANNING TREE RSTP mode. CONFIGURATION mode protocol spanning-tree rstp 2. Enable RSTP. PROTOCOL SPANNING TREE RSTP mode no disable Examples of the RSTP show Commands To disable RSTP globally for all Layer 2 interfaces, enter the disable command from PROTOCOL SPANNING TREE RSTP mode.
Configured hello time 2, max age 20, forward delay 15, max hops 0 We are the root Current root has priority 32768, Address 0001.e801.cbb4 Number of topology changes 4, last change occurred 00:02:17 ago on Te 1/26 Port 377 (TenGigabitEthernet 2/1) is designated Forwarding Port path cost 20000, Port priority 128, Port Identifier 128.377 Designated root has priority 32768, address 0001.e801.cbb4 Designated bridge has priority 32768, address 0001.e801.cbb4 Designated port id is 128.
Adding and Removing Interfaces To add and remove interfaces, use the following commands. To add an interface to the Rapid Spanning Tree topology, configure it for Layer 2 and it is automatically added. If you previously disabled RSTP on the interface using the command no spanning-tree 0 command, re-enable it using the spanning-tree 0 command. • Remove an interface from the Rapid Spanning Tree topology. no spanning-tree 0 Modifying Global Parameters You can modify RSTP parameters.
PROTOCOL SPANNING TREE RSTP mode hello-time seconds NOTE: With large configurations (especially those configurations with more ports) Dell Networking recommends increasing the hello-time. The range is from 1 to 10. • The default is 2 seconds. Change the max-age parameter. PROTOCOL SPANNING TREE RSTP mode max-age seconds The range is from 6 to 40. The default is 20 seconds. To view the current values for global parameters, use the show spanning-tree rstp command from EXEC privilege mode.
Enabling SNMP Traps for Root Elections and Topology Changes To enable SNMP traps collectively, use this command. Enable SNMP traps for RSTP, MSTP, and PVST+ collectively. snmp-server enable traps xstp Influencing RSTP Root Selection RSTP determines the root bridge, but you can assign one bridge a lower priority to increase the likelihood that it is selected as the root bridge. To change the bridge priority, use the following command.
– Disable the shutdown-on-violation command on the interface (the no spanning-tree stp-id portfast [bpduguard | [shutdown-on-violation]] command). – Disable spanning tree on the interface (the no spanning-tree command in INTERFACE mode). – Disable global spanning tree (the no spanning-tree command in CONFIGURATION mode). To enable EdgePort on an interface, use the following command. • Enable EdgePort on an interface.
47 Software-Defined Networking (SDN) Dell Networking operating software supports Software-Defined Networking (SDN). For more information, refer to the SDN Deployment Guide.
48 Security Security features are supported on Dell Networking OS. This chapter describes several ways to provide security to the Dell Networking system. For details about all the commands described in this chapter, refer to the Security chapter in the Dell Networking OS Command Reference Guide. AAA Accounting Accounting, authentication, and authorization (AAA) accounting is part of the AAA security model.
– suppress: Do not generate accounting records for a specific type of user. – default | name: enter the name of a list of accounting methods. – start-stop: use for more accounting information, to send a start-accounting notice at the beginning of the requested event and a stop-accounting notice at the end. – wait-start: ensures that the TACACS+ security server acknowledges the start notice before granting the user's process request.
Monitoring AAA Accounting Dell Networking OS does not support periodic interim accounting because the periodic command can cause heavy congestion when many users are logged in to the network. No specific show command exists for TACACS+ accounting. To obtain accounting records displaying information about users currently logged in, use the following command. • Step through all active sessions and print all the accounting records for the actively accounted functions.
Configuring AAA Authentication Login Methods To configure an authentication method and method list, use the following commands. Dell Networking OS Behavior: If you use a method list on the console port in which RADIUS or TACACS is the last authentication method, and the server is not reachable, Dell Networking OS allows access even though the username and password credentials cannot be verified.
Enabling AAA Authentication — RADIUS To enable authentication from the RADIUS server, and use TACACS as a backup, use the following commands. 1. Enable RADIUS and set up TACACS as backup. CONFIGURATION mode aaa authentication enable default radius tacacs 2. Establish a host address and password. CONFIGURATION mode radius-server host x.x.x.x key some-password 3. Establish a host address and password. CONFIGURATION mode tacacs-server host x.x.x.
Password obscuring masks the password and keys for display only but does not change the contents of the file. The string of asterisks is the same length as the encrypted string for that line of configuration. To verify that you have successfully obscured passwords and keys, use the show running-config command or show startup-config command. If you are using role-based access control (RBAC), only the system administrator and security administrator roles can enable the service obscure-password command.
Configuration Task List for Privilege Levels The following list has the configuration tasks for privilege levels and passwords.
To view the configuration for the enable secret command, use the show running-config command in EXEC Privilege mode. In custom-configured privilege levels, the enable command is always available. No matter what privilege level you entered Dell Networking OS, you can enter the enable 15 command to access and configure all CLIs.
• reset: return the command to its default privilege mode. Examples of Privilege Level Commands To view the configuration, use the show running-config command in EXEC Privilege mode. The following example shows a configuration to allow a user john to view only EXEC mode commands and all snmp-server commands.
Specifying LINE Mode Password and Privilege You can specify a password authentication of all users on different terminal lines. The user’s privilege level is the same as the privilege level assigned to the terminal line, unless a more specific privilege level is assigned to the user. To specify a password for the terminal line, use the following commands. • Configure a custom privilege level for the terminal lines. LINE mode privilege level level • – level level: The range is from 0 to 15.
Transactions between the RADIUS server and the client are encrypted (the users’ passwords are not sent in plain text). RADIUS uses UDP as the transport protocol between the RADIUS server host and the client. For more information about RADIUS, refer to RFC 2865, Remote Authentication Dial-in User Service.
• Monitoring RADIUS (optional) For a complete listing of all Dell Networking OS commands related to RADIUS, refer to the Security chapter in the Dell Networking OS Command Reference Guide. NOTE: RADIUS authentication and authorization are done in a single step. Hence, authorization cannot be used independent of authentication. However, if you have configured RADIUS authorization and have not configured authentication, a message is logged stating this.
CONFIGURATION mode radius-server host {hostname | ip-address} [auth-port port-number] [retransmit retries] [timeout seconds] [key [encryption-type] key] Configure the optional communication parameters for the specific host: – auth-port port-number: the range is from 0 to 65535. Enter a UDP port number. The default is 1812. – retransmit retries: the range is from 0 to 100. Default is 3. – timeout seconds: the range is from 0 to 1000. Default is 5 seconds.
– seconds: the range is from 0 to 1000. Default is 5 seconds. To view the configuration of RADIUS communication parameters, use the show running-config command in EXEC Privilege mode. Monitoring RADIUS To view information on RADIUS transactions, use the following command. • View RADIUS transactions to troubleshoot problems. EXEC Privilege mode debug radius TACACS+ Dell Networking OS supports terminal access controller access control system (TACACS+ client, including support for login authentication.
4. Assign the method-list to the terminal line. LINE mode login authentication {method-list-name | default} Example of a Failed Authentication To view the configuration, use the show config in LINE mode or the show running-config tacacs+ command in EXEC Privilege mode. If authentication fails using the primary method, Dell Networking OS employs the second method (or third method, if necessary) automatically.
Example of Specifying a TACACS+ Server Host Dell(conf)# Dell(conf)#aaa authentication login tacacsmethod tacacs+ Dell(conf)#aaa authentication exec tacacsauthorization tacacs+ Dell(conf)#tacacs-server host 25.1.1.2 key Force Dell(conf)# Dell(conf)#line vty 0 9 Dell(config-line-vty)#login authentication tacacsmethod Dell(config-line-vty)#end Specifying a TACACS+ Server Host To specify a TACACS+ server host and configure its communication parameters, use the following command.
Protection from TCP Tiny and Overlapping Fragment Attacks Tiny and overlapping fragment attack is a class of attack where configured ACL entries — denying TCP port-specific traffic — is bypassed and traffic is sent to its destination although denied by the ACL. RFC 1858 and 3128 proposes a countermeasure to the problem. This countermeasure is configured into the line cards and enabled by default.
To disable SSH server functions, use the no ip ssh server enable command. Using SCP with SSH to Copy a Software Image To use secure copy (SCP) to copy a software image through an SSH connection from one switch to another, use the following commands. On the chassis, invoke SCP.
Configuring the SSH Server Key Exchange Algorithm To configure the key exchange algorithm for the SSH server, use the ip ssh server kex key-exchange-algorithm command in CONFIGURATION mode. key-exchange-algorithm : Enter a space-delimited list of key exchange algorithms that will be used by the SSH server.
• hmac-sha2-256-96 When FIPS is enabled, the default HMAC algorithm is hmac-sha1-96. Example of Configuring a HMAC Algorithm The following example shows you how to configure a HMAC algorithm list. Dell(conf)# ip ssh server mac hmac-sha1-96 Configuring the SSH Server Cipher List To configure the cipher list supported by the SSH server, use the ip ssh server cipher cipher-list command in CONFIGURATION mode. cipher-list-: Enter a space-delimited list of ciphers the SSH server will support.
SSH server ciphers : 3des-cbc,aes128-cbc,aes192-cbc,aes256-cbc,aes128-ctr,aes192ctr,aes256-ctr. SSH server macs : hmac-md5,hmac-md5-96,hmac-sha1,hmac-sha1-96,hmac-sha2-256,hmacsha2-256-96. SSH server kex algorithms : diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha1,diffie-hellman-group1sha1,diffie-hellman-group14-sha1. Password Authentication : enabled. Hostbased Authentication : disabled. RSA Authentication : disabled.
no ip ssh password-authentication or no ip ssh rsa-authentication 6. Enable host-based authentication. CONFIGURATION mode ip ssh hostbased-authentication enable 7. Bind shosts and rhosts to host-based authentication. CONFIGURATION mode ip ssh pub-key-file flash://filename or ip ssh rhostsfile flash://filename Examples of Creating shosts and rhosts The following example shows creating shosts. admin@Unix_client# cd /etc/ssh admin@Unix_client# ls moduli sshd_config ssh_host_dsa_key.pub ssh_host_key.
Troubleshooting SSH To troubleshoot SSH, use the following information. You may not bind id_rsa.pub to RSA authentication while logged in via the console. In this case, this message displays:%Error: No username set for this term. Enable host-based authentication on the server (Dell Networking system) and the client (Unix machine). The following message appears if you attempt to log in via SSH and host-based is disabled on the client.
2. Enter a password. 3. Assign an access class. 4. Enter a privilege level. You can assign line authentication on a per-VTY basis; it is a simple password authentication, using an access-class as authorization. Configure local authentication globally and configure access classes on a per-user basis. Dell Networking OS can assign different access classes to different users by username. Until users attempt to log in, Dell Networking OS does not know if they will be assigned a VTY line.
The following example shows how to deny incoming connections from subnet 10.0.0.0 without displaying a login prompt.
A constrained RBAC model provides for separation of duty and as a result, provides greater security than the hierarchical RBAC model. Essentially, a constrained model puts some limitations around each role’s permissions to allow you to partition of tasks. However, some inheritance is possible. Default command permissions are based on CLI mode (such as configure, interface, router), any specific command settings, and the permissions allowed by the privilege and role commands.
If you do not, the following error is displayed when you attempt to enable role-based only AAA authorization. % Error: Exec authorization must be applied to more than one line to be useful, e.g. console and vty lines. Could use default authorization method list as alternative. 5. Verify the configuration has been applied to the console or VTY line.
• Modifying Command Permissions for Roles • Adding and Deleting Users from a Role Creating a New User Role Instead of using the system defined user roles, you can create a new user role that best matches your organization. When you create a new user role, you can first inherit permissions from one of the system defined roles. Otherwise you would have to create a user role’s command permissions from scratch. You then restrict commands or add commands to that role.
Modifying Command Permissions for Roles You can modify (add or delete) command permissions for newly created user roles and system defined roles using the role mode { { { addrole | deleterole } role-name } | reset } command command in Configuration mode. NOTE: You cannot modify system administrator command permissions. If you add or delete command permissions using the role command, those changes only apply to the specific user role. They do not apply to other roles that have inheritance from that role.
Dell(conf)#show role mode configure interface Role access: netadmin, secadmin, sysadmin Example: Verify that the Security Administrator Can Access Interface Mode The following example shows that the secadmin role can now access Interface mode (highlighted in bold).
NOTE: If you already have a user ID that exists with a privilege level, you can add the user role to username that has a privilege Dell (conf) #no username john The following example adds a user, to the secadmin user role. Dell (conf)#username john role secadmin password 0 password AAA Authentication and Authorization for Roles This section describes how to configure AAA Authentication and Authorization for Roles.
You can further restrict users’ permissions, using the aaa authorization command command in CONFIGURATION mode. aaa authorization command {method-list-name | default} method [… method4] Examples of Applying a Method List The following configuration example applies a method list: TACACS+, RADIUS and local: ! radius-server host 10.16.150.203 key ! tacacs-server host 10.16.150.
Configuring TACACS+ and RADIUS VSA Attributes for RBAC For RBAC and privilege levels, the Dell Networking OS RADIUS and TACACS+ implementation supports two vendor-specific options: privilege level and roles. The Dell Networking vendor-ID is 6027 and the supported option has attribute of type string, which is titled “Force10-avpair”.
The following example shows you how to configure AAA accounting to monitor commands executed by the users who have a secadmin user role. Dell(conf)#aaa accounting command role secadmin default start-stop tacacs+ Applying an Accounting Method to a Role To apply an accounting method list to a role executed by a user with that user role, use the accounting command in LINE mode.
Displaying Role Permissions Assigned to a Command To display permissions assigned to a command, use the show role command in EXEC Privilege mode. The output displays the user role and or permission level.
49 Service Provider Bridging Service provider bridging is supported on Dell Networking OS. VLAN Stacking VLAN stacking, also called Q-in-Q, is defined in IEEE 802.1ad — Provider Bridges, which is an amendment to IEEE 802.1Q — Virtual Bridged Local Area Networks. It enables service providers to use 802.1Q architecture to offer separate VLANs to customers with no coordination between customers, and minimal coordination between customers and the provider. Using only 802.
Figure 111. VLAN Stacking in a Service Provider Network Important Points to Remember • Interfaces that are members of the Default VLAN and are configured as VLAN-Stack access or trunk ports do not switch untagged traffic. To switch traffic, add these interfaces to a non-default VLAN-Stack-enabled VLAN. • Dell Networking cautions against using the same MAC address on different customer VLANs, on the same VLAN-Stack VLAN.
Related Configuration Tasks • Configuring the Protocol Type Value for the Outer VLAN Tag • Configuring Dell Networking OS Options for Trunk Ports • Debugging VLAN Stacking • VLAN Stacking in Multi-Vendor Networks Creating Access and Trunk Ports To create access and trunk ports, use the following commands. • Access port — a port on the service provider edge that directly connects to the customer. An access port may belong to only one service provider VLAN.
Example of Viewing VLAN Stack Member Status To display the status and members of a VLAN, use the show vlan command from EXEC Privilege mode. Members of a VLANStacking-enabled VLAN are marked with an M in column Q.
interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 no ip address portmode hybrid switchport vlan-stack trunk shutdown Dell(conf-if-te-1/1)#interface vlan 100 Dell(conf-if-vl-100)#untagged tengigabitethernet 1/1 Dell(conf-if-vl-100)#interface vlan 101 Dell(conf-if-vl-101)#tagged tengigabitethernet 1/1 Dell(conf-if-vl-101)#interface vlan 103 Dell(conf-if-vl-103)#vlan-stack compatible Dell(conf-if-vl-103-stack)#member tengigabitethernet 1/1 Dell(conf-if-vl-103-stack)#do show vlan Codes: Q: U x G - * - Default VLAN, G - GVRP VL
Given the matching-TPID requirement, there are limitations when you employ Dell Networking systems at network edges, at which, frames are either double tagged on ingress (R4) or the outer tag is removed on egress (R3). VLAN Stacking The default TPID for the outer VLAN tag is 0x9100. The system allows you to configure both bytes of the 2 byte TPID. Previous versions allowed you to configure the first byte only, and thus, the systems did not differentiate between TPIDs with a common first byte.
Figure 112.
Figure 113.
Figure 114. Single and Double-Tag TPID Mismatch The following table details the outcome of matched and mismatched TPIDs in a VLAN-stacking network with the S-Series. Table 69. Behaviors for Mismatched TPID Network Position Incoming Packet TPID System TPID Match Type Pre-Version 8.2.1.0 Version 8.2.1.
Network Position Incoming Packet TPID System TPID Match Type Pre-Version 8.2.1.0 Version 8.2.1.
Precedence Description Green High-priority packets that are the least preferred to be dropped. Yellow Lower-priority packets that are treated as best-effort. Red Lowest-priority packets that are always dropped (regardless of congestion status). • Honor the incoming DEI value by mapping it to an Dell Networking OS drop precedence. INTERFACE mode dei honor {0 | 1} {green | red | yellow} You may enter the command once for 0 and once for 1. Packets with an unmapped DEI value are colored green.
Dynamic Mode CoS for VLAN Stacking One of the ways to ensure quality of service for customer VLAN-tagged frames is to use the 802.1p priority bits in the tag to indicate the level of QoS desired. When an S-Tag is added to incoming customer frames, the 802.1p bits on the S-Tag may be configured statically for each customer or derived from the C-Tag using Dynamic Mode CoS. Dynamic Mode CoS maps the C-Tag 802.1p value to a S-Tag 802.1p value. Figure 115.
Likewise, in the following configuration, packets with dot1p priority 0–3 are marked as dot1p 7 in the outer tag and queued to Queue 3. Rate policing is according to qos-policy-input 3. All other packets will have outer dot1p 0 and hence are queued to Queue 1. They are therefore policed according to qos-policy-input 1.
Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling Spanning tree bridge protocol data units (BPDUs) use a reserved destination MAC address called the bridge group address, which is 01-80-C2-00-00-00. Only spanning-tree bridges on the local area network (LAN) recognize this address and process the BPDU.
Dell Networking OS Behavior: In Dell Networking OS versions prior to 8.2.1.0, the MAC address that Dell Networking systems use to overwrite the Bridge Group Address on ingress was non-configurable. The value of the L2PT MAC address was the Dell Networkingunique MAC address, 01-01-e8-00-00-00.
Enabling Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling To enable Layer 2 protocol tunneling, use the following command. 1. Verify that the system is running the default CAM profile. Use this CAM profile for L2PT. EXEC Privilege mode show cam-profile 2. Enable protocol tunneling globally on the system. CONFIGURATION mode protocol-tunnel enable 3. Tunnel BPDUs the VLAN.
The default is: no rate limiting. The range is from 64 to 320 kbps. Debugging Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling To debug Layer 2 protocol tunneling, use the following command. • Display debugging information for L2PT. EXEC Privilege mode debug protocol-tunnel Provider Backbone Bridging IEEE 802.1ad—Provider Bridges amends 802.1Q—Virtual Bridged Local Area Networks so that service providers can use 802.
50 sFlow Configuring sFlow is supported on Dell Networking OS. Overview The Dell Networking Operating System (OS) supports sFlow version 5. sFlow is a standard-based sampling technology embedded within switches and routers which is used to monitor network traffic. It is designed to provide traffic monitoring for high-speed networks with many switches and routers. sFlow uses two types of sampling: • Statistical packet-based sampling of switched or routed packet flows.
• Community list and local preference fields are not filled in extended gateway element in the sFlow datagram. • 802.1P source priority field is not filled in extended switch element in sFlow datagram. • Only Destination and Destination Peer AS number are packed in the dst-as-path field in extended gateway element. • If the packet being sampled is redirected using policy-based routing (PBR), the sFlow datagram may contain incorrect extended gateway/router information.
0 sFlow samples collected 0 sFlow samples dropped due to sub-sampling Enabling and Disabling sFlow on an Interface By default, sFlow is disabled on all interfaces. This CLI is supported on physical ports and link aggregation group (LAG) ports. To enable sFlow on a specific interface, use the following command. • Enable sFlow on an interface. INTERFACE mode [no] sflow ingress-enable To disable sFlow on an interface, use the no version of this command.
Extended max header size Samples rcvd from h/w :256 :0 Example of the show running-config sflow Command Dell#show running-config sflow ! sflow collector 100.1.1.12 agent-addr 100.1.1.1 sflow enable sflow max-header-size extended Dell#show run int tengigabitEthernet 1/10 ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/10 no ip address switchport sflow ingress-enable sflow max-header-size extended no shutdown sFlow Show Commands Dell Networking OS includes the following sFlow display commands.
Displaying Show sFlow on an Interface To view sFlow information on a specific interface, use the following command. • Display sFlow configuration information and statistics on a specific interface. EXEC mode show sflow interface interface-name Examples of the sFlow show Commands The following example shows the show sflow interface command.
sflow collector ip-address agent-addr ip-address [number [max-datagram-size number] ] | [max-datagram-size number ] The default UDP port is 6343. The default max-datagram-size is 1400. Changing the Polling Intervals The sflow polling-interval command configures the polling interval for an interface in the maximum number of seconds between successive samples of counters sent to the collector. This command changes the global default counter polling (20 seconds) interval.
• • Enable extended sFlow. sflow [extended-switch] [extended-router] [extended-gateway] enable By default packing of any of the extended information in the datagram is disabled. Confirm that extended information packing is enabled. show sflow Examples of Verifying Extended sFlow The bold line shows that extended sFlow settings are enabled on all three types.
IP SA IP DA srcAS and srcPeerAS dstAS and dstPeerAS Description is no AS information for IGP. BGP static/connected/IGP — — Exported Exported Prior to Dell Networking OS version 7.8.1.0, extended gateway data is not exported because IP DA is not learned via BGP. Version 7.8.1.0 allows extended gateway information in cases where the source and destination IP addresses are learned by different routing protocols, and for cases where is source is reachable over ECMP.
51 Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) Simple network management protocol (SNMP) is supported on Dell Networking OS. NOTE: On Dell Networking routers, standard and private SNMP management information bases (MIBs) are supported, including all Get and a limited number of Set operations (such as set vlan and copy cmd). Protocol Overview Network management stations use SNMP to retrieve or alter management data from network elements.
FIPS Mode Privacy Options Authentication Options Disabled des56 md5 (HMAC-MD5-96) Enabled (DES56-CBC) aes128 (AES128-CFB) sha (HMAC-SHA1-96) aes128 (AES128-CFB) sha (HMAC-SHA1-96) To enable security for SNMP packets transferred between the server and the client, you can use the snmp-server user username group groupname 3 auth authentication-type auth-password priv aes128 priv-password command to specify that AES-CFB 128 encryption algorithm needs to be used.
• Copying Configuration Files via SNMP • Manage VLANs Using SNMP • Enabling and Disabling a Port using SNMP • Fetch Dynamic MAC Entries using SNMP • Deriving Interface Indices • Monitor Port-channels Important Points to Remember • Typically, 5-second timeout and 3-second retry values on an SNMP server are sufficient for both LAN and WAN applications.
Setting Up User-Based Security (SNMPv3) When setting up SNMPv3, you can set users up with one of the following three types of configuration for SNMP read/write operations. Users are typically associated to an SNMP group with permissions provided, such as OID view. • noauth — no password or privacy. Select this option to set up a user with no password or privacy privileges. This setting is the basic configuration. Users must have a group and profile that do not require password privileges.
Select a User-based Security Type Dell(conf)#snmp-server host 1.1.1.1 traps {oid tree} version 3 ? auth Use the SNMPv3 authNoPriv Security Level noauth Use the SNMPv3 noAuthNoPriv Security Level priv Use the SNMPv3 authPriv Security Level Dell(conf)#snmp-server host 1.1.1.1 traps {oid tree} version 3 noauth ? WORD SNMPv3 user name Reading Managed Object Values You may only retrieve (read) managed object values if your management station is a member of the same community as the SNMP agent.
Example of Writing the Value of a Managed Object > snmpset -v 2c -c mycommunity 10.11.131.161 sysName.0 s "R5" SNMPv2-MIB::sysName.0 = STRING: R5 Configuring Contact and Location Information using SNMP You may configure system contact and location information from the Dell Networking system or from the management station using SNMP. To configure system contact and location information from the Dell Networking system and from the management station using SNMP, use the following commands.
• Force10 enterpriseSpecific protocol traps — bgp, ecfm, stp, and xstp. To configure the system to send SNMP notifications, use the following commands. 1. Configure the Dell Networking system to send notifications to an SNMP server. CONFIGURATION mode snmp-server host ip-address [traps | informs] [version 1 | 2c |3] [community-string] To send trap messages, enter the keyword traps. To send informational messages, enter the keyword informs.
LINECARDUP: %sLine card %d is up CARD_MISMATCH: Mismatch: line card %d is type %s - type %s required.
%ECFM-5-ECFM_MAC_STATUS_ALARM: MAC Status Defect detected by MEP 1 in Domain provider at Level 4 VLAN 3000 %ECFM-5-ECFM_REMOTE_ALARM: Remote CCM Defect detected by MEP 3 in Domain customer1 at Level 7 VLAN 1000 %ECFM-5-ECFM_RDI_ALARM: RDI Defect detected by MEP 3 in Domain customer1 at Level 7 VLAN 1000 entity Enable entity change traps Trap SNMPv2-MIB::sysUpTime.0 = Timeticks: (1487406) 4:07:54.06, SNMPv2-MIB::snmpTrapOID.0 = OID: SNMPv2-SMI::mib-2.47.2.0.1, SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.6027.3.6.1.1.2.
Following example shows the SNMP trap that is sent when connectivity to the syslog server is lost: DISMAN-EVENT-MIB::sysUpTimeInstance = Timeticks: (19738) 0:03:17.38 SNMPv2MIB::snmpTrapOID.0 = OID: SNMPv2SMI::enterprises.6027.3.30.1.1.1 SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.6027.3.30.1.1 = STRING: "NOT_REACHABLE: Syslog server 10.11.226.121 (port: 9140) is not reachable" SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.6027.3.6.1.1.2.
MIB Object OID Object Values Description 5 = scp 6 = usbflash copySrcFileName .1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.5.1.1.1.1.4 Path (if the file is not in the Specifies name of the file. current directory) and filename. • If copySourceFileType is set to running-config or startup-config, copySrcFileName is not required. copyDestFileType .1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.5.1.1.1.1.5 1 = Dell Networking OS file 2 = running-config Specifies the type of file to copy to. • 3 = startup-config • copyDestFileLocation .1.3.6.1.4.1.
CONFIGURATION mode snmp-server community community-name rw 2. Copy the f10-copy-config.mib MIB from the Dell iSupport web page to the server to which you are copying the configuration file. 3. On the server, use the snmpset command as shown in the following example. snmpset -v snmp-version -c community-name -m mib_path/f10-copy-config.mib force10systemip-address mib-object.index {i | a | s} object-value... • Every specified object must have an object value and must precede with the keyword i.
FTOS-COPY-CONFIG-MIB::copySrcFileType.100 = INTEGER: runningConfig(2) FTOS-COPY-CONFIG-MIB::copyDestFileType.100 = INTEGER: startupConfig(3) Copying the Startup-Config Files to the Running-Config To copy the startup-config to the running-config from a UNIX machine, use the following command. • Copy the startup-config to the running-config from a UNIX machine. snmpset -c private -v 2c force10system-ip-address copySrcFileType.index i 3 copyDestFileType.
Example of Copying Configuration Files via TFTP From a UNIX Machine .snmpset -v 2c -c private -m ./f10-copy-config.mib 10.10.10.10 copySrcFileType.4 i 3 copyDestFileType.4 i 1 copyDestFileLocation.4 i 3 copyDestFileName.4 s /home/myfilename copyServerAddress.4 a 11.11.11.11 Copy a Binary File to the Startup-Configuration To copy a binary file from the server to the startup-configuration on the Dell Networking system via FTP, use the following command.
MIB Object OID Values Description copyEntryRowStatus .1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.5.1.1.1.1.15 Row status Specifies the state of the copy operation. Uses CreateAndGo when you are performing the copy. The state is set to active when the copy is completed. Obtaining a Value for MIB Objects To obtain a value for any of the MIB objects, use the following command. • Get a copy-config MIB object value. snmpset -v 2c -c public -m ./f10-copy-config.mib force10system-ip-address [OID.index | mib-object.
Viewing the Available Flash Memory Size • To view the available flash memory using SNMP, use the following command. snmpget -v2c -c public 192.168.60.120 .1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.10.1.2.9.1.6.1 enterprises.6027.3.10.1.2.9.1.5.1 = Gauge32: 24 The output above displays that 24% of the flash memory is used. MIB Support to Display the Software Core Files Generated by the System Dell Networking provides MIB objects to display the software core files generated by the system.
enterprises.6027.3.10.1.2.10.1.3.1.2 enterprises.6027.3.10.1.2.10.1.3.1.3 enterprises.6027.3.10.1.2.10.1.3.2.1 enterprises.6027.3.10.1.2.10.1.4.1.1 enterprises.6027.3.10.1.2.10.1.4.1.2 enterprises.6027.3.10.1.2.10.1.4.1.3 enterprises.6027.3.10.1.2.10.1.4.2.1 enterprises.6027.3.10.1.2.10.1.5.1.1 enterprises.6027.3.10.1.2.10.1.5.1.2 enterprises.6027.3.10.1.2.10.1.5.1.3 enterprises.6027.3.10.1.2.10.1.5.2.
Internet address is not set MTU 1554 bytes, IP MTU 1500 bytes LineSpeed auto ARP type: ARPA, ARP Timeout 04:00:00 To display the ports in a VLAN, send an snmpget request for the object dot1qStaticEgressPorts using the interface index as the instance number, as shown for an S-Series. The following example shows viewing VLAN ports using SNMP with no ports assigned. > snmpget -v2c -c mycommunity 10.11.131.185 .1.3.6.1.2.1.17.7.1.4.3.1.2.1107787786 SNMPv2-SMI::mib-2.17.7.1.4.3.1.2.
• • To add a tagged port to a VLAN, write the port to the dot1qVlanStaticEgressPorts object. To add an untagged port to a VLAN, write the port to the dot1qVlanStaticEgressPorts and dot1qVlanStaticUntaggedPorts objects. NOTE: Whether adding a tagged or untagged port, specify values for both dot1qVlanStaticEgressPorts and dot1qVlanStaticUntaggedPorts. Example of Adding an Untagged Port to a VLAN using SNMP In the following example, Port 0/2 is added as an untagged member of VLAN 10.
To enable overload bit for IPv4 set 1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.18.1.1 and IPv6 set 1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.18.1.4 To set time to wait set 1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.18.1.2 and 1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.18.1.5 respectively To set time to wait till bgp session are up set 1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.18.1.3 and 1.3.6.1.4.1.6027.3.18.1.6 Enabling and Disabling a Port using SNMP To enable and disable a port using SNMP, use the following commands. 1. Create an SNMP community on the Dell system. CONFIGURATION mode snmp-server community 2.
In the following example, R1 has one dynamic MAC address, learned off of port TenGigabitEthernet 1/21, which a member of the default VLAN, VLAN 1. The SNMP walk returns the values for dot1dTpFdbAddress, dot1dTpFdbPort, and dot1dTpFdbStatus. Each object comprises an OID concatenated with an instance number. In the case of these objects, the instance number is the decimal equivalent of the MAC address; derive the instance number by converting each hex pair to its decimal equivalent.
• • the next 1 bit is 0 for a physical interface and 1 for a logical interface the next 1 bit is unused For example, the index 72925242 is 100010110001100000000111010 in binary. The binary interface index for TeGigabitEthernet 1/21 of a 48-port 10/100/1000Base-T line card with RJ-45 interface. Notice that the physical/logical bit and the final, unused bit are not given. The interface is physical, so represent this type of interface by a 0 bit, and the unused bit is always 0.
dot3aCommonAggFdbVlanId SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.6027.3.2.1.1.6.1.2.1107755009.1 = INTEGER: 1 dot3aCommonAggFdbTagConfig SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.6027.3.2.1.1.6.1.3.1107755009.1 = INTEGER: 2 (Tagged 1 or Untagged 2) dot3aCommonAggFdbStatus SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.6027.3.2.1.1.6.1.4.1107755009.1 = INTEGER: 1 << Status active, 2 – status inactive Example of Viewing Status of Learned MAC Addresses If we learn MAC addresses for the LAG, status is shown for those as well. dot3aCurAggVlanId SNMPv2-SMI::enterprises.
52 Stacking Stacking is supported on the S4810 platform with the Dell Networking Operating System (OS) version 8.3.7.1, version 8.3.10.2, and newer. NOTE: The S4810 commands accept Unit ID numbers 0-11, though the S4810 supports stacking up to three units only with Dell Networking OS version 8.3.7.1 and version 8.3.10.2. The S4810 supports stacking up to six units with Dell Networking OS version 8.3.12.0.
If the master switch goes off line, the standby replaces it as the new master and the switch with the next highest priority or MAC address becomes standby. Stack Master Election The stack elects a master and standby unit at bootup time based on two criteria. • Unit priority — User-configurable. The range is from 1 to 14. A higher value (14) means a higher priority. The default is 1.
Use the following command to configure a virtual IP: Dell(conf)#virtual-ip {ip-address | ipv6–address | dhcp} Failover Roles If the stack master fails (for example, is powered off), it is removed from the stack topology. The standby unit detects the loss of peering communication and takes ownership of the stack management, switching from the standby role to the master role. The distributed forwarding tables are retained during the failover, as is the stack MAC address.
7 Member not present [output omitted] Stack#show system stack-unit 0 | grep priority Master priority : 0 Stack#show system stack-unit 1 | grep priority Master priority : 0 Example of Adding a Standalone with a Lower MAC Address and Equal Priority to a Stack ---------------STANDALONE AFTER CONNECTION----------------Standalone#%STKUNIT0-M:CP %POLLMGR-2-ALT_STACK_UNIT_STATE: Alternate Stack-unit is present 00:20:20: %STKUNIT0-M:CP %CHMGR-5-STACKUNITDETECTED: Stack unit 1 present 00:20:22: %STKUNIT0-M:CP %CHMGR
Figure 118. High Availability on S-Series Stacks S-Series stacks have master and standby management units analogous to Dell Networking route processor modules (RPM). The master unit synchronizes the running configuration and protocol states so that the system fails over in the event of a hardware or software fault on the master unit. In such an event, or when the master unit is removed, the standby unit becomes the stack manager and Dell Networking OS elects a new standby unit.
-----------------------------------------------Failover Count: 0 Last failover timestamp: None Last failover Reason: None Last failover type: None -- Last Data Block Sync Record: ------------------------------------------------stack-unit Config: succeeded Nov 25 2014 Start-up Config: succeeded Nov 25 2014 Runtime Event Log: succeeded Nov 25 2014 Running Config: succeeded Nov 25 2014 ACL Mgr: succeeded Nov 25 2014 LACP: no block sync done STP: no block sync done SPAN: no block sync done 15:29:58 15:29:58 15
• You cannot enable stacking and virtual link trunking (VLT) simultaneously on the device. To convert a stacked unit to VLT, refer to Reconfiguring Stacked Switches as VLT. • Data ports are configured as stacking ports in predefined groups of four 10G ports called stack-groups. When using the 40G ports, you can configure a single port as a stack port; each 40G port is a stack-group. • All the ports in a stack-group are placed in stacking mode. Unused ports in that group cannot be used as data ports.
• If the new unit is running an Dell Networking OS version prior to 8.3.10.x , the unit is put into a card problem state, Dell Networking OS is not upgraded, and a syslog message is raised. The unit must be upgraded to Dell Networking OS version 8.3.12.0 before you can proceed. Syslog messages are generated by the management unit: • before the management unit downloads its Dell Networking OS version 8.3.12.0 or later to the new unit.
Creating a New Stack Prior to creating a stack, know which unit will be the management unit and which will be the standby unit. Enable the front ports of the units for stacking. For more information, refer to Enabling Front End Port Stacking. To create a new stack, use the following commands. 1. Power up all units in the stack. 2. Verify that each unit has the same Dell Networking OS version prior to stacking them together. EXEC Privilege mode show version 3.
Example of a Syslog Figure 120. Creating a New Stack In the following example, stack unit is the master management unit, stack unit 2is the standby unit. The cables are connected to each unit.
5 6 7 8 9 10 Member Member Member Member Member Member not not not not not not present present present present present present -- Power Supplies -Unit Bay Status Type FanStatus -------------------------------------1 0 absent absent 1 1 up AC up 2 0 down UNKNOWN down 2 1 up AC up 3 0 absent absent 3 1 up AC up 4 0 absent absent 4 1 up AC up -- Fan Status -Unit Bay TrayStatus Fan0 Speed Fan1 Speed ----------------------------------------1 0 up up 9360 up 9360 1 1 up up 9360 up 9360 2 0 up up 7680 up 7680
• • • manually determine each units position in the stack by configuring each unit to correspond with the stack before connecting it. If you add a unit that has a stack number that conflicts with the stack, the stack assigns the first available stack number. If the stack has a provision for the stack-number that will be assigned to the new unit, the provision must match the unit type, or Dell Networking OS generates a type mismatch error.
Reload Type : normal-reload -- Stack Info -Unit UnitType Status ReqTyp CurTyp Version Ports ---------------------------------------------------------0 Management online S4810 S4810 8-3-7-13 64 1 Member online S4810 S4810 8-3-7-13 64 2 Member not present 3 Standby online S4810 S4810 8-3-7-13 64 4 Member not present 5 Member not present 6 Member not present 7 Member not present 8 Member not present 9 Member not present 10 Member not present 11 Member not present Adding a Configured Unit to an Existing Stack
• If you configure the new unit with a stack number that is already assigned to a stack member, the stack avoids a numbering conflict by assigning the new switch the first available stack number. • If the stack has been provisioned for the stack number that is assigned to the new unit, the pre-configured provisioning must match the switch type. If there is a conflict between the provisioned switch type and the new unit, a mismatch error message is displayed.
Renumbering the stack manager triggers the whole stack to reload, as shown in the message below. When the stack comes back online, the master unit remains the management unit. Renumbering master unit will reload the stack. WARNING: Interface configuration for current unit will be lost! Proceed to renumber [confirm yes/no]: yes Creating a Virtual Stack Unit on an S-Series Stack Use virtual stack units to configure ports on the stack before adding a new unit. • Create a virtual stack unit.
Up Time Dell Networking Jumbo Capable POE Capable Burned In MAC : No Of MACs : 3 : 57 min, 0 sec OS Version : 8-3-7-13 : yes : no 00:01:e8:8a:df:e6 -- Power Supplies -Unit Bay Status Type FanStatus -----------------------------------------0 0 absent absent 0 1 up AC up -- Fan Status -Unit Bay TrayStatus Fan0 Speed Fan1 Speed ------------------------------------------0 0 up up 6960 up 6960 0 1 up up 6720 up 6720 Speed in RPM -- Unit 1 -Unit Type Status Required Type : Member Unit : not present : S4810 - 5
10 11 Member Member not present not present The following example shows the show system stack-ports command.
show redundancy Resetting a Unit on an S-Series Stack You may reset any stack unit except for the master management unit, as shown in the following message. % Error: Reset of master unit is not allowed. To rest a unit on an S-Series stack, use the following commands. • Reload a stack-unit. EXEC Privilege mode • reset stack-unit Reload a member unit, from the unit itself. EXEC Privilege mode • reset-self Reset a stack-unit when the unit is in a problem state.
-- Unit 1 -Unit Type Status Next Boot Required Type Current Type Master priority Hardware Rev Num Ports Up Time Dell Networking Jumbo Capable POE Capable Boot Flash Memory Size Temperature Voltage Serial Number Part Number Vendor Id Date Code Country Code Piece Part ID PPID Revision Service Tag Expr Svc Code Auto Reboot Burned In MAC No Of MACs : Management Unit : online : online : S4810 - 52-port GE/TE/FG (SE) : S4810 - 52-port GE/TE/FG (SE) : 0 : 3.
2/39 stack-2# 3/47 10 up up Remove Units or Front End Ports from a Stack To remove units or front end ports from a stack, use the following instructions. • Removing a Unit from an S-Series Stack • Removing Front End Port Stacking Removing a Unit from an S-Series Stack The running-configuration and startup-configuration are synchronized on all stack units. A stack member that is disconnected from the stack maintains this configuration.
Removing Front End Port Stacking To remove the configuration on the front end ports used for stacking, use the following commands. 1. Remove the stack group configuration that is configured. CONFIGURATION mode no stack-unit id stack-group id 2. Save the stacking configuration on the ports. EXEC Privilege mode write memory 3. Reload the switch. EXEC Privilege mode reload After the units are reloaded, the system reboots. The units come up as standalone units after the reboot completes.
Recover from a Card Problem State on an S-Series Stack If a unit added to a stack has a different Dell Networking OS version, the unit does not come online and Dell Networking OS cites a card problem error. To recover, disconnect the new unit from the stack, change the Dell Networking OS version to match the stack, and then reconnect it to the stack.
53 Storm Control Storm control is supported on Dell Networking OS. The storm control feature allows you to control unknown-unicast and broadcast traffic on Layer 2 and Layer 3 physical interfaces. Dell Networking Operating System (OS) Behavior: Dell Networking OS supports broadcast control (the storm-control broadcast command) for Layer 2 and Layer 3 traffic. Dell Networking OS Behavior: The minimum number of packets per second (PPS) that storm control can limit on the device is two.
54 Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) The spanning tree protocol (STP) is supported on Dell Networking OS. Protocol Overview STP is a Layer 2 protocol — specified by IEEE 802.1d — that eliminates loops in a bridged topology by enabling only a single path through the network. By eliminating loops, the protocol improves scalability in a large network and allows you to implement redundant paths, which can be activated after the failure of active paths.
• • To add interfaces to the spanning tree topology after you enable STP, enable the port and configure it for Layer 2 using the switchport command. The IEEE Standard 802.1D allows 8 bits for port ID and 8 bits for priority. The 8 bits for port ID provide port IDs for 256 ports. Configuring Interfaces for Layer 2 Mode All interfaces on all switches that participate in spanning tree must be in Layer 2 mode and enabled. Figure 121.
Example of the show config Command To verify that an interface is in Layer 2 mode and enabled, use the show config command from INTERFACE mode. Dell(conf-if-te-1/1)#show config ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 no ip address switchport no shutdown Dell(conf-if-te-1/1)# Enabling Spanning Tree Protocol Globally Enable the spanning tree protocol globally; it is not enabled by default.
no disable Examples of Verifying Spanning Tree Information To disable STP globally for all Layer 2 interfaces, use the disable command from PROTOCOL SPANNING TREE mode. To verify that STP is enabled, use the show config command from PROTOCOL SPANNING TREE mode.
Te 1/4 Dell# 8.514 8 4 FWD 0 32768 0001.e80d.2462 8.514 Adding an Interface to the Spanning Tree Group To add a Layer 2 interface to the spanning tree topology, use the following command. • Enable spanning tree on a Layer 2 interface. INTERFACE mode spanning-tree 0 Modifying Global Parameters You can modify the spanning tree parameters. The root bridge sets the values for forward-delay, hello-time, and max-age and overwrites the values set on other bridges participating in STP.
• Change the max-age parameter (the refresh interval for configuration information that is generated by recomputing the spanning tree topology). PROTOCOL SPANNING TREE mode max-age seconds The range is from 6 to 40. The default is 20 seconds. To view the current values for global parameters, use the show spanning-tree 0 command from EXEC privilege mode. Refer to the second example in Enabling Spanning Tree Protocol Globally.
• Enable PortFast on an interface. INTERFACE mode spanning-tree stp-id portfast [bpduguard | [shutdown-on-violation]] Example of Verifying PortFast is Enabled on an Interface To verify that PortFast is enabled on a port, use the show spanning-tree command from EXEC Privilege mode or the show config command from INTERFACE mode. Dell Networking recommends using the show config command.
– Disabling global spanning tree (the no spanning-tree in CONFIGURATION mode). Figure 123. Enabling BPDU Guard Dell Networking OS Behavior: BPDU guard and BPDU filtering both block BPDUs, but are two separate features. BPDU guard: • is used on edgeports and blocks all traffic on edgeport if it receives a BPDU. • drops the BPDU after it reaches the RPM and generates a console message.
Te 1/6 Root 128.263 128 20000 FWD 20000 P2P No Te 1/7 ErrDis 128.264 128 20000 EDS 20000 P2P No Dell(conf-if-te-1/7)#do show ip interface brief tengigabitEthernet 1/7 Interface IP-Address OK Method Status Protocol TenGigabitEthernet 1/7 unassigned YES Manual up up Selecting STP Root The STP determines the root bridge, but you can assign one bridge a lower priority to increase the likelihood that it becomes the root bridge. You can also specify that a bridge is the root or the secondary root.
BPDU is ignored and the port on Switch C transitions from a forwarding to a root-inconsistent state (shown by the green X icon). As a result, Switch A becomes the root bridge. Figure 124. STP Root Guard Prevents Bridging Loops Configuring Root Guard Enable STP root guard on a per-port or per-port-channel basis.
– 0: enables root guard on an STP-enabled port assigned to instance 0. – mstp: enables root guard on an MSTP-enabled port. – rstp: enables root guard on an RSTP-enabled port. – pvst: enables root guard on a PVST-enabled port. To disable STP root guard on a port or port-channel interface, use the no spanning-tree 0 rootguard command in an interface configuration mode.
As shown in the following illustration (STP topology 2, upper right), a loop can also be created if the forwarding port on Switch B becomes busy and does not forward BPDUs within the configured forward-delay time. As a result, the blocking port on Switch C transitions to a forwarding state, and both Switch A and Switch C transmit traffic to Switch B (STP topology 2, lower right).
– Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) – Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP) – Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (MSTP) – Per-VLAN Spanning Tree Plus (PVST+) • You cannot enable root guard and loop guard at the same time on an STP port. For example, if you configure loop guard on a port on which root guard is already configured, the following error message is displayed: % Error: RootGuard is configured. Cannot configure LoopGuard.
55 System Time and Date System time and date settings and the network time protocol (NTP) are supported on Dell Networking OS. You can set system times and dates and maintained through the NTP. They are also set through the Dell Networking Operating System (OS) command line interfaces (CLIs) and hardware settings. In the release 9.4.(0.0), support for reaching an NTP server through different VRFs is included. You can configure a maximum of eight logging servers across different VRFs or the same VRF.
Dell Networking OS synchronizes with a time-serving host to get the correct time. You can set Dell Networking OS to poll specific NTP time-serving hosts for the current time. From those time-serving hosts, the system chooses one NTP host with which to synchronize and serve as a client to the NTP host. As soon as a host-client relationship is established, the networking device propagates the time information throughout its local network.
• Specify the NTP server to which the Dell Networking system synchronizes. CONFIGURATION mode ntp server ip-address Examples of Viewing System Clock To display the system clock state with respect to NTP, use the show ntp status command from EXEC Privilege mode. R6_E300(conf)#do show ntp status Clock is synchronized, stratum 2, reference is 192.168.1.1 frequency is -369.623 ppm, stability is 53.319 ppm, precision is 4294967279 reference time is CD63BCC2.0CBBD000 (16:54:26.
• Configure a source IP address for NTP packets. CONFIGURATION mode ntp source interface Enter the following keywords and slot/port or number information: – For a 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword TenGigabitEthernet then the slot/port information. – For a 40-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword fortyGigE then the slot/port information. – For a Loopback interface, enter the keyword loopback then a number from 0 to 16383.
ntp server [vrf] {hostname | ipv4-address |ipv6-address} [ key keyid] [prefer] [version number] Configure the IP address of a server and the following optional parameters: • – vrf-name : Enter the name of the VRF through which the NTP server is reachable. – hostname : Enter the keyword hostname to see the IP address or host name of the remote device. – ipv4-address : Enter an IPv4 address in dotted decimal format (A.B.C.D).
NOTE: • Leap Indicator (sys.leap, peer.leap, pkt.leap) — This is a two-bit code warning of an impending leap second to be inserted in the NTP time scale. The bits are set before 23:59 on the day of insertion and reset after 00:00 on the following day. This causes the number of seconds (rollover interval) in the day of insertion to be increased or decreased by one.
Setting the Time and Date for the Switch Software Clock You can change the order of the month and day parameters to enter the time and date as time day month year. You cannot delete the software clock. The software clock runs only when the software is up. The clock restarts, based on the hardware clock, when the switch reboots. To set the software clock, use the following command. • Set the system software clock to the current time and date.
Setting Daylight Saving Time Once Set a date (and time zone) on which to convert the switch to daylight saving time on a one-time basis. To set the clock for daylight savings time once, use the following command. • Set the clock to the appropriate timezone and daylight saving time. CONFIGURATION mode clock summer-time time-zone date start-month start-day start-year start-time end-month end-day end-year end-time [offset] – time-zone: enter the three-letter name for the time zone.
– start-month: Enter the name of one of the 12 months in English. You can enter the name of a day to change the order of the display to time day month year. – start-day: Enter the number of the day. The range is from 1 to 31. You can enter the name of a month to change the order of the display to time day month year. – start-year: Enter a four-digit number as the year. The range is from 1993 to 2035. – start-time: Enter the time in hours:minutes.
56 Tunneling Tunnel interfaces create a logical tunnel for IPv4 or IPv6 traffic. Tunneling supports RFC 2003, RFC 2473, and 4213. DSCP, hop-limits, flow label values, open shortest path first (OSPF) v2, and OSPFv3 are supported. Internet control message protocol (ICMP) error relay, PATH MTU transmission, and fragmented packets are not supported. Configuring a Tunnel You can configure a tunnel in IPv6 mode, IPv6IP mode, and IPIP mode.
Dell(conf-if-tu-3)#tunnel destination 8::9 Dell(conf-if-tu-3)#tunnel mode ipv6 Dell(conf-if-tu-3)#ip address 3.1.1.1/24 Dell(conf-if-tu-3)#ipv6 address 3::1/64 Dell(conf-if-tu-3)#no shutdown Dell(conf-if-tu-3)#show config ! interface Tunnel 3 ip address 3.1.1.1/24 ipv6 address 3::1/64 tunnel destination 8::9 tunnel source 5::5 tunnel mode ipv6 no shutdown Configuring Tunnel Keepalive Settings You can configure a tunnel keepalive target, keepalive interval, and attempts.
Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#ipv6 unnumbered tengigabitethernet 1/1 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel source 40.1.1.1 Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#tunnel mode ipip decapsulate-any Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#no shutdown Dell(conf-if-tu-1)#show config ! interface Tunnel 1 ip unnumbered TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 ipv6 unnumbered TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 tunnel source 40.1.1.
57 Uplink Failure Detection (UFD) Uplink failure detection (UFD) provides detection of the loss of upstream connectivity and, if used with network interface controller (NIC) teaming, automatic recovery from a failed link. Feature Description A switch provides upstream connectivity for devices, such as servers. If a switch loses its upstream connectivity, downstream devices also lose their connectivity.
Figure 127. Uplink Failure Detection How Uplink Failure Detection Works UFD creates an association between upstream and downstream interfaces. The association of uplink and downlink interfaces is called an uplink-state group. An interface in an uplink-state group can be a physical interface or a port-channel (LAG) aggregation of physical interfaces. An enabled uplink-state group tracks the state of all assigned upstream interfaces.
Figure 128. Uplink Failure Detection Example If only one of the upstream interfaces in an uplink-state group goes down, a specified number of downstream ports associated with the upstream interface are put into a Link-Down state. You can configure this number and is calculated by the ratio of the upstream port bandwidth to the downstream port bandwidth in the same uplink-state group.
• If one of the upstream interfaces in an uplink-state group goes down, either a user-configurable set of downstream ports or all the downstream ports in the group are put in an Operationally Down state with an UFD Disabled error. The order in which downstream ports are disabled is from the lowest numbered port to the highest.
NOTE: Downstream interfaces in an uplink-state group are put into a Link-Down state with an UFD-Disabled error message only when all upstream interfaces in the group go down. To revert to the default setting, use the no downstream disable links command. 4. (Optional) Enable auto-recovery so that UFD-disabled downstream ports in the uplink-state group come up when a disabled upstream port in the group comes back up.
Example of Syslog Messages Before and After Entering the clear ufd-disable uplink-state-group Command (S50) The following example message shows the Syslog messages that display when you clear the UFD-Disabled state from all disabled downstream interfaces in an uplink-state group by using the clear ufd-disable uplink-state-group group-id command. All downstream interfaces return to an operationally up state.
– For a port channel interface, enter the keywords port-channel then a number. • If a downstream interface in an uplink-state group is disabled (Oper Down state) by uplink-state tracking because an upstream port is down, the message error-disabled[UFD] displays in the output. Display the current configuration of all uplink-state groups or a specified group.
ARP type: ARPA, ARP Timeout 04:00:00 Last clearing of "show interface" counters 00:25:46 Queueing strategy: fifo Input Statistics: 0 packets, 0 bytes 0 64-byte pkts, 0 over 64-byte pkts, 0 over 127-byte pkts 0 over 255-byte pkts, 0 over 511-byte pkts, 0 over 1023-byte pkts 0 Multicasts, 0 Broadcasts 0 runts, 0 giants, 0 throttles 0 CRC, 0 overrun, 0 discarded Output Statistics: 0 packets, 0 bytes, 0 underruns 0 64-byte pkts, 0 over 64-byte pkts, 0 over 127-byte pkts 0 over 255-byte pkts, 0 over 511-byte pkt
00:10:00: %STKUNIT0-M:CP %IFMGR-5-OSTATE_DN: Changed interface state to down: Te 1/1 Dell(conf-uplink-state-group-3)# description Testing UFD feature Dell(conf-uplink-state-group-3)# show config ! uplink-state-group 3 description Testing UFD feature downstream disable links 2 downstream TenGigabitEthernet 1/1-2,5,9,11-12 upstream TenGigabitEthernet 1/3-4 Dell(conf-uplink-state-group-3)# Dell(conf-uplink-state-group-3)#exit Dell(conf)#exit Dell# 00:13:06: %STKUNIT0-M:CP %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from conso
58 Upgrade Procedures To find the upgrade procedures, go to the Dell Networking OS Release Notes for your system type to see all the requirements needed to upgrade to the desired Dell Networking OS version. To upgrade your system type, follow the procedures in the Dell Networking OS Release Notes. Get Help with Upgrades Direct any questions or concerns about the Dell Networking OS upgrade procedures to the Dell Technical Support Center. You can reach Technical Support: • On the web: http://www.dell.
59 Virtual LANs (VLANs) Virtual LANs (VLANs) are supported on Dell Networking OS. VLANs are a logical broadcast domain or logical grouping of interfaces in a local area network (LAN) in which all data received is kept locally and broadcast to all members of the group. When in Layer 2 mode, VLANs move traffic at wire speed and can span multiple devices. The Dell Networking Operating System (OS) supports up to 4093 port-based VLANs and one default VLAN, as specified in IEEE 802.1Q.
NOTE: You cannot assign an IP address to the Default VLAN. To assign an IP address to a VLAN that is currently the Default VLAN, create another VLAN and assign it to be the Default VLAN. For more information about assigning IP addresses, refer to Assigning an IP Address to a VLAN. • Untagged interfaces must be part of a VLAN. To remove an untagged interface from the Default VLAN, create another VLAN and place the interface into that VLAN.
• The VLAN protocol identifier identifies the frame as tagged according to the IEEE 802.1Q specifications (2 bytes). • Tag control information (TCI) includes the VLAN ID (2 bytes total). The VLAN ID can have 4,096 values, but two are reserved. NOTE: The insertion of the tag header into the Ethernet frame increases the size of the frame to more than the 1,518 bytes as specified in the IEEE 802.3 standard. Some devices that are not compliant with IEEE 802.3 may not support the larger frame size.
Assigning Interfaces to a VLAN You can only assign interfaces in Layer 2 mode to a VLAN using the tagged and untagged commands. To place an interface in Layer 2 mode, use the switchport command. You can further designate these Layer 2 interfaces as tagged or untagged. For more information, refer to the Interfaces chapter and Configuring Layer 2 (Data Link) Mode.
NUM Status Q * 1 Inactive 2 Active T T 3 Active T T 4 Active T Ports Po1(So 0/0-1) Te 1/1 Po1(So 0/0-1) Te 1/2 Po1(So 0/0-1) When you remove a tagged interface from a VLAN (using the no tagged interface command), it remains tagged only if it is a tagged interface in another VLAN. If the tagged interface is removed from the only VLAN to which it belongs, the interface is placed in the Default VLAN as an untagged interface.
* 1 2 3 4 Inactive Active T T Active T T Active U Po1(So 0/0-1) Te 1/3 Po1(So 0/0-1) Te 1/1 Te 1/2 The only way to remove an interface from the Default VLAN is to place the interface in Default mode by using the no switchport command in INTERFACE mode. Assigning an IP Address to a VLAN VLANs are a Layer 2 feature. For two physical interfaces on different VLANs to communicate, you must assign an IP address to the VLANs to route traffic between the two interfaces.
3. Configure the interface for Switchport mode. INTERFACE mode switchport 4. Add the interface to a tagged or untagged VLAN. VLAN INTERFACE mode [tagged | untagged] Enabling Null VLAN as the Default VLAN In a Carrier Ethernet for Metro Service environment, service providers who perform frequent reconfigurations for customers with changing requirements occasionally enable multiple interfaces, each connected to a different customer, before the interfaces are fully configured.
60 VLT Proxy Gateway The Virtual link trucking (VLT) proxy gateway feature allows a VLT domain to locally terminate and route L3 packets that are destined to a Layer 3 (L3) end point in another VLT domain. Enable the VLT proxy gateway using the link layer discover protocol (LLDP) method or the static configuration. For more information, refer to Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.
Guidelines for Enabling the VLT Proxy Gateway Keep the following points in mind when you enable a VLT proxy gateway: • Proxy gateway is supported only for VLT; for example, across a VLT domain. • You must enable the VLT peer-routing command for the VLT proxy gateway to function. • Asymmetric virtual local area network (VLAN) configuration, such as the same VLAN configured with Layer 2 (L2) mode on one VLT domain and L3 mode on another VLT domain is not supported.
• Dell Networking recommends the vlt-peer-mac transmit command only for square VLTs without diagonal links. • The virtual router redundancy (VRRP) protocol and IPv6 routing is not supported. • Private VLANs (PVLANs) are not supported. • When a Virtual Machine (VM) moves from one VLT domain to the another VLT domain, the VM host sends the gratuitous ARP (GARP) , which in-turn triggers a mac movement from the previous VLT domain to the newer VLT domain.
• You must have at least one link connection to each unit of the VLT domain. Following are the prerequisites for Proxy Gateway LLDP configuration: • You must globally enable LLDP. • You cannot have interface–level LLDP disable commands on the interfaces configured for proxy gateway and you must enable both transmission and reception. • You must connect both units of the remote VLT domain by the port channel member.
• The above figure shows a sample VLT Proxy gateway scenario. There are no diagonal links in the square VLT connection between the C and D in VLT domain 1 and C1 and D1 in the VLT domain 2. This causes sub-optimal routing with the VLT Proxy Gateway LLDP method. For VLT Proxy Gateway to work in this scenario you must configure the VLT-peer-mac transmit command under VLT Domain Proxy Gateway LLDP mode, in both C and D (VLT domain 1) and C1 and D1 (VLT domain 2).
2. Configure remote-mac-address in VLT Domain Proxy Gateway LLDP mode. Configure the system mac-addresses of both C and D in C1 and also in D1 in the remote VLT domain and vice versa. Sample Static Configuration on C switch or C1 switch Switch_C#conf Switch_C(conf)#vlt domain 1 Switch_C(conf-vlt-domain1)#proxy-gateway static Switch_C(conf-vlt-domain1-pxy-gw-static)#remote-mac-address ....
61 Virtual Link Trunking (VLT) Overview VLT allows physical links between two chassis to appear as a single virtual link to the network core or other switches such as Edge, Access, or top-of-rack (ToR). VLT reduces the role of spanning tree protocols (STPs) by allowing link aggregation group (LAG) terminations on two separate distribution or core switches, and by supporting a loop-free topology. (To prevent the initial loop that may occur prior to VLT being established, use a spanning tree protocol.
Figure 130. VLT on S4810 Switches VLT on Core Switches Uplinks from servers to the access layer and from access layer to the aggregation layer are bundled in LAG groups with end-to-end Layer 2 multipathing. This set up requires “horizontal” stacking at the access layer and VLT at the aggregation layer such that all the uplinks from servers to access and access to aggregation are in Active-Active Load Sharing mode.
Figure 131. Enhanced VLT VLT Terminology The following are key VLT terms. • Virtual link trunk (VLT) — The combined port channel between an attached device and the VLT peer switches. • VLT backup link — The backup link monitors the vitality of VLT peer switches. The backup link sends configurable, periodic keep alive messages between the VLT peer switches. • VLT interconnect (VLTi) — The link used to synchronize states between the VLT peer switches.
• If you include RSTP on the system, configure it before VLT. Refer to Configure Rapid Spanning Tree. • If you include PVST on the system, configure it before VLT. Refer to PVST Configuration. • Dell Networking strongly recommends that the VLTi (VLT interconnect) be a static LAG and that you disable LACP on the VLTi. • Ensure that the spanning tree root bridge is at the Aggregation layer. If you enable RSTP on the VLT device, refer to RSTP and VLT for guidelines to avoid traffic loss.
• Layer 2 Protocol Tunneling is not supported in VLT. Configuration Notes When you configure VLT, the following conditions apply. • VLT domain – A VLT domain supports two chassis members, which appear as a single logical device to network access devices connected to VLT ports through a port channel. – A VLT domain consists of the two core chassis, the interconnect trunk, backup link, and the LAG members connected to attached devices.
NOTE: If you configure the VLT system MAC address or VLT unit-id on only one of the VLT peer switches, the link between the VLT peer switches is not established. Each VLT peer switch must be correctly configured to establish the link between the peers. – If the link between the VLT peer switches is established, changing the VLT system MAC address or the VLT unit-id causes the link between the VLT peer switches to become disabled.
– For detailed information about how to use VRRP in a VLT domain, refer to the following VLT and VRRP interoperability section. – For information about configuring IGMP Snooping in a VLT domain, refer to VLT and IGMP Snooping. – All system management protocols are supported on VLT ports, including SNMP, RMON, AAA, ACL, DNS, FTP, SSH, Syslog, NTP, RADIUS, SCP, TACACS+, Telnet, and LLDP. – Enable Layer 3 VLAN connectivity VLT peers by configuring a VLAN network interface for the same VLAN on both switches.
If the VLTi link fails, the status of the remote VLT Primary Peer is checked using the backup link. If the remote VLT Primary Peer is available, the Secondary Peer disables all VLT ports to prevent loops. If all ports in the VLTi link fail or if the communication between VLTi links fails, VLT checks the backup link to determine the cause of the failure.
VLT IPv6 The following features have been enhanced to support IPv6: • VLT Sync — Entries learned on the VLT interface are synced on both VLT peers. • Non-VLT Sync — Entries learned on non-VLT interfaces are synced on both VLT peers. • Tunneling — Control information is associated with tunnel traffic so that the appropriate VLT peer can mirror the ingress port as the VLT interface rather than pointing to the VLT peer’s VLTi link.
Figure 132. PIM-Sparse Mode Support on VLT On each VLAN where the VLT peer nodes act as the first hop or last hop routers, one of the VLT peer nodes is elected as the PIM designated router. If you configured IGMP snooping along with PIM on the VLT VLANs, you must configure VLTi as the static multicast router port on both VLT peer switches. This ensures that for first hop routers, the packets from the source are redirected to the designated router (DR) if they are incorrectly hashed.
To verify the PIM neighbors on the VLT VLAN and on the multicast port, use the show ip pim neighbor, show ip igmp snooping mrouter, and show running config commands. You can configure virtual link trunking (VLT) peer nodes as rendezvous points (RPs) in a Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) domain. If the VLT node elected as the designated router fails and you enable VLT Multicast Routing, multicast routes are synced to the other peer for traffic forwarding to ensure minimal traffic loss.
peer-routing 3. Configure the peer-routing timeout. VLT DOMAIN mode peer-routing—timeout value value: Specify a value (in seconds) from 1 to 65535. The default value is infinity (without configuring the timeout). VLT Multicast Routing VLT Multicast Routing provides resiliency to multicast routed traffic during the multicast routing protocol convergence period after a VLT link or VLT peer fails using the least intrusive method (PIM) and does not alter current protocol behavior.
5. Configure a PIM-enabled external neighboring router as a rendezvous point (RP). For more information, refer to Configuring a Static Rendezvous Point. 6. Configure the VLT VLAN routing metrics to prefer VLT VLAN interfaces over non-VLT VLAN interfaces. For more information, refer to Classify Traffic. 7. Configure symmetrical Layer 2 and Layer 3 configurations on both VLT peers for any spanned VLAN.
In the case of a primary VLT switch failure, the secondary switch starts sending BPDUs with its own bridge ID and inherits all the port states from the last synchronization with the primary switch. An access device never detects the change in primary/secondary roles and does not see it as a topology change. The following examples show the RSTP configuration that you must perform on each peer switch to prevent forwarding loops.
channel-member interface interface: specify one of the following interface types: 4. • For a 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword TenGigabitEthernet then the slot/port information. • For a 40-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword fortyGigE then the slot/port information. Ensure that the port channel is active. INTERFACE PORT-CHANNEL mode no shutdown 5. Repeat Steps 1 to 4 on the VLT peer switch to configure the VLT interconnect.
CONFIGURATION mode interface managementethernet slot/ port Enter the slot (0-1) and the port (0). 2. Configure an IPv4 address (A.B.C.D) or IPv6 address (X:X:X:X::X) and mask (/x) on the interface. MANAGEMENT INTERFACE mode {ip address ipv4-address/ mask | ipv6 address ipv6-address/ mask} This is the IP address to be configured on the VLT peer with the back-up destination command. 3. Ensure that the interface is active. MANAGEMENT INTERFACE mode no shutdown 4.
The priority values are from 1 to 65535. The default is 32768. 3. (Optional) When you create a VLT domain on a switch, Dell Networking OS automatically creates a VLT-system MAC address used for internal system operations. VLT DOMAIN CONFIGURATION mode system-mac mac-address mac-address To explicitly configure the default MAC address for the domain by entering a new MAC address, use the system-mac command. The format is aaaa.bbbb.cccc. Also, reconfigure the same MAC address on the VLT peer switch.
no shutdown 6. Associate the port channel to the corresponding port channel in the VLT peer for the VLT connection to an attached device. INTERFACE PORT-CHANNEL mode vlt-peer-lag port-channel id-number The valid port-channel ID numbers are from 1 to 128. 7. Repeat Steps 1 to 6 on the VLT peer switch to configure the same port channel as part of the VLT domain. 8. On an attached switch or server: To connect to the VLT domain and add port channels to it, configure a port channel.
3. • For a 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword TenGigabitEthernet then the slot/port information. • For a 40-Gigabit Ethernet interface, enter the keyword fortyGigE then the slot/port information. Enter VLT-domain configuration mode for a specified VLT domain. CONFIGURATION mode vlt domain domain-id The range of domain IDs is from 1 to 1000. 4. Enter the port-channel number that acts as the interconnect trunk.
9. Place the interface in Layer 2 mode. INTERFACE PORT-CHANNEL mode switchport 10. Associate the port channel to the corresponding port channel in the VLT peer for the VLT connection to an attached device. INTERFACE PORT-CHANNEL mode vlt-peer-lag port-channel id-number Valid port-channel ID numbers are from 1 to 128. 11. Ensure that the port channel is active. INTERFACE PORT-CHANNEL mode no shutdown 12. Add links to the eVLT port. Configure a range of interfaces to bulk configure.
channel-member 5. Configure the backup link between the VLT peer units (shown in the following example). 6. Configure the peer 2 management ip/ interface ip for which connectivity is present in VLT peer 1. EXEC Privilege mode show running-config vlt 7. Configure the peer 1 management ip/ interface ip for which connectivity is present in VLT peer 1. EXEC mode or EXEC Privilege mode show interfaces interface 8.
Configure the backup link between the VLT peer units. 1. Configure the peer 2 management ip/ interface ip for which connectivity is present in VLT peer 1. 2. Configure the peer 1 management ip/ interface ip for which connectivity is present in VLT peer 2. Dell-2#show running-config vlt ! vlt domain 5 peer-link port-channel 1 back-up destination 10.11.206.58 Dell-2# show interfaces managementethernet 0/0 Internet address is 10.11.206.
port-channel-protocol LACP port-channel 100 mode active no shutdown s60-1#show running-config interface tengigabitethernet 1/30 ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/30 no ip address ! port-channel-protocol LACP port-channel 100 mode active no shutdown s60-1#show running-config interface port-channel 100 ! interface Port-channel 100 no ip address switchport no shutdown s60-1#show interfaces port-channel 100 brief Codes: L - LACP Port-channel L LAG 100 Mode L2 Status up Uptime 03:33:48 Ports Te 1/8 (Up) Te 1
PVST+ Configuration PVST+ is supported in a VLT domain. Before you configure VLT on peer switches, configure PVST+ in the network. PVST+ is required for initial loop prevention during the VLT startup phase. You may also use PVST+ for loop prevention in the network outside of the VLT port channel. Run PVST+ on both VLT peer switches. PVST+ instance will be created for every VLAN configured in the system.
eVLT Configuration Example The following example demonstrates the steps to configure enhanced VLT (eVLT) in a network. In this example, you are configuring two domains. Domain 1 consists of Peer 1 and Peer 2; Domain 2 consists of Peer 3 and Peer 4, as shown in the following example. In Domain 1, configure Peer 1 fist, then configure Peer 2. When that is complete, perform the same steps for the peer nodes in Domain 2. The interface used in this example is TenGigabitEthernet. Figure 133.
Next, configure the VLT domain and VLTi on Peer 2. Domain_1_Peer2#configure Domain_1_Peer2(conf)#interface port-channel 1 Domain_1_Peer2(conf-if-po-1)# channel-member TenGigabitEthernet 1/8-9 Domain_1_Peer2(conf) #vlt domain Domain_1_Peer2(conf-vlt-domain)# Domain_1_Peer2(conf-vlt-domain)# Domain_1_Peer2(conf-vlt-domain)# Domain_1_Peer2(conf-vlt-domain)# 1000 peer-link port-channel 1 back-up destination 10.16.130.12 system-mac mac-address 00:0a:00:0a:00:0a unit-id 1 Configure eVLT on Peer 2.
Domain_2_Peer4(conf-vlt-domain)# system-mac mac-address 00:0b:00:0b:00:0b Domain_2_Peer4(conf-vlt-domain)# unit-id 1 Configure eVLT on Peer 4. Domain_2_Peer4(conf)#interface port-channel 100 Domain_2_Peer4(conf-if-po-100)# switchport Domain_2_Peer4(conf-if-po-100)# vlt-peer-lag port-channel 100 Domain_2_Peer4(conf-if-po-100)# no shutdown Add links to the eVLT port-channel on Peer 4.
Verifying a VLT Configuration To monitor the operation or verify the configuration of a VLT domain, use any of the following show commands on the primary and secondary VLT switches. • Display information on backup link operation. EXEC mode • show vlt backup-link Display general status information about VLT domains currently configured on the switch.
HeartBeat Timeout: UDP Port: HeartBeat Messages Sent: HeartBeat Messages Received: 3 34998 1026 1025 Dell_VLTpeer2# show vlt backup-link VLT Backup Link ----------------Destination: Peer HeartBeat status: HeartBeat Timer Interval: HeartBeat Timeout: UDP Port: HeartBeat Messages Sent: HeartBeat Messages Received: 10.11.200.20 Up 1 3 34998 1030 1014 The following example shows the show vlt brief command.
VLT Role ---------VLT Role: System MAC address: System Role Priority: Local System MAC address: Local System Role Priority: Secondary 00:01:e8:8a:df:bc 32768 00:01:e8:8a:df:e6 32768 The following example shows the show running-config vlt command. Dell_VLTpeer1# show running-config vlt ! vlt domain 30 peer-link port-channel 60 back-up destination 10.11.200.18 Dell_VLTpeer2# show running-config vlt ! vlt domain 30 peer-link port-channel 60 back-up destination 10.11.200.
Executing IEEE compatible Spanning Tree Protocol Root ID Priority 0, Address 0001.e88a.dff8 Root Bridge hello time 2, max age 20, forward delay 15 Bridge ID Priority 0, Address 0001.e88a.dff8 We are the root Configured hello time 2, max age 20, forward delay 15 Interface Designated Name PortID Prio Cost Sts Cost Bridge ID PortID ---------- -------- ---- ------- -------- - ------- ------------Po 1 128.2 128 200000 DIS 0 0 0001.e88a.dff8 128.2 Po 3 128.4 128 200000 DIS 0 0 0001.e88a.dff8 128.4 Po 4 128.
Verify that the port channels used in the VLT domain are assigned to the same VLAN.
Verifying a Port-Channel Connection to a VLT Domain (From an Attached Access Switch) On an access device, verify the port-channel connection to a VLT domain. Dell_TORswitch(conf)# show running-config interface port-channel 11 ! interface Port-channel 11 no ip address switchport channel-member fortyGigE 1/48,52 no shutdown Troubleshooting VLT To help troubleshoot different VLT issues that may occur, use the following information.
Description Behavior at Peer Up Behavior During Run Time Action to Take Unit ID mismatch The VLT peer does not boot up. The VLTi is forced to a down state. The VLT peer does not boot up. The VLTi is forced to a down state. A syslog error message is generated. A syslog error message is generated. Verify the unit ID is correct on both VLT peers. Unit ID numbers must be sequential on peer units; for example, if Peer 1 is unit ID “0”, Peer 2 unit ID must be “1’.
You can associate either a VLT VLAN or a VLT LAG to a PVLAN. First configure the VLT interconnect (VLTi) or a VLT LAG by using the peer-link port-channel id-number command or the VLT VLAN by using the peer-link port-channel idnumber peer-down-vlan vlan interface number command and the switchport command.
Whenever a change occurs in the VLAN mode of one of the peers, this modification is synchronized with the other peers. Depending on the validation mechanism that is initiated for MAC synchronization of VLT peers, MAC addresses learned on a particular VLAN are either synchronized with the other peers, or MAC addresses synchronized from the other peers on the same VLAN are deleted. This method of processing occurs when the PVLAN mode of VLT LAGs is modified.
Table 82.
VLT LAG Mode PVLAN Mode of VLT VLAN Peer1 Peer2 Peer1 Peer2 Trunk Access Primary/Normal Secondary ICL VLAN Membership Mac Synchronization No No Configuring a VLT VLAN or LAG in a PVLAN You can configure the VLT peers or nodes in a private VLAN (PVLAN). Because the VLT LAG interfaces are terminated on two different nodes, PVLAN configuration of VLT VLANs and VLT LAGs are symmetrical and identical on both the VLT peers. PVLANs provide Layer 2 isolation between ports within the same VLAN.
The range is from 1 to 128. 8. (Optional) To configure a VLT LAG, enter the VLAN ID number of the VLAN where the VLT forwards packets received on the VLTi from an adjacent peer that is down. VLT DOMAIN CONFIGURATION mode peer-link port-channel id-number peer-down-vlan vlan interface number The range is from 1 to 4094. Associating the VLT LAG or VLT VLAN in a PVLAN 1. Access INTERFACE mode for the port that you want to assign to a PVLAN. CONFIGURATION mode interface interface 2. Enable the port.
• Amended by specifying the new secondary VLAN to be added to the list. Proxy ARP Capability on VLT Peer Nodes The proxy ARP functionality is supported on VLT peer nodes. A proxy ARP-enabled device answers the ARP requests that are destined for another host or router. The local host forwards the traffic to the proxy ARP-enabled device, which in turn transmits the packets to the destination. By default, proxy ARP is enabled. To disable proxy ARP, use the no proxy-arp command in the interface mode.
When a VLT node detects peer up, it will not perform proxy ARP for the peer IP addresses. IP address synchronization occurs again between the VLT peers. Proxy ARP is enabled only if peer routing is enabled on both the VLT peers. If you disable peer routing by using the no peerroutingcommand in VLT DOMAIN node, a notification is sent to the VLT peer to disable the proxy ARP.
Configuring VLAN-Stack over VLT To configure VLAN-stack over VLT, follow these steps. 1. Configure the VLT LAG as VLAN-stack access or trunk mode on both the peers. INTERFACE PORT-CHANNEL mode vlan-stack {access | trunk} 2. Configure VLAN as VLAN-stack compatible on both the peers. INTERFACE VLAN mode vlan-stack compatible 3. Add the VLT LAG as a member to the VLAN-stack on both the peers. INTERFACE VLAN mode member port-channel port—channel ID 4. Verify the VLAN-stack configurations.
no shutdown Dell# Dell(conf)#interface port-channel 20 Dell(conf-if-po-20)#switchport Dell(conf-if-po-20)#vlt-peer-lag port-channel 20 Dell(conf-if-po-20)#vlan-stack trunk Dell(conf-if-po-20)#no shutdown Dell#show running-config interface port-channel 20 ! interface Port-channel 20 no ip address switchport vlan-stack trunk vlt-peer-lag port-channel 20 no shutdown Dell# Configure VLAN as VLAN-Stack VLAN and add the VLT LAG as Members to the VLAN Dell(conf)#interface vlan 50 Dell(conf-if-vl-50)#vlan-stack com
back-up destination 10.16.151.
NUM 50 Status Active Description Dell# Q M M V Ports Po10(Te 1/8) Po20(Te 1/20) Po1(Te 1/30-32) IPv6 Peer Routing in VLT Domains Overview Peer routing for IPv6 packets in VLT domains is supported on the S4810, S4820T, S6000, Z9000, and MXL platforms.
During failure cases, when a VLT node goes down and comes back up all the ND entries learned via VLT interface must be synchronized to the peer VLT node Synchronization of IPv6 ND Entries in a Non-VLT Domain L3 VLT provides a higher resiliency at the Layer 3 forwarding level. Routed VLT enables you to replace VRRP with routed VLT to route the traffic from L2 access nodes. With ND synchronization, both the VLT nodes perform Layer 3 forwarding on behalf of each other.
Sample Configuration of IPv6 Peer Routing in a VLT Domain Consider a sample scenario as shown in the following figure in which two VLT nodes, Unit1 and Unit2, are connected in a VLT domain using an ICL or VLTi link. To the south of the VLT domain, UNit1 and Unit2 are connected to a ToR switch named Node B. Also, Unit1 is connected to another node, Node A, and Unit2 is linked to a node, Node C. The network between TOR to VLT Nodes is purely L2 in nature.
Consider a case in which NS for VLT node1 IP reaches VLT node1 on VLT interface and NS for VLT node1 IP reaches VLT node2 due to LAG level hashing in TOR. When VLT node1 receives NS from VLT VLAN interface, it unicasts NA packet on the VLT interface. When NS reaches VLT node2 it is flooded on all interfaces including ICL. When VLT node 1 receives NS on ICL then it floods NA packet on the VLAN. If NS is unicast and if reaches wrong VLT peer it is lifted to CPU using ACL entry.
One of the VLT peer is configured as default gateway router on VLT hosts. If VLT node receives L3 traffic intended for the other VLT peer it routes the traffic to next hop instead of forwarding the traffic to the VLT peer. If neighbor entry is not present VLT node will resolve the next hop. There may be traffic loss during neighbor resolution period.
When a host moves from VLT interface to non-VLT interface or vice versa Neighbor entry is updated and synchronized to VLT peer. When a host moves from non-VLT interface of VLT node1 to non-VLT interface of VLT node2 neighbor entry is updated and synchronized to VLT peer.
62 Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF) Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF) allows a physical router to partition itself into multiple Virtual Routers (VRs). The control and data plane are isolated in each VR so that traffic does NOT flow across VRs.Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF) allows multiple instances of a routing table to co-exist within the same router at the same time. VRF Overview VRF improves functionality by allowing network paths to be segmented without using multiple devices.
Figure 134. VRF Network Example VRF Configuration Notes Although there is no restriction on the number of VLANs that can be assigned to a VRF instance, the total number of routes supported in VRF is limited by the size of the IPv4 CAM. VRF is implemented in a network device by using Forwarding Information Bases (FIBs). A network device may have the ability to configure different virtual routers, where entries in the FIB that belong to one VRF cannot be accessed by another VRF on the same device.
Table 83. Feature/Capability Support Status for Default VRF Support Status for Non-default VRF Configuration rollback for commands introduced or modified Yes No LLDP protocol on the port Yes No 802.
Feature/Capability Support Status for Default VRF Support Status for Non-default VRF sFlow Yes No VRRP on physical and logical interfaces Yes Yes VRRPV3 Yes Yes Secondary IP Addresses Yes No Following IPv6 capabilities No Basic Yes No OSPFv3 Yes Yes IS-IS Yes Yes BGP Yes Yes ACL Yes No Multicast Yes No NDP Yes Yes RAD Yes Yes Ingress/Egress Storm-Control (perinterface/global) Yes No DHCP DHCP requests are not forwarded across VRF instances.
Creating a Non-Default VRF Instance VRF is enabled by default on the switch and supports up to 64 VRF instances: 1 to 63 and the default VRF (0). Task Command Syntax Command Mode Create a non-default VRF instance by specifying a name and VRF ID number, and enter VRF configuration mode.
Task Command Syntax Command Mode instances (including the default VRF 0), do not enter a value for vrf-name. Assigning an OSPF Process to a VRF Instance OSPF routes are supported on all VRF instances. Refer toOpen Shortest Path First (OSPFv2) for complete OSPF configuration information. Assign an OSPF process to a VRF instance . Return to CONFIGURATION mode to enable the OSPF process.
Task Command Syntax Command Mode Hold Down: 0 sec, Preempt: TRUE, AdvInt: 1 sec Adv rcvd: 0, Bad pkts rcvd: 0, Adv sent: 43, Gratuitous ARP sent: 0 Virtual MAC address: 00:00:5e:00:01:0a Virtual IP address: 10.1.1.100 Authentication: (none) Configuring Management VRF You can assign a management interface to a management VRF. Task Command Syntax Command Mode Create a management VRF. ip vrf management CONFIGURATION Assign a management port to a management VRF.
Task Command Syntax Command Mode NOTE: You can also have the management route to point to a front-end port in case of the management VRF. For example: management route 2::/64 te 0/0. To configure a static entry in the IPv6 neighbor discovery, perform the following steps: Task Command Syntax Command Mode Configure a static neighbor.
Figure 136. Setup VRF Interfaces The following example relates to the configuration shown in Figure1 and Figure 2. Router 1 ip vrf blue 1 ! ip vrf orange 2 ! ip vrf green 3 ! interface TenGigabitEthernet no ip address switchport no shutdown ! interface TenGigabitEthernet ip vrf forwarding blue ip address 10.0.0.1/24 no shutdown ! interface TenGigabitEthernet ip vrf forwarding orange ip address 20.0.0.
ip vrf forwarding green ip address 30.0.0.1/24 no shutdown ! interface Vlan 128 ip vrf forwarding blue ip address 1.0.0.1/24 tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/1 no shutdown ! interface Vlan 192 ip vrf forwarding orange ip address 2.0.0.1/24 tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/1 no shutdown ! interface Vlan 256 ip vrf forwarding green ip address 3.0.0.1/24 tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/1 no shutdown ! router ospf 1 vrf blue router-id 1.0.0.1 network 1.0.0.0/24 area 0 network 10.0.0.
ip vrf forwarding blue ip address 1.0.0.2/24 tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/1 no shutdown interface Vlan 192 ip vrf forwarding orange ip address 2.0.0.2/24 tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/1 no shutdown ! interface Vlan 256 ip vrf forwarding green ip address 3.0.0.2/24 tagged TenGigabitEthernet 3/1 no shutdown ! router ospf 1 vrf blue router-id 1.0.0.2 network 11.0.0.0/24 area 0 network 1.0.0.0/24 area 0 passive-interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/1 ! router ospf 2 vrf orange router-id 2.0.0.2 network 21.0.0.
E2 - OSPF external type 2, i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2, IA - IS-IS inter area, * - candidate default, > - non-active route, + - summary route Gateway of last resort is not set C C O Destination ----------1.0.0.0/24 10.0.0.0/24 11.0.0.0/24 Gateway ------Direct, Vl 128 Direct, Te 1/1 via 1.0.0.
Dell#show ip ospf 1 neighbor Neighbor ID Pri 1.0.0.1 1 FULL/BDR ! Dell#sh ip ospf 2 neighbor Neighbor ID Pri 2.0.0.1 1 FULL/BDR ! Dell#show ip route vrf blue State Dead Time 00:00:36 Address 1.0.0.1 Interface Vl 128 Area State Dead Time 00:00:33 Address 2.0.0.
Route Leaking VRFs Static routes can be used to redistribute routes between non-default to default/non-default VRF and vice-versa. You can configure route leaking between two VRFs using the following command: ip route vrf x.x.x.x s.s.s.s nh.nh.nh.nh vrf default. This command indicates that packets that are destined to x.x.x.x/s.s.s.s are reachable through nh.nh.nh.nh in the default VRF table. Meaning, the routes to x.x.x.x/s.s.s.
purpose, routes corresponding VRF-Shared routes are leaked to only VRF-Red and VRF-Blue. And for reply, routes corresponding to VRF-Red and VRF-Blue are leaked to VRF-Shared. For leaking the routes from VRF-Shared to VRF-Red and VRF-Blue, you can configure route-export tag on VRF-shared (source VRF, who is exporting the routes); the same route-export tag value should be configured on VRF-Red and VRF-blue as route-import tag (target VRF, that is importing the routes).
Dell# show ip route vrf VRF-Green O 33.3.3.3/32 via 133.3.3.3 00:00:11 C 133.3.3.0/24 110/0 Direct, Te 1/13 0/0 22:39:61 Dell# show ip route vrf VRF-Shared O 44.4.4.4/32 via 144.4.4.4 110/0 00:00:11 C 144.4.4.0/24 Direct, Te 1/4 0/0 00:32:36 Show routing tables of VRFs( after route-export and route-import tags are configured). Dell# show ip route vrf VRF-Red O C O C 11.1.1.1/32 111.1.1.0/24 44.4.4.4/32 144.4.4.0/24 via 111.1.1.1 110/0 00:00:10 Direct, Te 1/11 0/0 22:39:59 via VRF-shared:144.4.4.
Configuring Route Leaking with Filtering When you initalize route leaking from one VRF to another, all the routes are exposed to the target VRF. If the size of the source VRF's RTM is considerablly large, an import operation results in the duplication of the target VRF's RTM with the source RTM entries. To mitigate this issue, you can use route-maps to filter the routes that are exported and imported into the route targets based on certain matching criteria.
The show run output for the above configuration is as follows: ip vrf vrf-Red ip route-export 1:1 export_ospfbgp_protocol ip route-import 2:2 ! this action exports only the OSPF and BGP routes to other VRFs ! ip vrf vrf-Blue ip route-export 2:2 ip route-import 1:1 import_ospf_protocol !this action accepts only OSPF routes from VRF-red even though both OSPF as well as BGP routes are shared The show VRF commands displays the following output: Dell# show ip route vrf VRF-Blue C 122.2.2.
63 Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) Virtual router redundancy protocol (VRRP) is supported on Dell Networking OS. VRRP Overview VRRP is designed to eliminate a single point of failure in a statically routed network. VRRP specifies a MASTER router that owns the next hop IP and MAC address for end stations on a local area network (LAN). The MASTER router is chosen from the virtual routers by an election process and forwards packets sent to the next hop IP address.
Figure 137. Basic VRRP Configuration VRRP Benefits With VRRP configured on a network, end-station connectivity to the network is not subject to a single point-of-failure. End-station connections to the network are redundant and are not dependent on internal gateway protocol (IGP) protocols to converge or update routing tables. VRRP Implementation Within a single VRRP group, up to 12 virtual IP addresses are supported.
Table 84. Recommended VRRP Advertise Intervals on the S4810 Recommended Advertise Interval Groups/Interface Total VRRP Groups S4810 S4810 Less than 250 1 second 12 Between 250 and 450 2–3 seconds 24 Between 450 and 600 3–4 seconds 36 Between 600 and 800 4 seconds 48 Between 800 and 1000 5 seconds 84 Between 1000 and 1200 7 seconds 100 Between 1200 and 1500 8 seconds 120 VRRP Configuration By default, VRRP is not configured.
Examples of Configuring and Verifying VRRP The following examples how to configure VRRP. Dell(conf)#interface tengigabitethernet 1/1 Dell(conf-if-te-1/1)#vrrp-group 111 Dell(conf-if-te-1/1-vrid-111)# The following examples how to verify the VRRP configuration. Dell(conf-if-te-1/1)#show conf ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 ip address 10.10.10.
2. Set the master switch to VRRP protocol version 3. Dell_master_switch(conf-if-te-1/1-vrid-100)#version 3 3. Set the backup switches to version 3. Dell_backup_switch1(conf-if-te-1/1-vrid-100)#version 3 Dell_backup_switch2(conf-if-te-1/2-vrid-100)#version 3 Assign Virtual IP addresses Virtual routers contain virtual IP addresses configured for that VRRP group (VRID). A VRRP group does not transmit VRRP packets until you assign the Virtual IP address to the VRRP group.
The following example shows how to verify a virtual IP address configuration. NOTE: In the following example, the primary IP address and the virtual IP addresses are on the same subnet. Dell(conf-if-te-1/1)#show conf ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 ip address 10.10.10.1/24 ! vrrp-group 111 priority 255 virtual-address 10.10.10.1 virtual-address 10.10.10.2 virtual-address 10.10.10.
Examples of the priority Command Dell(conf-if-te-1/2)#vrrp-group 111 Dell(conf-if-te-1/2-vrid-111)#priority 125 To verify the VRRP group priority, use the show vrrp command. Dellshow vrrp -----------------TenGigabitEthernet 1/1, VRID: 111, Net: 10.10.10.1 State: Master, Priority: 255, Master: 10.10.10.1 (local) Hold Down: 0 sec, Preempt: TRUE, AdvInt: 1 sec Adv rcvd: 0, Bad pkts rcvd: 0, Adv sent: 2343, Gratuitous ARP sent: 5 Virtual MAC address: 00:00:5e:00:01:6f Virtual IP address: 10.10.10.1 10.10.10.
virtual-address 10.10.10.3 virtual-address 10.10.10.10 Disabling Preempt The preempt command is enabled by default. The command forces the system to change the MASTER router if another router with a higher priority comes online. Prevent the BACKUP router with the higher priority from becoming the MASTER router by disabling preempt. NOTE: You must configure all virtual routers in the VRRP group the same: you must configure all with preempt enabled or configure all with preempt disabled.
• Change the advertisement interval setting. INTERFACE-VRID mode advertise-interval seconds The range is from 1 to 255 seconds. • The default is 1 second. For VRRPv3, change the advertisement centisecs interval setting. INTERFACE-VRID mode advertise-interval centisecs centisecs The range is from 25 to 4075 centisecs in units of 25 centisecs. The default is 100 centisecs.
For a virtual group, you can also track the status of a configured object (the track object-id command) by entering its object number. NOTE: You can configure a tracked object for a VRRP group (using the track object-id command in INTERFACEVRID mode) before you actually create the tracked object (using a track object-id command in CONFIGURATION mode). However, no changes in the VRRP group’s priority occur until the tracked object is defined and determined to be down.
The following example shows verifying the tracking status.
When you configure both CLIs, the later timer rules VRRP enabling. For example, if you set vrrp delay reload 600 and vrrp delay minimum 300, the following behavior occurs: • When the system reloads, VRRP waits 600 seconds (10 minutes) to bring up VRRP on all interfaces that are up and configured for VRRP. • When an interface comes up and becomes operational, the system waits 300 seconds (5 minutes) to bring up VRRP on that interface.
Figure 138. VRRP for IPv4 Topology Examples of Configuring VRRP for IPv4 and IPv6 The following example shows configuring VRRP for IPv4 Router 2. R2(conf)#interface tengigabitethernet 2/31 R2(conf-if-te-2/31)#ip address 10.1.1.1/24 R2(conf-if-te-2/31)#vrrp-group 99 R2(conf-if-te-2/31-vrid-99)#priority 200 R2(conf-if-te-2/31-vrid-99)#virtual 10.1.1.3 R2(conf-if-te-2/31-vrid-99)#no shut R2(conf-if-te-2/31)#show conf ! interface TenGigabitEthernet 2/31 ip address 10.1.1.
-----------------TenGigabitEthernet 2/31, VRID: 99, Net: 10.1.1.1 State: Master, Priority: 200, Master: 10.1.1.1 (local) Hold Down: 0 sec, Preempt: TRUE, AdvInt: 1 sec Adv rcvd: 0, Bad pkts rcvd: 0, Adv sent: 817, Gratuitous ARP sent: 1 Virtual MAC address: 00:00:5e:00:01:63 Virtual IP address: 10.1.1.3 Authentication: (none) R2# Router 3 R3(conf)#interface tengigabitethernet 3/21 R3(conf-if-te-3/21)#ip address 10.1.1.2/24 R3(conf-if-te-3/21)#vrrp-group 99 R3(conf-if-te-3/21-vrid-99)#virtual 10.1.1.
Figure 139. VRRP for an IPv6 Configuration NOTE: In a VRRP or VRRPv3 group, if two routers come up with the same priority and another router already has MASTER status, the router with master status continues to be MASTER even if one of two routers has a higher IP or IPv6 address. The following example shows configuring VRRP for IPv6 Router 2 and Router 3. Configure a virtual link local (fe80) address for each VRRPv3 group created for an interface.
R2(conf-if-te-1/1-vrid-10)#virtual-address fe80::10 R2(conf-if-te-1/1-vrid-10)#virtual-address 1::10 R2(conf-if-te-1/1-vrid-10)#no shutdown R2(conf-if-te-1/1)#show config interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 ipv6 address 1::1/64 vrrp-group 10 priority 100 virtual-address fe80::10 virtual-address 1::10 no shutdown R2(conf-if-te-1/1)#end R2#show vrrp -----------------TenGigabitEthernet 1/1, IPv6 VRID: 10, Version: 3, Net:fe80::201:e8ff:fe6a:c59f VRF: 0 default-vrf State: Master, Priority: 100, Master: fe80::201:e
VRRP in a VRF: Non-VLAN Scenario The following example shows how to enable VRRP in a non-VLAN. The following example shows a typical use case in which you create three virtualized overlay networks by configuring three VRFs in two E-Series switches. The default gateway to reach the internet in each VRF is a static route with the next hop being the virtual IP address configured in VRRP. In this scenario, a single VLAN is associated with each VRF.
S1(conf)#interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/1 S1(conf-if-te-1/1)#ip vrf forwarding VRF-1 S1(conf-if-te-1/1)#ip address 10.10.1.5/24 S1(conf-if-te-1/1)#vrrp-group 11 % Info: The VRID used by the VRRP group 11 in VRF 1 will be 177. S1(conf-if-te-1/1-vrid-101)#priority 100 S1(conf-if-te-1/1-vrid-101)#virtual-address 10.10.1.2 S1(conf-if-te-1/1)#no shutdown ! S1(conf)#interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/2 S1(conf-if-te-1/2)#ip vrf forwarding VRF-2 S1(conf-if-te-1/2)#ip address 10.10.1.
S2(conf-if-te-1/3)#ip vrf forwarding VRF-3 S2(conf-if-te-1/3)#ip address 20.1.1.6/24 S2(conf-if-te-1/3)#vrrp-group 15 % Info: The VRID used by the VRRP group 15 in VRF 3 will be 243. S2(conf-if-te-1/3-vrid-105)#priority 100 S2(conf-if-te-1/3-vrid-105)#virtual-address 20.1.1.5 S2(conf-if-te-1/3)#no shutdown VLAN Scenario In another scenario, to connect to the LAN, VRF-1, VRF-2, and VRF-3 use a single physical interface with multiple tagged VLANs (instead of separate physical interfaces).
VRF: 1 vrf1 State: Master, Priority: 100, Master: 10.1.1.1 (local) Hold Down: 0 sec, Preempt: TRUE, AdvInt: 1 sec Adv rcvd: 0, Bad pkts rcvd: 0, Adv sent: 278, Gratuitous ARP sent: 1 Virtual MAC address: 00:00:5e:00:01:01 Virtual IP address: 10.1.1.100 Authentication: (none) Dell#show vrrp vrf vrf2 port-channel 1 -----------------Port-channel 1, IPv4 VRID: 1, Version: 2, Net: 10.1.1.1 VRF: 2 vrf2 State: Master, Priority: 100, Master: 10.1.1.
VRF: 1 vrf1 State: Master, Priority: 100, Master: 10.1.1.1 (local) Hold Down: 0 sec, Preempt: TRUE, AdvInt: 1 sec Adv rcvd: 0, Bad pkts rcvd: 0, Adv sent: 278, Gratuitous ARP sent: 1 Virtual MAC address: 00:00:5e:00:01:01 Virtual IP address: 10.1.1.100 Authentication: (none) Vlan 400, IPv4 VRID: 10, Version: 2, Net: 20.1.1.2 VRF: 1 vrf1 State: Backup, Priority: 90, Master: 20.1.1.
Figure 141. VRRP for IPv6 Topology NOTE: In a VRRP or VRRPv3 group, if two routers come up with the same priority and another router already has MASTER status, the router with master status continues to be master even if one of two routers has a higher IP or IPv6 address.
NOTE: The virtual IPv6 address you configure should be the same as the IPv6 subnet to which the interface belongs.
Virtual MAC address: 00:00:5e:00:02:ff Virtual IP address: 10:1:1::255 fe80::255 Dell#show vrrp tengigabitethernet 2/8 TenGigabitEthernet 2/8, IPv6 VRID: 255, Version: 3, Net: fe80::201:e8ff:fe8a:e9ed VRF: 0 default State: Master, Priority: 110, Master: fe80::201:e8ff:fe8a:e9ed (local) Hold Down: 0 centisec, Preempt: TRUE, AdvInt: 100 centisec Accept Mode: FALSE, Master AdvInt: 100 centisec Adv rcvd: 0, Bad pkts rcvd: 0, Adv sent: 120 Virtual MAC address: 00:00:5e:00:02:ff Virtual IP address: 10:1:1::255 fe
64 S-Series Debugging and Diagnostics This chapter describes debugging and diagnostics for the device. Offline Diagnostics The offline diagnostics test suite is useful for isolating faults and debugging hardware. The diagnostics tests are grouped into three levels: • • • Level 0 — Level 0 diagnostics check for the presence of various components and perform essential path verifications. In addition, Level 0 diagnostics verify the identification registers of the components on the board.
3. Start diagnostics on the unit. diag stack-unit stack-unit-number When the tests are complete, the system displays the following message and automatically reboots the unit. Dell#00:09:42 : Diagnostic test results are stored on file: flash:/TestReport-SU-0.txt Diags completed... Rebooting the system now!!! Mar 12 10:40:35: %S4810:0 %DIAGAGT-6-DA_DIAG_DONE: Diags finished on stack unit 0 Diagnostic results are printed to a file in the flash using the filename format TestReport-SU-.txt.
10 11 Member Member not present not present -- Power Supplies -Unit Bay Status Type FanSpeed(rpm) --------------------------------------------------------------------------0 0 down UNKNOWN 0 0 1 up AC 14000 -- Fan Status -Unit Bay TrayStatus Fan0 Speed Fan1 Speed -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------0 0 up up 13466 up 13466 0 1 up up 13653 up 13466 Speed in RPM The following example shows the diag command (standalone unit).
**************MFG INFO******************* Data in Chassis Eeprom Vendor Id : Country Code : Date Code : Serial Number : Part Number : Product Revision : Product Order Number : Mfg Info is listed as... 07 02 01222011 HADL112220111 7590009602 A S4810P-AC **************************** S4810 LEVEL 0 DIAGNOSTICS************************** diagS4810ChkPsuPresence[625]: ERROR: Psu : 0 is not present Test 1.000 - Psu Power Good Test .................................... Test 1.001 - Psu Power Good Test .............
Last Restart Reason If the system restarts for some reason (automatically or manually), the show system command output includes the reason for the restart. The following table shows the reasons displayed in the output and their corresponding causes. Table 85.
show hardware stack-unit {0-11} buffer unit {0-1} port {1-64} queue {0-14 | all} bufferinfo • View input and output statistics on the party bus, which carries inter-process communication traffic between CPUs. EXEC Privilege mode show hardware stack-unit {0-11} cpu party-bus statistics • View the ingress and egress internal packet-drop counters, MAC counters drop, and FP packet drops for the stack unit on per port basis.
Example of the show interfaces transceiver Command Dell#show interfaces transceiver -- RPM Environment Status -Slot Status Temp Voltage -----------------------------0 active 33C ok 1 not present Recognize an Overtemperature Condition An overtemperature condition occurs, for one of two reasons: the card genuinely is too hot or a sensor has malfunctioned. Inspect cards adjacent to the one reporting the condition to discover the cause.
This message indicates that the specified card is not receiving enough power. In response, the system first shuts down Power over Ethernet (PoE). If the under-voltage condition persists, line cards are shut down, then the RPMs. Troubleshoot an Under-Voltage Condition To troubleshoot an under-voltage condition, check that the correct number of power supplies are installed and their Status light emitting diodes (LEDs) are lit.
• • • • • • • • • • • • show hardware ipv6 {e.g.
Policy Discards Packets dropped by FP (L2+L3) Drops Port bitmap zero Drops Rx VLAN Drops --- Ingress MAC counters--Ingress FCSDrops Ingress MTUExceeds --- MMU Drops --Ingress MMU Drops HOL DROPS(TOTAL) HOL DROPS on COS0 HOL DROPS on COS1 HOL DROPS on COS2 HOL DROPS on COS3 HOL DROPS on COS4 HOL DROPS on COS5 HOL DROPS on COS6 HOL DROPS on COS7 HOL DROPS on COS8 HOL DROPS on COS9 HOL DROPS on COS10 HOL DROPS on COS11 HOL DROPS on COS12 HOL DROPS on COS13 HOL DROPS on COS14 HOL DROPS on COS15 HOL DROPS on COS
HOL DROPS on COS4 HOL DROPS on COS5 HOL DROPS on COS6 HOL DROPS on COS7 HOL DROPS on COS8 HOL DROPS on COS9 HOL DROPS on COS10 HOL DROPS on COS11 HOL DROPS on COS12 HOL DROPS on COS13 HOL DROPS on COS14 HOL DROPS on COS15 HOL DROPS on COS16 HOL DROPS on COS17 TxPurge CellErr Aged Drops --- Egress MAC counters--Egress FCS Drops --- Egress FORWARD PROCESSOR IPv4 L3UC Aged & Drops TTL Threshold Drops INVALID VLAN CNTR Drops L2MC Drops PKT Drops of ANY Conditions Hg MacUnderflow TX Err PKT Counter --- Error cou
Aged Drops --- Egress MAC counters--Egress FCS Drops --- Egress FORWARD PROCESSOR IPv4 L3UC Aged & Drops TTL Threshold Drops INVALID VLAN CNTR Drops L2MC Drops PKT Drops of ANY Conditions Hg MacUnderflow TX Err PKT Counter --- Error counters--Internal Mac Transmit Errors Unknown Opcodes Internal Mac Receive Errors : 0 : 0 Drops : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 --- : 0 : 0 : 0 Dataplane Statistics The show hardware stack-unit cpu data-plane statistics command provides insight into the packet types coming to t
Example of Viewing Party Bus Statistics Dell#sh hardware stack-unit 2 cpu party-bus statistics Input Statistics: 27550 packets, 2559298 bytes 0 dropped, 0 errors Output Statistics: 1649566 packets, 1935316203 bytes 0 errors Display Stack Port Statistics The show hardware stack-unit stack-port command displays input and output statistics for a stack-port interface.
Interface Te 0/0 : Description RX - IPV4 L3 Unicast Frame Counter RX - IPV4 L3 routed multicast Packets RX - IPV6 L3 Unicast Frame Counter RX - IPV6 L3 routed multicast Packets RX - Unicast Packet Counter RX - 64 Byte Frame Counter RX - 64 to 127 Byte Frame Counter RX - 128 to 255 Byte Frame Counter RX - 256 to 511 Byte Frame Counter RX - 512 to 1023 Byte Frame Counter RX - 1024 to 1518 Byte Frame Counter RX - 1519 to 1522 Byte Good VLAN Frame Counter RX - 1519 to 2047 Byte Frame Counter RX - 2048 to 4095 B
RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX - IPV4 L3 Unicast Frame Counter IPV4 L3 routed multicast Packets IPV6 L3 Unicast Frame Counter IPV6 L3 routed multicast Packets Unicast Packet Counter 64 Byte Frame Counter 64 to 127 Byte Frame Counter 128 to 255 Byte Frame Counter 256 to 511 Byte Frame Counter 512 to 1023 Byte Frame Counter 1024 to 1518 Byte Frame Counter 1519 to 1522 Byte Good
RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX RX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX - 1024 to 1518 Byte Frame Counter 1519 to 1522 Byte Good VLAN Frame Counter 1519 to 2047 Byte Frame Counter 2048 to 4095 Byte Frame Counter 4096 to 9216 Byte Frame Counter Good Packet Counter Packet/frame Counter Unicast Packet Counter Multicast Packet Counter Broadcast Frame Counter Byte Counter Control frame counter PAUSE frame counter Oversized frame counter Jabber frame c
RX - 256 to 511 Byte Frame Counter RX - 512 to 1023 Byte Frame Counter RX - 1024 to 1518 Byte Frame Counter RX - 1519 to 1522 Byte Good VLAN Frame Counter RX - 1519 to 2047 Byte Frame Counter RX - 2048 to 4095 Byte Frame Counter RX - 4096 to 9216 Byte Frame Counter RX - Good Packet Counter RX - Packet/Frame Counter RX - Unicast Frame Counter RX - Multicast Frame Counter RX - Broadcast Frame Counter RX - Byte Counter RX - Control Frame Counter RX - Pause Control Frame Counter RX - Oversized Frame Counter RX
When a member or standby unit crashes, the mini core file gets uploaded to master unit. When the master unit crashes, the mini core file is uploaded to new master. The panic string contains key information regarding the crash. Several panic string types exist, and they are displayed in regular English text to enable easier understanding of the crash cause.
To enable a TCP dump, use the following command. • Enable a TCP dump for CPU bound traffic.
65 Standards Compliance This chapter describes standards compliance for Dell Networking products. NOTE: Unless noted, when a standard cited here is listed as supported by the Dell Networking Operating System (OS), Dell Networking OS also supports predecessor standards. One way to search for predecessor standards is to use the http://tools.ietf.org/ website. Click “Browse and search IETF documents,” enter an RFC number, and inspect the top of the resulting document for obsolescence citations to related RFCs.
RFC and I-D Compliance Dell Networking OS supports the following standards. The standards are grouped by related protocol. The columns showing support by platform indicate which version of Dell Networking OS first supports the standard. General Internet Protocols The following table lists the Dell Networking OS support per platform for general internet protocols. Table 87. General Internet Protocols RFC# Full Name S-Series 768 User Datagram Protocol 7.6.1 793 Transmission Control Protocol 7.6.
RFC# Full Name S-Series 1042 A Standard for the Transmission of IP Datagrams 7.6.1 over IEEE 802 Networks 1191 Path MTU Discovery 1305 Network Time Protocol (Version 3) Specification, 7.6.1 Implementation and Analysis 1519 Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR): an Address Assignment and Aggregation Strategy 7.6.1 1542 Clarifications and Extensions for the Bootstrap Protocol 7.6.1 1812 Requirements for IP Version 4 Routers 7.6.1 2131 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol 7.6.
RFC# Full Name S-Series 4862 IPv6 Stateless Address Autoconfiguration 8.3.12.0 5175 IPv6 Router Advertisement Flags Option 8.3.12.0 Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) The following table lists the Dell Networking OS support per platform for BGP protocols. Table 90. Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) RFC# Full Name S-Series/Z-Series 1997 BGP ComAmtturnibituitees 7.8.1 2385 Protection of BGP Sessions via the TCP MD5 Signature Option 7.8.1 2439 BGP Route Flap Damping 7.8.
Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) The following table lists the Dell Networking OS support per platform for IS-IS protocol. Table 92.
Multicast The following table lists the Dell Networking OS support per platform for Multicast protocol. Table 94. Multicast RFC# Full Name S-Series 1112 Host Extensions for IP Multicasting 7.8.1 2236 Internet Group Management Protocol, Version 2 7.8.1 2710 Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) for IPv6 3376 Internet Group Management Protocol, Version 3 7.8.1 3569 An Overview of Source-Specific Multicast (SSM) 7.8.
RFC# Full Name S4810 1850 OSPF Version 2 Management Information Base 7.6.1 1901 Introduction to Communitybased SNMPv2 7.6.1 2011 SNMPv2 Management 7.6.1 Information Base for the Internet Protocol using SMIv2 2012 SNMPv2 Management Information Base for the Transmission Control Protocol using SMIv2 7.6.1 2013 SNMPv2 Management Information Base for the User Datagram Protocol using SMIv2 7.6.1 2024 Definitions of Managed Objects for Data Link Switching using SMIv2 7.6.
RFC# Full Name S4810 2578 Structure of Management Information Version 2 (SMIv2) 7.6.1 2579 Textual Conventions for SMIv2 7.6.1 2580 Conformance Statements for SMIv2 7.6.1 2618 RADIUS Authentication Client MIB, except the following four counters: 7.6.1 S4820T Z-Series 9.5.(0.0) 9.5.(0.0) radiusAuthClientInvalidServerAdd resses radiusAuthClientMalformedAcce ssResponses radiusAuthClientUnknownTypes radiusAuthClientPacketsDropped 2698 A Two Rate Three Color Marker 9.5.(0.
RFC# Full Name S4810 S4820T Z-Series 3418 Management Information Base (MIB) for the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) 7.6.1 3434 Remote Monitoring MIB Extensions for High Capacity Alarms, High-Capacity Alarm Table (64 bits) 7.6.1 3580 IEEE 802.1X Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS) Usage Guidelines 7.6.
RFC# Full Name S4810 S4820T Z-Series 9.2.(0.0) 9.2.(0.0) interfaces. Used in the Programmatic Interface RESTAPI feature. IEEE 802.1AB Management Information Base module for LLDP configuration, statistics, local system data and remote systems data components. 7.7.1 IEEE 802.1AB The LLDP Management 7.7.1 Information Base extension module for IEEE 802.1 organizationally defined discovery information. (LLDP DOT1 MIB and LLDP DOT3 MIB) IEEE 802.1AB The LLDP Management 7.7.
RFC# Full Name S4810 FORCE10-LINKAGGMIB Force10 Enterprise Link Aggregation MIB 7.6.1 S4820T FORCE10-CHASSIS-MIB Force10 E-Series Enterprise Chassis MIB FORCE10-COPYCONFIG-MIB Force10 File Copy MIB (supporting SNMP SET operation) 7.7.1 FORCE10-MONMIB Force10 Monitoring MIB 7.6.1 FORCE10-PRODUCTSMIB Force10 Product Object Identifier 7.6.1 MIB FORCE10-SS-CHASSIS- Force10 S-Series Enterprise MIB Chassis MIB 7.6.1 FORCE10-SMI Force10 Structure of Management Information 7.6.