Configuring vrrp, Vrrp overview – H3C Technologies H3C S12500 Series Switches User Manual

Page 138

Advertising
background image

127

Configuring VRRP

The term router in this document refers to both routers and Layer 3 switches.

VRRP overview

Typically, as shown in

Figure 28

, you can configure a default route with the gateway as the next hop for

every host on a network segment. All packets destined to other network segments are sent over the

default route to the gateway, which then forwards the packets. However, when the gateway fails, all the

hosts that use the gateway as the default next-hop router fail to communicate with external networks.

Figure 28 LAN networking

Configuring a default route for network hosts facilitates your configuration, but also requires high

performance stability of the device that acts as the gateway. Using more egress gateways is a common

way to improve system reliability, but introduces the problem of routing among the egresses.
Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) is designed to address this problem. VRRP adds a group of

routers that can act as network gateways to a VRRP group, which forms a virtual router. Routers in the

VRRP group elect a master through the VRRP election mechanism to act as a gateway, and hosts on a

LAN only need to configure the virtual router as their default network gateway.
VRRP is an error-tolerant protocol, which improves the network reliability and simplifies configurations on

hosts. On a multicast and broadcast LAN such as Ethernet, VRRP provides highly reliable default links

without configuration changes (such as dynamic routing protocols, route discovery protocols) when a

router fails, and prevent network interruption due to a single link failure.
VRRP operates in either of the following modes:

Standard protocol mode—Includes two versions VRRPv2 and VRRPv3. IPv4 VRRPv2 is based on
RFC 2338. IPv6 VRRPv2 is based on RFC 3768. VRRPv3 is based on RFC 5798. For more

information, see "

VRRP standard protocol mode

."

Load balancing mode—Extends the standard protocol mode and realizes load balancing. For more
information, see "

VRRP load balancing mode

."

Advertising
This manual is related to the following products: