Configuring mpls te, Overview, Te and mpls te – H3C Technologies H3C S12500-X Series Switches User Manual

Page 55: Mpls te basic concepts, Static crlsp establishment

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Configuring MPLS TE

Overview

TE and MPLS TE

Network congestion can degrade the network backbone performance. It might occur when network

resources are inadequate or when load distribution is unbalanced. Traffic engineering (TE) is intended to

avoid the latter situation where partial congestion might occur because of improper resource allocation.
TE can make the best use of network resources and avoid uneven load distribution by real-time
monitoring of traffic and traffic load on network elements and dynamic tuning of traffic management

attributes, routing parameters, and resources constraints.
MPLS TE combines the MPLS technology and traffic engineering. It reserves resources by establishing LSP

tunnels along the specified paths, allowing traffic to bypass congested nodes to achieve appropriate
load distribution.
MPLS TE features simplicity and good scalability. With MPLS TE, a service provider can deploy traffic

engineering on the existing MPLS backbone to provide various services and optimize network resources

management.

MPLS TE basic concepts

CRLSP—Constraint-based Routed Label Switched Path. To establish a CRLSP, you must configure

routing (as you do for a normal LSP), and specify constrains, such as the bandwidth.

MPLS TE tunnel—A virtual point-to-point connection from the ingress node to the egress node.
Typically, an MPLS TE tunnel consists of one CRLSP. To deploy CRLSP backup or transmit traffic over

multiple paths, you must establish multiple CRLSPs for one class of traffic. In this case, an MPLS TE

tunnel consists of a set of CRLSPs. An MPLS TE tunnel is identified by an MPLS TE tunnel interface on

the ingress node. When the outgoing interface of a traffic flow is an MPLS TE tunnel interface, the
traffic flow is forwarded through the CRLSP of the MPLS TE tunnel.

Static CRLSP establishment

A static CRLSP is established by manually specifying the incoming label, outgoing label, and other
constraints (such as bandwidth) on each hop (including the ingress, transit, and egress nodes) along the

path that the traffic travels. Static CRLSPs feature simple configuration, but they cannot automatically

adapt to network changes.
For more information about static CRLSPs, see "Configuring a static CRLSP."

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