Vpn support, Ospf sham link, Protocols and standards – H3C Technologies H3C S10500 Series Switches User Manual

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VPN support

In BGP MPLS VPNs, multiple sites in the same VPN can use OSPF as the internal routing protocol, but

they are treated as different ASs. An OSPF route learned by a site is forwarded to another site as an
external route. This mechanism leads to heavy OSPF routing traffic and management issues.
To solve this problem, domain IDs are used to differentiate VPNs. Sites in the same VPN are considered

as directly connected. PE routers exchange OSPF routing information like on a dedicated line. Thus

network management and OSPF operation efficiency are improved.

NOTE:

For configuration of this feature, see

MPLS Configuration Guide.

OSPF sham link

An OSPF sham link is a point-to-point link between two PE routers on the MPLS VPN backbone.
In general, BGP peers exchange routing information on the MPLS VPN backbone by using the BGP

extended community attributes. OSPF running on the remote PE uses the routing information to originate

Type-3 summary LSAs (inter-area routes) transmitted to CEs.
If a CE has an intra-area route (backdoor route) to another CE, VPN traffic will always travel on the

backdoor route rather than the corresponding inter-area route because an intra-area route has a higher

priority than an inter-area route. To avoid this, an unnumbered sham link can be configured between PEs

to connect the CEs via an intra-area route over the backbone.

NOTE:

For more information about sham link, see

MPLS Configuration Guide.

BFD

NOTE:

For more information about BFD, see

High Availability Configuration Guide.

Bidirectional forwarding detection (BFD) provides a single mechanism to quickly detect and monitor the

connectivity of links between OSPF neighbors, reducing network convergence time.

Protocols and standards

RFC 1765, OSPF Database Overflow

RFC 2328, OSPF Version 2

RFC 3101, OSPF Not-So-Stubby Area (NSSA) Option

RFC 3137, OSPF Stub Router Advertisement

RFC 3630, Traffic Engineering Extensions to OSPF Version 2

RFC 4811, OSPF Out-of-Band LSDB Resynchronization

RFC 4812, OSPF Restart Signaling

RFC 4813, OSPF Link-Local Signaling

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