Routing engine functions – Juniper Networks M5 User Manual

Page 52

Advertising
background image

Routing Engine Architecture

Figure 14: Routing Engine Architecture

JUNOS

software

System

management

processes

Routing

protocols

Control

functions

System processes

Operating system

Kernel

Intel-based PCI platform

1164

Routing Engine Functions

The Routing Engine handles all routing protocol processes, as well as the software processes
that control the router’s interfaces, the chassis components, system management, and user
access to the router. These routing and software processes run on top of a kernel that
interacts with the Packet Forwarding Engine. For more information about the processes,
see “Routing Engine Software Components” on page 21.

The Routing Engine includes the following functions and features:

Processing of routing protocol packets—The Routing Engine handles all packets that
concern routing protocols, freeing the Packet Forwarding Engine to handle only
packets that represent Internet traffic.

Software modularity—Because each software process is devoted to a different
function and uses a separate process space, the failure of one process has little or no
effect on the others.

In-depth Internet functionality—Each routing protocol is implemented with a complete
set of Internet features and provides full flexibility for advertising, filtering, and
modifying routes. Routing policies are set according to route parameters (for example,
prefix, prefix lengths, and Border Gateway Protocol [BGP] attributes).

Scalability—The JUNOS routing tables have been designed to hold all the routes in
current networks with ample capacity for expansion. Additionally, the JUNOS Internet
software can efficiently support large numbers of interfaces and virtual circuits.

Management interface—Different levels of system management tools are provided,
including the JUNOS command-line interface (CLI), the JUNOScript application
programming interface, the craft interface, and SNMP.

Storage and change management—Configuration files, system images, and microcode
can be held and maintained in primary and secondary storage systems, permitting
local or remote upgrades.

32

M5 and M10 Internet Routers Hardware Guide

Advertising
This manual is related to the following products:

M10