Dynamic crlsp establishment, Traffic forwarding, Static routing – H3C Technologies H3C S12500-X Series Switches User Manual

Page 56: Policy-based routing, Make-before-break

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Dynamic CRLSP establishment

Dynamic CRLSPs are dynamically established through a label distribution protocol (such as RSVP-TE). The

label distribution protocol advertises labels to establish CRLSPs and reserves bandwidth resources on

each node along the calculated path.
Dynamic CRLSPs adapt to network changes and support CRLSP backup, but they require complicated

configurations.
The device supports the label distribution protocol of RSVP-TE for MPLS TE. Resource Reservation Protocol

(RSVP) reserves resources on each node along a path. Extended RSVP can support MPLS label

distribution and allow resource reservation information to be transmitted with label bindings. This
extended RSVP is called "RSVP-TE."
For more information about RSVP, see "Configuring RSVP."

Traffic forwarding

After an MPLS TE tunnel is established, traffic is not forwarded on the tunnel automatically. You must

direct the traffic to the tunnel by using one of the following methods.

Static routing

You can direct traffic to an MPLS TE tunnel by creating a static route that reaches the destination through
the tunnel interface. This is the easiest way to implement MPLS TE tunnel forwarding. However, when the

traffic to multiple networks is to be forwarded through the MPLS TE tunnel, you must configure multiple

static routes, which are complicated to configure and difficult to maintain.
For more information about static routing, see Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.

Policy-based routing

You can configure PBR on the ingress interface of traffic to direct the traffic that matches an ACL to the

MPLS TE tunnel interface.
PBR can match the traffic to be forwarded on the tunnel not only by destination IP address, but also by

source IP address, protocol type, and other criteria. Compared with static routing, PBR is more flexible
but requires more complicated configuration.
For more information about policy-based routing, see Layer 3IP Routing Configuration Guide.

Make-before-break

Make-before-break is a mechanism to change an MPLS TE tunnel with minimum data loss and without

using extra bandwidth.
Traffic forwarding is interrupted if the existing CRLSP is removed before a new CRLSP is established. The

make-before-break mechanism makes sure that the existing CRLSP is removed after the new CRLSP is
established and the traffic is switched to the new CRLSP. However, this might waste bandwidth resources

if some links on the old and new CRLSPs are the same, because you need to reserve bandwidth on these

links for both the old and new CRLSPs. The make-before-break mechanism uses the SE resource

reservation style to address this problem.
The resource reservation style refers to the style in which RSVP-TE reserves bandwidth resources during

CRLSP establishment. The resource reservation style used by an MPLS TE tunnel is determined by the

ingress node, and is advertised to other nodes through RSVP.

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