Protocols and standards, Mpls te configuration task list, Label acceptance control configuration example – H3C Technologies H3C S12500-X Series Switches User Manual

Page 58

Advertising
background image

47

Associated mode—In this mode, you establish a bidirectional MPLS TE tunnel by binding two

unidirectional CRLSPs in opposite directions. The two CRLSPs can be established in different modes
and use different paths. For example, one CRLSP is established statically and the other CRLSP is

established dynamically by RSVP-TE.

For more information about establishing MPLS TE tunnel through RSVP-TE, the Path message, and the Resv

message, see "Configuring RSVP."

Protocols and standards

RFC 2702, Requirements for Traffic Engineering Over MPLS

RFC 3564, Requirements for Support of Differentiated Service-aware MPLS Traffic Engineering

RFC 4124, Protocol Extensions for Support of Diffserv-aware MPLS Traffic Engineering

RFC 4125, Maximum Allocation Bandwidth Constraints Model for Diffserv-aware MPLS Traffic
Engineering

RFC 4127, Russian Dolls Bandwidth Constraints Model for Diffserv-aware MPLS Traffic Engineering

ITU-T Recommendation Y.1720, Protection switching for MPLS networks

MPLS TE configuration task list

To configure an MPLS TE tunnel to use a static CRLSP, complete the following tasks:

1.

Enable MPLS TE on each node and interface that the MPLS TE tunnel traverses.

2.

Create a tunnel interface on the ingress node of the MPLS TE tunnel, and specify the tunnel
destination address—the address of the egress node.

3.

Create a static CRLSP on each node that the MPLS TE tunnel traverses.
For information about creating a static CRLSP, see "Configuring a static CRLSP."

4.

On the ingress node of the MPLS TE tunnel, configure the tunnel interface to reference the created
static CRLSP.

5.

On the ingress node of the MPLS TE tunnel, configure static routing or PBR to direct traffic to the
MPLS TE tunnel.

To configure an MPLS TE tunnel to use a CRLSP dynamically established by RSVP-TE, complete the

following tasks:

1.

Enable MPLS TE and RSVP on each node and interface that the MPLS TE tunnel traverses.
For information about enabling RSVP, see "Configuring RSVP."

2.

Create a tunnel interface on the ingress node of the MPLS TE tunnel, and specify the address of the
egress node as the tunnel destination address.

3.

Configure an IGP on each node that the MPLS TE tunnel traverses.

4.

On the ingress node of the MPLS TE tunnel, configure RSVP-TE to establish a CRLSP based on the
path calculated by IGP.

5.

On the ingress node of the MPLS TE tunnel, configure static routing or PBR to direct traffic to the
MPLS TE tunnel.

You can also configure other MPLS TE functions such as bidirectional MPLS TE tunnel as needed.
To configure MPLS TE, perform the following tasks:

Advertising