Configuring GMPLS
SUMMARY STEPS
1. configure
2. interface tunnel-gte tunnel-id
3. ipv4 address ipv4-address mask or ipv4 unnumbered type interface-path-id
4. passive
5. match identifier tunnel number
6. destination ip-address
7. Use the commit or end command.
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action
Step 1
configure
Example:
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router# configure
Step 2
interface tunnel-gte tunnel-id
Example:
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router(config)#
interface tunnel-gte 1
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router(config-if)#
Step 3
ipv4 address ipv4-address mask or ipv4
unnumbered type interface-path-id
Example:
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router(config-if)#
ipv4 address 127.0.0.1 255.0.0.0
Step 4
passive
Example:
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router(config-if)#
passive
Cisco IOS XR MPLS Configuration Guide for the Cisco CRS Router, Release 5.1.x
262
Purpose
Enters global configuration mode.
Configures an MPLS-TE tunnel interface for GMPLS interfaces.
Specifies a primary or secondary IPv4 address for an interface.
• Network mask can be a four-part dotted decimal address. For example,
255.0.0.0 indicates that each bit equal to 1 means that the corresponding
address bit belongs to the network address.
• Network mask can be indicated as a slash (/) and a number (prefix length).
The prefix length is a decimal value that indicates how many of the
high-order contiguous bits of the address compose the prefix (the network
portion of the address). A slash must precede the decimal value, and there
is no space between the IP address and the slash.
or
• Enables IPv4 processing on a point-to-point interface without assigning
an explicit IPv4 address to that interface.
Configures a passive interface.
The tailend (passive) router does not signal the tunnel, it simply accepts
Note
a connection from the headend router. The tailend router supports the
same configuration as the headend router.
Implementing MPLS Traffic Engineering