27-3
Cisco 10000 Series Router Software Configuration Guide
OL-2226-23
Chapter 27 IP Tunneling
Restrictions for GRE Tunnel IP Source and Destination VRF Membership
Restrictions for GRE Tunnel IP Source and Destination
VRF Membership
•
Both ends of the tunnel must reside within the same VRF.
•
The VRF associated with the
tunnel vrf
command is the same as the VRF associated with the
physical interface over which the tunnel sends packets (outer IP packet routing).
•
The VRF associated with the tunnel by using the
ip vrf forwarding
command is the VRF that the
packets are to be forwarded in as the packets exit the tunnel (inner IP packet routing).
How to Configure GRE Tunnel IP Source and Destination
VRF Membership
To configure GRE Tunnel IP Source and Destination VRF Membership on the Cisco 10000 series router,
perform the following configuration tasks:
•
Configuring Tunnel VRF, page 27-3
•
Configuring VRF-Aware VPDN Tunnels, page 27-4
Configuring Tunnel VRF
The
tunnel vrf
command enables the Tunnel VRF feature by identifying the VRF in which the tunnel
destination terminates. When configuring this feature, enter the
tunnel destination
command followed
by the
tunnel vrf
command as shown in the following Summary Steps.
Use the following procedure to configure tunnel VRF on the router:
SUMMARY STEPS
1.
enable
2.
configure
{
terminal
|
memory
|
network
}
3.
interface tunnel
number
4.
ip vrf forwarding
vrf-name
5.
ip address
ip-address subnet-mask
6.
tunnel source
(
ip-address
|
type number
)
7.
tunnel destination
ip-address
{
hostname
|
ip-address
}
8.
tunnel
vrf
vrf-name
For more detailed information, see the
Generic Routing Encapsulation Tunnel IP Source and Destination
VRF Membership
feature module, located at the following URL:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps6566/products_feature_guides_list.html