
215
SNMP Management
Only the default router can be managed via SNMP.
AAA
The Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting protocols include services such
as the RADIUS client and the client. The switch supports these services
only on the default router.
Network Services
The Ping and the Trace Route clients are supported in the Virtual Router context.
Other protocols are supported only in the default router. These include the SNTP
client, DNS client, sFlow, RPCAP, and Auto Install.
Loopback and Tunnel
Interfaces
Loopback interfaces with IPv4 prefixes are supported in the Virtual Router.
Loopback interfaces with IPv6 addresses can be configured only in the default
router.
The number of Loopback interfaces in builds containing the VRF package is
increased to 64. The loopback interfaces are shared across VR instances in the
system and there is no restriction on the maximum supported per VR.
Tunnel interfaces are not supported in the Virtual Router.
IP
unnumbered
interfaces
IP unnumbered interface cannot be part of non-default VRF instance. This feature
is supported only in the default router.
OSPFv2
The OSPFv2 protocol is supported in the Virtual Router. As of the current
release, a crash in the OSPFv2 protocol does not cause the switch to reboot. All
OSPF features including graceful restart and NSF are supported for OSPFv2 in
each VR instance.
OSPF v3
The OSPFv3 protocol is supported only in the default router.
RIP
RIP is not currently supported in the Virtual Router.
VRRP
The Virtual Routing Redundancy Protocol is a fault-tolerance feature that enables
two or more routers to appear as one router to the IP clients. If one of the VRRP
routers fails, another router can take over the data forwarding with minimum
interruption to client traffic.
The VRRP protocol is supported in the Virtual Router context. The VRRP protocol
enables two or more virtual routers running on different physical switches to
form a VRRP group. The Virtual Routers running on the same physical switch
cannot form a VRRP group with each other.
BGP
The Border Gateway Protocol is intended to be used by the Customer Edge (CE)
switch to communicate with other CE switches and PE switches across the
Provider Network. This typical VRF-Lite deployment is described in “VRF Lite
Deployment Scenarios” on page 274. The BGP protocol runs in the Default
Router context and is aware of the Virtual Routers. BGP is used to:
1. Redistribute VPN routes from Virtual Routers on the CE switch to the attached
PE in the Provider Network.
2. Leak routes dynamically between different Virtual Routers on the same
physical switch. This requires support for BGP extended communities and route
Summary of Contents for QuantaMesh QNOS5
Page 1: ...QuantaMesh Ethernet Switch Configuration Guide QNOS5 NOS Platform ...
Page 209: ...209 Table 7 8 IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Settings ...
Page 226: ...226 Table 8 2 L3 Multicast Defaults ...
Page 254: ...254 Appendix A Term and Acronyms Table 9 5 Terms and Acronyms ...