261
Which IPv4 routes are to be assigned with MPLS labels depends on the routing policy. Only routes that
satisfy the criteria are assigned with labels. All the other routes are still common IPv4 routes.
To configure a routing policy for inter-AS option C on an ASBR PE:
Step Command
Remarks
1.
Enter system view.
system-view
N/A
2.
Enter routing policy view.
route-policy
policy-name
permit
node
seq-number
N/A
3.
Configure the device to match
IPv4 routes with labels.
if-match mpls-label
N/A
4.
Configure the device to assign
labels to IPv4 routes.
apply mpls-label
By default, an IPv4 route does not
carry any label.
NOTE:
For information about routing policy configuration, see
Layer 3—IP Routing Configuration Guide.
Configuring nested VPN
For a network with many VPNs, if you want to implement layered management of VPNs and to conceal
the deployment of internal VPNs, nested VPN is a good solution. By using nested VPN, you can
implement layered management of internal VPNs easily with a low cost and simple management
operation.
Configuration prerequisites
Configure the basic MPLS L3VPN capability (see “
”).
Configuring nested VPN
To configure nested VPN:
Step Command
Remarks
1.
Enter system view.
system-view
N/A
2.
Enter BGP view.
bgp
as-number
N/A
3.
Enter BGP VPN instance view.
ipv4-family vpn-instance
vpn-instance-name
N/A
4.
Configure a CE peer or peer
group.
peer
{
group-name
|
peer-address
}
as-number
number
N/A
5.
Return to BGP view.
quit
N/A
6.
Enter BGP-VPNv4 subaddress
family view.
ipv4-family vpnv4
N/A
7.
Enable nested VPN.
nesting-vpn
Disabled by default.