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Configuring BGP Signaling for VPLS

This section describes one way to configure BGP signaling for VPLS, but does not provide complete details about configuring BGP and BGP/MPLS VPNs.

Table 79 lists the commands discussed in this section to configure BGP signaling for VPLS.

Table 79: Commands to Configure BGP Signaling for VPLS

address-family l2vpn

neighbor next-hop-self

address-family vpls

neighbor remote-as

exit-address-family

neighbor send-community

ip router-id

neighbor update-source

neighbor activate

router bgp

To configure BGP signaling for VPLS on the PE router:

  1. Enable the BGP routing protocol on the PE router and specify the local AS; that is, the AS to which this BGP speaker belongs.
    host1(config)#router bgp 100

    The AS number identifies the PE router to other BGP routers.

  2. Configure the PE-to-PE BGP session by first adding an entry to the BGP neighbor table.
    host1(config-router)#neighbor 10.4.4.4 remote-as 100
  3. Use neighbor commands to specify the peers to which BGP advertises routes.

    This example configures only the update-source and next-hop-self attributes. The update-source attribute allows the BGP session to use the IP address of a specific operational interface as the update source address for TCP connections. the next-hop-self attribute forces the BGP speaker to report itself as the next hop for an advertised route that it learned from a neighbor.

    host1(config-router)#neighbor 10.4.4.4 update-source loopback 0
    host1(config-router)#neighbor 10.4.4.4 next-hop-self
  4. Create the L2VPN address family to configure the router to exchange layer 2 NLRI for all VPLS instances.
    host1(config-router)#address-family l2vpn signaling
  5. Activate the PE-to-PE session in the L2VPN address family by specifying neighbors that exchange routes from within the current address family.
    host1(config-router-af)#neighbor 10.4.4.4 activate
  6. Use neighbor commands to configure additional address family parameters for the session, then exit the address family.

    This example configures only the next-hop-self attribute, forcing the BGP speaker to report itself as the next hop for an advertised route that it learned from a neighbor.

    host1(config-router-af)#neighbor 10.4.4.4 next-hop-self
    host1(config-router-af)#exit-address-family
  7. Create the VPLS address family to configure the router to exchange layer 2 NLRI for each VPLS instance configured on the router.

    You must issue the address-family vpls command separately for each VPLS instance configured on the router.

    host1(config-router)#address-family vpls customer1
    host1(config-router-af)#exit-address-family
    host1(config-router)#address-family vpls customer2

     

After you configure MPLS LSPs and BGP signaling, the router automatically generates a VPLS virtual core interface for each VPLS instance. The VPLS virtual core interface represents all of the MPLS tunnels from the router to the remote VE device.

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