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Understanding the Control Plane
The control plane software is an integral part
of JUNOS software that is active on the primary node of a cluster.
It achieves redundancy by communicating state, configuration, and
other information to the inactive Routing Engine on the secondary
node. If the primary Routing Engine fails, the secondary one is ready
to assume control.
This topic includes:
The control plane software:
- Runs on the Routing Engine and oversees the entire chassis
cluster system, including interfaces on both nodes
- Manages system and data plane resources, including the
Packet Forwarding Engine (PFE) on each node
- Synchronizes the configuration over the control link
- Establishes and maintains sessions, including authentication,
authorization, and accounting (AAA) functions
- Manages application-specific signaling protocols
- Establishes and maintains management sessions, such as
Telnet connections
- Handles asymmetric routing
- Manages routing state, Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)
processing, and Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) processing
Information from the control plane software follows
two paths:
- On the primary node (where the Routing Engine is active),
control information flows from the Routing Engine to the local Packet
Forwarding Engine.
- Control information flows across the control link to the
secondary node's Routing Engine and Packet Forwarding Engine.
The control plane software running on the primary
Routing Engine maintains state for the entire cluster, and only processes
running on its node can update state information. The primary Routing
Engine synchronizes state for the secondary node and also processes
all host traffic.
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