Technical Documentation

Layer 2 Routing Instance Types

Although routing instances are primarily intended to maintain separation of tables and protocols at Layer 3 (mirroring the traditional IP network separation at Layer 3), many aspects of routing instances make them convenient to use for Layer 2 applications and architectures as well. In Layer 2 applications, routing instances still help to maintain table, interface, and customer insulation, but with regard to media access control (MAC) addresses and VLAN tags as much as IP addresses.

You can configure three types of routing instances in Layer 2 networks on MX Series routers, as described in the indicated sections:

The other five types of routing instances are configured only for Layer 3 networks, and are described in the indicated Junos configuration guide:

  • forwarding—Forwarding instance. For more information, see the Junos Routing Protocols Configuration Guide.
  • l2vpn—Layer 2 VPN routing instance. For more information, see the Junos VPNs Configuration Guide.
  • no-forwarding—Nonforwarding routing instance. For more information, see the Junos Routing Protocols Configuration Guide.
  • virtual-router—Virtual routing instance. For more information, see the Junos Routing Protocols Configuration Guide.
  • vrf—VPN routing and forwarding (VRF) instance. For more information, see the Junos Routing Protocols Configuration Guide.

Published: 2010-07-15

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