route interface
Syntax
route interface tunnel lspName [
vc-id ] vcidValue [ groupID groupIdValue ]
[ control-word | no-control-word ] [ sequencing
| no-sequencing ]
[ relay-format { ethernet | frame-relay
| ppp | vlan | ethernet-raw-mode} ]
no route interface
Release Information
Command introduced before JunosE Release
7.1.0.
control-word, no-control-word, no-sequencing, and vlan keywords added in JunosE Release
7.1.0.
frame-relay keyword
added in JunosE Release 9.1.0.
ethernet-raw-mode keyword added in JunosE Release 10.0.0.
Description
Routes layer 2 traffic on a specified MPLS tunnel.
You must issue this command in the virtual router where the remote
address can be reached; that is, in the virtual router providing core
connections. You cannot enter the command in a VRF. The no version negates this command. See also the mpls-relay command.
 | Note:
This command is supported for configuration on an ATM
port (ATM Adaptation Layer 5 [AAL5] over an ATM major interface).
Before you can specify VPI/VCI ranges and cell concatenation parameters
on the ATM port to enable transmission of multiple ATM virtual circuits
over a single pseudowire, you must associate the ATM port with the
corresponding pseudowire using the mpls-relay or router interface tunnel command. For
more information about the support for multiple VCs over a single
pseudowire, see Multiple ATM Virtual Circuits over a Single
Pseudowire Overview in the JunosE BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide |
Options
- lspName—Name of the MPLS LSP
- vcidValue—Integer, in the
range 1–4294967295, that identifies the virtual connection;
the two ends across the MPLS core must match inside each VC type
 | Note:
The VLAN ID, DLCI, or ATM VPI/VCI are not related to the
VC ID and can be different on each end of the connection. |
- groupIdValue—Integer, in the
range 0–4294967295, that identifies a group of virtual connections
- control-word—Indicates that the local preference
is to use the control word for the layer 2 packets encapsulated in
MPLS packets sent to the remote PE router. The default preference
is determined by the interface stack on which the MPLS interface is
stacked.
- no-control-word—Indicates that the local preference
is to not use the control word for the layer 2 packets encapsulated
in MPLS packets sent to the remote PE router. The default preference
is determined by the interface stack on which the MPLS interface is
stacked.
- sequencing—Specifies that the local preference is
to include nonzero sequence numbers with the control word, enabling
the remote PE to detect out-of-order packets; has no effect if no
control word is sent in the packets. The router always accepts zero
sequence numbers and checks the order of nonzero sequence numbers
of MPLS packets received from the remote PE; any out-of-order packets
are dropped, regardless of whether sequencing is configured.
- no-sequencing—Specifies that the sequencing number
in the control word is set to zero, instructing the remote PE router
not to attempt to detect out-of-order packets; has no effect if no
control word is sent in the packets
- relay-format ethernet—Specifies that the router
uses Ethernet signaling and encapsulation, which causes the VLAN interface
to appear as an Ethernet interface to the other side of the connection;
enables a VLAN interface on one side of an MPLS tunnel to communicate
with an Ethernet or a bridged Ethernet interface on the other side
of an MPLS tunnel. The VLAN tag is not included in the MPLS encapsulation.
This option is not available on serial or POS interfaces for HDLC
layer 2 circuits. It is available only on VLAN interfaces.
- relay-format frame-relay—Specifies that the router
uses legacy (pre-RFC 4619) Frame Relay pseudowire type value for signaling
and encapsulation. Enables a router running JunosE Software that supports
the pseudowire type value defined in RFC 4619, Encapsulation methods
for transport of Frame Relay over MPLS Networks, to interoperate with
a router that uses the legacy (pre-RFC 4619) pseudowire type value.
This option is available on serial or POS interfaces for Frame Relay
layer 2 circuits. It is not supported on E120 and E320 routers.
- relay-format ppp—Specifies that the router uses
VC-type PPP signaling and PPP encapsulation instead of VC-type HDLC
signaling and HDLC encapsulation. The router uses VC-type HDLC signaling
and HDLC encapsulation by default. This option is available only on
serial and POS interfaces for HDLC layer 2 circuits.
- relay-format vlan—Specifies that the router uses
VLAN signaling and encapsulation. This option is not available on
serial or POS interfaces for HDLC layer 2 circuits. It is available
for VLAN interfaces.
- relay-format ethernet-raw-mode—Specifies that the
router uses Ethernet raw mode encapsulation for packets entering and
leaving pseudowires. This service corresponds to PW type 0x0005 "Ethernet"
[IANA]. When configured on an S-VLAN subinterface, enables the provider
edge (PE) device to strip the S-VLAN tags from all packets entering
the Martini circuit (MPLS packet switched network). It is supported
on ES2 4G, ES2 10G, and ES2 10G Uplink LMs on E120 and E320 routers.
You can enable the raw mode configuration only for MPLS shim interfaces
stacked on SVLAN interfaces.
 | Note:
The relay-format keyword determines
the pseudowire PW Type value that is used in LDP protocol messages.
For a complete list of pseudowire Type values, see http://www.iana.org/assignments/pwe3-parameters.
If you do not specify the relay-format keyword in the mpls-relay or route interface command, the pseudowire Type value
is chosen based on the type of the interface. For Ethernet interfaces,
the pseudowire Type value is chosen as Ethernet (0x0005). For VLAN
interfaces, the pseudowire Type value is chosen as Ethernet Tagged
Mode (0x0004) |
Mode
Interface Configuration
Related Documentation
- Configuring Ethernet/VLAN Layer 2 Services, Configuring Frame Relay Layer 2 Services, Configuring HDLC Layer 2 Services, Configuring
Ethernet Raw Mode Encapsulation for Martini Layer 2 Transport, and Configuring S-VLAN Tunnels for Layer 2 Services in the JunosE BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide
Published: 2010-10-19