CCIE SPv5.1 Labs
  • Intro
    • Setup
  • Purpose
  • Video Demonstration
  • Containerlab Tips
  • Labs
    • ISIS
      • Start
      • Topology
      • Prefix Suppression
      • Hello padding
      • Overload Bit
      • LSP size
      • Default metric
      • Hello/Hold Timer
      • Mesh groups
      • Prefix Summarization
      • Default Route Preference
      • ISIS Timers
      • Log Neighbor Changes
      • Troubleshooting 1 - No routes
      • Troubleshooting 2 - Adjacency
      • IPv6 Single Topology
      • IPv6 Single Topology Challenge
      • IPv6 Multi Topology
      • IPv6 Single to Multi Topology
      • Wide Metrics Explained
      • Route Filtering
      • Backdoor Link
      • Non-Optimal Intra-Area routing
      • Multi Area
      • Authentication
      • Conditional ATT Bit
      • Troubleshooting iBGP
      • Troubleshooting TE Tunnel
    • LDP
      • Start
      • Topology
      • LDP and ECMP
      • LDP and Static Routes
      • LDP Timers
      • LDP Authentication
      • LDP Session Protection
      • LDP/IGP Sync (OSPF)
      • LDP/IGP Sync (ISIS)
      • LDP Local Allocation Filtering
      • LDP Conditional Label Advertisement
      • LDP Inbound Label Advertisement Filtering
      • LDP Label Advertisement Filtering Challenge
      • LDP Implicit Withdraw
      • LDP Transport Address Troubleshooting
      • LDP Static Labels
    • MPLS-TE
      • Start
      • Topology
      • Basic TE Tunnel w/ OSPF
      • Basic TE Tunnel w/ ISIS
      • TE Tunnel using Admin Weight
      • TE Tunnel using Link Affinity
      • TE Tunnel with Explicit-Null
      • TE Tunnel with Conditional Attributes
      • RSVP message pacing
      • Reoptimization timer
      • IGP TE Flooding Thresholds
      • CSPF Tiebreakers
      • TE Tunnel Preemption
      • TE Tunnel Soft Preemption
      • Tunneling LDP inside RSVP
      • PE to P TE Tunnel
      • Autoroute Announce Metric (XE)
      • Autoroute Announce Metric (XR)
      • Autoroute Announce Absolute Metric
      • Autoroute Announce Backup Path
      • Forwarding Adjacency
      • Forwarding Adjacency with OSPF
      • TE Tunnels with UCMP
      • Auto-Bandwidth
      • FRR Link Protection (XE, BFD)
      • FRR Link Protection (XE, RSVP Hellos)
      • FRR Node Protection (XR)
      • FRR Path Protection
      • FRR Multiple Backup Tunnels (Node Protection)
      • FRR Multiple Backup Tunnels (Link Protection)
      • FRR Multiple Backup Tunnels (Backwidth/Link Protection)
      • FRR Backup Auto-Tunnels
      • FRR Backup Auto-Tunnels with SRLG
      • Full Mesh Auto-Tunnels
      • Full Mesh Dynamic Auto-Tunnels
      • One-Hop Auto-Tunnels
      • CBTS/PBTS
      • Traditional DS-TE
      • IETF DS-TE with MAM
      • IETF DS-TE with RDM
      • RDM w/ FRR Troubleshooting
      • Per-VRF TE Tunnels
      • Tactical TE Issues
      • Multicast and MPLS-TE
    • SR
      • Start
      • Topology
      • Basic SR with ISIS
      • Basic SR with OSPF
      • SRGB Modifcation
      • SR with ExpNull
      • SR Anycast SID
      • SR Adjacency SID
      • SR LAN Adjacency SID (Walkthrough)
      • SR and RSVP-TE interaction
      • SR Basic Inter-area with ISIS
      • SR Basic Inter-area with OSPF
      • SR Basic Inter-IGP (redistribution)
      • SR Basic Inter-AS using BGP
      • SR BGP Data Center (eBGP)
      • SR BGP Data Center (iBGP)
      • LFA
      • LFA Tiebreakers (ISIS)
      • LFA Tiebreakers (OSPF)
      • Remote LFA
      • RLFA Tiebreakers?
      • TI-LFA
      • Remote LFA or TILFA?
      • TI-LFA Node Protection
      • TI-LFA SRLG Protection
      • TI-LFA Protection Priorities (ISIS)
      • TI-LFA Protection Priorities (OSPF)
      • Microloop Avoidance
      • SR/LDP Interworking
      • SR/LDP SRMS OSPF Inter-Area
      • SR/LDP Design Challenge #1
      • SR/LDP Design Challenge #2
      • Migrate LDP to SR (ISIS)
      • OAM with SR
      • SR-MPLS using IPv6
      • Basic SR-TE with AS
      • Basic SR-TE with AS and ODN
      • SR-TE with AS Primary/Secondary Paths
      • SR-TE Dynamic Policies
      • SR-TE Dynamic Policy with Margin
      • SR-TE Explicit Paths
      • SR-TE Disjoint Planes using Anycast SIDs
      • SR-TE Flex-Algo w/ Latency
      • SR-TE Flex-Algo w/ Affinity
      • SR-TE Disjoint Planes using Flex-Algo
      • SR-TE BSIDs
      • SR-TE RSVP-TE Stitching
      • SR-TE Autoroute Include
      • SR Inter-IGP using PCE
      • SR-TE PCC Features
      • SR-TE PCE Instantiated Policy
      • SR-TE PCE Redundancy
      • SR-TE PCE Redundancy w/ Sync
      • SR-TE Basic BGP EPE
      • SR-TE BGP EPE for Unified MPLS
      • SR-TE Disjoint Paths
      • SR Converged SDN Transport Challenge
      • SR OAM DPM
      • SR OAM Tools
      • Performance-Measurement (Interface Delay)
    • SRv6
      • Start
      • Topology
      • Basic SRv6
      • SRv6 uSID
      • SRv6 uSID w/ EVPN-VPWS and BGP IPv4/IPv6
      • SRv6 uSID w/ SR-TE
      • SRv6 uSID w/ SR-TE Explicit Paths
      • SRv6 uSID w/ L3 IGW
      • SRv6 uSID w/ Dual-Connected PE
      • SRv6 uSID w/ Flex Algo
      • SRv6 uSID - Scale (Pt. 1)
      • SRv6 uSID - Scale (Pt. 2)
      • SRv6 uSID - Scale (Pt. 3) (UPA Walkthrough)
      • SRv6 uSID - Scale (Pt. 4) (Flex Algo)
      • SRv6 uSID w/ TI-LFA
    • Multicast
      • Start
      • Topology
      • Basic PIM-SSM
      • PIM-SSM Static Mapping
      • Basic PIM-SM
      • PIM-SM with Anycast RP
      • PIM-SM with Auto-RP
      • PIM-SM with BSR
      • PIM-SM with BSR for IPv6
      • PIM-BiDir
      • PIM-BiDir for IPv6
      • PIM-BiDir with Phantom RP
      • PIM Security
      • PIM Boundaries with AutoRP
      • PIM Boundaries with BSR
      • PIM-SM IPv6 using Embedded RP
      • PIM SSM Range Note
      • PIM RPF Troubleshooting #1
      • PIM RPF Troubleshooting #2
      • PIM RP Troubleshooting
      • PIM Duplicate Traffic Troubleshooting
      • Using IOS-XR as a Sender/Receiver
      • PIM-SM without Receiver IGMP Joins
      • RP Discovery Methods
      • Basic Interdomain Multicast w/o MSDP
      • Basic Interdomain Multicast w/ MSDP
      • MSDP Filtering
      • MSDP Flood Reduction
      • MSDP Default Peer
      • MSDP RPF Check (IOS-XR)
      • MSDP RPF Check (IOS-XE)
      • Interdomain MBGP Policies
      • PIM Boundaries using MSDP
    • MVPN
      • Start
      • Topology
      • Profile 0
      • Profile 0 with data MDTs
      • Profile 1
      • Profile 1 w/ Redundant Roots
      • Profile 1 with data MDTs
      • Profile 6
      • Profile 7
      • Profile 3
      • Profile 3 with S-PMSI
      • Profile 11
      • Profile 11 with S-PMSI
      • Profile 11 w/ Receiver-only Sites
      • Profile 9 with S-PMSI
      • Profile 12
      • Profile 13
      • UMH (Upstream Multicast Hop) Challenge
      • Profile 13 w/ Configuration Knobs
      • Profile 13 w/ PE RP
      • Profile 12 w/ PE Anycast RP
      • Profile 14 (Partitioned MDT)
      • Profile 14 with Extranet option #1
      • Profile 14 with Extranet option #2
      • Profile 14 w/ IPv6
      • Profile 17
      • Profile 19
      • Profile 21
    • MVPN SR
      • Start
      • Topology
      • Profile 27
      • Profile 27 w/ Constraints
      • Profile 27 w/ FRR
      • Profile 28
      • Profile 28 w/ Constraints and FRR
      • Profile 28 w/ Data MDTs
      • Profile 29
    • VPWS
      • Start
      • Topology
      • Basic VPWS
      • VPWS with Tag Manipulation
      • Redundant VPWS
      • Redundant VPWS (IOS-XR)
      • VPWS with PW interfaces
      • Manual VPWS
      • VPWS with Sequencing
      • Pseudowire Logging
      • VPWS with FAT-PW
      • MS-PS (Pseudowire stitching)
      • VPWS with BGP AD
    • VPLS
      • Start
      • Topology
      • Basic VPLS with LDP
      • VPLS with LDP and BGP
      • VPLS with BGP only
      • Hub and Spoke VPLS
      • Tunnel L2 Protocols over VPLS
      • Basic H-VPLS
      • H-VPLS with BGP
      • H-VPLS with QinQ
      • H-VPLS with Redundancy
      • VPLS with Routing
      • VPLS MAC Protection
      • Basic E-TREE
      • VPLS with LDP/BGP-AD and XRv RR
      • VPLS with BGP and XRv RR
      • VPLS with Storm Control
    • EVPN
      • Start
      • Topology
      • EVPN VPWS
      • EVPN VPWS Multihomed
      • EVPN VPWS Multihomed Single-Active
      • Basic Single-homed EVPN E-LAN
      • EVPN E-LAN Service Label Allocation
      • EVPN E-LAN Ethernet Tag
      • EVPN E-LAN Multihomed
      • EVPN E-LAN on XRv
      • EVPN IRB
      • EVPN-VPWS Multihomed IOS-XR (All-Active)
      • EVPN-VPWS Multihomed IOS-XR (Port-Active)
      • EVPN-VPWS Multihomed IOS-XR (Single-Active)
      • EVPN-VPWS Multihomed IOS-XR (Non-Bundle)
      • PBB-EVPN (Informational)
    • BGP Multi-Homing (XE)
      • Start
      • Topology
      • Lab1 ECMP
      • Lab2 UCMP
      • Lab3 Backup Path
      • Lab4 Shadow Session
      • Lab5 Shadow RR
      • Lab6 RR with Add-Path
      • Lab7 MPLS + Add Path ECMP
      • Lab8 MPLS + Shadow RR
      • Lab9 MPLS + RDs + UCMP
    • BGP Multi-Homing (XR)
      • Start
      • Topology
      • Lab1 ECMP
      • Lab2 UCMP
      • Lab3 Backup Path
      • Lab4 “Shadow Session”
      • Lab5 “Shadow RR”
      • Lab6 RR with Add-Path
      • Lab7 MPLS + Add Path ECMP
      • Lab8 MPLS + “Shadow RR”
      • Lab9 MPLS + RDs + UCMP
      • Lab10 MPLS + Same RD + Add-Path + UCMP
      • Lab11 MPLS + Same RD + Add-Path + Repair Path
    • BGP
      • Start
      • Conditional Advertisement
      • Aggregation and Deaggregation
      • Local AS
      • BGP QoS Policy Propagation
      • Non-Optimal eBGP Routing
      • Multihomed Enterprise Challenge
      • Provider Communities
      • Destination-Based RTBH
      • Destination-Based RTBH (Community-Based)
      • Source-Based RTBH
      • Source-Based RTBH (Community-Based)
      • Multihomed Enterprise Challenge (XRv)
      • Provider Communities (XRv)
      • DMZ Link BW Lab1
      • DMZ Link BW Lab2
      • PIC Edge in the Global Table
      • PIC Edge Troubleshooting
      • PIC Edge for VPNv4
      • AIGP
      • AIGP Translation
      • Cost-Community (iBGP)
      • Cost-Community (confed eBGP)
      • Destination-Based RTBH (VRF Provider-triggered)
      • Destination-Based RTBH (VRF CE-triggered)
      • Source-Based RTBH (VRF Provider-triggered)
      • Flowspec (Global IPv4/6PE)
      • Flowspec (VRF)
      • Flowspec (Global IPv4/6PE w/ Redirect)
      • Flowspec (Global IPv4/6PE w/ Redirect) T-Shoot
      • Flowspec (VRF w/ Redirect)
      • Flowspec (Global IPv4/6PE w/ CE Advertisement)
    • Intra-AS L3VPN
      • Start
      • Partitioned RRs
      • Partitioned RRs with IOS-XR
      • RT Filter
      • Non-Optimal Multi-Homed Routing
      • Troubleshoot #1 (BGP)
      • Troubleshoot #2 (OSPF)
      • Troubleshoot #3 (OSPF)
      • Troubleshoot #4 (OSPF Inter-AS)
      • VRF to Global Internet Access (IOS-XE)
      • VRF to Global Internet Access (IOS-XR)
    • Inter-AS L3VPN
      • Start
      • Inter-AS Option A
      • Inter-AS Option B
      • Inter-AS Option C
      • Inter-AS Option AB (D)
      • CSC
      • CSC with Option AB (D)
      • Inter-AS Option C - iBGP LU
      • Inter-AS Option B w/ RT Rewrite
      • Inter-AS Option C w/ RT Rewrite
      • Inter-AS Option A Multi-Homed
      • Inter-AS Option B Multi-Homed
      • Inter-AS Option C Multi-Homed
    • Russo Inter-AS
      • Start
      • Topology
      • Option A L3NNI
      • Option A L2NNI
      • Option A mVPN
      • Option B L3NNI
      • Option B mVPN
      • Option C L3NNI
      • Option C L3NNI w/ L2VPN
      • Option C mVPN
    • BGP RPKI
      • Start
      • RPKI on IOS-XE (Enabling the feature)
      • RPKI on IOS-XE (Validation)
      • RPKI on IOS-XR (Enabling the feature)
      • Enable SSH in Routinator
      • RPKI on IOS-XR (Validation)
      • RPKI on IOS-XR (RPKI Routes)
      • RPKI on IOS-XR (VRF)
      • RPKI iBGP Mesh (No Signaling)
      • RPKI iBGP Mesh (iBGP Signaling)
    • NAT
      • Start
      • Egress PE NAT44
      • NAT44 within an INET VRF
      • Internet Reachability between VRFs
      • CGNAT
      • NAT64 Stateful
      • NAT64 Stateful w/ Static NAT
      • NAT64 Stateless
      • MAP-T BR
    • BFD
      • Start
      • Topology
      • OSPF Hellos
      • ISIS Hellos
      • BGP Keepalives
      • PIM Hellos
      • Basic BFD for all protocols
      • BFD Asymmetric Timers
      • BFD Templates
      • BFD Tshoot #1
      • BFD for Static Routes
      • BFD Multi-Hop
      • BFD for VPNv4 Static Routes
      • BFD for VPNv6 Static Routes
      • BFD for Pseudowires
    • QoS
      • Start
      • QoS on IOS-XE
      • Advanced QoS on IOS-XE Pt. 1
      • Advanced QoS on IOS-XE Pt. 2
      • MPLS QoS Design
      • Notes - QoS on IOS-XR
    • NSO
      • Start
      • Basic NSO Usage
      • Basic NSO Template Service
      • Advanced NSO Template Service
      • Advanced NSO Template Service #2
      • NSO Template vs. Template Service
      • NSO API using Python
      • NSO API using Python #2
      • NSO API using Python #3
      • Using a NETCONF NED
      • Python Service
      • Nano Services
    • MDT
      • Start
      • MDT Server Setup
      • Basic Dial-Out
      • Filtering Data using XPATH
      • Finding the correct YANG model
      • Finding the correct YANG model #2
      • Event-Driven MDT
      • Basic Dial-In using gNMI
      • Dial-Out with TLS
      • Dial-In with TLS
      • Dial-In with two-way TLS
    • App-Hosting
      • Start
      • Lab - iperf3 Docker Container
      • Notes - LXC Container
      • Notes - Native Applications
      • Notes - Process Scripts
    • ZTP
      • Notes - Classic ZTP
      • Notes - Secure ZTP
    • L2 Connectivity Notes
      • 802.1ad (Q-in-Q)
      • MST-AG
      • MC-LAG
      • G.8032
    • Ethernet OAM
      • Start
      • Topology
      • CFM
      • y1731
      • Notes - y1564
    • Security
      • Start
      • Notes - Security ACLs
      • Notes - Hybrid ACLs
      • Notes - MPP (IOS-XR)
      • Notes - MPP (IOS-XE)
      • Notes - CoPP (IOS-XE)
      • Notes - LPTS (IOS-XR)
      • Notes - WAN MACsec White Paper
      • Notes - WAN MACsec Config Guide
      • Notes - AAA
      • Notes - uRPF
      • Notes - VTY lines (IOS-XR)
      • Lab - uRPF
      • Lab - MPP
      • Lab - AAA (IOS-XE)
      • Lab - AAA (IOS-XR)
      • Lab - CoPP and LPTS
    • Assurance
      • Start
      • Notes - Syslog on IOS-XE
      • Notes - Syslog on IOS-XR
      • Notes - SNMP Traps
      • Syslog (IOS-XR)
      • RMON
      • Netflow (IOS-XE)
      • Netflow (IOS-XR)
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Remote LFA

PreviousLFA Tiebreakers (OSPF)NextRLFA Tiebreakers?

Last updated 4 months ago

Load lfa.init.cfg

#R3-R6, R10 only
configure
load bootflash:lfa.init.cfg
commit replace
y

In the LFA lab we saw that we only achieved 50% coverage using LFA. Using remote LFA, achieve 100% coverage for all prefixes on R3 without breaking end-to-end LSPs.

Answer

#All routers
router isis 1
 add ipv4 uni
  mpls ldp auto-config
!
mpls ldp

#R3
router isis 1
 interface GigabitEthernet0/0/0/4
  address-family ipv4 unicast
   fast-reroute per-prefix
   fast-reroute per-prefix remote-lfa tunnel mpls-ldp
 !
 interface GigabitEthernet0/0/0/5
  address-family ipv4 unicast
   fast-reroute per-prefix
   fast-reroute per-prefix remote-lfa tunnel mpls-ldp

#R6, R10
mpls ldp
 address-family ipv4
  discovery targeted-hello accept

Explanation

In the previous LFA lab, we saw that we achieved only 50% coverage. This is because the loopbacks of R3’s directly connected neighbors cannot simply be IP routed to the other directly connected neighbor, for risk of the neighbor looping the packet back to R3.

A solution to this is to use remote LFA. With remote LFA, we use LDP to tunnel traffic beyond our nexthop router. This prevents the nexthop router from making an IP forwarding decision and looping traffic back to the PLR. Instead, the nexthop makes an MPLS forwarding decision, and forwards traffic to the node specified in the top label. That node is the PQ node, which is explained later.

To enable remote LFA we add the command fast-reroute per-prefix remote-lfa tunnel mpls-ldp to the ISIS interface. Note that the command fast-reroute per-prefix must also exist.

#R3
router isis 1
 interface GigabitEthernet0/0/0/4
  address-family ipv4 unicast
   fast-reroute per-prefix
   fast-reroute per-prefix remote-lfa tunnel mpls-ldp
 !
 interface GigabitEthernet0/0/0/5
  address-family ipv4 unicast
   fast-reroute per-prefix
   fast-reroute per-prefix remote-lfa tunnel mpls-ldp

Additionally, since this uses LDP, we must enable LDP on all routers.

To understand how remote LFAs are calculated, we need to expore the P and Q space. P space is the nodes the PLR can reach without using the protected link. Q space is the nodes that can reach the destination without using the protected link. Essentially, if a node is in the P space, it means the PLR can reach it without using the protected link. And if the node is also in the Q space, it means the PLR can release the packet at that node without risk of that node looping the traffic back to the PLR. A node that is in both the P and Q space is the node at which the router can release the packet. This is called a PQ node.

In our topology, using R3, the P space for 4.4.4.1/32 (reachable via Gi0/0/0/4) is R5 and R6. R3 can reach these nodes without traversing Gi0/0/0/4. The Q space is R10 and R6. These nodes can reach 4.4.4.1/32 without traversing R3’s Gi0/0/0/4 link.

Therefore, for 4.4.4.1/32, if we tunnel the packet to R6 using R5’s LDP label for R6, we can achieve fast reroute.

A common pitfall is not accepting targetted LDP sessions on the PQ nodes. Currently, R6 is not accepting tLDP sessions. R3 can still install the LFA backup path via R6 though.

However, a closer look at the FIB shows that only one label is used for this backup path:

Label 24000 is R5’s label for R6:

This would end up breaking an end-to-end LSP between R3 and R4. VPN traffic would have <Transport to R6>/<VPN label>, and R5 would pop the top label, exposing the VPN label too early.

To solve this, R3 and R6 must form a tLDP session. R3 needs to push <Transport to R6>/<Transport to R4>/<VPN>. R3 needs to learn R6’s LDP label for R4.

R3 is actually trying to actively initiate the session already simply due to the remote LFA feature being enabled, and R3 finding R6 as a PQ node. R3 allows us to continue using the LFA even though tLDP is down, because we might only be using remote LFA for IP traffic, in which case we don’t care about an end-to-end LSP.

If we simply enable targeted LDP acceptance on R6, we can see that R3 and R6 form a tLDP session. R3 learn’s R6’s label binding for 4.4.4.1/32, and uses this as a second label in the stack for the backup path.

#R6
mpls ldp
 address-family ipv4
  discovery targeted-hello accept

24001 is R6’s local label for 4.4.4.1/32:

Now the end-to-end LSP is retained under fast reroute conditions.

Also notice that we’ve achieved 100% coverage. In an upcoming lab, we will see a situtation that remote LFA cannot protect..