Enabling Disjoint Backup Paths - Nokia 7705 SAR-W Series Manual

Service aggregation router, mpls
Table of Contents

Advertisement

MPLS and RSVP-TE

3.8.4 Enabling Disjoint Backup Paths

A typical application of the SRLG feature is to provide automatic setup of secondary
LSPs or FRR bypass or detour LSPs, in order to minimize the probability that they
share the same failure risks with the primary LSP path (see
Figure 10
the interfaces that define links A-B, B-C, and C-D. The primary path uses these links
to connect node A to node D. In the event of a failure along the primary path, the
secondary path cannot use any of the links in SRLG_1 and takes the path from node
A to nodes E, F, G, H, J, and D.
Figure 11
as in
occur, depending on where the failure occurs:
The SRLG feature is supported on OSPF and IS-IS interfaces for which RSVP-TE is
enabled.
The following steps describe how to enable SRLG disjoint backup paths for LSP
redundancy and FRR.
LSP Redundancy for Primary/Secondary (standby) SRLG Disjoint Configuration
82
illustrates SRLG when LSP redundancy is used, where SRLG_1 contains
illustrates SRLG when FRR bypass is used, where SRLG_1 is the same
Figure
10. Since FRR bypass is used, the following possible reroutes may
• if node B fails, the bypass is from node A to nodes E, F, G, H, and C
• if node C fails, the bypass is from node B to nodes F, G, H, J, and D
• if link C-D fails, the bypass is from node C to nodes H, J, and D
• Create an SRLG-group (similar to creating an admin group).
• Link the SRLG-group to MPLS interfaces.
• Configure primary and secondary LSP paths, and enable SRLG on the
secondary LSP path. The SRLG secondary LSP paths will always perform a
strict CSPF query.
The setting of the srlg-frr command is irrelevant in this case (see the
command).
Use subject to Terms available at: www.nokia.com
© 2022 Nokia.
MPLS Guide
Figure 10
and
Figure
11).
srlg-frr
3HE 18686 AAAB TQZZA

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents