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MPLS Fundamentals

 MPLS FundamentalsWydawnictwo: cisco press
Autor: L. Ghein
Liczba stron: 672
Oprawa: miękka
ISBN: 978-1-58705-197-5
Czas dostawy: 4 - 6 tygodni (na zamówienie)
Nasza cena: 203,70 zł  


Opis MPLS Fundamentals:

MPLS has emerged as the new networking layer for service providers throughout the world. For many service providers and enterprises MPLS is a way of delivering new applications on their IP networks, while consolidating data and voice networks. MPLS has grown to be the new default network layer for service providers and is finding its way into enterprise networks as well. As opposed to the other books from Cisco Press on MPLS, this book focuses on the building blocks of MPLS (forwarding packets, LDP, MPLS and QoS, CEF, etc.) and not on a specific MPLS applications (MPLS VPN or MPLS Traffic Engineering). MPLS Fundamentalsprovides readers with a basic understanding of MPLS and its applications. Readers receive a comprehensive overview of all the aspects of MPLS, including its applications and a perspective on the future of MPLS.
  • Helps networking professionals choose the suitable MPLS application and design for his/her network
  • Provides MPLS theory and relates to basic IOS configuration examples
  • The Fundamental series from Cisco Press launches the basis to readers for understanding the purpose, application, and management of technologies


Spis treści MPLS Fundamentals:

Introduction
 
Part I: Fundamentals of MPLS
 


Chapter 1 The Evolution of MPLS

Definition of MPLS
Pre-MPLS Protocols
Benefits of MPLS

                Bogus Benefit

                The Use of One Unified Network Infrastructure

                Better IP over ATM Integration

                BGP-Free Core

                Peer-to-Peer VPN Model Versus Overlay VPN Model0

                Overlay VPN Model0

                Peer-to-Peer VPN Model

                Optimal Traffic Flow

                Traffic Engineering
History of MPLS in Cisco IOS

                Tag Switching to MPLS

                MPLS Applications
Summary

Chapter Review Questions
 


Chapter 2 MPLS Architecture
 
Introducing MPLS Labels

                Label Stacking

                Encoding of MPLS
MPLS and the OSI Reference Model
Label Switch Router
Label Switched Path
Forwarding Equivalence Class
Label Distribution

                Piggyback the Labels on an Existing IP Routing Protocol

                Running a Separate Protocol for Label Distribution
Label Distribution with LDP
Label Forwarding Instance Base
MPLS Payload
MPLS Label Spaces
Different MPLS Modes

                Label Distribution Modes

                Label Retention Modes

                LSP Control Modes
Summary

Chapter Review Questions
 


Chapter 3 Forwarding Labeled Packets
 
Forwarding of Labeled Packets

                Label Operation

                IP Lookup Versus Label Lookup

                Load Balancing Labeled Packets

                Unknown Label
Reserved Labels

                Implicit NULL Label

                Explicit NULL Label

                Router Alert Label

                OAM Alert Label
Unreserved Labels
TTL Behavior of Labeled Packets

                TTL Behavior in the Case of IP-to-Label or Label-to-IP

                TTL Behavior in the Case of Label-to-Label

                TTL Expiration
MPLS MTU

                MPLS MTU Command

                Giant and Baby Giant Frames

                Giant Frames on Switches

                MPLS Maximum Receive Unit
Fragmentation of MPLS Packets
Path MTU Discovery
Summary

Chapter Review Questions
 


Chapter 4 Label Distribution Protocol
 
LDP Overview
LDP Operation

                The Discovery of LSRs That Are Running LDP

                LDP Session Establishment and Maintenance

                Number of LDP Sessions

                Advertising of Label Mappings

                Label Withdrawing

                Housekeeping by Means of Notification
Targeted LDP Session
LDP Authentication
Controlling the Advertisement of Labels via LDP
MPLS LDP Inbound Label Binding Filtering
LDP Autoconfiguration
MPLS LDP-IGP Synchronization

                How MPLS LDP-IGP Synchronization Works

                MPLS LDP-IGP Synchronization Configuration
MPLS LDP Session Protection
Summary

Chapter Review Questions
 


Chapter 5 MPLS and ATM Architecture
 
Brief Introduction to ATM
Label Encoding
Label Advertisement

                Downstream-on-Demand Label Advertisement

                LDP Control Mode for ATM
LDP for LC-ATM

                Label Space

                Loop Detection by LDP

                Loop Detection by Hop Count TLV

                TTL Manipulation

                Loop Detection by Path Vector TLV

                LDP Address Messages

                Blocking Label Requests
Aggregate Labels
VC-Merge
Non MPLS-Aware ATM Switches
Label Switch Controller
Multi-Virtual Circuit Tagged Bit Rate

                MPLS CoS
Frame Mode ATM
Reducing the Number of LVCs
Summary

Chapter Review Questions
 


Chapter 6 Cisco Express Forwarding
 
Overview of Cisco IOS Switching Methods

                Process Switching

                Fast Switching

                CEF Switching
Why Is CEF Needed in MPLS Networks?
What Are the Components of CEF?

                The Adjacency Table

                The CEF Table
Operation of CEF
Distributed CEF (DCEF)
CEF Switching Packets in Hardware
Load Balancing in CEF
Unequal Cost Load Balancing
Labeling IP Packets by CEF
Load Balancing Labeled Packets
Troubleshooting CEF
Summary

Chapter Review Questions
 

Part II: Advanced MPLS Topics

 


Chapter 7 MPLS VPN
 
Introduction to MPLS VPN

                Definition of a VPN

                VPN Models

                MPLS VPN Model
Architectural Overview of MPLS VPN
Virtual Routing Forwarding

                RD

                RTs

                VPNv4 Route Propagation in the MPLS VPN Network

                Packet Forwarding in an MPLS VPN Network
BGP

                BGP Multiprotocol Extensions and Capabilities

                BGP Extended Community: RT

                VPNv4 Routes

                BGP Carrying the Label

                RRs

                RR Group

                BGP Route Selection

                BGP Multipath

                Using Multiple RDs
Packet Forwarding
PE-CE Routing Protocols

                Connected Routes

                Static Routing

                RIP Version 2

                OSPF

                OSPF VRF Configuration

                OSPF Metric Propagation

                BGP Extended Communities for OSPF

                OSPF Network Design

                Sham Link

                Down Bit and Domain Tag

                EIGRP

                Configuration

                Pre-Bestpath POI

                EIGRP PE-CE with Backdoor Links
IS-IS

                eBGP

                Autonomous System Override

                allowas-in
Hub-and-Spoke
SOO
VRF Access
Internet Access

                Internet in a VPN

                Internet Access Through the Global Routing Table

                Internet Access Through the Global Routing Table with Static Routes

                Internet Access Through a Central VRF Site
Multi-VRF CE

                OSPF VRF-Lite Command
CE Management
Summary

Chapter Review Questions
 


Chapter 8 MPLS Traffic Engineering
 
The Need for MPLS TE
Overview of the Operation of MPLS TE
Distribution of TE Information

                Requirements for the IGP

                OSPF Extensions for TE

                IS-IS Extensions for TE

                Flooding by the IGP
Routing and Cost of a TE LSP

                Link TE Attributes

                Maximum Reservable Bandwidth

                Attribute Flags

                TE Metric

                Shared Risk Link Groups

                Maximum Reservable Sub-Pool Bandwidth

                MPLS TE Tunnel (Trunk) Attributes

                TE Tunnel Path Calculation

                Path Setup Option

                IP Explicit Address Exclusion

                Setup and Holding Priority

                Reoptimization

                Periodic Reoptimization

                Event-Driven Reoptimization

                Manual Reoptimization
Dual TE Metrics
PCALC
RSVP

                RSVP and Labels

                Record Route Object

                Other Information Carried by RSVP

                Putting It All Together

                Shared Explicit Style

                RSVP Messages

                PathTear

                ResvTear

                PathErr

                ResvErr
Link Manager
FRR

                FRR-Link Protection

                FRR-Node Protection

                SRLG Used by Backup Tunnels

                Multiple Backup Tunnels
Forwarding Traffic onto MPLS TE Tunnels

                Static Routing

                Policy-Based Routing

                Autoroute Announce

                Forwarding Adjacency

                Direct Mapping of AToM Traffic onto TE Tunnels

                Class-Based Tunnel Selection

                Cost Calculation of IGP Routes over TE Tunnels

                Default Cost Calculation

                Adjusting the Cost Calculation

                Load Balancing
MPLS TE and MPLS VPN

                TE Tunnels Between PE Routers

                TE Tunnel with P Router as Tail End Router

                VRF-to-TE Tunnel Routing
Summary

Chapter Review Questions
 


Chapter 9 IPv6 over MPLS
 
Introduction to IPv6

                The Driving Forces for IPv6

                Overview of the IPv6 Protocol

                The IPv6 Header

                The IPv6 Addressing

                Other IPv6 Novelties

                Overview of IPv6 Unicast Routing in Cisco IOS

                IPv6 RIP (RIPng)

                OSPF for IPv6 or OSPFv3

                IS-IS for IPv6

                EIGRP for IPv6

                Multiprotocol BGP Extensions for IPv6

                CEFv6
Carrying IPv6 over an MPLS Backbone
MPLS VPN Network Using IPv6 over IPv4 Tunnels on the CE Routers
Carrying IPv6 over an MPLS Backbone (6PE)

                Operation of 6PE

                Configuration of 6PE

                Verifying 6PE Operation
Carrying IPv6 in VPNs Across an MPLS Backbone (6VPE)

                Operation of 6VPE

                Configuration of 6VPE

                Verifying 6VPE Operation

                IPv6 Internet Access Through 6VPE

                Supported Features for 6VPE
Remarks for Both 6PE and 6VPE

                Route Reflectors

                Turning Off TTL Propagation on the PE Routers

                Load Balancing Labeled IPv6 Packets

                PHP

                BGP Functionality
Summary

Chapter Review Questions
 


Chapter 10 Any Transport over MPLS
 
Understanding the Need for AToM
Transporting Layer 2 Frames
AToM Architecture

                Data Plane of AToM

                Signaling the Pseudowire

                C-Bit

                PW Type

                Group ID

                PW ID

                Interface Parameters

                Signaling the Status of the Pseudowire
The Control Word

                Control Word Functions

                Pad Small Packets

                Carry Control Bits of the Layer 2 Header of the Transported Protocol

                Preserve the Sequence of the Transported Frames

                Facilitate the Correct Load Balancing of AToM Packets in the MPLS Backbone Network

                Facilitate Fragmentation and Reassembly
MPLS MTU in the MPLS Backbone
The Basic AToM Configuration
Transported Layer 2 Protocols

                HDLC

                PPP

                Frame Relay

                DLCI-to-DLCI

                Port-to-Port Mode (Port Trunking)

                ATM

                ATM AAL5

                ATM Cell Relay

                Single Cell Relay Mode

                Packed Cell Relay Mode

                Ethernet

                Ethernet Frame Format

                EoMPLS Forwarding

                VLAN ID Rewrite

                EoMPLS Scenario Examples

                Dot1q Tunneling (QinQ) over AToM
AToM Tunnel Selection
AToM and QoS
Summary

Chapter Review Questions
 


Chapter 11 Virtual Private LAN Service
 
The Need for VPLS
VPLS Architecture
VPLS Data Plane
VPLS Signaling
The Basic VPLS Configuration
Verifying the VPLS Operation
VPLS and Tunneling Layer 2 Protocols

                Tunneling Cisco Discovery Protocol

                Tunneling Spanning Tree Protocol
Trunk Port Between the CE and PE
Hierarchical VPLS

                H-VPLS with Dot1q Tunneling (QinQ) in the Access Layer

                H-VPLS with MPLS in the Access Layer
Quality of Service
Limiting MAC Addresses
Routing Peering
Summary

Chapter Review Questions
 


Chapter 12 MPLS and Quality of Service
 
DiffServ with IP Packets
DiffServ with MPLS Packets
Default MPLS QoS Behavior in Cisco IOS
DiffServ Tunneling Models

                Pipe Model

                Short Pipe Model

                Uniform Model

                Advantages of the DiffServ Tunneling Models

                How to Implement the Three DiffServ Tunneling Models
Recoloring the Packet
MQC Commands for MPLS QoS
Moving MPLS QoS from the PE to the CE Router
Implementing the DiffServ Tunneling Models in Cisco IOS
The Table-Map Feature
The Use of MPLS QoS for Ethernet over MPLS
Summary

Chapter Review Questions
 


Chapter 13 Troubleshooting MPLS Networks
 
Label Stack Depth
Verifying Label Switched Path
Tracerouting in MPLS Networks

                Tracerouting in an IP Network

                Label-Aware ICMP

                TTL Behavior in MPLS Networks

                Tracerouting in MPLS Networks

                Problems with Tracerouting in MPLS Networks

                mpls ip ttl-expiration pop Command

                no mpls ip propagate-ttl
MPLS MTU
Ping
Debug MPLS Packets
Debugging Load Balancing of Labeled Packets
Verifying MPLS on the Interface
Verifying Number of Bytes Label Switched
MPLS-Aware Netflow
Summary

Chapter Review Questions
 


Chapter 14 MPLS Operation and Maintenance
 
Requirements of MPLS OAM

                Detection and Diagnosis of Control and Data Plane Defects

                Detection of a Defect in a Label Switched Path (LSP)

                OAM Packets Flowing on the Same Path as MPLS Data Traffic

                Path Characterization

                Measurement of SLAs

                OAM Interworking

                MIBs

                Accounting
Router Alert Option and Router Alert Label

                Router Alert Label
OAM Alert Label
MPLS LSP Ping

                LSP Ping Protocol Details

                Target FEC Stack

                Downstream Mapping

                Interface and Label Stack TLV

                Errored TLVs TLV

                Reply TOS Byte

                LSP Ping Operation

                LSP Verification

                MPLS Ping in Cisco IOS
MPLS LSP Traceroute

                MPLS Traceroute in Cisco IOS

                Router Alert Label
Load Balancing
VCCV
IP Service Level Agreement

                VRF-Aware IP SLA
Netflow Accounting
SNMP/MIBs

                Context-Based Access for SNMP over MPLS VPN

                MPLS VPN MIBs
Syslog

                OAM Message Mapping
Summary

Chapter Review Questions
 


Chapter 15 The Future of MPLS
 
New MPLS Applications
Work at IETF

                MPLS Control Word

                FCS Retention

                AToM Fragmentation and Reassembly

                Circuit Emulation

                GMPLS

                OAM Protocols

                MPLS Labeled Multicast
The Proliferation of MPLS
Summary
 

Part III: Appendixes

 
Appendix A Answers to
Chapter Review Questions
Appendix B Static MPLS Labels (online)
 
Index