MPLS Process Restart The MPLS process restart capability is a fault containment mechanism which ensures that process-level failures do not cause system-level failures. To achieve process restart capability, each process must run in its protected memory space independent of kernel.
Configuring Signaled LSP Parameters An LSPs configuration can specify not only the path that label-switched packets follow in a network, but also the characteristics of the path, the resources allocated along the path, and actions applied to the packets by the ingress or egress LERs.
Link Protection for FRR To avoid loss of traffic, Fast Reroute (FRR) protects the LSP and allows a broken LSP to be repaired immediately at the point of failure.
RSVP LSP with FRR RSVP LSP with fast reroute (FRR) protection for detour backup.
RSVP-TE Hello The RSVP-TE Hello feature is an optional extension to RSVP-TE protocols to detect neighbor down scenarios. It makes use of Hello messages as a keepalive poll mechanism between RSVP peers on a link.
Configuring Path Selection The user can exercise control over the paths used by an LSP by setting the select mode and by specifying a preferred path using the select-path command.
Configuring the RSVP Refresh Interval To maintain path states and resource reservations on the routers in an LSP, RSVP Path and Resv messages are sent at regular intervals.
Configuring the RSVP refresh multiple The refresh multiple is the number of refresh intervals that must elapse without a refresh message before a path state or resource reservation times out.