Configure Route Map on devices

You can configure route map on a device.

About this task

Follow this procedure to configure route map on devices.
Note

Note

For information about commands and supported parameters to configure route map, see ExtremeCloud Orchestrator Command Reference, 3.6.0 .

Procedure

  1. Run the following command to configure the route map with one or more rules:
    efa policy route-map create ?
    Flags:
          --name string           Name of route-map
          --rule stringArray      Rule in format seq[seq-num],action[permit/deny]

    The following is an example of creating a route map rmap_1 with two rules:

    efa policy route-map create –-name rmap_1 –-rule seq[5],action[permit] –-rule seq[10],action[permit]
  2. Run the following command to update the route map configuration on a list of devices:
    The update command configures the route map on device, removes configuration from a device or updates action of route-maps.
    efa policy route-map update ?
    Flags:
          --name string      Name of route-map
          --rule string      Rule in format seq[seq-num],action[permit/deny]
          --operation string Valid options are add-device, remove-device, update-action
          --ip string        Comma separated range of device IP addresses. Example: 1.1.1.1-3,1.1.1.2,2.2.2.2
    • You can associate a route map with multiple rules.
    • The add-device operation adds all the rules of the route map on the specified devices.
    • The delete-device operation deletes all the rules of the route map on the specified devices.
    Note

    Note

    The delete-device operation fails if the route map is bound to any BGP neighbor.

    For an update-action operation, specify the route map name and the rule. You can modify the action to permit or deny for a specific rule. You can provide only one rule at a time.

    The following are the examples of route map configuration update:
    • Add device: Configures a route map rule on devices 10.20.246.10 and 10.20.246.11. Assume there are two route map rules for a map named rmap_1 that already exists in XCO:
      1. rmap_1 seq 5 action permit
      2. rmap_1 seq 10 action permit
      efa policy route-map update –-name rmap_l –-operation add-device --ip 10.20.246.10-11
    • Delete device: Removes route map from the specified devices:
      efa policy route-map update –-name rmap_l –-operation delete-device --ip 10.20.246.10-11
    • Update action: Changes the action from permit to deny for the specified rule:
      efa policy route-map update –-name rmap_l –-rule seq[5],action[deny] –-operation update-action
    1. Verify the switch configuration on the SLX device.
      Example 1
      SLX# show running-config route-map
      route-map rmap_1 permit 5
      
      Example 2
      SLX# show running-config route-map
      route-map rmap_1 permit 5
      route-map rmap_1 permit 10
      
      Example 3
      SLX# show running-config route-map
      route-map rmap_1 deny 5
      route-map rmap_1 permit 10
      
  3. Run the following command to create route map match criteria:
    efa policy route-map-match create ?
    Flags:
          --name string              Name of route-map
          --rule string              Rule in format seq[seq-num],action[permit/deny]
          --match-ipv6-prefix string IPv6 prefix-list name

    The following is an example of route map match create in IPv6:

    efa policy route-map-match create –-name rmap_1 –-rule seq[5],action[permit] --match-ipv6-prefix prefix_1
    1. Verify the switch configuration on the SLX device.
      SLX# show running-config route-map
      route-map rmap_1 permit 5
      match ip address prefix-list prefix_1
  4. Run the following command to remove the route map match criteria:

    The IPv6 prefix list is the only match supported.

    efa policy route-map-match delete ?
    Flags:
          --name string              Name of route-map
          --rule string              Rule in format seq[seq-num],action[permit/deny]
          --match-ipv6-prefix string IPv6 prefix-list name

    The following is an example of route map match delete in IPv6:

    efa policy route-map-match delete –-name rmap_1 –-rule seq[5],action[permit]
    1. Verify the switch configuration on the SLX device.
      SLX# show running-config route-map
      route-map rmap_1 permit 5
  5. Run the following command to display the route map for a list of devices:

    In the command output, the App State column reflects the state of configuration on the specified device. When there is drift in a rule, the App State is shown as cfg-refreshed.

    efa policy route-map list ?
    Flags:
          --ip string     Comma separated range of device IP addresses. Example: 1.1.1.1-3,1.1.1.2,2.2.2.2

    Example:

    efa policy route-map list –-ip 10.20.246.10-11  
     
    Route-map details: 
     
    Name: rmap_1 
    Seq: 5 
    Action: permit 
    Match-ipv6-prefixlist: 
        Prefix-list: prefix_1 
     
    Name: rmap_2 
    Seq: 5 
    Action: permit 
    Match-ipv6-prefixlist: 
        Prefix-list: prefix_1 
    
    IP Addresses: 
    +----------------+-----+---------------+-----------------+ 
    |     Name     | Seq |  IP Address   |     App State     | 
    +--------------+-----+---------------+-------------------+ 
    | rmap_1       |  5  | 10.20.246.10  |    cfg-in-sync    | 
    +--------------+-----+---------------+-------------------+ 
    | rmap_1       |  5  | 10.20.246.11  |    cfg-in-sync    | 
    +--------------+-----+---------------+-------------------+ 
    | rmap_2       |  5  | 10.20.246.10  |    cfg-in-sync    | 
    +--------------+-----+---------------+-------------------+ 
    | rmap_2       |  5  | 10.20.246.11  |    cfg-in-sync    | 
    +--------------+-----+---------------+-------------------+ 
  6. Run the following command to delete a route map and the associated rules on the devices:
    efa policy route-map delete ?
    Flags:
           --name stringArray      Name of route-map
           --seq string            Sequence numbers. For example 5,10,20, or all
    • The command removes the route map rule from the XCO database and from the associated devices.
    • You can delete a specific rule of a route map by specifying the route map name and the sequence number of the rule.
    • You can delete all the route map rules for a specific route map name by specifying the sequence number as "all".
    • The result of this command depends on whether the route map is bound with a BGP neighbor.
      • If the route map is bound to BGP peer, you cannot delete the last route map rule.
      • If the route map has no bindings, the command deletes the configuration on all devices associated with the route map.

    The following example deletes two rules with sequence numbers 5 and 10 from a route map (rmap_1) that has three rules:

    • rmap_1 seq 5 action permit
    • rmap_1 seq 10 action permit
    • rmap_1 seq 20 action permit
      efa policy route-map delete –-name rmap_l –-seq 5,10
    1. Verify the switch configuration on the SLX device.
      SLX1# show running-config route-map rmap_1
      route-map rmap_1 permit 20