Configuring a VRF instance
About this task
Configure a VRF instance to provide a virtual routing interface for a user.
Note
The maximum routes of IPv4 and IPv6 for Global Router (GRT) are non-configurable and fixed at the system limits.
Maximum route traps are not generated on GRT. For non-default VRFs, the permitted maximum routes can be lower than system limits and traps generate when the limit is exceeded.
Procedure
- In the navigation tree, expand the following folders: .
- Click VRF.
- Click the VRF tab.
- Click Insert.
- Specify the VRF ID.
- Name the VRF instance.
- Configure VRF Lite-related traps.
- Configure the other parameters as required.
- Click Insert.
VRF field descriptions
Use the data in the following table to help you use the VRF tab.
Name |
Description |
---|---|
Id |
Specifies the ID number of the VRF instance. VRF ID 0 is reserved for the GlobalRouter. |
Name |
Names the VRF instance. |
ContextName |
Identifies the VRF. The SNMPv2 Community String or SNMPv3 contextName denotes the VRF context and is used to logically separate the MIB port management. |
TrapEnable |
Enables the VRF to send VRF Lite-related traps (VrfUp and VrfDown). The default is enabled. |
MaxRoutes |
Configures the maximum number of routes allowed for the VRF, which varies depending on the hardware. For scaling information, see VOSS Release Notes. The default value varies for the GlobalRouter and non-default VRFs, depending on your hardware platform. |
RpTrigger |
Specifies the Routing Protocol (RP) triggers for the VRF. The triggers are used to initiate or shutdown routing protocols on a VRF. You can act upon multiple RPs simultaneously. You can also use this option to bring individual RPs up in steps. |
MaxRoutesTrapEnable |
Enables the generation of the VRF Max Routes Exceeded traps. The default is enabled. |
Ipv6MaxRoutes |
Configures the maximum number of IPv6 routes allowed for the VRF, which varies depending on the hardware. For scaling information, see VOSS Release Notes. The default value varies for the GlobalRouter and non-default VRFs, depending on your hardware platform. |
Ipv6MaxRoutesTrapEnable |
Enables SNMP trap generation after the maximum number of IPv6 routes are reached. The default is enabled. |
Active |
Displays if the VRF is active (true). |
Origin | Displays the VRF origin (DYNAMIC or
CONFIG). CONFIG indicates the VRF was manually created by the
user. DYNAMIC indicates the VRF was created configuring an
mvpn-isid on a VLAN. The Default VRF and the MGMT VRF are
considered DYNAMIC.
Note: Only CONFIG
VRFs are saved and visible in the running-config.
|