Feature |
Product |
Release introduced |
---|---|---|
For configuration details, see VOSS User Guide. |
||
Fabric BCB mode |
5520 Series |
VOSS 8.2.5 |
VSP 4450 Series |
VSP 4000 4.0 |
|
VSP 4900 Series |
VOSS 8.1 |
|
VSP 7200 Series |
VOSS 4.2.1 |
|
VSP 7400 Series |
VOSS 8.0 |
|
VSP 8200 Series |
VSP 8200 4.0 |
|
VSP 8400 Series |
VOSS 4.2 |
|
VSP 8600 Series |
VSP 8600 4.5 |
|
XA1400 Series |
VOSS 8.0.50 |
|
Fabric BEB mode |
5520 Series |
VOSS 8.2.5 |
VSP 4450 Series |
VSP 4000 4.0 |
|
VSP 4900 Series |
VOSS 8.1 |
|
VSP 7200 Series |
VOSS 4.2.1 |
|
VSP 7400 Series |
VOSS 8.0 |
|
VSP 8200 Series |
VSP 8200 4.0 |
|
VSP 8400 Series |
VOSS 4.2 |
|
VSP 8600 Series |
VSP 8600 6.1 |
|
XA1400 Series |
VOSS 8.0.50 |
The boundary between the core MAC-in-MAC SPBM domain and the edge customer 802.1Q domain is handled by Backbone Edge Bridges (BEBs). I-SIDs are provisioned on the BEBs to be associated with a particular service instance.
In the SPBM core, the bridges are referred to as Backbone Core Bridges (BCBs). BCBs forward encapsulated traffic based on the BMAC-DA.
Important
SPBM separates the payload from the transport over the SPBM infrastructure. Configure all virtualization services on the BEBs at the edge of the network. There is no provisioning required on the core SPBM switches. This provides a robust carrier grade architecture where configuration on the core switches never needs to be touched when adding new services.
A BEB performs the same functionality as a BCB, but it also terminates one or more Virtual Service Networks (VSN). A BCB does not terminate any VSNs and is unaware of the VSN traffic it transports. A BCB simply knows how to reach any other BEB in the SPBM backbone.