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CIS185AdvancedRouting Protocols
EIGRP Part 2
Rick Graziani
Cabrillo College
graziani@cabrillo.edu
Fall 2012
2
EIGRP Part 2
EIGRP over Frame Relay
EIGRP over MPLS
EIGRP Load Balancing
EIGRP Bandwidth across WAN Links
Authentication
EIGRP Scalability in Large Networks
3
Materials
Book:
Implementing Cisco IP Routing
(ROUTE) Foundation Learning
Guide: Foundation learning for the
ROUTE 642-902 Exam
By Diane Teare
Book
ISBN-10: 1-58705-882-0
ISBN-13: 978-1-58705-882-0
eBook
ISBN-10: 0-13-255033-4
ISBN-13: 978-0-13-255033-8
Configuring and Verifying
EIGRP in an Enterprise WAN
Physical Frame-Relay
Multipoint and point-to-point Frame-Relay subinterfaces
Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) virtual private
networks (VPNs)
Ethernet over Multiprotocol Label Switching (EoMPLS)
4
Frame Relay Basics
Frame Relay Basics
A switched WAN technology
Virtual circuits (VCs) are created by a Service Provider (SP)
Multiple logical VCs to be multiplexed over a single physical interface.
Typically PVCs identified by a locally significant data link connection
identifier (DLCI).
For IP connectivity: A mapping between IP addresses and DLCIs must
be defined, either dynamically or statically.
5
Frame Relay Basics
By default, a Frame Relay network is an NBMA network.
Like multiaccess networks (Ethernet LANs) All routers are on the same
subnet
But broadcast (and multicast) packets CANNOT be sent just once as they
are in a broadcast environment such as Ethernet.
Cisco IOS implements pseudo-broadcasting
Router creates a copy of the broadcast or multicast packet for each
neighbor reachable through the WAN media (over the PVC).
Sends the copy of the broadcast or multicast packet over the appropriate
PVC for that neighbor.
6
EIGRP over Frame Relay:
Physical Interface with Dynamic Mapping
Inverse ARP is on by default
Automatically maps the IP address of the devices at the other end of the
PVCs to the local DLCI number.
Split horizon is disabled by default on Frame Relay physical interfaces.
Routes from Router R2 can be sent to Router R3, and vise-versa.
Note: Inverse ARP does not provide dynamic mapping for the
communication between routers R2 to R3 because they are not
connected with a PVC; this must be configured (mapped) manually
7
DLCI 100
DLCI 130
R1
Same Subnet
EIGRP over Frame Relay:
Physical Interface with Dynamic Mapping
R1 forms the adjacency with router R2 and R3 over the serial0/0
physical interface.
R3 (and R2) forms an adjacency with router R1.
No EIGRP relationship exists between routers R2 and R3.
8
EIGRP over Frame Relay:
Physical Interface with Static Mapping
Using static mapping disables Inverse ARP
No changes to the basic EIGRP configuration.
Manual IP-to-DLCI mapping commands on the serial 0/0 interface are
necessary on all three routers.
Again, because split horizon is disabled by default on Frame Relay
physical interfaces, routes from R2 can be sent to R3, and vise-versa.
Note: R1 includes a Frame Relay map to its own IP address so it can
ping its own interface.
9
R1
interface Serial 0/0
encapsulation frame-relay
ip address 192.168.1.103 255.255.255.0
frame-relay map ip 192.168.1.101 130 broadcast
router eigrp 110
network 192.168.1.0
R3
EIGRP over Frame Relay:
Physical Interface with Static Mapping
The adjacencies formed on R1 using static mapping are the same as those
formed using dynamic mapping.
R2 and R3 also form an adjacency with router R1.
R2 and R3 can also form an EIGRP adjacency to each other if the IP-to-
DLCI mapping for that connectivity is provided.
Output shows that R3 has two neighbors (router R1 and R2), indicating that
this mapping was provided on R3 (but not required between R2 and R3).
10
interface Serial 0/0
encapsulation frame-relay
ip address 192.168.1.103 255.255.255.0
frame-relay map ip 192.168.1.101 130 broadcast
frame-relay map ip 192.168.1.102 130 broadcast
router eigrp 110
network 192.168.1.0
R3
[...]... ip address 1 92. 168.1.101 25 5 .25 5 .25 5.0 no ip split-horizon eigrp 110 frame-relay map ip 1 92. 168.1.1 02 1 02 broadcast frame-relay map ip 1 92. 168.1.103 103 broadcast router eigrp 110 network 1 92. 168.1.0 network 1 72. 16.1.0 0.0.0 .25 5 R3 interface Serial 0/0 no ip address encapsulation frame-relay interface serial 0/0/0.1 multipoint ip address 1 92. 168.1.103 25 5 .25 5 .25 5.0 frame-relay map ip 1 92. 168.1.101 130... ip address 1 92. 168.1.101 25 5 .25 5 .25 5.0 no ip split-horizon eigrp 110 frame-relay map ip 1 92. 168.1.1 02 1 02 broadcast frame-relay map ip 1 92. 168.1.103 103 broadcast router eigrp 110 network 1 92. 168.1.0 network 1 72. 16.1.0 0.0.0 .25 5 R3 interface Serial 0/0 no ip address encapsulation frame-relay interface serial 0/0/0.1 multipoint ip address 1 92. 168.1.103 25 5 .25 5 .25 5.0 frame-relay map ip 1 92. 168.1.101 130... frame-relay interface serial 0/0/0.1 multipoint ip address 1 92. 168.1.103 25 5 .25 5 .25 5.0 frame-relay map ip 1 92. 168.1.101 130 broadcast router eigrp 110 network 1 92. 168.1.0 Because R3 is not using the neighbor command it tries to communicate with multicast packets on its Serial 0/0/.1 However, neighborship is not established because neither R1 nor Router R2 is accepting multicast packets 18 EIGRP over Frame... adjacency with routers R2 and R3 over the serial0/0.1 multipoint subinterface R2 and R3 form the adjacency with R1 Note: R2 and R3 could form an adjacency between each other if the IP address-to-DLCI mapping for that connectivity is provided (not required) 14 EIGRP over Frame Relay: Unicast Neighbors R1 R2 Not all Frame Relay service providers support multicasts/broadcasts so routing information... Layer 3 routing Benefits of Layer 2 switching Short fixed-length labels are assigned to each packet at the edge of the MPLS network Allows for scalable VPNs, end-to-end QoS, and other IP services that allow efficient utilization of existing networks with simpler configuration, management, and quicker fault correction 22 What is MPLS? New WAN technology originally defined in RFC 3031 by: Cisco... Later, Layer 2 VPNs based on point-to-point data link layer connectivity, using ATM or Frame Relay virtual circuits MPLS VPNs were introduced to provide a unified network for Layer 3 VPN services Any Transport over MPLS (AToM) was introduced to facilitate this Layer 2 connectivity across an MPLS backbone 34 Layer 2 and Layer 3 MPLS VPN Solutions Layer 2 MPLS VPN provides a Layer 2 service across... across the backbone R1 and R2 are connected together on the same IP subnet Layer 3 MPLS VPN provides a Layer 3 service across the backbone R1 and R2 are connected to ISP edge routers; on each side, a separate IP subnet is used 35 Layer 2 and Layer 3 MPLS VPN Solutions Site #3 The network is divided into: Customer-controlled part (C-network) Provider-controlled part (P-network) Contiguous... Ipsilon (now part of Nokia) What is the problem MPLS is trying to solve? Layer 3 End-to-end circuits Advantages IP routing provides dynamic, automatic path setup Provides best path and backup paths Provides QoS Disadvantages Latency in hop-by-hop Layer 3 lookup Latency in routing – switching – packet forwarding process What is the problem MPLS is trying to solve? Layer 2 End-to-end... precedence 28 MPLS Operation MPLS network nodes are called Label-Switched Routers (LSRs) Use the label to determine the next-hop for the packet Do not need to examine the packet’s IP header Forwards packets based on the label After a path has been established: Packets destined to the same endpoint with the same requirements can be forwarded based on these labels without a routing decision at... MPLS equivalent to destination-based routing 29 MPLS Operation A Label-Switched Path (LSP) must be defined for each FEC before packets can be sent Labels are locally significant to each MPLS node only Therefore nodes must communicate what label to use for each FEC Label Distribution Protocol Enhanced version of the Resource Reservation Protocol An interior routing protocol, such as OSPF or . CIS 185 Advanced Routing Protocols
EIGRP Part 2
Rick Graziani
Cabrillo College
graziani@cabrillo.edu
Fall 20 12
2
EIGRP Part 2
EIGRP over. 1 92. 168.1.103 25 5 .25 5 .25 5.0
frame-relay map ip 1 92. 168.1.101 130 broadcast
frame-relay map ip 1 92. 168.1.1 02 130 broadcast
router eigrp 110
network 1 92. 168.1.0
R3
EIGRP