Juniper JUNOSE 11.1.X - LINK LAYER CONFIGURATION 4-7-2010 Configuration manual

Category
Software
Type
Configuration manual

This manual is also suitable for

JUNOSe Software
for E Series Broadband Services Routers
Link Layer Configuration Guide
Release 11.1.x
Juniper Networks, Inc.
1194 North Mathilda Avenue
Sunnyvale, California 94089
USA
408-745-2000
www.juniper.net
Published: 2010-04-07
Juniper Networks, the Juniper Networks logo, JUNOS, NetScreen, ScreenOS, and Steel-Belted Radius are registered trademarks of Juniper Networks, Inc. in
the United States and other countries. JUNOSe is a trademark of Juniper Networks, Inc. All other trademarks, service marks, registered trademarks, or
registered service marks are the property of their respective owners.
Juniper Networks assumes no responsibility for any inaccuracies in this document. Juniper Networks reserves the right to change, modify, transfer, or
otherwise revise this publication without notice.
Products made or sold by Juniper Networks or components thereof might be covered by one or more of the following patents that are owned by or licensed
to Juniper Networks: U.S. Patent Nos. 5,473,599, 5,905,725, 5,909,440, 6,192,051, 6,333,650, 6,359,479, 6,406,312, 6,429,706, 6,459,579, 6,493,347,
6,538,518, 6,538,899, 6,552,918, 6,567,902, 6,578,186, and 6,590,785.
JUNOSe Software for E Series Broadband Services Routers Link Layer Configuration Guide
Release 11.1.x
Copyright © 2010, Juniper Networks, Inc.
All rights reserved. Printed in USA.
Writing: Krupa Chandrashekar, Subash Babu Asokan, Pallavi Madhusudhan, Diane Florio, Bruce Gillham, Justine Kangas, Sarah Lesway-Ball, Helen Shaw,
Brian Wesley Simmons, Fran Singer
Editing: Benjamin Mann
Illustration: Nathaniel Woodward
Cover Design: Edmonds Design
Revision History
April 2010FRS JUNOSe 11.1.x
The information in this document is current as of the date listed in the revision history.
YEAR 2000 NOTICE
Juniper Networks hardware and software products are Year 2000 compliant. The JUNOS Software has no known time-related limitations through the year
2038. However, the NTP application is known to have some difficulty in the year 2036.
ii
END USER LICENSE AGREEMENT
READ THIS END USER LICENSE AGREEMENT (AGREEMENT) BEFORE DOWNLOADING, INSTALLING, OR USING THE SOFTWARE. BY DOWNLOADING,
INSTALLING, OR USING THE SOFTWARE OR OTHERWISE EXPRESSING YOUR AGREEMENT TO THE TERMS CONTAINED HEREIN, YOU (AS CUSTOMER
OR IF YOU ARE NOT THE CUSTOMER, AS A REPRESENTATIVE/AGENT AUTHORIZED TO BIND THE CUSTOMER) CONSENT TO BE BOUND BY THIS
AGREEMENT. IF YOU DO NOT OR CANNOT AGREE TO THE TERMS CONTAINED HEREIN, THEN (A) DO NOT DOWNLOAD, INSTALL, OR USE THE SOFTWARE,
AND (B) YOU MAY CONTACT JUNIPER NETWORKS REGARDING LICENSE TERMS.
1. The Parties. The parties to this Agreement are (i) Juniper Networks, Inc. (if the Customers principal office is located in the Americas) or Juniper Networks
(Cayman) Limited (if the Customers principal office is located outside the Americas) (such applicable entity being referred to herein as Juniper), and (ii)
the person or organization that originally purchased from Juniper or an authorized Juniper reseller the applicable license(s) for use of the Software (Customer)
(collectively, the Parties).
2. The Software. In this Agreement, Software means the program modules and features of the Juniper or Juniper-supplied software, for which Customer
has paid the applicable license or support fees to Juniper or an authorized Juniper reseller, or which was embedded by Juniper in equipment which Customer
purchased from Juniper or an authorized Juniper reseller. Software also includes updates, upgrades and new releases of such software. Embedded
Software means Software which Juniper has embedded in or loaded onto the Juniper equipment and any updates, upgrades, additions or replacements
which are subsequently embedded in or loaded onto the equipment.
3. License Grant. Subject to payment of the applicable fees and the limitations and restrictions set forth herein, Juniper grants to Customer a non-exclusive
and non-transferable license, without right to sublicense, to use the Software, in executable form only, subject to the following use restrictions:
a. Customer shall use Embedded Software solely as embedded in, and for execution on, Juniper equipment originally purchased by Customer from Juniper
or an authorized Juniper reseller.
b. Customer shall use the Software on a single hardware chassis having a single processing unit, or as many chassis or processing units for which Customer
has paid the applicable license fees; provided, however, with respect to the Steel-Belted Radius or Odyssey Access Client software only, Customer shall use
such Software on a single computer containing a single physical random access memory space and containing any number of processors. Use of the
Steel-Belted Radius or IMS AAA software on multiple computers or virtual machines (e.g., Solaris zones) requires multiple licenses, regardless of whether
such computers or virtualizations are physically contained on a single chassis.
c. Product purchase documents, paper or electronic user documentation, and/or the particular licenses purchased by Customer may specify limits to
Customers use of the Software. Such limits may restrict use to a maximum number of seats, registered endpoints, concurrent users, sessions, calls,
connections, subscribers, clusters, nodes, realms, devices, links, ports or transactions, or require the purchase of separate licenses to use particular features,
functionalities, services, applications, operations, or capabilities, or provide throughput, performance, configuration, bandwidth, interface, processing,
temporal, or geographical limits. In addition, such limits may restrict the use of the Software to managing certain kinds of networks or require the Software
to be used only in conjunction with other specific Software. Customers use of the Software shall be subject to all such limitations and purchase of all applicable
licenses.
d. For any trial copy of the Software, Customers right to use the Software expires 30 days after download, installation or use of the Software. Customer
may operate the Software after the 30-day trial period only if Customer pays for a license to do so. Customer may not extend or create an additional trial
period by re-installing the Software after the 30-day trial period.
e. The Global Enterprise Edition of the Steel-Belted Radius software may be used by Customer only to manage access to Customers enterprise network.
Specifically, service provider customers are expressly prohibited from using the Global Enterprise Edition of the Steel-Belted Radius software to support any
commercial network access services.
The foregoing license is not transferable or assignable by Customer. No license is granted herein to any user who did not originally purchase the applicable
license(s) for the Software from Juniper or an authorized Juniper reseller.
4. Use Prohibitions. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the license provided herein does not permit the Customer to, and Customer agrees not to and shall
not: (a) modify, unbundle, reverse engineer, or create derivative works based on the Software; (b) make unauthorized copies of the Software (except as
necessary for backup purposes); (c) rent, sell, transfer, or grant any rights in and to any copy of the Software, in any form, to any third party; (d) remove
any proprietary notices, labels, or marks on or in any copy of the Software or any product in which the Software is embedded; (e) distribute any copy of
the Software to any third party, including as may be embedded in Juniper equipment sold in the secondhand market; (f) use any locked or key-restricted
feature, function, service, application, operation, or capability without first purchasing the applicable license(s) and obtaining a valid key from Juniper, even
if such feature, function, service, application, operation, or capability is enabled without a key; (g) distribute any key for the Software provided by Juniper
to any third party; (h) use the Software in any manner that extends or is broader than the uses purchased by Customer from Juniper or an authorized Juniper
reseller; (i) use Embedded Software on non-Juniper equipment; (j) use Embedded Software (or make it available for use) on Juniper equipment that the
Customer did not originally purchase from Juniper or an authorized Juniper reseller; (k) disclose the results of testing or benchmarking of the Software to
any third party without the prior written consent of Juniper; or (l) use the Software in any manner other than as expressly provided herein.
5. Audit. Customer shall maintain accurate records as necessary to verify compliance with this Agreement. Upon request by Juniper, Customer shall furnish
such records to Juniper and certify its compliance with this Agreement.
iii
6. Confidentiality. The Parties agree that aspects of the Software and associated documentation are the confidential property of Juniper. As such, Customer
shall exercise all reasonable commercial efforts to maintain the Software and associated documentation in confidence, which at a minimum includes
restricting access to the Software to Customer employees and contractors having a need to use the Software for Customers internal business purposes.
7. Ownership. Juniper and Junipers licensors, respectively, retain ownership of all right, title, and interest (including copyright) in and to the Software,
associated documentation, and all copies of the Software. Nothing in this Agreement constitutes a transfer or conveyance of any right, title, or interest in
the Software or associated documentation, or a sale of the Software, associated documentation, or copies of the Software.
8. Warranty, Limitation of Liability, Disclaimer of Warranty. The warranty applicable to the Software shall be as set forth in the warranty statement that
accompanies the Software (the Warranty Statement). Nothing in this Agreement shall give rise to any obligation to support the Software. Support services
may be purchased separately. Any such support shall be governed by a separate, written support services agreement. TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED
BY LAW, JUNIPER SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY LOST PROFITS, LOSS OF DATA, OR COSTS OR PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES,
OR FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THIS AGREEMENT, THE SOFTWARE, OR ANY JUNIPER OR
JUNIPER-SUPPLIED SOFTWARE. IN NO EVENT SHALL JUNIPER BE LIABLE FOR DAMAGES ARISING FROM UNAUTHORIZED OR IMPROPER USE OF ANY
JUNIPER OR JUNIPER-SUPPLIED SOFTWARE. EXCEPT AS EXPRESSLY PROVIDED IN THE WARRANTY STATEMENT TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY LAW,
JUNIPER DISCLAIMS ANY AND ALL WARRANTIES IN AND TO THE SOFTWARE (WHETHER EXPRESS, IMPLIED, STATUTORY, OR OTHERWISE), INCLUDING
ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, OR NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT DOES JUNIPER
WARRANT THAT THE SOFTWARE, OR ANY EQUIPMENT OR NETWORK RUNNING THE SOFTWARE, WILL OPERATE WITHOUT ERROR OR INTERRUPTION,
OR WILL BE FREE OF VULNERABILITY TO INTRUSION OR ATTACK. In no event shall Junipers or its suppliers or licensors liability to Customer, whether
in contract, tort (including negligence), breach of warranty, or otherwise, exceed the price paid by Customer for the Software that gave rise to the claim, or
if the Software is embedded in another Juniper product, the price paid by Customer for such other product. Customer acknowledges and agrees that Juniper
has set its prices and entered into this Agreement in reliance upon the disclaimers of warranty and the limitations of liability set forth herein, that the same
reflect an allocation of risk between the Parties (including the risk that a contract remedy may fail of its essential purpose and cause consequential loss),
and that the same form an essential basis of the bargain between the Parties.
9. Termination. Any breach of this Agreement or failure by Customer to pay any applicable fees due shall result in automatic termination of the license
granted herein. Upon such termination, Customer shall destroy or return to Juniper all copies of the Software and related documentation in Customers
possession or control.
10. Taxes. All license fees payable under this agreement are exclusive of tax. Customer shall be responsible for paying Taxes arising from the purchase of
the license, or importation or use of the Software. If applicable, valid exemption documentation for each taxing jurisdiction shall be provided to Juniper prior
to invoicing, and Customer shall promptly notify Juniper if their exemption is revoked or modified. All payments made by Customer shall be net of any
applicable withholding tax. Customer will provide reasonable assistance to Juniper in connection with such withholding taxes by promptly: providing Juniper
with valid tax receipts and other required documentation showing Customers payment of any withholding taxes; completing appropriate applications that
would reduce the amount of withholding tax to be paid; and notifying and assisting Juniper in any audit or tax proceeding related to transactions hereunder.
Customer shall comply with all applicable tax laws and regulations, and Customer will promptly pay or reimburse Juniper for all costs and damages related
to any liability incurred by Juniper as a result of Customers non-compliance or delay with its responsibilities herein. Customers obligations under this
Section shall survive termination or expiration of this Agreement.
11. Export. Customer agrees to comply with all applicable export laws and restrictions and regulations of any United States and any applicable foreign
agency or authority, and not to export or re-export the Software or any direct product thereof in violation of any such restrictions, laws or regulations, or
without all necessary approvals. Customer shall be liable for any such violations. The version of the Software supplied to Customer may contain encryption
or other capabilities restricting Customers ability to export the Software without an export license.
12. Commercial Computer Software. The Software is commercial computer software and is provided with restricted rights. Use, duplication, or disclosure
by the United States government is subject to restrictions set forth in this Agreement and as provided in DFARS 227.7201 through 227.7202-4, FAR 12.212,
FAR 27.405(b)(2), FAR 52.227-19, or FAR 52.227-14(ALT III) as applicable.
13. Interface Information. To the extent required by applicable law, and at Customer's written request, Juniper shall provide Customer with the interface
information needed to achieve interoperability between the Software and another independently created program, on payment of applicable fee, if any.
Customer shall observe strict obligations of confidentiality with respect to such information and shall use such information in compliance with any applicable
terms and conditions upon which Juniper makes such information available.
14. Third Party Software. Any licensor of Juniper whose software is embedded in the Software and any supplier of Juniper whose products or technology
are embedded in (or services are accessed by) the Software shall be a third party beneficiary with respect to this Agreement, and such licensor or vendor
shall have the right to enforce this Agreement in its own name as if it were Juniper. In addition, certain third party software may be provided with the
Software and is subject to the accompanying license(s), if any, of its respective owner(s). To the extent portions of the Software are distributed under and
subject to open source licenses obligating Juniper to make the source code for such portions publicly available (such as the GNU General Public License
(GPL) or the GNU Library General Public License (LGPL)), Juniper will make such source code portions (including Juniper modifications, as appropriate)
available upon request for a period of up to three years from the date of distribution. Such request can be made in writing to Juniper Networks, Inc., 1194
N. Mathilda Ave., Sunnyvale, CA 94089, ATTN: General Counsel. You may obtain a copy of the GPL at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html, and
a copy of the LGPL at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/lgpl.html.
15. Miscellaneous. This Agreement shall be governed by the laws of the State of California without reference to its conflicts of laws principles. The provisions
of the U.N. Convention for the International Sale of Goods shall not apply to this Agreement. For any disputes arising under this Agreement, the Parties
hereby consent to the personal and exclusive jurisdiction of, and venue in, the state and federal courts within Santa Clara County, California. This Agreement
constitutes the entire and sole agreement between Juniper and the Customer with respect to the Software, and supersedes all prior and contemporaneous
iv
agreements relating to the Software, whether oral or written (including any inconsistent terms contained in a purchase order), except that the terms of a
separate written agreement executed by an authorized Juniper representative and Customer shall govern to the extent such terms are inconsistent or conflict
with terms contained herein. No modification to this Agreement nor any waiver of any rights hereunder shall be effective unless expressly assented to in
writing by the party to be charged. If any portion of this Agreement is held invalid, the Parties agree that such invalidity shall not affect the validity of the
remainder of this Agreement. This Agreement and associated documentation has been written in the English language, and the Parties agree that the English
version will govern. (For Canada: Les parties aux présentés confirment leur volonté que cette convention de même que tous les documents y compris tout
avis qui s'y rattaché, soient redigés en langue anglaise. (Translation: The parties confirm that this Agreement and all related documentation is and will be
in the English language)).
v
vi
Abbreviated Table of Contents
About the Documentation xxix
Part 1 Chapters
Chapter 1 Configuring ATM 3
Chapter 2 Configuring Frame Relay 107
Chapter 3 Configuring Multilink Frame Relay 133
Chapter 4 Configuring Upper-Layer Protocols over Static Ethernet Interfaces 153
Chapter 5 Configuring VLAN and S-VLAN Subinterfaces 169
Chapter 6 Configuring 802.3ad Link Aggregation and Link Redundancy 199
Chapter 7 Configuring IEEE 802.3ah OAM Link-Fault Management 227
Chapter 8 Configuring Point-to-Point Protocol 263
Chapter 9 Configuring Multilink PPP 303
Chapter 10 Configuring Multiclass Multilink PPP 349
Chapter 11 Configuring Packet over SONET 363
Chapter 12 Configuring Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet 375
Chapter 13 Configuring Bridged IP 437
Chapter 14 Configuring Bridged Ethernet 443
Chapter 15 Configuring Transparent Bridging 467
Chapter 16 Configuring Cisco HDLC 505
Chapter 17 Configuring Dynamic Interfaces 515
Chapter 18 Configuring Dynamic Interfaces Using Bulk Configuration 623
Part 2 Index
Index 717
Abbreviated Table of Contents vii
viii
JUNOSe 11.1.x Link Layer Configuration Guide
Table of Contents
About the Documentation xxix
E Series and JUNOSe Documentation and Release Notes ............................xxix
Audience ....................................................................................................xxix
E Series and JUNOSe Text and Syntax Conventions ....................................xxix
Obtaining Documentation ..........................................................................xxxi
Documentation Feedback ...........................................................................xxxi
Requesting Technical Support .....................................................................xxxi
Self-Help Online Tools and Resources .................................................xxxii
Opening a Case with JTAC ...................................................................xxxii
Part 1 Chapters
Chapter 1 Configuring ATM 3
Overview .........................................................................................................3
ATM Interfaces ..........................................................................................4
ATM Physical Connections ........................................................................4
ATM Virtual Connections ..........................................................................5
Virtual Channel Connection ................................................................5
Virtual Path Connection ......................................................................5
ATM SVCs .................................................................................................5
ATM Adaptation Layer ..............................................................................5
Local ATM Passthrough .............................................................................6
VCC Cell Relay Encapsulation ...................................................................6
Traffic Management ..................................................................................7
Connection Admission Control ...........................................................7
ILMI ..........................................................................................................9
VPI/VCI Address Ranges ............................................................................9
VP Tunneling ..........................................................................................10
Platform Considerations ................................................................................10
Module Requirements .............................................................................10
Interface Specifiers .................................................................................11
References ....................................................................................................11
Supported Features .......................................................................................12
Module Capabilities .................................................................................12
Virtual Channel Support ..........................................................................13
Table of Contents ix
ATM NBMA ....................................................................................................13
ARP Table ...............................................................................................14
Static Map Versus Inverse ARP .........................................................14
Aging ................................................................................................14
Removing Circuits ............................................................................15
Operations, Administration, and Management of ATM Interfaces .................15
End-to-End and Segment Endpoints .......................................................15
Fault Management ..................................................................................15
How the ATM Interface Handles AIS Cells ........................................16
How the ATM Interface Handles RDI Cells ........................................16
Continuity Verification ............................................................................17
Activation and Deactivation Cells .....................................................17
Activating CC Cell Flow ....................................................................17
Deactivating CC Cell Flow .................................................................17
After CC Cell Flow Is Enabled ...........................................................18
Loopback ................................................................................................18
VC Integrity ......................................................................................18
F4 OAM Cells ....................................................................................19
ATM Ping ..........................................................................................19
How the ATM Interface Handles Loopback Cells Received ................20
Automatic Disabling of F5 OAM Services ................................................20
Rate Limiting for F5 OAM Cells ...............................................................21
Before You Configure ATM ............................................................................21
Configuration Tasks .......................................................................................22
Creating a Basic Configuration ......................................................................22
Setting Optional Parameters ..........................................................................24
Optional Tasks on ATM 1483 Subinterfaces ............................................26
Configuring OAM ...........................................................................................33
Configuring F4 OAM ...............................................................................33
Configuring F5 OAM ...............................................................................35
Setting a Loopback Location ID ...............................................................36
Enabling OAM Flush ...............................................................................37
Running ATM Ping ..................................................................................38
Configuring an NBMA Interface .....................................................................39
Creating an NBMA Static Map ........................................................................40
Assigning Descriptions to Interfaces ..............................................................42
Sending Interface Descriptions to AAA ..........................................................43
Assigning Descriptions to Virtual Paths ...................................................44
Exporting ATM 1483 Subinterface Descriptions ......................................44
Configuring Individual ATM PVC Parameters .................................................45
Benefits ...................................................................................................46
Creating Control PVCs .............................................................................46
Creating Data PVCs .................................................................................47
Configuring the Service Category for Data PVCs .....................................48
Configuring Encapsulation for Data PVCs ...............................................50
Configuring F5 OAM for Data PVCs ........................................................51
Configuring Inverse ARP for Data PVCs ..................................................54
x Table of Contents
JUNOSe 11.1.x Link Layer Configuration Guide
Configuring ATM VC Classes ..........................................................................55
Benefits ...................................................................................................55
Precedence Levels ..................................................................................56
Precedence Levels for Static PVCs ....................................................56
Precedence Levels for Dynamic PVCs ...............................................57
Precedence Level Examples .............................................................57
Upgrade Considerations ..........................................................................57
Configuring VC Classes ...........................................................................59
Assigning VC Classes to Individual PVCs .................................................64
Assigning VC Classes to ATM Major Interfaces ........................................65
Assigning VC Classes to Static ATM 1483 Subinterfaces ..........................66
Assigning VC Classes to Base Profiles for Bulk-Configured VC
Ranges .............................................................................................67
Precedence Level Examples for Assigning VC Classes .............................67
Example 1: Explicitly Changing the Service Category .......................67
Example 2: Changing the Encapsulation Method in the VC Class .....68
Example 3: Effect of Using the atm pvc Command ..........................68
Example 4: Overriding RADIUS Values .............................................68
Configuring Dynamic ATM 1483 Subinterfaces .............................................69
Monitoring ATM ............................................................................................69
Setting Statistics Baselines ......................................................................70
Displaying Interface Rate Statistics for ATM VCs and ATM VPs ...............70
Using ATM show Commands ..................................................................74
Chapter 2 Configuring Frame Relay 107
Overview .....................................................................................................107
Framing ................................................................................................107
Error Frames ........................................................................................108
Unicast and Multicast Addressing .........................................................108
User-to-Network and Network-to-Network Interfaces ............................108
Platform Considerations ..............................................................................109
Module Requirements ...........................................................................109
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................110
References ..................................................................................................110
Before You Configure Frame Relay ..............................................................110
Configuring Frame Relay .............................................................................111
End-to-End Fragmentation and Reassembly ................................................119
Frame Fragmentation ...........................................................................119
Frame Reassembly ...............................................................................119
Map Class .............................................................................................120
Configuring End-to-End Fragmentation .................................................120
Monitoring Frame Relay ..............................................................................123
Chapter 3 Configuring Multilink Frame Relay 133
Overview .....................................................................................................133
T1/E1 Connections ................................................................................133
MLFR Link Integrity Protocol ................................................................134
Table of Contents xi
Table of Contents
Interface Stacking .................................................................................135
Platform Considerations ..............................................................................135
Module Requirements ...........................................................................136
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................136
References ..................................................................................................136
Supported MLFR Features ...........................................................................136
Unsupported MLFR Features .......................................................................137
Before You Configure MLFR ........................................................................138
Configuration Tasks .....................................................................................138
Configuration Example .........................................................................139
Configuring Frame Relay Versus MLFR .................................................139
Monitoring MLFR .........................................................................................140
Chapter 4 Configuring Upper-Layer Protocols over Static Ethernet
Interfaces 153
Upper-Layer Protocols over Static Ethernet Overview .................................153
Upper-Layer Protocols over Static Ethernet Platform Considerations ...........154
Module Requirements ...........................................................................155
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................155
Upper-Layer Protocols over Static Ethernet References ...............................155
Configuring IP over a Static Ethernet Interface ............................................155
Configuring PPPoE over a Static Ethernet Interface .....................................156
Configuring IP and MPLS over a Static Ethernet Interface ...........................157
Configuring IP, MPLS, and PPPoE over Ethernet .........................................157
L2TP and Ethernet ......................................................................................159
Multinetting and Ethernet ............................................................................159
Monitoring Upper-Level Protocols over Ethernet .........................................159
Chapter 5 Configuring VLAN and S-VLAN Subinterfaces 169
VLAN Overview ...........................................................................................169
S-VLAN Overview ........................................................................................170
VLAN and S-VLAN Platform Considerations .................................................171
Module Requirements ...........................................................................171
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................171
VLAN and S-VLAN References .....................................................................172
Creating a VLAN Subinterface .....................................................................172
Creating a VLAN Major Interface ...........................................................172
Configuring IP over VLAN .....................................................................173
Configuring PPPoE over VLAN ..............................................................174
Configuring MPLS over VLAN ................................................................175
Configuring IP over VLAN and PPPoE over VLAN ..................................176
Configuring an S-VLAN Subinterface ...........................................................180
Configuring an S-VLAN Subinterface .....................................................181
Configuring PPPoE over an S-VLAN ......................................................181
Configuring S-VLAN Tunnels for Layer 2 Services over MPLS ......................184
Advantages ...........................................................................................184
Interface Stacking .................................................................................185
Configuration Example .........................................................................185
xii Table of Contents
JUNOSe 11.1.x Link Layer Configuration Guide
S-VLAN Oversubscription ............................................................................188
Monitoring VLAN and S-VLAN Subinterfaces ...............................................188
Displaying Interface Rate Statistics for VLAN Subinterfaces ..................189
Using Ethernet show Commands ..........................................................191
Chapter 6 Configuring 802.3ad Link Aggregation and Link Redundancy 199
802.3ad Link Aggregation for Ethernet Overview ........................................199
LACP .....................................................................................................200
Higher-Level Protocols ..........................................................................200
Load Balancing and QoS .......................................................................201
Ethernet Link Aggregation and MPLS ....................................................201
802.3ad Link Aggregation Platform Considerations .....................................201
Module Requirements ...........................................................................201
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................202
802.3ad Link Aggregation References .........................................................202
Configuring 802.3ad Link Aggregation ........................................................202
Configuring an Ethernet Physical Interface ...........................................203
Configuring a LAG Bundle .....................................................................203
Configuring IP for a LAG Bundle ...........................................................204
Configuring a VLAN Subinterface for a LAG Bundle ...............................204
Configuring a PPPoE Subinterface for a LAG Bundle .............................204
Configuring MPLS for a LAG Bundle ......................................................205
Example: Configuring an IP Interface for a LAG Bundle ...............................207
Example: Configuring a PPPoE Subinterface for a LAG Bundle ....................208
Example: Configuring a PPPoE Subinterface over a VLAN for a LAG
Bundle ..................................................................................................209
Example: Configuring MPLS for a LAG Bundle .............................................209
Example: Configuring MPLS over a VLAN for a LAG Bundle ........................210
Ethernet Link Redundancy Overview ..........................................................211
Ethernet Link Redundancy Configuration Models .................................211
Ethernet Link Redundancy Configuration Diagrams .......................212
Ethernet Link Redundancy Behavior ...........................................................215
Link Failure and Acquisition ..................................................................216
Protecting Against Physical Link Failure .........................................216
Protecting Against Virtual Link Failure ............................................216
Reverting After a Failover ...............................................................217
LACP Configuration and Member Link Behavior ...................................217
Member Link with Non-LAG Partner .....................................................218
Ethernet Link Redundancy and RSTP .............................................218
Acquiring Initial Links .....................................................................219
Detecting Failures ...........................................................................219
Failing Over ....................................................................................220
Configuring Ethernet Link Redundancy .......................................................220
Monitoring 802.3ad Link Aggregation .........................................................222
Table of Contents xiii
Table of Contents
Chapter 7 Configuring IEEE 802.3ah OAM Link-Fault Management 227
Ethernet OAM Link-Fault Management Overview ........................................228
Ethernet OAM Link-Fault Management Platform Considerations .................229
Module Requirements ...........................................................................229
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................229
Ethernet OAM Link-Fault Management References .....................................230
OAM Messages ............................................................................................230
OAM Elements Overview ............................................................................231
OAM Client ..................................................................................................232
OAM Sublayer .............................................................................................232
Control Block ........................................................................................233
Multiplexer ............................................................................................233
Parser ...................................................................................................233
OAM Feature Overview ...............................................................................234
OAM Discovery Feature ...............................................................................234
Information OAM PDU Components .....................................................235
Transmission Settings for Information OAM PDUs ................................235
OAM Link Monitoring Feature .....................................................................236
Supported Error Events for Tracking Link Faults ...................................237
Actions Performed on Exceeding Threshold Values ..............................237
OAM Remote Fault Detection Feature .........................................................238
Link Fault ..............................................................................................238
Dying Gasp ...........................................................................................239
Critical Event ........................................................................................239
OAM Remote and Local Loopback Feature ..................................................240
Interrelationship of OAM Link-Fault Management with Ethernet
Subsystems ...........................................................................................240
Guidelines for Configuring 802.3ah OAM Link-Fault Management ...............242
Configuring 802.3ah OAM Link-Fault Management .....................................242
Example: Configuring 802.3ah OAM Link-Fault Management and Enabling
Remote Failure Monitoring on an Interface ...........................................249
Example: Enabling Remote Loopback Support on the Local Interface .........250
Monitoring OAM Link-Fault Management Discovery Settings for an
Interface ...............................................................................................250
Monitoring OAM Link-Fault Management Statistics for an Interface ............253
Monitoring OAM Link-Fault Management Configuration for an Interface .....255
Monitoring OAM Link-Fault Management Sessions on All Configured
Interfaces ..............................................................................................258
Chapter 8 Configuring Point-to-Point Protocol 263
Overview .....................................................................................................263
Framing ................................................................................................263
Error Frames ........................................................................................264
Link Control Protocol ............................................................................264
LCP Negotiation Parameters ...........................................................264
Validation of LCP Peer Magic Number ............................................265
B-RAS Support ......................................................................................266
xiv Table of Contents
JUNOSe 11.1.x Link Layer Configuration Guide
Authentication ......................................................................................267
Rate Limiting for PPP Control Packets ..................................................267
Extensible Authentication Protocol .......................................................267
EAP Types ......................................................................................268
EAP Packet Retransmission ............................................................268
EAP Behavior in an L2TP Environment ..........................................269
Limitations .....................................................................................270
Performance ..................................................................................270
Remote Peer Scenarios During Negotiation of PPP Options ..................271
IPCP Lockout and Local IP Address Pool Restoration ............................272
Platform Considerations ..............................................................................273
Module Requirements ...........................................................................273
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................273
References ..................................................................................................274
Before You Configure PPP ...........................................................................275
Configuration Tasks .....................................................................................275
Optional Configuration Tasks ......................................................................278
Configuring PPP Authentication ............................................................283
PPP Accounting Statistics ............................................................................285
Monitoring PPP Interfaces ...........................................................................286
Troubleshooting ..........................................................................................300
Chapter 9 Configuring Multilink PPP 303
Overview .....................................................................................................303
Application ...........................................................................................304
MLPPP LCP Extensions .........................................................................304
MLPPP Link Selection ...........................................................................305
Platform Considerations ..............................................................................306
Module Requirements ...........................................................................307
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................307
References ..................................................................................................307
Supported MLPPP Features .........................................................................308
Unsupported MLPPP Features .....................................................................312
Before You Configure Static MLPPP .............................................................312
Configuring Static MLPPP ............................................................................312
Configuration Example .........................................................................314
Contextual Command Differences ........................................................314
Configuring Authentication ...................................................................315
Configuring Other PPP Attributes ..........................................................317
Configuring Dynamic MLPPP ......................................................................323
Configuring MLPPP Fragmentation and Reassembly ...................................324
Overview ..............................................................................................324
Application .....................................................................................325
Supported Configurations ...............................................................325
Module Requirements ....................................................................325
Link Configuration Parameters .......................................................325
Bundle Validation and Configuration Guidelines .............................326
Bundle Validation Failure ................................................................327
Table of Contents xv
Table of Contents
Recovering from Bundle Validation Failure .....................................327
Configuring Fragmentation and Reassembly for Static MLPPP ..............327
Static MLPPP over ATM 1483 Example ..........................................328
Configuring Fragmentation and Reassembly for Dynamic MLPPP ........329
Dynamic MLPPP over PPPoE Example ...........................................330
Dynamic MLPPP over L2TP Example .............................................330
Configuring Fragmentation and Reassembly for MLPPP Bundles ..........333
Configuring Multiclass MLPPP .....................................................................333
Monitoring MLPPP .......................................................................................333
Chapter 10 Configuring Multiclass Multilink PPP 349
Multiclass MLPPP Overview .........................................................................349
Multiclass MLPPP Fragmentation and Reassembly ...............................349
Multiclass MLPPP Configuration Guidelines ...........................................350
Multiclass MLPPP Traffic Classes Overview .................................................350
Multiclass MLPPP LCP Extensions Overview ................................................351
Multiclass MLPPP Platform Considerations ..................................................351
Module Requirements ...........................................................................352
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................352
Multiclass MLPPP References ......................................................................352
Configuring Multiclass MLPPP .....................................................................352
Enabling Multiclass MLPPP ..........................................................................353
Configuring Traffic Classes on Multiclass MLPPP Interfaces .........................354
Configuring Fragmentation on Multiclass MLPPP Interfaces ........................355
Configuring Reassembly on Multiclass MLPPP Interfaces ............................355
Example: Configuring Multiclass MLPPP on a Dynamic Interface ................356
Example: Configuring Multiclass MLPPP on a Static Interface ......................357
Monitoring Multiclass MLPPP ......................................................................358
Chapter 11 Configuring Packet over SONET 363
Overview .....................................................................................................363
POS Features ........................................................................................363
SONET/SDH ..........................................................................................364
Platform Considerations ..............................................................................364
Module Requirements ...........................................................................365
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................365
References ..................................................................................................365
Before You Configure POS ...........................................................................366
Configuration Tasks .....................................................................................366
Monitoring POS ...........................................................................................371
xvi Table of Contents
JUNOSe 11.1.x Link Layer Configuration Guide
Chapter 12 Configuring Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet 375
Overview .....................................................................................................375
PPPoE Stages ........................................................................................376
Discovery .......................................................................................376
Session ...........................................................................................377
PPPoE Service Name Tables .................................................................377
Features .........................................................................................378
Table Structure ...............................................................................378
Enabling the Service Name Table for Use .......................................379
Using the PPPoE Remote Circuit ID to Identify Subscribers ..................379
Application .....................................................................................379
PPPoE Remote Circuit ID Capture ..................................................380
PPPoE Remote Circuit ID Format ...................................................380
Use by RADIUS or L2TP .................................................................383
System Event Log ...........................................................................384
PPPoE MTU Configuration ....................................................................384
Platform Considerations ..............................................................................384
Module Requirements ...........................................................................385
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................385
References ..................................................................................................386
Before You Configure PPPoE .......................................................................386
Configuring PPPoE over ATM ......................................................................386
Configuring PPPoE for Ethernet Modules .....................................................393
PPPoE Interface and Subinterface Limits ..............................................393
Configuring IPv4 and IPv6 over PPPoE with VLAN ................................393
Configuring PPPoE Without VLANs .......................................................397
Configuring PADM Messages .......................................................................401
Configuring PADN Messages .......................................................................403
Configuring PPPoE Service Name Tables .....................................................404
Creating and Populating PPPoE Service Name Tables ...........................404
Enabling PPPoE Service Name Tables for Use with Static Interfaces .....407
PPPoE over ATM Configurations .....................................................407
PPPoE over Ethernet Configurations ..............................................409
Enabling PPPoE Service Name Tables for Use with Dynamic
Interfaces .......................................................................................410
Configuring PADS Packet Content ...............................................................412
Configuring PPPoE Remote Circuit ID Capture ............................................413
Monitoring PPPoE .......................................................................................419
Troubleshooting ..........................................................................................434
Chapter 13 Configuring Bridged IP 437
Overview .....................................................................................................437
Proxy ARP ............................................................................................437
DHCP ....................................................................................................438
Platform Considerations ..............................................................................438
Module Requirements ...........................................................................438
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................439
Table of Contents xvii
Table of Contents
References ..................................................................................................439
Before You Configure Bridged IP .................................................................439
Configuring Bridged IP ................................................................................440
Chapter 14 Configuring Bridged Ethernet 443
Overview .....................................................................................................443
Bridged Ethernet Application ................................................................444
Assigning MAC Addresses .....................................................................444
VLAN and S-VLAN Configurations .........................................................445
Platform Considerations ..............................................................................446
Module Requirements ...........................................................................446
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................447
References ..................................................................................................447
Configuring Bridged Ethernet ......................................................................447
Configuring IP with PPPoE Terminated at the Router ............................447
Alternative Configuration ......................................................................452
Configuring VLANs over Bridged Ethernet ...................................................453
Configuring VLAN Subinterfaces over Bridged Ethernet ........................453
Configuring Higher-Level Protocols over VLANs ....................................454
Configuring IP over VLAN ...............................................................454
Configuring PPPoE over VLAN ........................................................454
Configuring MPLS over VLAN .........................................................455
Configuring S-VLANs over Bridged Ethernet ................................................458
Configuring S-VLAN Subinterfaces over Bridged Ethernet .....................458
Configuring Higher-Level Protocols over S-VLANs .................................460
Configuring the MTU Size for Bridged Ethernet ...........................................460
Monitoring Bridged Ethernet .......................................................................461
Chapter 15 Configuring Transparent Bridging 467
Overview .....................................................................................................467
How Transparent Bridging Works .........................................................467
Bridge Groups and Bridge Group Interfaces ..........................................468
Bridge Interface Types and Supported Configurations ...........................469
Subscriber Policies ................................................................................470
Concurrent Routing and Bridging ..........................................................471
Transparent Bridging and VPLS ............................................................472
Unsupported Features ...........................................................................472
Platform Considerations ..............................................................................472
Module Requirements ...........................................................................472
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................473
References ..................................................................................................473
Before You Configure Transparent Bridging ................................................473
Configuration Tasks .....................................................................................474
Creating Bridge Groups .........................................................................475
Configuring Optional Bridge Group Attributes .......................................476
Configuring Bridge Group Interfaces .....................................................478
Configuring Subscriber Policies .............................................................480
Enabling Concurrent Routing and Bridging ...........................................486
xviii Table of Contents
JUNOSe 11.1.x Link Layer Configuration Guide
Configuring Explicit Routing .................................................................486
Configuration Examples ..............................................................................488
Example 1: Bridging with Bridged Ethernet ..........................................488
Example 2: Bridging with VLANs ..........................................................489
Monitoring Transparent Bridging .................................................................490
Setting Statistics Baselines ....................................................................491
Removing Dynamic MAC Address Entries ............................................492
Monitoring Bridge Groups .....................................................................493
Monitoring Bridge Interfaces .................................................................500
Monitoring Subscriber Policies ..............................................................502
Chapter 16 Configuring Cisco HDLC 505
Overview .....................................................................................................505
Framing ................................................................................................505
Error Frames ........................................................................................506
SLARP Keepalive ...................................................................................506
Platform Considerations ..............................................................................506
Module Requirements ...........................................................................506
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................507
Before You Configure Cisco HDLC ...............................................................507
Configuration Tasks .....................................................................................507
Optional Tasks ......................................................................................508
Configuration Example .........................................................................510
Monitoring Cisco HDLC ...............................................................................511
Chapter 17 Configuring Dynamic Interfaces 515
Overview .....................................................................................................515
Autodetection .......................................................................................516
Types of Dynamic Interfaces ................................................................516
Upper-Layer Dynamic Interface Configurations ....................................517
Profiles .................................................................................................518
RADIUS Authentication .........................................................................518
ATM Oversubscription for Dynamic Interfaces .....................................519
How Oversubscription Works .........................................................519
Static ATM 1483 Subinterfaces .......................................................519
Bulk-Configured VC Ranges ............................................................520
Combination of Static ATM 1483 Subinterfaces and Bulk-Configured
VC Ranges ...............................................................................520
Ethernet Oversubscription for Dynamic Interfaces ...............................521
Platform Considerations ..............................................................................521
Module Requirements ...........................................................................521
Interface Specifiers ...............................................................................521
References ..................................................................................................522
About Configuring Dynamic Interfaces over Static ATM ..............................522
About Configuring RADIUS for Dynamic Interfaces ...............................523
subscriber Command .....................................................................523
Authenticating Subscribers on Dynamic Bridged Ethernet over Static
ATM Interfaces .........................................................................523
Table of Contents xix
Table of Contents
Placing Dynamic IP Routes in the Routing Table ............................525
auto-configure Command .....................................................................525
Encapsulation Type Lockout ...........................................................525
atm pvc Command ...............................................................................528
Configuring PPP and PPPoE Dynamic Interfaces over Static ATM ...............528
Configuring a PPP or PPPoE Dynamic Interface ....................................529
Terminating Stale PPPoA Subscribers and Restarting LCP
Negotiations ...................................................................................533
Configuring PPPoE Dynamic Interfaces over PPPoE Static Interfaces ..........534
Configuring Dynamic PPPoE over Static PPPoE with ATM Interface
Columns .........................................................................................534
Configuring Dynamic PPPoE over Static PPPoE with Ethernet Interface
Columns .........................................................................................535
Configuring Dynamic PPPoE over Static PPPoE with Ethernet and VLAN
Interface Columns ..........................................................................536
Configuring IPv4 and IPv6 over Static and Dynamic PPPoE ..................538
Configuring Dynamic PPPoE over Static PPPoE with Ethernet and S-VLAN
Interface Columns ..........................................................................542
S-VLAN Oversubscription ...............................................................544
Configuring Encapsulation Type Lockout for PPPoE Clients ..................548
Differences from Lockout Configuration for PPPoE over Static
ATM .........................................................................................548
Configuration Tasks ........................................................................549
Configuring and Verifying Lockout for PPPoE Clients .....................549
Clearing the Lockout Condition for a PPPoE Client .........................551
Configuring IPoA Dynamic Interfaces ..........................................................553
Configuring a Dynamic IPoA Interface ..................................................554
Configuring Bridged Ethernet Dynamic Interfaces .......................................557
Configuring a Dynamic Bridged Ethernet Interface ...............................558
Configuring Subscriber Management for IP Subscribers on Dynamic
Bridged Ethernet Interfaces ............................................................561
Configuration Example Using subscriber Command .......................561
Equivalent Configuration Example Using IP Subscriber
Management ............................................................................562
Configuring a Dynamic Interface from a Profile ..........................................563
Profile Considerations ...........................................................................563
Profile Characteristics ...........................................................................564
Bridged Ethernet Characteristics ....................................................564
IP Characteristics ............................................................................564
IPv6 Characteristics ........................................................................565
L2TP Characteristics .......................................................................566
MLPPP and PPP Characteristics ......................................................566
PPPoE Characteristics .....................................................................567
VLAN Characteristics ......................................................................567
Working with Profiles ...........................................................................568
Configuring a Profile .............................................................................569
Assigning a Profile to an Interface .........................................................594
Profile Configuration Examples .............................................................597
Scripts and Macros ......................................................................................598
Monitoring Upper-Layer Dynamic Interfaces and Profiles ............................599
Troubleshooting PPP and PPPoE Dynamic Interfaces ..................................619
xx Table of Contents
JUNOSe 11.1.x Link Layer Configuration Guide
  • Page 1 1
  • Page 2 2
  • Page 3 3
  • Page 4 4
  • Page 5 5
  • Page 6 6
  • Page 7 7
  • Page 8 8
  • Page 9 9
  • Page 10 10
  • Page 11 11
  • Page 12 12
  • Page 13 13
  • Page 14 14
  • Page 15 15
  • Page 16 16
  • Page 17 17
  • Page 18 18
  • Page 19 19
  • Page 20 20
  • Page 21 21
  • Page 22 22
  • Page 23 23
  • Page 24 24
  • Page 25 25
  • Page 26 26
  • Page 27 27
  • Page 28 28
  • Page 29 29
  • Page 30 30
  • Page 31 31
  • Page 32 32
  • Page 33 33
  • Page 34 34
  • Page 35 35
  • Page 36 36
  • Page 37 37
  • Page 38 38
  • Page 39 39
  • Page 40 40
  • Page 41 41
  • Page 42 42
  • Page 43 43
  • Page 44 44
  • Page 45 45
  • Page 46 46
  • Page 47 47
  • Page 48 48
  • Page 49 49
  • Page 50 50
  • Page 51 51
  • Page 52 52
  • Page 53 53
  • Page 54 54
  • Page 55 55
  • Page 56 56
  • Page 57 57
  • Page 58 58
  • Page 59 59
  • Page 60 60
  • Page 61 61
  • Page 62 62
  • Page 63 63
  • Page 64 64
  • Page 65 65
  • Page 66 66
  • Page 67 67
  • Page 68 68
  • Page 69 69
  • Page 70 70
  • Page 71 71
  • Page 72 72
  • Page 73 73
  • Page 74 74
  • Page 75 75
  • Page 76 76
  • Page 77 77
  • Page 78 78
  • Page 79 79
  • Page 80 80
  • Page 81 81
  • Page 82 82
  • Page 83 83
  • Page 84 84
  • Page 85 85
  • Page 86 86
  • Page 87 87
  • Page 88 88
  • Page 89 89
  • Page 90 90
  • Page 91 91
  • Page 92 92
  • Page 93 93
  • Page 94 94
  • Page 95 95
  • Page 96 96
  • Page 97 97
  • Page 98 98
  • Page 99 99
  • Page 100 100
  • Page 101 101
  • Page 102 102
  • Page 103 103
  • Page 104 104
  • Page 105 105
  • Page 106 106
  • Page 107 107
  • Page 108 108
  • Page 109 109
  • Page 110 110
  • Page 111 111
  • Page 112 112
  • Page 113 113
  • Page 114 114
  • Page 115 115
  • Page 116 116
  • Page 117 117
  • Page 118 118
  • Page 119 119
  • Page 120 120
  • Page 121 121
  • Page 122 122
  • Page 123 123
  • Page 124 124
  • Page 125 125
  • Page 126 126
  • Page 127 127
  • Page 128 128
  • Page 129 129
  • Page 130 130
  • Page 131 131
  • Page 132 132
  • Page 133 133
  • Page 134 134
  • Page 135 135
  • Page 136 136
  • Page 137 137
  • Page 138 138
  • Page 139 139
  • Page 140 140
  • Page 141 141
  • Page 142 142
  • Page 143 143
  • Page 144 144
  • Page 145 145
  • Page 146 146
  • Page 147 147
  • Page 148 148
  • Page 149 149
  • Page 150 150
  • Page 151 151
  • Page 152 152
  • Page 153 153
  • Page 154 154
  • Page 155 155
  • Page 156 156
  • Page 157 157
  • Page 158 158
  • Page 159 159
  • Page 160 160
  • Page 161 161
  • Page 162 162
  • Page 163 163
  • Page 164 164
  • Page 165 165
  • Page 166 166
  • Page 167 167
  • Page 168 168
  • Page 169 169
  • Page 170 170
  • Page 171 171
  • Page 172 172
  • Page 173 173
  • Page 174 174
  • Page 175 175
  • Page 176 176
  • Page 177 177
  • Page 178 178
  • Page 179 179
  • Page 180 180
  • Page 181 181
  • Page 182 182
  • Page 183 183
  • Page 184 184
  • Page 185 185
  • Page 186 186
  • Page 187 187
  • Page 188 188
  • Page 189 189
  • Page 190 190
  • Page 191 191
  • Page 192 192
  • Page 193 193
  • Page 194 194
  • Page 195 195
  • Page 196 196
  • Page 197 197
  • Page 198 198
  • Page 199 199
  • Page 200 200
  • Page 201 201
  • Page 202 202
  • Page 203 203
  • Page 204 204
  • Page 205 205
  • Page 206 206
  • Page 207 207
  • Page 208 208
  • Page 209 209
  • Page 210 210
  • Page 211 211
  • Page 212 212
  • Page 213 213
  • Page 214 214
  • Page 215 215
  • Page 216 216
  • Page 217 217
  • Page 218 218
  • Page 219 219
  • Page 220 220
  • Page 221 221
  • Page 222 222
  • Page 223 223
  • Page 224 224
  • Page 225 225
  • Page 226 226
  • Page 227 227
  • Page 228 228
  • Page 229 229
  • Page 230 230
  • Page 231 231
  • Page 232 232
  • Page 233 233
  • Page 234 234
  • Page 235 235
  • Page 236 236
  • Page 237 237
  • Page 238 238
  • Page 239 239
  • Page 240 240
  • Page 241 241
  • Page 242 242
  • Page 243 243
  • Page 244 244
  • Page 245 245
  • Page 246 246
  • Page 247 247
  • Page 248 248
  • Page 249 249
  • Page 250 250
  • Page 251 251
  • Page 252 252
  • Page 253 253
  • Page 254 254
  • Page 255 255
  • Page 256 256
  • Page 257 257
  • Page 258 258
  • Page 259 259
  • Page 260 260
  • Page 261 261
  • Page 262 262
  • Page 263 263
  • Page 264 264
  • Page 265 265
  • Page 266 266
  • Page 267 267
  • Page 268 268
  • Page 269 269
  • Page 270 270
  • Page 271 271
  • Page 272 272
  • Page 273 273
  • Page 274 274
  • Page 275 275
  • Page 276 276
  • Page 277 277
  • Page 278 278
  • Page 279 279
  • Page 280 280
  • Page 281 281
  • Page 282 282
  • Page 283 283
  • Page 284 284
  • Page 285 285
  • Page 286 286
  • Page 287 287
  • Page 288 288
  • Page 289 289
  • Page 290 290
  • Page 291 291
  • Page 292 292
  • Page 293 293
  • Page 294 294
  • Page 295 295
  • Page 296 296
  • Page 297 297
  • Page 298 298
  • Page 299 299
  • Page 300 300
  • Page 301 301
  • Page 302 302
  • Page 303 303
  • Page 304 304
  • Page 305 305
  • Page 306 306
  • Page 307 307
  • Page 308 308
  • Page 309 309
  • Page 310 310
  • Page 311 311
  • Page 312 312
  • Page 313 313
  • Page 314 314
  • Page 315 315
  • Page 316 316
  • Page 317 317
  • Page 318 318
  • Page 319 319
  • Page 320 320
  • Page 321 321
  • Page 322 322
  • Page 323 323
  • Page 324 324
  • Page 325 325
  • Page 326 326
  • Page 327 327
  • Page 328 328
  • Page 329 329
  • Page 330 330
  • Page 331 331
  • Page 332 332
  • Page 333 333
  • Page 334 334
  • Page 335 335
  • Page 336 336
  • Page 337 337
  • Page 338 338
  • Page 339 339
  • Page 340 340
  • Page 341 341
  • Page 342 342
  • Page 343 343
  • Page 344 344
  • Page 345 345
  • Page 346 346
  • Page 347 347
  • Page 348 348
  • Page 349 349
  • Page 350 350
  • Page 351 351
  • Page 352 352
  • Page 353 353
  • Page 354 354
  • Page 355 355
  • Page 356 356
  • Page 357 357
  • Page 358 358
  • Page 359 359
  • Page 360 360
  • Page 361 361
  • Page 362 362
  • Page 363 363
  • Page 364 364
  • Page 365 365
  • Page 366 366
  • Page 367 367
  • Page 368 368
  • Page 369 369
  • Page 370 370
  • Page 371 371
  • Page 372 372
  • Page 373 373
  • Page 374 374
  • Page 375 375
  • Page 376 376
  • Page 377 377
  • Page 378 378
  • Page 379 379
  • Page 380 380
  • Page 381 381
  • Page 382 382
  • Page 383 383
  • Page 384 384
  • Page 385 385
  • Page 386 386
  • Page 387 387
  • Page 388 388
  • Page 389 389
  • Page 390 390
  • Page 391 391
  • Page 392 392
  • Page 393 393
  • Page 394 394
  • Page 395 395
  • Page 396 396
  • Page 397 397
  • Page 398 398
  • Page 399 399
  • Page 400 400
  • Page 401 401
  • Page 402 402
  • Page 403 403
  • Page 404 404
  • Page 405 405
  • Page 406 406
  • Page 407 407
  • Page 408 408
  • Page 409 409
  • Page 410 410
  • Page 411 411
  • Page 412 412
  • Page 413 413
  • Page 414 414
  • Page 415 415
  • Page 416 416
  • Page 417 417
  • Page 418 418
  • Page 419 419
  • Page 420 420
  • Page 421 421
  • Page 422 422
  • Page 423 423
  • Page 424 424
  • Page 425 425
  • Page 426 426
  • Page 427 427
  • Page 428 428
  • Page 429 429
  • Page 430 430
  • Page 431 431
  • Page 432 432
  • Page 433 433
  • Page 434 434
  • Page 435 435
  • Page 436 436
  • Page 437 437
  • Page 438 438
  • Page 439 439
  • Page 440 440
  • Page 441 441
  • Page 442 442
  • Page 443 443
  • Page 444 444
  • Page 445 445
  • Page 446 446
  • Page 447 447
  • Page 448 448
  • Page 449 449
  • Page 450 450
  • Page 451 451
  • Page 452 452
  • Page 453 453
  • Page 454 454
  • Page 455 455
  • Page 456 456
  • Page 457 457
  • Page 458 458
  • Page 459 459
  • Page 460 460
  • Page 461 461
  • Page 462 462
  • Page 463 463
  • Page 464 464
  • Page 465 465
  • Page 466 466
  • Page 467 467
  • Page 468 468
  • Page 469 469
  • Page 470 470
  • Page 471 471
  • Page 472 472
  • Page 473 473
  • Page 474 474
  • Page 475 475
  • Page 476 476
  • Page 477 477
  • Page 478 478
  • Page 479 479
  • Page 480 480
  • Page 481 481
  • Page 482 482
  • Page 483 483
  • Page 484 484
  • Page 485 485
  • Page 486 486
  • Page 487 487
  • Page 488 488
  • Page 489 489
  • Page 490 490
  • Page 491 491
  • Page 492 492
  • Page 493 493
  • Page 494 494
  • Page 495 495
  • Page 496 496
  • Page 497 497
  • Page 498 498
  • Page 499 499
  • Page 500 500
  • Page 501 501
  • Page 502 502
  • Page 503 503
  • Page 504 504
  • Page 505 505
  • Page 506 506
  • Page 507 507
  • Page 508 508
  • Page 509 509
  • Page 510 510
  • Page 511 511
  • Page 512 512
  • Page 513 513
  • Page 514 514
  • Page 515 515
  • Page 516 516
  • Page 517 517
  • Page 518 518
  • Page 519 519
  • Page 520 520
  • Page 521 521
  • Page 522 522
  • Page 523 523
  • Page 524 524
  • Page 525 525
  • Page 526 526
  • Page 527 527
  • Page 528 528
  • Page 529 529
  • Page 530 530
  • Page 531 531
  • Page 532 532
  • Page 533 533
  • Page 534 534
  • Page 535 535
  • Page 536 536
  • Page 537 537
  • Page 538 538
  • Page 539 539
  • Page 540 540
  • Page 541 541
  • Page 542 542
  • Page 543 543
  • Page 544 544
  • Page 545 545
  • Page 546 546
  • Page 547 547
  • Page 548 548
  • Page 549 549
  • Page 550 550
  • Page 551 551
  • Page 552 552
  • Page 553 553
  • Page 554 554
  • Page 555 555
  • Page 556 556
  • Page 557 557
  • Page 558 558
  • Page 559 559
  • Page 560 560
  • Page 561 561
  • Page 562 562
  • Page 563 563
  • Page 564 564
  • Page 565 565
  • Page 566 566
  • Page 567 567
  • Page 568 568
  • Page 569 569
  • Page 570 570
  • Page 571 571
  • Page 572 572
  • Page 573 573
  • Page 574 574
  • Page 575 575
  • Page 576 576
  • Page 577 577
  • Page 578 578
  • Page 579 579
  • Page 580 580
  • Page 581 581
  • Page 582 582
  • Page 583 583
  • Page 584 584
  • Page 585 585
  • Page 586 586
  • Page 587 587
  • Page 588 588
  • Page 589 589
  • Page 590 590
  • Page 591 591
  • Page 592 592
  • Page 593 593
  • Page 594 594
  • Page 595 595
  • Page 596 596
  • Page 597 597
  • Page 598 598
  • Page 599 599
  • Page 600 600
  • Page 601 601
  • Page 602 602
  • Page 603 603
  • Page 604 604
  • Page 605 605
  • Page 606 606
  • Page 607 607
  • Page 608 608
  • Page 609 609
  • Page 610 610
  • Page 611 611
  • Page 612 612
  • Page 613 613
  • Page 614 614
  • Page 615 615
  • Page 616 616
  • Page 617 617
  • Page 618 618
  • Page 619 619
  • Page 620 620
  • Page 621 621
  • Page 622 622
  • Page 623 623
  • Page 624 624
  • Page 625 625
  • Page 626 626
  • Page 627 627
  • Page 628 628
  • Page 629 629
  • Page 630 630
  • Page 631 631
  • Page 632 632
  • Page 633 633
  • Page 634 634
  • Page 635 635
  • Page 636 636
  • Page 637 637
  • Page 638 638
  • Page 639 639
  • Page 640 640
  • Page 641 641
  • Page 642 642
  • Page 643 643
  • Page 644 644
  • Page 645 645
  • Page 646 646
  • Page 647 647
  • Page 648 648
  • Page 649 649
  • Page 650 650
  • Page 651 651
  • Page 652 652
  • Page 653 653
  • Page 654 654
  • Page 655 655
  • Page 656 656
  • Page 657 657
  • Page 658 658
  • Page 659 659
  • Page 660 660
  • Page 661 661
  • Page 662 662
  • Page 663 663
  • Page 664 664
  • Page 665 665
  • Page 666 666
  • Page 667 667
  • Page 668 668
  • Page 669 669
  • Page 670 670
  • Page 671 671
  • Page 672 672
  • Page 673 673
  • Page 674 674
  • Page 675 675
  • Page 676 676
  • Page 677 677
  • Page 678 678
  • Page 679 679
  • Page 680 680
  • Page 681 681
  • Page 682 682
  • Page 683 683
  • Page 684 684
  • Page 685 685
  • Page 686 686
  • Page 687 687
  • Page 688 688
  • Page 689 689
  • Page 690 690
  • Page 691 691
  • Page 692 692
  • Page 693 693
  • Page 694 694
  • Page 695 695
  • Page 696 696
  • Page 697 697
  • Page 698 698
  • Page 699 699
  • Page 700 700
  • Page 701 701
  • Page 702 702
  • Page 703 703
  • Page 704 704
  • Page 705 705
  • Page 706 706
  • Page 707 707
  • Page 708 708
  • Page 709 709
  • Page 710 710
  • Page 711 711
  • Page 712 712
  • Page 713 713
  • Page 714 714
  • Page 715 715
  • Page 716 716
  • Page 717 717
  • Page 718 718
  • Page 719 719
  • Page 720 720
  • Page 721 721
  • Page 722 722
  • Page 723 723
  • Page 724 724
  • Page 725 725
  • Page 726 726
  • Page 727 727
  • Page 728 728
  • Page 729 729
  • Page 730 730
  • Page 731 731
  • Page 732 732
  • Page 733 733
  • Page 734 734
  • Page 735 735
  • Page 736 736
  • Page 737 737
  • Page 738 738
  • Page 739 739
  • Page 740 740
  • Page 741 741
  • Page 742 742
  • Page 743 743
  • Page 744 744
  • Page 745 745
  • Page 746 746
  • Page 747 747
  • Page 748 748
  • Page 749 749
  • Page 750 750
  • Page 751 751
  • Page 752 752
  • Page 753 753
  • Page 754 754
  • Page 755 755
  • Page 756 756
  • Page 757 757
  • Page 758 758
  • Page 759 759
  • Page 760 760
  • Page 761 761
  • Page 762 762
  • Page 763 763
  • Page 764 764
  • Page 765 765
  • Page 766 766
  • Page 767 767
  • Page 768 768
  • Page 769 769
  • Page 770 770
  • Page 771 771
  • Page 772 772
  • Page 773 773
  • Page 774 774

Juniper JUNOSE 11.1.X - LINK LAYER CONFIGURATION 4-7-2010 Configuration manual

Category
Software
Type
Configuration manual
This manual is also suitable for

Ask a question and I''ll find the answer in the document

Finding information in a document is now easier with AI