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308625-14.20 Rev 00
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308625-14.20 Rev 00
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308625-14.20 Rev 00
Contents
Preface
Text Conventions .............................................................................................................xvi
Table 4-2.BFE X.25 Network Service Record Parameter Settings .........................4-8
Table B-1.Information to Gather Before Configuring NAT ....................................... B-3
Table B-2.Available show nat Commands ............................................................. B-10
308625-14.20 Rev 00
xiii
Preface
This guide describes the following services and what you do to start and
customize them on a Nortel Networks
•Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE) tunnels
•Network Address Translation (NAT)
•Basic Revised IP Security Option (RIPSO) security labels
•Blacker front-end (BFE) device connections
You can use Site Manager to configure any of these services on a router. You can
also use the Bay Command Console (BCC
guide, you will find instructions for using both the BCC and Site Manager.
™
router:
™
) to configure GRE and NAT. In this
For instructions on how to start and use the BCC, see Using the Bay Command
Console (BCC); for instructions on how to start and use Site Manager, see
Configuring and Managing Routers with Site Manager.
Before using this guide, you must complete the following procedures. For a new
router:
•Install the router (see the installation guide that came with your router).
•Connect the router to the network and create a pilot configuration file (see
Make sure that you are running the latest version of Nortel Networks BayRS
Site Manager software. For information about upgrading BayRS and Site
Manager, see the upgrading guide for your version of BayRS.
308625-14.20 Rev 00
Quick-Starting Routers, Configuring BayStack Remote Access, or Connecting
ASN Routers to a Network).
™
and
xv
Configuring GRE, NAT, RIPSO, and BFE Services
Text Conventions
This guide uses the following text conventions:
angle brackets (< >)Indicate that you choose the text to enter based on the
description inside the brackets. Do not type the
brackets when entering the command.
Example: If the command syntax is:
ping <
ping 192.32.10.12
ip_address
>
, you enter:
bold text
Indicates command names and options and text that
you need to enter.
Example: Enter
Example: Use the
show ip {alerts | routes}.
command.
dinfo
braces ({})Indicate required elements in syntax descriptions
where there is more than one option. You must choose
only one of the options. Do not type the braces when
entering the command.
Example: If the command syntax is:
show ip {alerts | routes}
show ip alerts or show ip routes
, you must enter either:
, but not both.
brackets ([ ])Indicate optional elements in syntax descriptions. Do
not type the brackets when entering the command.
Example: If the command syntax is:
show ip interfaces [-alerts]
show ip interfaces
or
, you can enter either:
show ip interfaces -alerts
.
italic textIndicates new terms, book titles, and variables in
command syntax descriptions. Where a variable is two
or more words, the words are connected by an
underscore.
xvi
Example: If the command syntax is:
show at <
valid_route
valid_route
is one variable and you substitute one value
>
for it.
308625-14.20 Rev 00
Preface
screen textIndicates system output, for example, prompts and
system messages.
Acronyms
Example:
Set Trap Monitor Filters
separator ( > )Shows menu paths.
Example: Protocols > IP identifies the IP option on the
Protocols menu.
vertical line (
)Separates choices for command keywords and
|
arguments. Enter only one of the choices. Do not type
the vertical line when entering the command.
For more information about GRE, NAT, and other IP services, refer to the
following publications:
•Reference for BCC IP show commands
(Nortel Networks part number 308603-14.00 Rev 00)
Provides descriptions of all
commands that display GRE and NAT configuration and statistical data.
•Configuring IP, ARP, RARP, RIP, and OSPF Services
(Nortel Networks part number 308627-14.00 Rev 00)
Provides a description of IP, ARP, RARP, RIP, and OSPF services and
instructions for configuring them.
xviii
commands for IP services, including the
show
308625-14.20 Rev 00
•Configuring IP Exterior Gateway Protocols (BGP and EGP)
(Nortel Networks part number 308628-14.00 Rev 00)
Provides a description of Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) and Exterior
Gateway Protocol (EGP) services and instructions for configuring them.
You can print selected technical manuals and release notes free, directly from the
Internet. Go to the support.baynetworks.com/library/tpubs/ URL. Find the product
for which you need documentation. Then locate the specific category and model
or version for your hardware or software product. Use Adobe Acrobat Reader to
open the manuals and release notes, search for the sections you need, and print
them on most standard printers. Go to Adobe Systems at www.adobe.com to
download a free copy of Acrobat Reader.
You can purchase selected documentation sets, CDs, and technical publications
through the Internet at the www1.fatbrain.com/documentation/nortel/ URL.
How to Get Help
If you purchased a service contract for your Nortel Networks product from a
distributor or authorized reseller, contact the technical support staff for that
distributor or reseller for assistance.
Preface
If you purchased a Nortel Networks service program, contact one of the following
Nortel Networks Technical Solutions Centers:
Technical Solutions CenterTelephone
EMEA(33) (4) 92-966-968
North America(800) 2LANWAN or (800) 252-6926
Asia Pacific(61) (2) 9927-8800
China(800) 810-5000
An Express Routing Code (ERC) is available for many Nortel Networks products
and services. When you use an ERC, your call is routed to a technical support
person who specializes in supporting that product or service. To locate an ERC for
your product or service, go to the www12.nortelnetworks.com/ URL and click
ERC at the bottom of the page.
308625-14.20 Rev 00
xix
Chapter 1
Configuring GRE Tunnels
This chapter provides information about Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE)
tunnels and instructions for configuring them. It includes the following sections:
TopicPage
GRE Concepts and Terminology
Creating a GRE Tunnel1-10
Customizing a GRE Tunnel1-21
Deleting a GRE Tunnel1-27
1-2
308625-14.20 Rev 00
1-1
Configuring GRE, NAT, RIPSO, and BFE Services
GRE Concepts and Terminology
Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE) is a protocol that allows transport of
non-IP traffic through IP-based systems. GRE, which is defined in RFCs 1701 and
1702, encapsulates Internet Protocol (IP) and other layer 3 protocols to enable
data transmission through an IP tunnel. This tunneling mechanism allows:
•Transport of non-IP traffic through intermediate systems that support only IP
•Creation of a virtual private network (VPN) that uses the Internet as a section
of your own private network
•Communication between subnetworks with unregistered or discontiguous
network addresses
A tunnel is a virtual point-to-point connection. It has as its end points the IP
addresses of two router IP interfaces, one serving as the source, the other serving
as the destination. When using GRE, remember that:
•This protocol is slower than native routing because packets require additional
processing.
•IP fragmentation of the packet can occur due to extra bytes introduced by
encapsulation.
1-2
•Troubleshooting the physical link when problems occur is difficult.
GRE tunnels support encapsulation of the following protocols:
•IP - Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), Open Shortest Path First (OSPF), and
Routing Information Protocol (RIP)
•Internet Protocol Exchange (IPX) and IPX RIP/Service Advertising Protocol
(SAP)
•Open Systems Interconnection (OSI)
308625-14.20 Rev 00
How GRE Tunneling Works
A simple point-to-point GRE tunnel terminates at router interfaces at each end of
the tunnel (Figure 1-1
more logical addresses. For IP and IPX protocols, at each tunnel end point there is
one logical address for each protocol configured for encapsulation over the tunnel.
Because the concept of an interface address does not exist in OSI, only one IP
address is required per router.
Configuring GRE Tunnels
). Each interface has a physical address and may have one or
Remote logical
host interface
Host
B
Router
2
Remote physical
router interface
IP0095A
Host
A
Router
1
Local physical
router interface
Local logical
host interface
GRE tunnel
Figure 1-1.Simple GRE Tunnel Components
The physical address, which is always an IP address, is visible to the devices
making up the intervening network cloud. The logical addresses are not visible to
the devices that make up the intervening network cloud. They are private
addresses, visible only to the networks on either side of the tunnel.
308625-14.20 Rev 00
1-3
Configuring GRE, NAT, RIPSO, and BFE Services
The GRE tunnel can use any IP interface configured on the router as a physical
end point. To maximize the robustness of the tunnel, use a circuitless IP address as
a tunnel’s physical end point whenever possible. Because a circuitless IP address
is associated with the whole router, not one physical interface, the tunnel operates
as long as any slot that has a working IP interface stays up. (For instructions on
configuring a circuitless interface, see Configuring IP, ARP, RARP, RIP, and OSPF Services.)
Example of Packet Handling in a GRE Tunnel
The following steps explain how GRE tunneling takes place. The example
describes a GRE tunnel encapsulating IP or IPX (refer to Figure 1-2
1.
The router interface on router 1 receives a packet from host 1, looks up the
packet’s destination address in its IP routing table, and determines that the
next hop to the destination address is the remote end of a GRE tunnel. The
router interface queues the packet at the tunnel interface for GRE
encapsulation.
2.
Router 1 adds a GRE header to the packet and sends the packet to IP.
3.
IP looks up the route to the remote tunnel end point and sends the
GRE-encapsulated packet to the appropriate next-hop address.
).
1-4
4.
The remote tunnel interface on router 2 removes the outer IP header and the
GRE header.
5.
The remote router interface looks up the packet’s destination address in its
routing table and chooses the next hop to reach host 2.
The same process would take place for IPX.
308625-14.20 Rev 00
Configuring GRE Tunnels
Host
1
Key
interface
10.0.0.1
8.0.0.2
Data
Router 1
Router
Tunnel
interface
MAC header
Source IP address
Destination IP address
Transport protocol
Passenger protocol
Internet/Intranet
11.0.0.10
11.0.0.20
10.0.0.1
8.0.0.2
Data
MAC header
Source IP address
Destination IP address
GRE header
Source IP address
Destination address
Router 2
Tunnel
interface
MAC header
Source IP address
Destination IP address
Router
interface
10.0.0.1
8.0.0.2
Data
Host
2
Figure 1-2.GRE Tunnel Encapsulating the IP Protocol
GRE Packet Headers
The previous example followed the path of a GRE packet as it traversed the
tunnel, explaining its handling. Here is some detail about what occurs with the
headers of such a GRE packet. A GRE packet has the following headers
(Figure 1-3
308625-14.20 Rev 00
):
IP0064A
1-5
Configuring GRE, NAT, RIPSO, and BFE Services
IP delivery header
GRE header
Payload packet
IP0110A
Figure 1-3.GRE Packet Headers
The outermost (delivery) header is an IP header with protocol type 0x47 (GRE).
For a packet arriving at the router through a tunnel, the destination address is an IP
interface that the network administrator configures as the GRE tunnel remote end
point. The next header is the GRE header (Figure 1-4
payload. The payload could be IP, IPX, or OSI, in which case it would contain an
identifying header of the protocol type.
). The last header is the
1-6
0123
01234567890123456789012345678901
Recur Flag Ver C
K S s
R
Key (optional)
Sequence number (optional)
Routing (optional)
Protocol type
Offset (optional)Checksum (optional)
IP0111A
Figure 1-4.Detail of GRE Header
For a more complete description of the GRE header, see RFC 1701.
308625-14.20 Rev 00
Configuring GRE Tunnels
Requirements for GRE Tunnels Encapsulating IP Protocol
If you are using GRE tunneling to encapsulate the IPX or OSI protocol,
Note:
skip this section. The requirements discussed below do not apply to tunnels
encapsulating IPX or OSI.
Before configuring a tunnel encapsulating IP, you should be aware of a limitation
inherent in the use of all tunnels, including GRE tunnels. A tunnel is a virtual
point-to-point connection between two routers that are actually several hops apart.
This point-to-point connection can hide the real distance between the routers from
portions of the network, leading to unintended, suboptimal routing decisions and
in some cases, to routing loops.
In particular, if a router at one end of a tunnel determines that the best route to the
remote physical end point of the tunnel is through the tunnel itself, a loop, internal
to the router, occurs and prevents the tunnel from operating. You must configure
one of the following at each end of the tunnel to prevent routing loops:
•Announce policy
•Accept policy
•Static route
The best choice depends on the network topology to which it is applied.
When configuring a tunnel with IP encapsulation, you must implement
Note:
an announce or accept policy or a static route at each end of the tunnel for the
tunnel to operate correctly.
Announce Policies
An announce policy governs the advertisement of routing information. When
preparing a routing advertisement, IP consults its announce policies to determine
whether to advertise the route. For GRE tunneling, you can configure an announce
policy for each routing protocol (RIP, OSPF, BGP) configured on the logical
tunnel interface to block the advertisement of a range of network addresses that
contains the tunnel’s local physical interface address. For information about
configuring RIP and OSPF announce policies, see Configuring IP, ARP, RARP, RIP, and OSPF Services. For information about configuring BGP announce
policies, see Configuring IP Exterior Gateway Protocols (BGP and EGP).
308625-14.20 Rev 00
1-7
Configuring GRE, NAT, RIPSO, and BFE Services
The disadvantage of using an announce policy is that it prevents the advertisement
of other subnets within the blocked range. Depending on the network topology,
this configuration may not be desirable.
Accept Policies
An accept policy governs the addition of new routes to the routing tables. For
GRE tunneling, you can configure an accept policy for each routing protocol (RIP,
OSPF, BGP) configured on the logical tunnel interface to block the receipt of
advertisements from a range of network addresses that contains the tunnel’s
remote physical interface address. For information about configuring RIP and
OSPF accept policies, see Configuring IP, ARP, RARP, RIP, and OSPF Services.
For information about configuring BGP accept policies, see Configuring IP Exterior Gateway Protocols (BGP and EGP).
The disadvantage of using an accept policy is that it prevents the receipt of
advertisements of subnets contained in the blocked range. Depending on the
network topology, this configuration may not be desirable.
Static Routes
1-8
A static route is a route configuration that designates a specific router within the
intervening network cloud as the next hop to the remote physical tunnel end point.
Because static routes take precedence over routes that the router learns
dynamically from routing protocols, this configuration forces the router to direct
packets through the cloud to reach the tunnel’s remote physical address.
The disadvantage of using a static route is that it is fixed. If the path through the
chosen next hop to the remote tunnel end point goes down, the tunnel goes down
as well until you manually reconfigure the static route. Similarly, even if the path
through the chosen next hop becomes more costly than the path through some
other attached router, the tunnel continues to use the more costly path unless you
manually intervene.
Note:
When configuring a static route, be careful not to inadvertently create a
loop.
308625-14.20 Rev 00
Number of Tunnels Configurable per Router
The number of GRE tunnels you can configure on a router varies, depending on
the type of protocol being encapsulated.
For IP and IPX
You can create up to 64 GRE tunnels on one router; each GRE tunnel can have
multiple end points. You can configure up to 256 remote tunnel end points
distributed over the configured GRE tunnels for IP and IPX.
For OSI
GRE point-to-point and point-to-multipoint tunnels are viewed by OSI as
point-to-point subnetworks as defined by ISO 10589. Each GRE tunnel appears as
a single OSI interface. Configure GRE tunnels for OSI traffic within the following
guidelines:
•Each router interface can support one GRE tunnel configured with OSI.
•A single 32 Mb router slot can support a maximum of 48 interfaces.
Configuring GRE Tunnels
•The maximum number of end points per tunnel is 150.
Theoretically, a single slot could support 48 interfaces, each of which could be a
point-to-multipoint configuration. OSI would treat this configuration as 48 groups
of point-to-point subnetworks with each subnetwork having an adjacency. (An
adjacent router is the next hop on the path toward the destination.) Each adjacency
would have its own state machine, and flooding of data would be resource
intensive because datagrams would need to be propagated along each adjacency.
Such a configuration would have implications for buffer and memory usage.
308625-14.20 Rev 00
1-9
Configuring GRE, NAT, RIPSO, and BFE Services
Creating a GRE Tunnel
To create a tunnel:
1.Configure the local tunnel end point.
Add one or more protocols (IP, IPX, or OSI) to the local tunnel end point.
2.
3.Configure the remote tunnel end point.
For instructions, see:
TopicPage
onfiguring the Local Tunnel End Point1-10
C
Adding a Protocol to the Local Tunnel End Point1-12
Configuring the Remote Tunnel End Point1-16
Configuring the Local Tunnel End Point
When you create a GRE tunnel, you assign the tunnel a name and an IP address.
The IP address is the router interface used as the local physical end point for this
tunnel. The IP address must be that of an existing physical router IP interface or
the circuitless address. To maximize the robustness of the tunnel, use a circuitless
IP address as a tunnel’s physical end point whenever possible. (For instructions on
configuring a circuitless IP interface, see Configuring IP, ARP, RARP, RIP, and OSPF Services.)
Using the BCC
1-10
This IP address is visible to the network cloud that the tunnel passes through.
To configure the local tunnel end point of a GRE tunnel:
1.Navigate to the box or stack prompt and enter:
tunnels
The tunnels prompt appears.
2.Navigate to the tunnels prompt (for example, box; tunnels) and enter the
following command:
gre name
<name>
local-address
<address>
308625-14.20 Rev 00
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