ipip¶
Note
requires a Product License.
The list of ipip interfaces on the device.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip>
<ipip> |
An interface name. |
mtu¶
Set the max transmission unit size in octets.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip>
vsr running ipip <ipip># mtu <uint32>
promiscuous¶
Set promiscuous mode.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip>
vsr running ipip <ipip># promiscuous true|false
enabled (pushed)¶
The desired (administrative) state of the interface.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip>
vsr running ipip <ipip># enabled true|false
- Default value
true
description¶
A textual description of the interface.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip>
vsr running ipip <ipip># description <string>
local (mandatory)¶
The source address that should be used for the tunnel.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip>
vsr running ipip <ipip># local LOCAL
LOCAL |
An IPv4 or IPv6 address. |
remote (mandatory)¶
The destination address that should be used for the tunnel.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip>
vsr running ipip <ipip># remote REMOTE
REMOTE |
An IPv4 or IPv6 address. |
ttl¶
The time-to-live (or hop limit) that should be utilised for the IP packets used for the tunnel transport. If not set, the ttl is inherited from the inner packet for IPv4 tunnels, and is 64 for IPv6 tunnels.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip>
vsr running ipip <ipip># ttl <uint8>
tos¶
Set the DSCP bits in the Type of Service field.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip>
vsr running ipip <ipip># tos TOS
|
Description |
---|---|
<uint8> |
No description. |
inherit |
Inherit the ToS from inner frame. |
link-interface¶
Route tunneled packets through this interface.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip>
vsr running ipip <ipip># link-interface LINK-INTERFACE
LINK-INTERFACE |
An interface name. |
link-vrf¶
The link vrf name.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip>
vsr running ipip <ipip># link-vrf <string>
ifindex (state only)¶
System assigned number for each interface. Corresponds to ifIndex object in SNMP Interface MIB.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> ifindex
admin-status (state only)¶
The desired state of the interface. In RFC 7223 this leaf has the same read semantics as ifAdminStatus. Here, it reflects the administrative state as set by enabling or disabling the interface.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> admin-status
oper-status (state only)¶
The current operational state of the interface. This leaf has the same semantics as ifOperStatus.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> oper-status
last-change (state only)¶
This timestamp indicates the time of the last state change of the interface (e.g., up-to-down transition). This corresponds to the ifLastChange object in the standard interface MIB. The value is the timestamp in nanoseconds relative to the Unix Epoch (Jan 1, 1970 00:00:00 UTC).
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> last-change
ipv4¶
Parameters for the IPv4 address family.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> ipv4
enabled¶
Controls whether IPv4 is enabled or disabled on this interface. When IPv4 is enabled, this interface is connected to an IPv4 stack, and the interface can send and receive IPv4 packets.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> ipv4
vsr running ipv4# enabled true|false
- Default value
true
address¶
The list of configured IPv4 addresses on the interface.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> ipv4
vsr running ipv4# address <address> peer PEER
|
Description |
---|---|
<ipv4-address> |
An IPv4 address. |
<masked-ipv4-address> |
A masked IPv4 address: address and prefix of that subnet. |
peer¶
The IPv4 address of the remote endpoint for point to point interfaces.
peer PEER
PEER |
An IPv4 address. |
origin (state only)¶
The origin of this address, e.g., statically configured, assigned by DHCP, etc..
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> ipv4 address <address> origin
ipv6¶
Parameters for the IPv6 address family.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> ipv6
enabled¶
Controls whether IPv6 is enabled or disabled on this interface. When IPv6 is enabled, this interface is connected to an IPv6 stack, and the interface can send and receive IPv6 packets.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> ipv6
vsr running ipv6# enabled true|false
- Default value
true
address¶
The list of configured IPv6 addresses on the interface.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> ipv6
vsr running ipv6# address <address> peer PEER
|
Description |
---|---|
<ipv6-address> |
An IPv6 address. |
<masked-ipv6-address> |
A masked IPv6 address: address and prefix of that subnet. |
peer¶
The IPv6 address of the remote endpoint for point to point interfaces.
peer PEER
PEER |
An IPv6 address. |
origin (state only)¶
The origin of this address, e.g., static, dhcp, etc.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> ipv6 address <address> origin
status (state only)¶
The status of an address. Most of the states correspond to states from the IPv6 Stateless Address Autoconfiguration protocol.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> ipv6 address <address> status
network-stack¶
Network stack parameters for this interface.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack
ipv4¶
IPv4 parameters.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv4
send-redirects¶
Send ICMP redirect if host is on the same network than gateway.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv4
vsr running ipv4# send-redirects true|false
accept-redirects¶
Accept redirect when acting as a host. It is always disabled when acting as a router. Must be activated at vrf or system level too to be activated.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv4
vsr running ipv4# accept-redirects true|false
accept-source-route¶
Accept packets with source route option. Must be activated at vrf or system level too to be activated.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv4
vsr running ipv4# accept-source-route true|false
arp-announce¶
Define different restriction levels for announcing the local source IP address from IP packets in ARP requests sent on interface. Increasing the restriction level gives more chance for receiving answer from the resolved target while decreasing the level announces more valid sender’s information.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv4
vsr running ipv4# arp-announce ARP-ANNOUNCE
|
Description |
---|---|
any |
Use any local address, configured on any interface. |
avoid-not-in-subnet |
Try to avoid local addresses that are not in the target’s subnet for this interface. This mode is useful when target hosts reachable via this interface require the source IP address in ARP requests to be part of their logical network configured on the receiving interface. When we generate the request we will check all our subnets that include the target IP and will preserve the source address if it is from such subnet. If there is no such subnet we select source address according to the rules for level 2, ‘best-local’. |
best-local |
Always use the best local address for this target. In this mode we ignore the source address in the IP packet and try to select local address that we prefer for talks with the target host. Such local address is selected by looking for primary IP addresses on all our subnets on the outgoing interface that include the target IP address. If no suitable local address is found we select the first local address we have on the outgoing interface or on all other interfaces, with the hope we will receive reply for our request and even sometimes no matter the source IP address we announce. |
arp-filter¶
Allows to have multiple network interfaces on the same subnet, and have the ARPs for each interface be answered based on whether or not the kernel would route a packet from the ARP’d IP out that interface (therefore you must use source based routing for this to work). In other words it allows control of which cards (usually 1) will respond to an arp request.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv4
vsr running ipv4# arp-filter true|false
arp-ignore¶
Define different modes for sending replies in response to received ARP requests that resolve local target IP addresses.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv4
vsr running ipv4# arp-ignore ARP-IGNORE
|
Description |
---|---|
any |
Reply for any local target IP address, configured on any interface. |
check-interface |
Reply only if the target IP address is local address configured on the incoming interface. |
check-interface-and-subnet |
Reply only if the target IP address is local address configured on the incoming interface and both with the sender’s IP address are part from same subnet on this interface. |
ignore-scope |
Do not reply for local addresses configured with scope host, only resolutions for global and link addresses are replied. |
ignore-all |
Do not reply for all local addresses. |
arp-proxy¶
Enable ARP proxy.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv4
vsr running ipv4# arp-proxy true|false
log-invalid-addresses¶
Log packets with impossible addresses.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv4
vsr running ipv4# log-invalid-addresses true|false
ipv6¶
IPv6 parameters.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv6
autoconfiguration¶
Autoconfigure addresses using Prefix Information in Router Advertisements.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv6
vsr running ipv6# autoconfiguration true|false
accept-router-advert¶
Accept Router Advertisements.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv6
vsr running ipv6# accept-router-advert ACCEPT-ROUTER-ADVERT
|
Description |
---|---|
never |
Do not accept Router Advertisements. |
norouter-mode |
Accept Router Advertisements if forwarding is disabled. |
always |
Accept Router Advertisements even if forwarding is enabled. |
accept-redirects¶
Accept redirect when acting as a host. It is always disabled when acting as a router.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv6
vsr running ipv6# accept-redirects true|false
accept-source-route¶
Accept packets with source route option.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv6
vsr running ipv6# accept-source-route true|false
router-solicitations¶
Number of Router Solicitations to send until assuming no routers are present.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv6
vsr running ipv6# router-solicitations <int16>
use-temporary-addresses¶
Preference for Privacy Extensions (RFC4941). Not applied to point-to- point and loopback devices (always 0).
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> network-stack ipv6
vsr running ipv6# use-temporary-addresses USE-TEMPORARY-ADDRESSES
|
Description |
---|---|
never |
Disable Privacy Extensions, i.e. use the public address, subnet prefix/interface id, where interface id is always the same. |
prefer-public-addresses |
Enable Privacy Extensions, but prefer public addresses over temporary addresses. |
always |
Enable Privacy Extensions and prefer temporary addresses over public addresses. |
qos¶
Note
requires a Product License.
QoS configuration.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos
ingress¶
Ingress QoS configuration.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos ingress
rate-limit¶
Rate limit configuration.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos ingress rate-limit
policer (config only)¶
Traffic policer defined in the QoS context.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos ingress rate-limit
vsr running rate-limit# policer <leafref>
policer (state only)¶
Traffic policer.
bandwidth (state only)¶
Maximum bandwidth of regular traffic, a.k.a. CIR (Committed Information Rate), in bps. 0 allows no regular traffic.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos ingress rate-limit policer bandwidth
burst (state only)¶
Maximum burst size of shaped traffic, a.k.a. CBS (Committed Burst Size), in bytes. The default value is set to bandwidth / 80 to handle a burst of 100 ms at the targeted bandwidth. If not set or set to 0, the default value is applied.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos ingress rate-limit policer burst
excess-bandwidth (state only)¶
Maximum bandwidth of excess traffic, a.k.a. EIR (Excess Information Rate), in bps. 0 allows no excess traffic.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos ingress rate-limit policer excess-bandwidth
excess-burst (state only)¶
Maximum burst size of excess traffic, a.k.a. EBS (Excess Burst Size), in bytes. The default value is set to excess-bandwidth / 80 to handle a burst of 100 ms at the targeted bandwidth. If not set or set to 0, the default value is applied.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos ingress rate-limit policer excess-burst
stats (state only)¶
Traffic policer statistics.
Number of packets passed (regular traffic that conforms to (bandwidth, burst) specification.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos ingress rate-limit policer stats pass-packets
Number of bytes passed (regular traffic that conforms to (bandwidth, burst) specification.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos ingress rate-limit policer stats pass-bytes
Number of excess packets passed (excess traffic that conforms to (excess-bandwidth, excess-burst) specification.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos ingress rate-limit policer stats pass-excess-packets
Number of excess bytes passed (excess traffic that conforms to (excess-bandwidth, excess-burst) specification.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos ingress rate-limit policer stats pass-excess-bytes
Number of packets dropped (traffic that does not conform to bandwidth or excess-bandwidth).
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos ingress rate-limit policer stats drop-packets
Number of bytes dropped (traffic that does not conform to bandwidth or excess-bandwidth).
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos ingress rate-limit policer stats drop-bytes
egress¶
Egress QoS configuration.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos egress
rate-limit¶
Rate limit configuration.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos egress rate-limit
policer (config only)¶
Traffic policer defined in the QoS context.
vsr running config# vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos egress rate-limit
vsr running rate-limit# policer <leafref>
policer (state only)¶
Traffic policer.
bandwidth (state only)¶
Maximum bandwidth of regular traffic, a.k.a. CIR (Committed Information Rate), in bps. 0 allows no regular traffic.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos egress rate-limit policer bandwidth
burst (state only)¶
Maximum burst size of shaped traffic, a.k.a. CBS (Committed Burst Size), in bytes. The default value is set to bandwidth / 80 to handle a burst of 100 ms at the targeted bandwidth. If not set or set to 0, the default value is applied.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos egress rate-limit policer burst
excess-bandwidth (state only)¶
Maximum bandwidth of excess traffic, a.k.a. EIR (Excess Information Rate), in bps. 0 allows no excess traffic.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos egress rate-limit policer excess-bandwidth
excess-burst (state only)¶
Maximum burst size of excess traffic, a.k.a. EBS (Excess Burst Size), in bytes. The default value is set to excess-bandwidth / 80 to handle a burst of 100 ms at the targeted bandwidth. If not set or set to 0, the default value is applied.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos egress rate-limit policer excess-burst
stats (state only)¶
Traffic policer statistics.
Number of packets passed (regular traffic that conforms to (bandwidth, burst) specification.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos egress rate-limit policer stats pass-packets
Number of bytes passed (regular traffic that conforms to (bandwidth, burst) specification.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos egress rate-limit policer stats pass-bytes
Number of excess packets passed (excess traffic that conforms to (excess-bandwidth, excess-burst) specification.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos egress rate-limit policer stats pass-excess-packets
Number of excess bytes passed (excess traffic that conforms to (excess-bandwidth, excess-burst) specification.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos egress rate-limit policer stats pass-excess-bytes
Number of packets dropped (traffic that does not conform to bandwidth or excess-bandwidth).
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos egress rate-limit policer stats drop-packets
Number of bytes dropped (traffic that does not conform to bandwidth or excess-bandwidth).
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> qos egress rate-limit policer stats drop-bytes
counters (state only)¶
A collection of interface-related statistics objects.
in-octets (state only)¶
The total number of octets received on the interface, including framing characters. Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at re-initialization of the management system, and at other times as indicated by the value of ‘last-clear’.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> counters in-octets
in-unicast-pkts (state only)¶
The number of packets, delivered by this sub-layer to a higher (sub-)layer, that were not addressed to a multicast or broadcast address at this sub-layer. Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at re-initialization of the management system, and at other times as indicated by the value of ‘last-clear’.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> counters in-unicast-pkts
in-discards (state only)¶
The number of inbound packets that were chosen to be discarded even though no errors had been detected to prevent their being deliverable to a higher-layer protocol. One possible reason for discarding such a packet could be to free up buffer space. Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at re-initialization of the management system, and at other times as indicated by the value of ‘last-clear’.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> counters in-discards
in-errors (state only)¶
For packet-oriented interfaces, the number of inbound packets that contained errors preventing them from being deliverable to a higher- layer protocol. For character- oriented or fixed-length interfaces, the number of inbound transmission units that contained errors preventing them from being deliverable to a higher-layer protocol. Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at re- initialization of the management system, and at other times as indicated by the value of ‘last-clear’.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> counters in-errors
out-octets (state only)¶
The total number of octets transmitted out of the interface, including framing characters. Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at re-initialization of the management system, and at other times as indicated by the value of ‘last-clear’.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> counters out-octets
out-unicast-pkts (state only)¶
The total number of packets that higher-level protocols requested be transmitted, and that were not addressed to a multicast or broadcast address at this sub-layer, including those that were discarded or not sent. Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at re- initialization of the management system, and at other times as indicated by the value of ‘last-clear’.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> counters out-unicast-pkts
out-discards (state only)¶
The number of outbound packets that were chosen to be discarded even though no errors had been detected to prevent their being transmitted. One possible reason for discarding such a packet could be to free up buffer space. Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at re-initialization of the management system, and at other times as indicated by the value of ‘last-clear’.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> counters out-discards
out-errors (state only)¶
For packet-oriented interfaces, the number of outbound packets that could not be transmitted because of errors. For character-oriented or fixed-length interfaces, the number of outbound transmission units that could not be transmitted because of errors. Discontinuities in the value of this counter can occur at re-initialization of the management system, and at other times as indicated by the value of ‘last-clear’.
vsr> show state vrf <vrf> interface ipip <ipip> counters out-errors