08-06-2015 02:40 PM
Hi all
According to what I know , the router can only have one LDP router-id configured usually using the command mpls ldp router-id {interface} force
I have one of my PEs configured with a private IP address (loopback 0) and is configured as MPLS LDP router-id
I have a new connection with an uplink provider with Juniper being his terminating device
The provider insists to use public router-id from my side , I configured a new one and advertised it to him through the BGP session we established , but the LDP session never come up
I have tested the same case with Cisco on gns3 , even If he cannot reach my actual router-id , I can use the mpls ldp discovery transport-address {public address} and the session is up , as well as , I configured xconnect using the public router-id and all is fine
Have anyone faced something similar ?
Thanks
BR,
Mohammad
08-06-2015 02:59 PM
Hi Mohammad,
Okay, I suppose you have done the obligatory ping of the LDP RID of the Juniper sourced from your public loopback used as your LDP RID, and it worked. I also assume that this is a direct connection between your router and the provider's Juniper, and that the provider is in fact running LDP toward you.
What do debugs say? Can you run debug mpls ldp transport events and debug mpls ldp transport connections and post the results? Both these commands have an optional interface keyword to limit the output just to a specified interface.
Best regards,
Peter
08-10-2015 12:14 AM
Hi
I have tested the setup using GNS3 (olive Junos) and I could saw the LDP session coming up (on the test lab):
Cisco Side
interface Loopback0
ip address 1.1.1.1 255.255.255.255
interface Loopback1
ip address 212.118.1.1 255.255.255.255
mpls label protocol ldp
mpls ldp router-id Loopback0 force
interface FastEthernet1/0
ip address 212.118.201.1 255.255.255.0
mpls ldp discovery transport-address 212.118.1.1
mpls ip
router bgp 1
bgp log-neighbor-changes
no bgp default ipv4-unicast
neighbor 212.118.201.20 remote-as 20
address-family ipv4
network 212.118.1.1 mask 255.255.255.255
neighbor 212.118.201.20 activate
neighbor 212.118.201.20 send-label
exit-address-family
address-family l2vpn vpls
neighbor 212.118.201.20 activate
neighbor 212.118.201.20 send-community both
neighbor 212.118.201.20 prefix-length-size 2
exit-address-family
Juniper Side
set interfaces em0 unit 0 family inet address 212.118.201.20/24
set interfaces em0 unit 0 family mpls
set interfaces lo0 unit 0 family inet address 20.20.20.20/32
set routing-options router-id 20.20.20.20
set routing-options autonomous-system 20
set protcols bgp group EBGP local-address 212.118.201.20
set protcols bgp group EBGP family inet labeled-unicast
set protcols bgp group EBGP l2vpn signaling
set protcols bgp group EBGP export MSSK_POL
set protcols bgp group EBGP peer-as 1
set protcols bgp group EBGP neighbor 212.118.201.1
set protocols ldp transport-address router-id
set policy-options prefix-list MSSK_LIST 20.20.20.20/32
set policy-options policy-statement MSSK_POL from prefix-list MSSK_LIST
set policy-options policy-statement MSSK_POL then accept
Verifications
R1#show mpls interfaces
Interface IP Tunnel BGP Static Operational
FastEthernet1/0 Yes (ldp) No Yes No Yes
FastEthernet2/0 Yes (ldp) No No No Yes
R1#show ip bgp summary
BGP router identifier 212.118.1.1, local AS number 1
BGP table version is 15, main routing table version 15
2 network entries using 288 bytes of memory
2 path entries using 160 bytes of memory
2/2 BGP path/bestpath attribute entries using 272 bytes of memory
1 BGP AS-PATH entries using 24 bytes of memory
0 BGP route-map cache entries using 0 bytes of memory
0 BGP filter-list cache entries using 0 bytes of memory
BGP using 744 total bytes of memory
BGP activity 3/1 prefixes, 8/6 paths, scan interval 60 secs
Neighbor V AS MsgRcvd MsgSent TblVer InQ OutQ Up/Down State/PfxRcd
212.118.201.20 4 20 31 34 15 0 0 00:12:47 1
R1#show ip bgp
BGP table version is 15, local router ID is 212.118.1.1
Status codes: s suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best, i - internal,
r RIB-failure, S Stale, m multipath, b backup-path, f RT-Filter,
x best-external, a additional-path, c RIB-compressed,
Origin codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete
RPKI validation codes: V valid, I invalid, N Not found
Network Next Hop Metric LocPrf Weight Path
*> 20.20.20.20/32 212.118.201.20 0 20 i
*> 212.118.1.1/32 0.0.0.0 0 32768 i
R1#sh bgp l2vpn vpls all summary
BGP router identifier 212.118.1.1, local AS number 1
BGP table version is 1, main routing table version 1
Neighbor V AS MsgRcvd MsgSent TblVer InQ OutQ Up/Down State/PfxRcd
212.118.201.20 4 20 32 35 1 0 0 00:13:15 0
R1#show mpls ldp neighbor
Peer LDP Ident: 2.2.2.2:0; Local LDP Ident 1.1.1.1:0
TCP connection: 2.2.2.2.26760 - 1.1.1.1.646
State: Oper; Msgs sent/rcvd: 71/63; Downstream
Up time: 00:50:34
LDP discovery sources:
FastEthernet2/0, Src IP addr: 192.168.12.2
Addresses bound to peer LDP Ident:
192.168.12.2 2.2.2.2
Peer LDP Ident: 20.20.20.20:0; Local LDP Ident 1.1.1.1:0
TCP connection: 20.20.20.20.646 - 212.118.1.1.11719
State: Oper; Msgs sent/rcvd: 211/180; Downstream
Up time: 00:29:28
LDP discovery sources:
FastEthernet1/0, Src IP addr: 212.118.201.20
Addresses bound to peer LDP Ident:
212.118.201.20
08-10-2015 12:40 AM
Hi Mohammad,
So now when you confirmed in your lab that you can get your LDP session up in this scenario, can you have a look at the debug and show commands with your service provider Nagendra and I have asked you for?
Best regards,
Peter
08-10-2015 01:33 AM
Hi please find the debug output below
Aug 10 08:28:24.308: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:28:28.276: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:28:30.296: ldp: Rcvd ldp dir hello to 212.118.1.222 from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0); POS9/0/0; opt 0xF
Aug 10 08:28:30.300: ldp: ldp Hello from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0) to 212.118.1.222, opt 0xF
Aug 10 08:28:30.300: ldp: dhcb intvl mbr cnt = 1, intvl = 5000, target = 195.229.11.13
Aug 10 08:28:32.828: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:28:37.380: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:28:41.196: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:28:43.740: ldp: Rcvd ldp dir hello to 212.118.1.222 from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0); POS9/0/0; opt 0xF
Aug 10 08:28:43.740: ldp: ldp Hello from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0) to 212.118.1.222, opt 0xF
Aug 10 08:28:43.740: ldp: dhcb intvl mbr cnt = 1, intvl = 5000, target = 195.229.11.13
Aug 10 08:28:45.556: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:28:50.096: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 11:28:50: %SYS-6-EXIT_CONFIG: User malqudah has exited tty session 3(212.35.70.177)
Aug 10 08:28:51.588: ldp: Scan listening TCBs
Aug 10 08:28:53.892: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:28:57.336: ldp: Rcvd ldp dir hello to 212.118.1.222 from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0); POS9/0/0; opt 0xF
Aug 10 08:28:57.336: ldp: ldp Hello from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0) to 212.118.1.222, opt 0xF
Aug 10 08:28:57.336: ldp: dhcb intvl mbr cnt = 1, intvl = 5000, target = 195.229.11.13
Aug 10 08:28:57.740: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:29:01.976: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:29:05.804: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:29:10.708: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:29:11.012: ldp: Rcvd ldp dir hello to 212.118.1.222 from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0); POS9/0/0; opt 0xF
Aug 10 08:29:11.012: ldp: ldp Hello from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0) to 212.118.1.222, opt 0xF
Aug 10 08:29:11.012: ldp: dhcb intvl mbr cnt = 1, intvl = 5000, target = 195.229.11.13
Aug 10 08:29:14.904: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:29:19.032: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:29:23.908: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:29:24.860: ldp: Rcvd ldp dir hello to 212.118.1.222 from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0); POS9/0/0; opt 0xF
Aug 10 08:29:24.860: ldp: ldp Hello from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0) to 212.118.1.222, opt 0xF
Aug 10 08:29:24.860: ldp: dhcb intvl mbr cnt = 1, intvl = 5000, target = 195.229.11.13
Aug 10 08:29:28.884: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:29:33.268: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:29:37.696: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:29:39.484: ldp: Rcvd ldp dir hello to 212.118.1.222 from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0); POS9/0/0; opt 0xF
Aug 10 08:29:39.484: ldp: ldp Hello from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0) to 212.118.1.222, opt 0xF
Aug 10 08:29:39.484: ldp: dhcb intvl mbr cnt = 1, intvl = 5000, target = 195.229.11.13
Aug 10 08:29:41.652: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:29:45.816: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:29:50.304: ldp: Send ldp hello; POS9/0/0, src/dst 195.229.16.152/224.0.0.2, inst_id 0
Aug 10 08:29:51.396: ldp: Rcvd ldp dir hello to 212.118.1.222 from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0); POS9/0/0; opt 0xF
Aug 10 08:29:51.396: ldp: ldp Hello from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0) to 212.118.1.222, opt 0xF
Aug 10 08:29:51.396: ldp: dhcb intvl mbr cnt = 1, intvl = 5000, target = 195.229.11.13
Aug 10 08:29:51.608: ldp: Scan listening TCBs
195.229.11.13 is his LDP router-id , 212.118.1.222 is my transport address (configured using the mpls ldp discovery transport-address command under the interface) , 195.229.16.152 is my physical interface IP address , and .153 is his IP address
Thanks
BR,
Mohammad
08-10-2015 02:38 AM
Mohammad,
According to the outputs, it seems as if your service provider was trying to set up a targeted LDP session - notice that the debug says:
Aug 10 08:28:30.296: ldp: Rcvd ldp dir hello to 212.118.1.222 from 195.229.11.13 (195.229.11.13:0); POS9/0/0; opt 0xF
It may be necessary to set up a targeted LDP session back to your SP. Can you try doing that?
Best regards,
Peter
08-10-2015 06:25 AM
Yes , I have defined an access-list
access-list 59 permit host 195.229.11.13
mpls ldp discovery targeted-session from 59
The strange issue is that the access-list was counting , but the LDP neighbor never came up
BR,
Mohammad
08-10-2015 07:00 AM
Mohammad,
It is possible that you actually need to configure a targeted session back to your SP. If the SP expects that you send targeted hellos to it then it may not accept your multicast hellos.
So if possible please try adding your SP's transport address as a static LDP neighbor. Thanks!
Best regards,
Peter
08-11-2015 04:17 AM
The SP allowed my loopback 0 interface (which is my actual MPLS LDP router-id) in his LDP filter and the LDP neighborship is up now , but the issue now is we are trying to establish xconnect
In the show mpls ldp neighbors output , I can see two targeted sessions from the SP , one is directed to the private IP (the router-id) which is in the active state , and the other one is for my public address which I configured under the interface using mpls ldp discovery transport-address x.x.x.x command which is in the passive state
According to him , he is writing the public IP address in the xconnect configuration but seems not working
I have tried to clear the session but with no luck !
I tried to configured the command mpls ldp neighbor x.x.x.x targeted ldp and nothing as well
Anyone can advise?
Thanks
BR,
Mohammad
08-13-2015 02:08 AM
What is so weird is that I have configured the mpls ldp discovery transport-address x.x.x.x and am still seeing the ldp hello messages from my side sourced from the physical IP address , why?
BR,
Mohammad
08-13-2015 02:45 AM
Mohammad,
Can you perhaps post the current configuration and relevant show commands? A lot has changed since you originally created this thread so we need to be updated about the current state of configuration and the runtime status.
Thanks!
Best regards,
Peter
08-14-2015 02:05 AM
Hi and thanks for the reply
What I have noticed is that am sending (multicast ldp hello messages from my side) and the SP is sending targeted ldp hello messages and I think that is the issue that prevents the neighbor ship from coming up !
interface POS9/0/0
description Etisalat_Second_Link_through_Orange
mtu 1544
ip address 195.229.16.152 255.255.255.254
encapsulation ppp
mpls ip
mpls label protocol ldp
mpls ldp discovery transport-address 212.118.1.222
mpls mtu 1536
mpls bgp forwarding
BR,
Mohammad
08-06-2015 03:49 PM
Hi,
In addition to what Peter asked, can you also get "show mpls ldp discovery"?. Do you see hellos sent and received on the interface?.
-Nagendra
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide