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The Flexible NetFlow--MPLS Egress NetFlow feature allows you to capture IP flow information for packets undergoing MPLS label
disposition; that is, packets that arrive on a router as MPLS packets and are transmitted as IP packets.
Finding Feature Information
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see Bug Search Tool and the release notes for your platform and software release. To find information about the features documented in this module,
and to see a list of the releases in which each feature is supported, see the feature information table.
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Information About Flexible NetFlow MPLS Egress NetFlow
Flexible NetFlow MPLS Egress NetFlow
The Flexible NetFlow - MPLS Egress NetFlow feature allows you to capture IP flow information for packets that arrive on a
router as Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) packets and are transmitted as IP packets. This feature allows you to capture
the MPLS VPN IP flows that are traveling through the service provider backbone from one site of a VPN to another site of the
same VPN. The Flexible NetFlow - MPLS Egress NetFlow feature is enabled by applying a flow monitor in output (egress) mode
on the provider edge (PE) to customer edge (CE) interface of the provider’s network.
The figure below shows a sample MPLS VPN network topology that includes four VPN 1 sites and two VPN 2 sites. If the Flexible
NetFlow - MPLS Egress NetFlow is enabled on an outgoing PE interface by applying a flow monitor in output mode, IP flow information
for packets that arrive at the PE as MPLS packets (from an MPLS VPN) and that are transmitted as IP packets to the PE router
is captured. For example:
To capture the flow of traffic going to site 2 of VPN 1 from any remote VPN 1 sites, you enable a flow monitor in output
mode on link PE2-CE5 of provider edge router PE2.
To capture the flow of traffic going to site 1 of VPN 2 from any remote VPN 2 site, you enable a flow monitor in output mode
on link PE3-CE4 of the provider edge router PE3.
The flow data is stored in the Flexible NetFlow cache. You can use the
show flow monitor monitor-namecache command to display the flow data in the cache.
If you configure a Flexible NetFlow exporter for the flow monitors you use for the Flexible NetFlow - MPLS Egress NetFlow
feature, the PE routers will export the captured flows to the configured collector devices in the provider network. Applications
such as the Network Data Analyzer or the VPN Solution Center (VPN-SC) can gather information from the captured flows and compute
and display site-to-site VPN traffic statistics.
Limitations
When using Flexible NetFlow to monitor outbound traffic on a router at the edge of an MPLS cloud, for IP traffic that leaves
over a VRF, the following fields are not collected and have a value of 0:
destination mask
destination prefix
destination AS numbers
destination BGP traffic index
nexthop
BGP nexthop
How to Configure Flexible NetFlow MPLS Egress NetFlow
Configuring a Flow Exporter
for the Flow Monitor
Perform this
optional task to configure a flow exporter for the flow monitor in order to
export the data that is collected by Flexible NetFlow to a remote system for
further analysis and storage.
Flow exporters are
used to send the data that you collect with Flexible NetFlow to a remote system
such as a NetFlow Collection Engine. Exporters use UDP as the transport
protocol and use the Version 9 export format.
Note
Each flow
exporter supports only one destination. If you want to export the data to
multiple destinations, you must configure multiple flow exporters and assign
them to the flow monitor.
You can export to
a destination using either an IPv4 or IPv6 address.
Note
When you configure an exporter, configure the exporter in such a way that the source interface is defined as a WAN interface.
This configuration helps you prevent any unpredictable behavior because the NAT is not applied on the packets.
Specifies the
version of the NetFlow export protocol used by the exporter.
Default:
netflow-v9 .
Step 7
transport udp udp-port
Example:
Device(config-flow-exporter)# transport udp 65
Configures
UDP as the transport protocol and specifies the UDP port on which the
destination system is listening for exported Flexible NetFlow traffic.
Step 8
exit
Example:
Device(config-flow-exporter)# exit
Exits
Flexible NetFlow flow exporter configuration mode and returns to global
configuration mode.
Step 9
flow monitor flow-monitor-name
Example:
Device(config)# flow monitor FLOW-MONITOR-1
Enters
Flexible NetFlow flow monitor configuration mode for the flow monitor that you
created previously.
Step 10
exporter exporter-name
Example:
Device(config-flow-monitor)# exporter EXPORTER-1
Specifies the
name of an exporter that you created previously.
Step 11
end
Example:
Device(config-flow-monitor)# end
Exits
Flexible NetFlow flow monitor configuration mode and returns to privileged EXEC
mode.
Step 12
show flow exporter exporter-name
Example:
Device# show flow exporter FLOW_EXPORTER-1
(Optional)
Displays the current status of the specified flow exporter.
Step 13
show running-config flow exporter exporter-name
Example:
Device<# show running-config flow exporter FLOW_EXPORTER-1
(Optional)
Displays the configuration of the specified flow exporter.
Creating a Customized Flow
Monitor
Perform this
required task to create a customized flow monitor.
Each flow monitor has a separate cache assigned to it. Each flow monitor requires a record to define the contents and layout
of its cache entries. These record formats can be one of the predefined formats or a user-defined format. An advanced user can create a customized format using the flow record command.
Before you begin
If you want to use
a customized record instead of using one of
the Flexible NetFlow predefined records, you must create the customized
record before you can perform this task. If you want to add a flow exporter to
the flow monitor for data export, you must create the exporter before you can
complete this task.
Note
You must use the no ip flow monitor command to remove a flow monitor from all of the interfaces to which you have applied it before you can modify the parameters
for the record command on the flow monitor.
SUMMARY STEPS
enable
configure terminal
flow monitor monitor-name
description description
record {record-name | netflow-original | netflow {ipv4 | ipv6 } record [peer ]}
Device(config-if)# ip flow monitor FLOW-MONITOR-1 input
Activates a flow monitor that was created previously by assigning it to the interface to analyze traffic.
Step 5
Repeat Steps 3 and 4 to activate a flow monitor on any other interfaces in the device over which you want to monitor traffic.
—
Step 6
end
Example:
Device(config-if)# end
Exits interface configuration mode and returns to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 7
show flow interface typenumber
Example:
Device# show flow interface GigabitEthernet 0/0/0
Displays the status of Flexible NetFlow (enabled or disabled) on the specified interface.
Step 8
show flow monitor name monitor-namecache format record
Example:
Device# show flow monitor name FLOW_MONITOR-1 cache format record
Displays the status, statistics, and flow data in the cache for the specified flow monitor.
Configuration Examples for Flexible NetFlow MPLS Egress NetFlow
Example: Configuring Flexible NetFlow Egress Accounting for IPv4 and IPv6 Traffic
The following example shows how to configure Flexible NetFlow egress accounting for IPv4 and IPv6 traffic.
This example starts in global configuration mode.
!
flow record v4_r1
match ipv4 tos
match ipv4 protocol
match ipv4 source address
match ipv4 destination address
match transport source-port
match transport destination-port
collect counter bytes long
collect counter packets long
!
flow record v6_r1
match ipv6 traffic-class
match ipv6 protocol
match ipv6 source address
match ipv6 destination address
match transport source-port
match transport destination-port
collect counter bytes long
collect counter packets long
!
flow monitor FLOW-MONITOR-1
record v4_r1
exit
!
!
flow monitor FLOW-MONITOR-2
record v6_r1
exit
!
ip cef
ipv6 cef
!
interface GigabitEthernet0/0/0
ip address 172.16.6.2 255.255.255.0
ipv6 address 2001:DB8:2:ABCD::2/48
ip flow monitor FLOW-MONITOR-1 output
ipv6 flow monitor FLOW-MONITOR-2 output
!
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Feature Information for Flexible NetFlow - MPLS Egress NetFlow
The following table provides release information about the feature or features described in this module. This table lists
only the software release that introduced support for a given feature in a given software release train. Unless noted otherwise,
subsequent releases of that software release train also support that feature.
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco
Feature Navigator, go to www.cisco.com/go/cfn. An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Table 1. Feature Information for Flexible NetFlow - MPLS Egress NetFlow
Feature Name
Releases
Feature Information
Flexible NetFlow - MPLS Egress NetFlow
12.2(33)SRE
12.2(50)SY
12.4(22)T
15.0(1)SY
15.0(1)SY1
Cisco IOS XE Release 3.1S
The Flexible NetFlow--MPLS Egress NetFlow feature allows you to capture IP flow information for packets undergoing MPLS label
disposition; that is, packets that arrive on a router as MPLS packets and are transmitted as IP packets.
Support for this feature was added for Cisco 7200 and 7300 NPE series routers in Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRE.
No commands were introduced or modified by this feature.