- Read Me First
- Cisco BGP Overview
- BGP 4
- Configuring a Basic BGP Network
- BGP 4 Soft Configuration
- BGP Support for 4-byte ASN
- IPv6 Routing: Multiprotocol BGP Extensions for IPv6
- IPv6 Routing: Multiprotocol BGP Link-Local Address Peering
- IPv6 Multicast Address Family Support for Multiprotocol BGP
- Configuring Multiprotocol BGP (MP-BGP) Support for CLNS
- BGP IPv6 Admin Distance
- Connecting to a Service Provider Using External BGP
- BGP Route-Map Continue
- BGP Route-Map Continue Support for Outbound Policy
- Removing Private AS Numbers from the AS Path in BGP
- Configuring BGP Neighbor Session Options
- BGP Neighbor Policy
- BGP Dynamic Neighbors
- BGP Support for Next-Hop Address Tracking
- BGP Restart Neighbor Session After Max-Prefix Limit Reached
- BGP Support for Dual AS Configuration for Network AS Migrations
- Configuring Internal BGP Features
- BGP VPLS Auto Discovery Support on Route Reflector
- BGP FlowSpec Route-reflector Support
- BGP Flow Specification Client
- BGP NSF Awareness
- BGP Graceful Restart per Neighbor
- BGP Support for BFD
- IPv6 NSF and Graceful Restart for MP-BGP IPv6 Address Family
- BGP Link Bandwidth
- Border Gateway Protocol Link-State
- iBGP Multipath Load Sharing
- BGP Multipath Load Sharing for Both eBGP and iBGP in an MPLS-VPN
- Loadsharing IP Packets over More Than Six Parallel Paths
- BGP Policy Accounting
- BGP Policy Accounting Output Interface Accounting
- BGP Cost Community
- BGP Support for IP Prefix Import from Global Table into a VRF Table
- BGP Support for IP Prefix Export from a VRF Table into the Global Table
- BGP per Neighbor SoO Configuration
- Per-VRF Assignment of BGP Router ID
- BGP Next Hop Unchanged
- BGP Support for the L2VPN Address Family
- BGP Event-Based VPN Import
- BGP Best External
- BGP PIC Edge for IP and MPLS-VPN
- Detecting and Mitigating a BGP Slow Peer
- Configuring BGP: RT Constrained Route Distribution
- Configuring a BGP Route Server
- BGP Diverse Path Using a Diverse-Path Route Reflector
- BGP Enhanced Route Refresh
- Configuring BGP Consistency Checker
- BGP—Origin AS Validation
- BGP MIB Support
- BGP 4 MIB Support for Per-Peer Received Routes
- BGP Support for Nonstop Routing (NSR) with Stateful Switchover (SSO) Using L2VPN VPLS
- BGP NSR Auto Sense
- BGP NSR Support for iBGP Peers
- BGP Graceful Shutdown
- BGP — mVPN BGP sAFI 129 - IPv4
- BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
- BFD—BGP Multihop Client Support, cBit (IPv4 and IPv6), and Strict Mode
- BGP Attribute Filter and Enhanced Attribute Error Handling
- BGP Additional Paths
- BGP-Multiple Cluster IDs
- BGP-VPN Distinguisher Attribute
- BGP-RT and VPN Distinguisher Attribute Rewrite Wildcard
- VPLS BGP Signaling
- Multicast VPN BGP Dampening
- BGP—IPv6 NSR
- BGP-VRF-Aware Conditional Advertisement
- BGP—Selective Route Download
- BGP—Support for iBGP Local-AS
- eiBGP Multipath for Non-VRF Interfaces (IPv4/IPv6)
- L3VPN iBGP PE-CE
- BGP NSR Support for MPLS VPNv4 and VPNv6 Inter-AS Option B
- BGP-RTC for Legacy PE
- BGP PBB EVPN Route Reflector Support
- BGP Monitoring Protocol
- VRF Aware BGP Translate-Update
- BGP Support for MTR
- BGP Accumulated IGP
- BGP MVPN Source-AS Extended Community Filtering
- BGP AS-Override Split-Horizon
- BGP Support for Multiple Sourced Paths Per Redistributed Route
- Maintenance Function: BGP Routing Protocol
BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
Subsequent Address Family Identifier (SAFI) 129, known as VPN Multicast SAFI, provides the capability to support multicast routing in the service provider's core IPv6 network.
Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) Multicast Virtual Private Network (MVPN) provides a means for service providers to use different encapsulation methods (generic routing encapsulation [GRE], Multicast Label Distribution Protocol [MLDP], and ingress replication) for forwarding MVPN multicast data traffic in the service provider network.
The BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6 feature is required to support BGP-based MVPNs.
- Finding Feature Information
- Prerequisites for BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
- Information About BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
- How to Configure BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
- Configuration Examples for BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
- Additional References
- Feature Information for BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
Finding Feature Information
Your software release may not support all the features documented in this module. For the latest caveats and feature information, 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 at the end of this module.
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.
Prerequisites for BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
-
Before you configure a SAFI 129 IPv6-related address family, the ipv6 unicast-routing command must be configured on the device.
-
To create a multicast IPv6 VRF address family under BGP, IPv6 must first be activated on the VRF itself.
NoteThere is no separate multicast configuration on the VRF. Configuring the address-family ipv6 command on the VRF will enable both unicast and multicast topologies.
If you want prefixes to be installed into the Routing Information Base (RIB), you must configure the pim command on a VRF interface.
Information About BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
Overview of BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
MVPN utilizes the existing VPN infrastructure to allow multicast traffic to pass through the provider space. Information derived from VPN routes is one of the components needed to set up tunnels within the core. Currently, multicast traffic will derive this information from the unicast VPNv6 tables, which forces multicast traffic to be dependent on unicast topologies.
For scenarios in which multicast and unicast traffic would be better suited with separate topologies, the customer edge (CE) router may advertise a special set of routes to be used exclusively for multicast VPNs. Multicast routes learned from the CE router can be propagated to remote provider edge (PE) routers via SAFI 129. Multicast routes learned from the CE router or multicast VPN routes learned from remote PE routers can now be installed directly into the multicast RIB, instead of using replicated routes from the unicast RIB. Maintaining separate routes and entries for unicast and multicast allows you to create differing topologies for each service within the core.
How to Configure BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
Configuring BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
vrf
definition
vrf1
4.
rd
route-distinguisher
5.
route-target
export
route-target-ext-community
6.
route-target
import
route-target-ext-community
7.
address-family
ipv6
8.
mdt
default
group-address
9.
exit
10.
exit
11.
router
bgp
autonomous-system-number
12.
address-family
vpnv6
multicast
13.
neighbor
peer-group-name
send-community
extended
14.
neighbor
{ip-address |
peer-group-name |
ipv6-address
%}
activate
15.
address-family
ipv6
multicast
vrf
vrf-name
16.
end
DETAILED STEPS
Configuration Examples for BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
Example: Configuring BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
The example below shows the configuration for a PE router:
hostname PE1 ! ! vrf definition blue rd 55:1111 route-target export 55:1111 route-target import 55:1111 ! address-family ipv6 mdt default 232.1.1.1 mdt data 232.1.200.0 0.0.0.0 exit-address-family ! !ip multicast-routing ip multicast-routing vrf blue ip cef ! ipv6 unicast-routing ipv6 multicast-routing ipv6 multicast-routing vrf blue ipv6 cef ! !interface Loopback0 ip address 205.1.0.1 255.255.255.255 ip pim sparse-dense-mode ipv6 address FE80::205:1:1 link-local ipv6 address 205::1:1:1/64 ipv6 enable ! interface Ethernet0/0 ! interface connect to the core vpn bandwidth 1000 ip address 30.3.0.1 255.255.255.0 ip pim sparse-dense-mode delay 100 ipv6 address FE80::70:1:1 link-local ipv6 address 70::1:1:1/64 ipv6 enable mpls ip ! interface Ethernet1/1 ! interface connect to CE (vrf interface) bandwidth 1000 vrf forwarding blue ip address 10.1.0.1 255.255.255.0 ip pim sparse-dense-mode delay 100 ipv6 address FE80::20:1:1 link-local ipv6 address 20::1:1:1/64 ipv6 enable ! router ospf 200 redistribute connected subnets redistribute bgp 55 metric 10 passive-interface Loopback0 network 30.3.0.0 0.0.255.255 area 1 ! router bgp 55 bgp log-neighbor-changes no bgp default route-target filter ! neighbor to another PE in core neighbor 205.3.0.3 remote-as 55 neighbor 205.3.0.3 update-source Loopback0 ! address-family ipv4 mdt ! neighbor to another PE in core neighbor 205.3.0.3 activate neighbor 205.3.0.3 send-community extended exit-address-family ! address-family vpnv6 ! neighbor to another PE in core neighbor 205.3.0.3 activate neighbor 205.3.0.3 send-community extended exit-address-family ! address-family vpnv6 multicast ! neighbor to another PE in core ! this address-family is added to enable ! safi129 between two PEs neighbor 205.3.0.3 activate neighbor 205.3.0.3 send-community extended exit-address-family ! address-family ipv6 vrf blue ! neighbor to CE1 in vrf redistribute connected redistribute static neighbor FE80::20:1:6%Ethernet1/1 remote-as 56 neighbor FE80::20:1:6%Ethernet1/1 activate exit-address-family ! address-family ipv6 multicast vrf blue ! neighbor to CE1 in vrf ! this address-family is added to enable ! safi2 on PE-CE redistribute connected redistribute static neighbor FE80::20:1:6%Ethernet1/1 remote-as 56 neighbor FE80::20:1:6%Ethernet1/1 activate exit-address-family ! ipv6 pim vrf blue rp-address 201::1:1:7 blue_bidir_acl bidir ipv6 pim vrf blue rp-address 202::1:1:6 blue_sparse_acl ! ipv6 access-list black_bidir_acl permit ipv6 any FF06::/64 ! ipv6 access-list black_sparse_acl permit ipv6 any FF04::/64 ! ipv6 access-list blue_bidir_acl permit ipv6 any FF05::/64 ! ipv6 access-list blue_sparse_acl permit ipv6 any FF03::/64 ! end
The example below shows the configuration for a CE router:
hostname CE1 ! ip multicast-routing ip cef ipv6 unicast-routing ipv6 multicast-routing ipv6 multicast rpf use-bgp ipv6 cef ! interface Ethernet1/1 bandwidth 1000 ip address 10.1.0.6 255.255.255.0 no ip redirects no ip proxy-arp ip pim sparse-dense-mode delay 100 ipv6 address FE80::20:1:6 link-local ipv6 address 20::1:1:6/64 ipv6 enable no keepalive ! router bgp 56 bgp log-neighbor-changes neighbor FE80::20:1:1%Ethernet1/1 remote-as 55 ! address-family ipv6 redistribute connected redistribute static neighbor FE80::20:1:1%Ethernet1/1 activate exit-address-family ! address-family ipv6 multicast redistribute connected redistribute static neighbor FE80::20:1:1%Ethernet1/1 activate exit-address-family ! ipv6 pim rp-address 201::1:1:7 blue_bidir_acl bidir ipv6 pim rp-address 202::1:1:6 blue_sparse_acl ! ipv6 access-list blue_bidir_acl permit ipv6 any FF05::/64 ! ipv6 access-list blue_sparse_acl permit ipv6 any FF03::/64 ! end
Additional References
Related Documents
Related Topic |
Document Title |
---|---|
Cisco IOS commands |
|
BGP commands: complete command syntax, command modes, command history, defaults, usage guidelines, and examples |
Standards and RFCs
Standard/RFC |
Title |
---|---|
MDT SAFI |
|
RFC 2547 |
BGP/MPLS VPNs |
Technical Assistance
Description |
Link |
---|---|
The Cisco Support and Documentation website provides online resources to download documentation, software, and tools. Use these resources to install and configure the software and to troubleshoot and resolve technical issues with Cisco products and technologies. Access to most tools on the Cisco Support and Documentation website requires a Cisco.com user ID and password. |
Feature Information for BGP-MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6
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.Feature Name |
Releases |
Feature Information |
---|---|---|
BGP—MVPN SAFI 129 IPv6 |
15.2(4)S Cisco IOS XE Release 3.7S 15.3(1)T |
SAFI 129 , known as VPN Multicast SAFI, provides the capability to support multicast routing in the service provider's core IPv6 network. The following commands were introduced or modified: address-family ipv6, address-family vpnv6, and show bgp vpnv6 multicast. |