■
Point-to-Multipoint LSPs Connectivity Verification at Egress Nodes Overview on
page 237
■
Verifying and Troubleshooting MPLS Connectivity on page 367
LDP Discovery Mechanisms
LDP uses two different mechanisms for peer discovery. Peer discovery removes the
need to explicitly configure the label-switching peers for an LSR.
■
LDP uses the basic discovery mechanism to discover directly connected LDP
peers.
■
LDP uses the extended discovery mechanism to discover peers that are not
directly connected.
LDP Basic Discovery Mechanism
To discover directly connected peers, LSRs periodically send out LDP link hellos on
the interface. The link hellos are contained in UDP packets that are addressed to the
well-known LDP discovery port, 646. The destination address for the ports is
224.0.0.2. Using this port and address ensures that the hellos are sent to all routers
on the interface’s subnet.
The link hello includes the LDP identifier for the label space that the LSR intends to
use for the interface. In the JUNOSe implementation, this is always the platform label
space, so the LDP identifier specifies the LSR ID and a value of 0 for the label space.
The link hello also includes other information, such as the hello hold time configured
on the interface. The hello hold time specifies how long an LSR maintains a record
of hellos received from potential peers.
When an LSR receives a link hello, it identifies the sending LSR as a potential LDP
peer on that interface. The LSRs form a hello adjacency to keep track of each other.
The basic discovery mechanism is enabled by default when you enable LDP on an
interface. You can configure the link hellos in the LDP profile with the
hello hold-time
and
hello interval
commands. You can configure a transport IP address to be globally
included in link hellos with the
mpls ldp discovery transport-address
command.
LDP Extended Discovery Mechanism
To discover LDP peers that are not directly connected, LSRs periodically send out
LDP targeted hellos to potential peers. The targeted hellos are contained in UDP
packets that are addressed to the well-known LDP discovery port, 646. The destination
address for the ports is a specific targeted address. LDP sends targeted hellos when
you configure one or more IP addresses in a targeted-hello send list. In a layer 2
Martini circuit, targeted hellos are automatically sent to the remote PE neighbor (the
base tunnel endpoint). See
Configuring Layer 2 Services over MPLS
for information
about layer 2 circuits.
242
■
LDP Discovery Mechanisms
JUNOSe 11.1.x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide
Summary of Contents for BGP
Page 6: ...vi ...
Page 8: ...viii JUNOSe 11 1 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide ...
Page 37: ...Part 1 Border Gateway Protocol Configuring BGP Routing on page 3 Border Gateway Protocol 1 ...
Page 38: ...2 Border Gateway Protocol JUNOSe 11 1 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide ...
Page 234: ...198 Monitoring BGP JUNOSe 11 1 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide ...
Page 236: ...200 Multiprotocol Layer Switching JUNOSe 11 1 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide ...
Page 542: ...506 Monitoring BGP MPLS VPNs JUNOSe 11 1 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide ...
Page 544: ...508 Layer 2 Services Over MPLS JUNOSe 11 1 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide ...
Page 610: ...574 Virtual Private LAN Service JUNOSe 11 1 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide ...
Page 624: ...588 VPLS References JUNOSe 11 1 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide ...
Page 680: ...644 Virtual Private Wire Service JUNOSe 11 1 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide ...
Page 724: ...688 Monitoring MPLS Forwarding Table for VPWS JUNOSe 11 1 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide ...
Page 725: ...Part 6 Index Index on page 691 Index 689 ...
Page 726: ...690 Index JUNOSe 11 1 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide ...