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SP0019 - MPLS TE Tunnel Forwarding (Part 2)

The video demonstrates and compares various traffic forwarding options in Cisco MPLS Traffic Engineering (TE). Since MPLS TE is based on a tunnel interface, the two obvious options are static route and Policy Based Routing (PBR). The other two available options, which we will look at more extensively at their characteristics, are Autoroute Announce and Forwarding Adjacency. We will investigate how these forwarding options cause the tunnel to be seen by routing protocol and effect the router routing decision.

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SP0019 - MPLS TE Tunnel Forwarding (Part 1)

The video demonstrates and compares various traffic forwarding options in Cisco MPLS Traffic Engineering (TE). Since MPLS TE is based on a tunnel interface, the two obvious options are static route and Policy Based Routing (PBR). The other two available options, which we will look at more extensively at their characteristics, are Autoroute Announce and Forwarding Adjacency. We will investigate how these forwarding options cause the tunnel to be seen by routing protocol and effect the router routing decision.

Rating: 
5
Average: 5 (1 vote)
Difficulty Level: 
0

SP0013 - MPLS VPN Shared Service and Internet (No VRF) (Part 2)

Many MPLS providers provide common services such as SIP trunk gateway to their clients. Internet access is also a type of common services. This video demonstrates how these shared services can be implemented in Cisco MPLS VPN. We will first look at an implementation without VRF and methods to get traffic from client VRF to global routing table and back into the VRF. The next video will look at an alternative of implementing this with VRF. 

Rating: 
5
Average: 5 (1 vote)
Difficulty Level: 
0

SP0013 - MPLS VPN Shared Service and Internet (No VRF) (Part 1)

Many MPLS providers provide common services such as SIP trunk gateway to their clients. Internet access is also a type of common services. This video demonstrates how these shared services can be implemented in Cisco MPLS VPN. We will first look at an implementation without VRF and methods to get traffic from client VRF to global routing table and back into the VRF. The next video will look at an alternative of implementing this with VRF. 

Rating: 
5
Average: 5 (2 votes)
Difficulty Level: 
0

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