Configuring Transports

This module provides information about Nonstop Routing (NSR), Transmission Control Protocol (TCP), User Datagram Protocol (UDP ), and RAW Transports.

If you have specific requirements and need to adjust the NSR, TCP, UDP, or RAW values, refer to the Transport Stack Commands on IP Addresses and Services Command Reference for Cisco NCS 6000 Series Routers.

Feature History for Configuring NSR, TCP, UDP, and UDP RAW Transports

Release

Modification

Release 5.0.0

This feature was introduced.

Prerequisites for Configuring NSR, TCP, UDP, and RAW Transports

The following prerequisites are required to implement NSR, TCP, UDP, and RAW Transports:

You must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes the proper task IDs. The command reference guides include the task IDs required for each command. If you suspect user group assignment is preventing you from using a command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.

Information About Configuring NSR, TCP, UDP, and RAW Transports

To configure NSR, TCP, UDP, and RAW transports, you must understand the following concepts:

NSR Overview

Nonstop Routing (NSR) is provided for Open Shortest Path First (OSPF), Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), and Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) protocols for the following events:

  • Route Processor (RP) failover

  • Process restart for either OSPF, LDP, or TCP

  • Online insertion removal (OIR)

In the case of the RP failover, NSR is achieved by for both TCP and the applications (OSPF, BGP, or LDP).

NSR is a method to achieve High Availability (HA) of the routing protocols. TCP connections and the routing protocol sessions are migrated from the active RP to standby RP after the RP failover without letting the peers know about the failover. Currently, the sessions terminate and the protocols running on the standby RP reestablish the sessions after the standby RP goes active. Graceful Restart (GR) extensions are used in place of NSR to prevent traffic loss during an RP failover but GR has several drawbacks.

You can use the nsr process-failures switchover command to let the RP failover be used as a recovery action when the active TCP or active LDP restarts. When standby TCP or LDP restarts, only the NSR capability is lost till the standby instances come up and the sessions are resynchronized but the sessions do not go down. In the case of the process failure of an active OSPF, a fault-management policy is used. For more information, refer to Implementing OSPF on Routing Configuration Guide for Cisco NCS 6000 Series Routers.

TCP Overview

TCP is a connection-oriented protocol that specifies the format of data and acknowledgments that two computer systems exchange to transfer data. TCP also specifies the procedures the computers use to ensure that the data arrives correctly. TCP allows multiple applications on a system to communicate concurrently, because it handles all demultiplexing of the incoming traffic among the application programs.

UDP Overview

The User Datagram Protocol (UDP) is a connectionless transport-layer protocol that belongs to the IP family. UDP is the transport protocol for several well-known application-layer protocols, including Network File System (NFS), Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP), Domain Name System (DNS), and TFTP.

Any IP protocol other than TCP, UDP, is known as a RAW protocol.

For most sites, the default settings for the TCP, UDP, and RAW transports need not be changed.

How to Configure Failover as a Recovery Action for NSR

This section contains the following procedure:

Configuring Failover as a Recovery Action for NSR

This task allows you to configure failover as a recovery action to process failures of active instances.

When the active TCP or the NSR client of the active TCP terminates or restarts, the TCP sessions go down. To continue to provide NSR, failover is configured as a recovery action. If failover is configured, a switchover is initiated if the active TCP or an active application (for example, LDP, OSPF, and so forth) restarts or terminates.

For information on how to configure MPLS Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) for NSR, refer to the MPLS Configuration Guide for Cisco NCS 6000 Series Routers.

For information on how to configure NSR on a per-process level for each process, refer to the Routing Configuration Guide for Cisco NCS 6000 Series Routers.


Note

Before performing this procedure, enable RP isolation using the isolation enable command for improved troubleshooting. Without enabling RP isolation, the failing process will not generate the logs required to find the root cause of the failure.


SUMMARY STEPS

  1. configure
  2. nsr process-failures switchover
  3. commit

DETAILED STEPS

  Command or Action Purpose
Step 1

configure

Step 2

nsr process-failures switchover

Example:



RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router(config)# nsr process-failures switchover


Configures failover as a recovery action for active instances to switch over to a standby route processor (RP) to maintain nonstop routing (NSR.

Step 3

commit

Additional References

The following sections provide references related to configuring NSR, TCP, and transports.

Related Documents

Related Topic

Document Title

Transport Stack commands: complete command syntax, command modes, command history, defaults, usage guidelines, and examples

Transport Stack Commands in the IP Addresses and Services Command Reference for Cisco NCS 6000 Series Routers

MPLS LDP commands: complete command syntax, command modes, command history, defaults, usage guidelines, and examples

MPLS Label Distribution Protocol Commands in the MPLS Command Reference for Cisco NCS 6000 Series Routers

OSPF commands: complete command syntax, command modes, command history, defaults, usage guidelines, and examples

OSPF Commands in the Routing Command Reference for Cisco NCS 6000 Series Routers

MPLS Label Distribution Protocol feature information

Implementing MPLS Label Distribution Protocol in the MPLS Configuration Guide for Cisco NCS 6000 Series Routers

OSPF feature information

Implementing OSPF in the Routing Configuration Guide for Cisco NCS 6000 Series Routers

Standards

Standards

Title

No new or modified standards are supported by this feature, and support for existing standards has not been modified by this feature.

MIBs

MIBs

MIBs Link

To locate and download MIBs, use the Cisco MIB Locator found at the following URL and choose a platform under the Cisco Access Products menu: https://mibs.cloudapps.cisco.com/ITDIT/MIBS/servlet/index

RFCs

RFCs

Title

No new or modified RFCs are supported by this feature, and support for existing RFCs has not been modified by this feature.

Technical Assistance

Description

Link

The Cisco Technical Support website contains thousands of pages of searchable technical content, including links to products, technologies, solutions, technical tips, and tools. Registered Cisco.com users can log in from this page to access even more content.

http://www.cisco.com/techsupport