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Full Discussion: MPLS Setup and routing
Special Forums IP Networking MPLS Setup and routing Post 302300715 by sdotsen on Tuesday 24th of March 2009 09:50:03 PM
Old 03-24-2009
MPLS Setup and routing

We have a client that is bringing in a MPLS router into our network. Right now they connect to our site using a tunnel between our two firewalls. I have a policy in place that locks them down to 4 specific servers (the servers have a gateway of 10.199.1.1 w/ a subnet of /24). Keep that in mind. Now, vendor configured the MPLS router w/ a gateway of 10.199.1.250. If I plug the router into our switch, I should be able to ping the MPLS router, no? So says the vendor.

Now, let's assume that's how it works. How the heck do I pass traffic from the 4 servers throguh the MPLS router? I'll have to kill the existing tunnel but the VLAN's gateway is 10.199.1.1 so that's what the servers are defaulted to. If traffic goes through the MPLS, how can I access those 4 boxes from my internal LAN then?
 

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PARIS-TRACEROUTE(8)					      System Manager's Manual					       PARIS-TRACEROUTE(8)

NAME
paris-traceroute - print the IP-level routes between two Internet hosts. SYNOPSIS
paris-traceroute [ -fhilnqvV ] [ -b initial_id ] [ -d dest_port ] [ -a algorithm ] [ -f first_ttl ] [ -L packetlen ] [ -m max_ttl ] [ -M max_missing_hops ] [ -p protocol ] [ -q nqueries ] [ -s source_port ] [ -t tos ] [ -T delaymsecs ] [ -w waittime ] host DESCRIPTION
Paris traceroute is a new version of the well-known network diagnosis tool. It addresses problems caused by load balancers with the ini- tial traceroute(8) implementation. By controlling the flow identifier of the probes, it is able to follow accurate paths in networks with load balancers. It is also able to find all the load balanced paths to the destination. Finally, it enriches its output with information extracted from the received packets, allowing a more precise analysis of the discovered paths. Options are: -a Set the probing algorithm: hopbyhop Send q (configured with the -q flag) probes with the same TTL, then wait for all the replies or a timeout. Increment the TTL and reiter the operation until we reach the destination. All packets hold the same flow identifier. packetbypacket It is the classic traceroute(8) algorithm: send one probe at a time, then wait for a reply or a timeout. Reiter the operation until we reach the destination. concurrent Send all the probes from min_ttl to max_ttl and wait for all replies or a timeout. scout Send a scout probe with a ttl max to the destination. If the destination can be reached, compute the number of hops used to reach the destination and start the concurrent algorithm with a max_ttl equal to this number of hops. If the destination cannot be reached, the hopbyhop algorithm will be used instead. This algorithm is only usable with UDP probes. exhaustive Print all the possible "load balanced" paths to the destination. (See section EXHAUSTIVE ALGORITHM ) -b Set the initial probe identifier. -d Set the the UDP/TCP destination port (default: 33457). -f Set the initial ttl (default: 1). -h Print help. -i Print the "IP Identifier" value of the responses. It is used to identify the different interfaces of a router, or uncover NAT boxes. -l Display the ttl value of the reply. Useful to study asymmetric routing and NAT boxes. -L Set the data length to be used in outgoing packets. (default: 0). -m Set the maximum ttl (default: 30). -M Set the maximum number of consecutive unresponsive hops which causes the program to abort (default 3). -n Print hop addresses numerically. The default is to print also hostnames. -p Set the protocol to use (possible values: udp, tcp, icmp). -q Set the number of probes per hop (default: 3). -s Set the UDP/TCP source port (default: 33456). -t Set the Type of Service (default: 0). This field is taken into account by many per-flow load balancers: in presence of such a load balancer, packets having different TOS values are likely to follow a different paths. -T Set the time to wait between probes, in milliseconds (default 50ms). -v Print debug messages. -V Print the program version. -w Set the time to wait for a response, in milliseconds (default 5000ms). EXHAUSTIVE ALGORITHM
With the deployment of load balancing, there is no longer only one path between two Internet hosts. This algorithm sends enough probes at each hop to find all the possible interfaces. Unlike the other algorithms, it varies the flow identifier of the probes in a controlled man- ner, to ensure the discovery of all the interfaces with a high confidence degree. It also categorizes load balancers as "per-packet" (pseudo-random, round-robin packet balancing) or "per-flow" (packets belonging to the same flow follow the same path). In case of per-flow load balancing, it prints additional information to track flows. The following trace shows the enriched output: 14 1.1.1.1:0,1,3 539.065 ms 1.1.1.2:2,4,5 492.152 ms 15 2.2.2.2:0,1,3 563.163 ms 2.2.2.3:2,4,5 470.919 ms Integers listed after the interface addresses are "flow identifiers": they are used to identify a flow in the set of interfaces found by the algorithm. For example, flow #0 traverses interfaces 1.1.1.1 and 2.2.2.2. This is the same for flows 1 and 3 while flows 2, 4 and 5 traverse 1.1.1.2 and 2.2.2.3. OUTPUT
The following information are extracted from the response packets and displayed: Response TTL The TTL of the responses (from the routers and the destination) is optionally displayed in square brackets (Use the -l flag ). Original TTL This is the TTL of the probe when it was received and dropped by the router. If the original TTL is different than 1, it is dis- played with a !Tx symbol, where x is the value of the TTL. For example, !T0 indicates that the value of the TTL was 0 when the probe reached the router that discarded it. IP Identifier This the identifier of the IP error packet sent by the router. This field is set with the value of an internal 16-bit counter usu- ally incremented for each packet sent. This value is optionally displayed inside brackets. For instance {1234} indicates that the probe had its identifier set to 1234. MPLS labels If the packet contains ICMP extensions for MPLS, the MPLS label stack is diplayed in an additionnal line just after the current hop line. Labels of the same stack are separated with a "|" character. Other ICMP error messages Paris traceroutes uses the same convensions as traceroute(8) to display unexpected ICMP messages (i.e. different than TIME_EXCEEDED, PORT_UNREACHABLE and ECHO_REPLY). SEE ALSO
traceroute(8), pathchar(8), netstat(1), ping(8) AUTHOR
The initial version of traceroute(8) was implemented by Van Jacobson from a suggestion by Steve Deering. Paris traceroute was implemented by Xavier Cuvellier. Debugged and enhanced by Brice Augustin. The current version is available at: http://www.paris-traceroute.net BUGS
Please send bug reports to brice.augustin@rp.lip6.fr. 4.3 Berkeley Distribution 28 August 2006 PARIS-TRACEROUTE(8)
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