Cisco Systems 78-11741-02 manual Configuring Unidirectional Link Routing, Udlr Overview, IPC-505

Models: 78-11741-02

1 624
Download 624 pages 46.69 Kb
Page 551
Image 551

Configuring Unidirectional Link Routing

This chapter describes the unidirectional link routing (UDLR) feature. UDLR provides mechanisms for a router to emulate a bidirectional link to enable the routing of unicast and multicast packets over a physical unidirectional interface, such as a broadcast satellite link. However, there must be a back channel or other path between the routers that share a physical unidirectional link (UDL). A UDLR tunnel is a mechanism for unicast and multicast traffic; Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) UDLR and IGMP Proxy are mechanisms for multicast traffic.

For information about tunnel interfaces, refer to the “Configuring Logical Interfaces” chapter in the Cisco IOS Interface Configuration Guide. For information about IGMP, refer to the chapter “Configuring IP Multicast Routing” in the Cisco IOS IP Configuration Guide.

For a complete description of the UDLR commands used in this chapter, refer to the “Unidirectional Link Routing Commands” chapter in the Cisco IOS IP Command Reference, Volume 3 of 3: Multicast. To locate documentation of other commands that appear in this chapter, use the command reference master index, or search online.

To identify the hardware platform or software image information associated with a feature, use the Feature Navigator on Cisco.com to search for information about the feature or refer to the software release notes for a specific release. For more information, see the “Identifying Supported Platforms” section in the “Using Cisco IOS Software” chapter.

UDLR Overview

Both unicast and multicast routing protocols forward data on interfaces from which they have received routing control information. This model works only on bidirectional links for most existing routing protocols. However, some networks use broadcast satellite links, which are unidirectional. For networks that use broadcast satellite links, accomplishing two-way communication over broadcast satellite links presents a problem in terms of discovering and sharing knowledge of a network topology.

Specifically, in unicast routing, when a router receives an update message on an interface for a prefix, it forwards data for destinations that match that prefix out that same interface. This is the case in distance vector routing protocols. Similarly, in multicast routing, when a router receives a join message for a multicast group on an interface, it forwards copies of data destined for that group out that same interface. Based on these principles, existing unicast and multicast routing protocols cannot be supported over UDLs. UDLR is designed to enable the operation of routing protocols over UDLs without changing the routing protocols themselves.

Cisco IOS IP Configuration Guide

IPC-505

Page 551
Image 551
Cisco Systems 78-11741-02 manual Configuring Unidirectional Link Routing, Udlr Overview, IPC-505