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Cisco ASR 9000 Series Aggregation Services Router Getting Started Guide
OL-17502-02
Chapter 1 Introducing the Cisco ASR 9000 Series Aggregation Services Router
System Configurations
MPLS TE Preferred Path: Preferred tunnel path functions let you map pseudowires to specific TE
tunnels. Attachment circuits are cross-connected to specific MPLS TE tunnel interfaces instead of
remote provider-edge router IP addresses (reachable using Interior Gateway Protocol [IGP] or Label
Distribution Protocol [LDP]).

High Availability

The Cisco ASR 9000 Series router is intended for use in networks that require high-availability. It is
designed to provide high MTBF (Mean Time Between Failures) and low MTTR (Mean Time To Resolve)
rates. This minimizes outages or and maximizes availability. The Cisco ASR 9000 Series router achieves
this using the following:
Component redundancy
Duplex power supplies
Cooling systems
Fault detection
Management features
High availability features
Non-stop forwarding (NSF)—Cisco IOS XR Software supports forwarding without traffic loss
during a brief outage of the control plane through signaling and routing protocol
implementations for graceful restart extensions as standardized by the IETF, NSF requires
neighboring nodes to be NSF-aware.
Process restartability (minimum disruption restart)
Stateful switchovers
In-service software upgrades
MPLS TE FRR
Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD)
Standard IEEE 802.3ad link aggregation bundles
System Configurations
The router runs Cisco IOS XR Software on the following standalone chassis types, available in AC or
DC versions:
a 6-slot chassis
a 10-slot chassis