- Written by Chitra Ramachandran
- Posted on April 18, 2024
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 295 Views
A typical multicast receiver expresses interest in a multicast stream by sending IGMP messages, the last hop router would then convert this IGMP to a PIM message and propagate upstream. As part of this feature when an IGMP message or PIM message is received in a VRF and there is a corresponding VRF leak configuration, the IGMP / PIM state is then leaked into the source VRF and processed only in the source VRF.
- Written by Tarun Jaswanth LNU
- Posted on August 24, 2020
- Updated on April 22, 2024
- 20408 Views
802.1X is an IEEE standard protocol that prevents unauthorized devices from gaining access to the network.
- Written by Jason Shamberger
- Posted on March 11, 2020
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 12330 Views
EOS 4.21.3F introduces support for BGP Flowspec, as defined in RFC5575 and RFC7674. The typical use case is to filter or redirect DDoS traffic on edge routers.
- Written by Rajesh Velandy
- Posted on April 22, 2024
- Updated on April 24, 2024
- 138 Views
Bidirectional Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) allows routers to build trees to deliver multicast traffic from sources to receivers. It is a variant of sparse-mode PIM that efficiently addresses the use case where receivers for a multicast group are also sources for that group.
- Written by Thomas Cannon
- Posted on April 18, 2024
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 221 Views
This TOI describes a feature allowing packets that do not match any VLAN translations to be dropped from a port. This can be useful to drop selective Q-in-Q packets that do not receive a VLAN. The Configuration section details CLI commands used to configure the feature.
- Written by Nathanael Dattappa
- Posted on April 18, 2024
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 274 Views
Link Flap Damping is a feature designed to detect situations when an interface is continuously flapping. If enough flaps are done, the damping mechanism is triggered temporarily holding the interface link-down. This smoothes out link flap occurrences and reduces churn in the network caused by link flaps.
- Written by Johnny Chen
- Posted on June 24, 2021
- Updated on August 7, 2023
- 8643 Views
ECMP Hash visibility CLI determines the output interface for an ECMP set based on the flow parameters supplied by the user. Ingress interface, source IP address, destination IP address and IP protocol are the required parameters.
- Written by Dylan Walsh
- Posted on October 20, 2022
- Updated on April 22, 2024
- 5102 Views
EosSdkRpc is an agent built on top of the Arista EOS SDK. It uses gRPC as a mechanism to provide remote access to the EOS SDK. The gRPC interface that EosSdkRpc supports closely matches the interface provided by EOS SDK, and the intent is that the .proto interface can be publicly supported. EosSdkRpc allows for remote access and using protobuf to specify the interface isolates user code from the Linux ABI issues that come with building C++ applications on different compiler, libc, and kernel versions.
- Written by Stefan Kheraj
- Posted on April 18, 2024
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 261 Views
Filtered mirroring allows certain packets to be selected for mirroring, rather than all packets ingressing or egressing a mirror source port.
- Written by Mithilesh Tiwari
- Posted on April 18, 2024
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 208 Views
This document describes the introduction and use of the global knob which facilitates the txQueue percentage-based allocations based on the available bandwidth of the parent interface.
- Written by Vinay Garg
- Posted on April 18, 2024
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 209 Views
Support for ingress Port ACLs on GUE Packets. The matching of ACLs can be done on outer IP header as well as UDP header fields for gue routed/bridged, decap/transit packets, and the ACL can be applied to Front Panel Ports.
- Written by Yiming Pan
- Posted on April 18, 2024
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 203 Views
Arista’s 7135 Connect Series of Layer 1+ switches are powerful network devices that allow for dynamic connections between various layer 1 components on the system, such as the front panel and FPGA. These connections are driven by an underlying CLOS network of crossbar switches. The following commands provide the ability to configure middle stage crossbar switches within the system to create dynamic layer 1 connections.
- Written by Charlotte Fedderly
- Posted on April 22, 2024
- Updated on April 22, 2024
- 190 Views
On supported devices, a port-channel can be configured as a mirroring destination for both ingress and egress source directions. Traffic mirrored to a port-channel is load-balanced based on the global port-channel load-balance configuration, which is the same for other port-channels.
- Written by Adrian Fettes
- Posted on April 22, 2024
- Updated on April 22, 2024
- 204 Views
An interface may be a source for both a mirroring session and sFlow at the same time. For more information about mirroring and ingress and egress sFlow look in the Resources section below.
- Written by Sam Ho
- Posted on August 25, 2019
- Updated on May 2, 2024
- 6536 Views
This feature adds support for allowing multiple destinations in a single monitor session.
- Written by Dickson Chum
- Posted on April 18, 2024
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 226 Views
Mirrored packets may be configured to be truncated per mirroring session.
- Written by Sharad Birmiwal
- Posted on April 18, 2024
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 329 Views
EOS supported two routing protocol implementations: multi-agent and ribd. The ribd routing protocol model is removed starting from the EOS-4.32.0F release. Multi-agent will be the only routing protocol model. Both models largely work the same way though there are subtle differences.
- Written by Xuan Qi
- Posted on April 18, 2024
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 245 Views
This feature adds all-active (A-A) multihoming support on the multi-domain EVPN VXLAN-MPLS gateway. It allows L2 and L3 ECMP to form between the multihoming gateways on the TOR devices inside the site and on the gateways in the remote sites. Therefore, traffic can be load-balanced to the multi-homing gateway and redundancy and fast convergence can be achieved.
- Written by Aparna Karanjkar
- Posted on June 17, 2019
- Updated on May 3, 2024
- 7560 Views
EOS supports reading and streaming various OpenConfig configuration and state models over gNMI (gRPC Network Management Interface), RESTCONF, and NETCONF transports. A subset of the configuration models may also be modified over these transports
- Written by Robert
- Posted on April 22, 2024
- Updated on April 24, 2024
- 130 Views
By default, the scheduling between parent interfaces and the attached shaped subinterfaces is done in strict priority mode where the parent interface has the highest priority. Subinterfaces that are not shaped use the same queues as the parent so the traffic on these subinterfaces will also have strict priority over shaped subinterfaces.
- Written by Santosh Kumar
- Posted on December 22, 2017
- Updated on May 2, 2024
- 4897 Views
PIM Static Source Discovery (SSD) is a feature implemented as part of PIM-SM. Familiarity with setting up and configuring PIM-SM (Sparse Mode) and PIM-SSM (Source-Specific Multicast) is assumed.
- Written by Paulo Panhoto
- Posted on April 18, 2024
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 212 Views
This feature provides a continuous, live, stream of ingress counters for Policy-Based Routing (PBR) rules in terms of bytes and packets. It is implemented as a special call in EosSdkRpc and follows this definition:
- Written by Gabor
- Posted on April 18, 2024
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 331 Views
Port mirroring is used to send a copy of packets seen on one port to a network monitoring connection on another switch port. Port mirroring is commonly used with network probes or other monitoring devices; examples include intrusion detection devices, latency analyzers, or packet capture and protocol analysis tools.
- Written by Asang Dani
- Posted on April 17, 2024
- Updated on April 17, 2024
- 294 Views
The goal of route prioritization is to improve overall network behavior by ensuring that routes classified as having a higher priority are processed and installed in a timely fashion. Activity for lower priority routes must not significantly delay high priority route processing. For example, when a network event affects a large number of BGP routes causing them to be reprogrammed, the programming of an important IGP route that provides underlay connectivity and is affected by a subsequent event should not have to be queued behind the BGP routes. Prioritizing the IGP route programming will improve network convergence. It may also eliminate duplicate work for other routes depending on it.
- Written by Josh Pfosi
- Posted on June 11, 2019
- Updated on April 22, 2024
- 9144 Views
This feature adds support for CPU traffic policy capable of matching and acting on IP traffic which would otherwise
- Written by David Jowett
- Posted on April 18, 2024
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 224 Views
This feature extends sampled flow tracker to support the selective sampling of certain traffic types (specified globally), such as routed IPv4, routed IPv6, and MPLS pop and route IPv4, per interface. The feature is applicable on interfaces, subinterfaces, port channels, and port channel subinterfaces.
- Written by Patrick MacArthur
- Posted on February 23, 2021
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 5278 Views
Sub-interfaces can be grouped into logical units called scheduling groups, which are shaped as a single unit. Each scheduling group may be assigned a scheduling policy which defines a shape rate in kbps and optionally a guaranteed bandwidth, also in kbps.
- Written by Ronish Kalia
- Posted on June 12, 2019
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 5771 Views
This feature enables policer (using policy-map) on a VTEP to rate limit traffic per VLAN/VNI. The policer can be applied in both input and output directions to rate limit decapsulated and encapsulated VXLAN traffic, respectively. Prior to EOS-4.32.0F, the policers are not applicable on multicast traffic through the VTEP. For platforms supporting rate limiting of both bridged and routed encapsulated traffic, the rate limiting would be done on common policer limits.
- Written by Simon Liang
- Posted on September 5, 2021
- Updated on April 23, 2024
- 6356 Views
This document describes the VRF selection policy and VRF fallback feature. A VRF selection policy contains match rules that specify certain criteria (e.g. DSCP, IP protocol) as well as a resulting action to select a VRF in which to do the FIB lookup.