- Written by Paraic Gallagher
- Posted on October 28, 2020
- Updated on October 28, 2020
- 11485 Views
This feature adds a configuration option which provides a CLI error if a reference is made to an unconfigured policy
- Written by Alton Lo
- Posted on November 23, 2020
- Updated on November 23, 2020
- 14581 Views
To use IPv6 addresses for VXLAN underlay, there are two different approaches. The first approach is to make use of
- Written by Sridhar Nagarajan
- Posted on December 14, 2020
- Updated on December 14, 2020
- 12448 Views
This feature provides the capability to count the number of packets hitting rules associated with egress ACLs
- Written by Sridhar Nagarajan
- Posted on November 9, 2020
- Updated on November 15, 2020
- 12554 Views
This feature provides the capability to count the number of packets hitting rules associated with egress ACLs
- Written by Andrew Li
- Posted on November 9, 2020
- Updated on December 23, 2021
- 13324 Views
Normally the ingress router in the following diagram has no control over an autonomous system border router’s
- Written by Jeffrey Nelson
- Posted on October 28, 2020
- Updated on June 26, 2026
- 30041 Views
This feature adds control plane support for inter-subnet forwarding between EVPN networks. This support is achieved by advertising received EVPN IP Prefix routes (Type-5) with next-hop self. VXLAN and MPLS encapsulation are supported, and the encapsulation type used for advertised routes is dependent on the encapsulation type configured for EVPN peering. The following diagram shows an example topology where an EVPN VXLAN network exchanges Type-5 routes with an EVPN MPLS network.
- Written by Aaron Bamberger
- Posted on October 28, 2020
- Updated on October 28, 2020
- 14795 Views
In a traditional EVPN VXLAN centralized anycast gateway deployment, multiple L3 VTEPs serve the role of the
- Written by Kewei Shi
- Posted on November 4, 2020
- Updated on May 21, 2025
- 14831 Views
Logical ports are hardware resources that are required to activate interfaces.
- Written by Chris Roche
- Posted on November 2, 2020
- Updated on November 2, 2020
- 10574 Views
BFD sessions are only established for OSPFv2 and OSPFv3 adjacencies that are in the FULL state. In a LAN environment
- Written by Joel Katticaran
- Posted on October 29, 2020
- Updated on February 7, 2022
- 10623 Views
This feature adds support to match against nexthop address for VPNV4/V6 routes. This support allows
- Written by Pete Carson
- Posted on November 9, 2020
- Updated on July 21, 2023
- 12297 Views
The NTP service in EOS may be configured to act as an NTP server for other devices as clients. Previously, all clients
- Written by Roee Bar
- Posted on October 29, 2020
- Updated on October 29, 2020
- 11667 Views
The feature allows modification of the egress TTL of packets routed via PBR, and to modify the TTL of naked IP/IPv6
- Written by Vishrant Vasavada
- Posted on October 28, 2020
- Updated on February 3, 2022
- 11901 Views
This feature extends link bandwidth extended community deletion mechanism, which previously always required
- Written by Jeff Wen
- Posted on April 6, 2021
- Updated on April 6, 2021
- 14725 Views
A Management VRF instance allows network operators to separate their management traffic from the rest of the
- Written by Sulyab Thottungal Valapu
- Posted on October 29, 2020
- Updated on October 17, 2024
- 11605 Views
This document describes the OSPFv2 and OSPFv3 feature that allows enabling or disabling the inclusion of LSAs having “Down” (DN) bit set in SPF calculations. The DN Bit is a loop prevention mechanism implemented when OSPF is used as CE - PE IGP protocol.
- Written by James Doherty
- Posted on October 28, 2020
- Updated on October 28, 2020
- 10902 Views
4.25.0F adds support to use large community lists in the ‘set large community’ route map set clause.
- Written by Patrick MacArthur
- Posted on February 23, 2021
- Updated on April 18, 2024
- 12453 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 Ethan Rahn
- Posted on November 9, 2020
- Updated on July 21, 2023
- 11748 Views
This document details how to use the Zero Touch Provisioning (ZTP) USB configuration feature. Arista’s Zero Touch
