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Example topology – Juniper Networks JUNOS OS 10.4 User Manual

Page 42

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Spanning Tree Protocols (xSTP, where the “x” represents the STP type)—Bridges
function by associating a MAC address with an interface, similar to the way a router
associates an IP network address with a next-hop interface. Just as routing protocols
use packets to detect and prevent routing loops, bridges use xSTP frames to detect
and prevent bridging loops. (Layer 2 loops are more devastating to a network because
of the broadcast nature of Ethernet LANs.)

Integrated bridging and routing (IRB)—Support for both Layer 2 bridging and Layer 3
routing on the same interface. Frames are bridged if they are not sent to the router's
MAC address. Frames sent to the router's MAC address are routed to other interfaces
configured for Layer 3 routing.

Related

Documentation

Ethernet Networking

Example Roadmap: Configuring a Basic Bridge Domain Environment on page 22

Example Step: Configuring Interfaces and VLAN Tags on page 24

Example Step: Configuring Bridge Domains on page 30

Example Step: Configuring Spanning Tree Protocols on page 32

Example Step: Configuring Integrated Bridging and Routing on page 34

Example Roadmap: Configuring a Basic Bridge Domain Environment

Configuring Layer 2 features on MX Series routers can vary from the very simple
(aggregated Ethernet trunk interfaces, spanning trees), to the more complex (inner and
outer VLAN tags, broadcast domains), to the very complicated (integrated bridging and
routing, Layer 2 filtering). This example offers a fairly complex configuration for Layer 2
processing in a bridged environment.

Example Topology on page 22

Example Scenario on page 23

Example Configuration Summary on page 24

Example Topology

Consider the network in

Figure 5 on page 23

. The figure shows three MX Series routers

acting as Layer 2 devices.

Copyright © 2013, Juniper Networks, Inc.

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Junos OS 13.1 MX Series 3D Universal Edge Routers Solutions Guide