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Rsvp gr configuration example, Network requirements – H3C Technologies H3C S6800 Series Switches User Manual

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152

Input: 0 packets, 0 bytes, 0 drops

Output: 177 packets, 11428 bytes, 0 drops

# Execute the display mpls te tunnel-interface command on Switch A. The output shows detailed
information about the MPLS TE tunnel.

[SwitchA] display mpls te tunnel-interface

Tunnel Name : Tunnel 1

Tunnel State : Up (Main CRLSP up, Shared-resource CRLSP down)

Tunnel Attributes :

LSP ID : 23331 Tunnel ID : 1

Admin State : Normal

Ingress LSR ID : 1.1.1.9 Egress LSR ID : 4.4.4.9

Signaling : RSVP-TE Static CRLSP Name : -

Resv Style : SE

Tunnel mode : -

Reverse-LSP name : -

Reverse-LSP LSR ID : - Reverse-LSP Tunnel ID: -

Class Type : CT0 Tunnel Bandwidth : 0 kbps

Reserved Bandwidth : 0 kbps

Setup Priority : 7 Holding Priority : 7

Affinity Attr/Mask : 0/0

Explicit Path : -

Backup Explicit Path : -

Metric Type : TE

Record Route : Disabled Record Label : Disabled

FRR Flag : Disabled Backup Bandwidth Flag: Disabled

Backup Bandwidth Type: - Backup Bandwidth : -

Route Pinning : Disabled

Retry Limit : 10 Retry Interval : 2 sec

Reoptimization : Disabled Reoptimization Freq : -

Backup Type : None Backup LSP ID : -

Auto Bandwidth : Disabled Auto Bandwidth Freq : -

Min Bandwidth : - Max Bandwidth : -

Collected Bandwidth : -

# Execute the display ip routing-table command on Switch A to verify that a static route entry with
interface Tunnel 1 as the output interface exists. (Details not shown.)

RSVP GR configuration example

Network requirements

Switch A, Switch B, and Switch C run IS-IS.
Use RSVP-TE to establish a TE tunnel from Switch A to Switch C.
Configure RSVP GR on the switches to ensure continuous forwarding when a switch reboots.