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Enabling tunnel flow control, Disconnecting tunnels by force, Displaying and maintaining l2tp – H3C Technologies H3C SecPath F1000-E User Manual

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response packet from the peer within a specified period of time, it retransmits the Hello packet. If it

receives no response packet from the peer after transmitting the Hello packet three times, it considers the

L2TP tunnel is down and tries to re-establish a tunnel with the peer.
Follow these steps to set the Hello interval:

To do…

Use the command…

Remarks

Enter system view

system-view

Enter L2TP group view

l2tp-group group-number

Set the hello interval

tunnel timer hello hello-interval

Optional
60 seconds by default

Enabling Tunnel Flow Control

The L2TP tunnel flow control function controls data packet transmission by buffering and adjusting data
packets that arrive out of order.
Follow these steps to enable tunnel flow control:

To do…

Use the command…

Remarks

Enter system view

system-view

Enter L2TP group view

l2tp-group group-number

Enable the tunnel flow control
function

tunnel flow-control

Optional
Disabled by default

Disconnecting Tunnels by Force

Either the LAC or the LNS can initiate a tunnel disconnection request. You can also disconnect a tunnel
when no users are online or a network failure occurs. Once a tunnel is disconnected, the control

connection and all the sessions within the tunnel are removed. When a user dials in, a new tunnel is

established.
Follow these steps to disconnect tunnels by force:

To do…

Use the command…

Remarks

Disconnect tunnels by force

reset l2tp tunnel { id tunnel-id |
name remote-name }

Available in user view

Displaying and Maintaining L2TP

To do…

Use the command…

Remarks

Display information about L2TP
tunnels

display l2tp tunnel

Available in any view