MLPPP over MPLS

Brent A O'Keeffe bokeeffe at csc.com
Mon Feb 20 13:56:47 UTC 2006


It may also be worth noting that if the provider is running Juniper and 
not Cisco, there are fragmentation issues with certain versions of Juniper 
code.  The MLPPP session cannot agree on an MTU and usually stop somewhere 
around 100 bytes if they do.  The workaround is to implement "ppp 
multilink fragment disable" on the Cisco Multilink interface.

Brent



Jon Lewis <jlewis at lewis.org> 
Sent by: owner-nanog at merit.edu
02/17/2006 03:38 PM

To
"Jon R. Kibler" <Jon.Kibler at aset.com>
cc
nanog at merit.net
Subject
Re: MLPPP over MPLS







On Fri, 17 Feb 2006, Jon R. Kibler wrote:

> We have a customer that is implementing an MPLS network that will have 2 

> to 6 T1 feeds at some locations that will be using MLPPP for channel 
> bonding. This is a telco provided network that will be customer managed.

It's not clear from your message, but I'm assuming the MLPPP will be from 
PE to CE and that the MPLS you speak of is MPLS VPN.  If that's the case, 
on the customer end, it's just a MLPPP, and on your end, it's an MLPPP 
with an "ip vrf forwarding foo" statement.  It's probably more than the 
average CCNA can handle (but so are MLPPP, MPLS, and most day to day IOS 
config work).  Anyone who actually uses IOS on a regular basis (as opposed 

to someone who crammed for an exam and knows squat) should have no trouble 

with it.

> The customer is being told by their router vendor that an MLPPP/MPLS 
> network is 'too complex' to be managed by anyone except for the router 
> vendor's VARs or the telco. They indicated that it would be impossible 
> for the customer's router vendor certified network person to come up to 
> speed on MLPPP/MPLS configurations and manage such a network -- that it 
> takes years to adequately learn how to manage that type of network 
> configuration.

I think someone may be confusing "providing MPLS service" with "buying 
MPLS service".  A customer buying MPLS VPN service never sees any of the 
MPLS tags or messes with MPLS/tag-switching commands.  There is no added 
complexity...or at least there doesn't need to be any.

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