SUMMARY STEPS
1.
configure
2.
mpls traffic-eng
3.
attribute-set auto-mesh attribute-set-name
4.
affinity value mask mask-value
5.
signalled-bandwidth kbps class-type class-type number
6.
autoroute announce
7.
fast-reroute protect bandwidth node
8.
auto-bw collect-bw-only
9.
logging events lsp-status {state | insufficient-bandwidth | reoptimize | reroute }
10.
Use the commit or end command.
DETAILED STEPS
PurposeCommand or Action
Enters global configuration mode.configure
Example:
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router# configure
Step 1
Enters MPLS-TE configuration mode.mpls traffic-eng
Example:
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router(config)# mpls traffic-eng
Step 2
Specifies name of the attribute-set of auto-mesh type.
attribute-set auto-mesh attribute-set-name
Example:
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router(config-te)# attribute-set
auto-mesh attribute-set-mesh
Step 3
Configures the affinity properties the tunnel requires in its links
for an MPLS-TE tunnel under an auto-mesh attribute-set.
affinity value mask mask-value
Example:
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router(config-te)# affinity 0101
mask 320
Step 4
Configures the bandwidth attribute required for an MPLS-TE
tunnel under an auto-mesh attribute-set. Because the default
signalled-bandwidth kbps class-type class-type number
Example:
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:router(config-te-attribute-set)#
signalled-bandwidth 1000 class-type 0
Step 5
tunnel priority is 7, tunnels use the default TE class map
(namely, class-type 0, priority 7).
You can configure the class type of the tunnel
bandwidth request. The class-type 0 is strictly
equivalent to global-pool and class-type 1 is strictly
equivalent to subpool.
Note
Cisco IOS XR MPLS Configuration Guide for the Cisco CRS Router, Release 5.1.x
328
Implementing MPLS Traffic Engineering
Configuring Tunnel Attribute-Set Templates