- Written by Chris Hydon
- Posted on June 17, 2019
- Updated on December 19, 2024
- 24475 Views
Ethernet VPN (EVPN) networks normally require some measure of redundancy to reduce or eliminate the impact of outages and maintenance. RFC7432 describes four types of route to be exchanged through EVPN, with a built-in multihoming mechanism for redundancy. Prior to EOS 4.22.0F, MLAG was available as a redundancy option for EVPN with VXLAN, but not multihoming. EVPN multihoming is a multi-vendor standards-based redundancy solution that does not require a dedicated peer link and allows for more flexible configurations than MLAG, supporting peering on a per interface level rather than a per device level. It also supports a mass withdrawal mechanism to minimize traffic loss when a link goes down.
- Written by Shamit Kapadia
- Posted on March 4, 2025
- Updated on March 4, 2025
- 131 Views
EVPN VXLAN all-active multihoming (AA-MH) provides redundancy to reduce or eliminate the impact of outages and maintenance. The objective of Maintenance Mode on AA-MH is to gracefully drain away the traffic from the EVPN core flowing through a switch that is part of multihoming while the switch is put into maintenance, and to gracefully add it back into the network and attract traffic again once the switch is out of maintenance. During the maintenance cycle any customer edge Ethernet or Port-Channel interfaces, whether they are participating as ethernet segments or not, can also be put into maintenance mode. Doing so eliminates the northbound traffic from the customer edge from flowing through the switch under maintenance. The traffic will instead take a path through other available multi-homing peers.
- Written by Swati Patel
- Posted on February 11, 2021
- Updated on October 22, 2024
- 13957 Views
[L2 EVPN] and [Multicast EVPN IRB] solutions allow for the delivery of customer BUM (Broadcast, Unknown unicast