viernes, 19 de febrero de 2016

JNP: USO DE ROUTING INSTANCE – FORWARDING


JNP: USO DE ROUTING INSTANCE – FORWARDING


Esta opción sirve básicamente para enrutar tráfico dependiendo del origen del mismo.

El primer paso es definir un filtro para elegir los orígenes que queremos enrutar.

Definimos una instancia de enrutamiento utilizando la funcionabilidad de Forwarding*  (instance-type)[1] y configuramos la ip o red destino.



set routing-instances RI-DSO-WEB instance-type forwarding
set routing-instances RI-DSO-WEB routing-options static route X.X.X.X/32 next-hop Y.Y.Y.Y



[1] type—Can be one of the following:
·         evpn—(MX 3D Series routers only) Enable an Ethernet VPN (EVPN) on the routing instance. You cannot configure the evpn option under the [edit logical-systems logical-system-namerouting-instances routing-instance-name instance-type] hierarchy level.
·         forwarding—Provide support for filter-based forwarding, where interfaces are not associated with instances. All interfaces belong to the default instance. Other instances are used for populating RPD learned routes. For this instance type, there is no one-to-one mapping between an interface and a routing instance. All interfaces belong to the default instance inet.0.
·         l2backhaul-vpn—Provide support for Layer 2 wholesale VLAN packets with no existing corresponding logical interface. When using this instance, the router learns both the outer tag and inner tag of the incoming packets, when the instance-role statement is defined as access, or the outer VLAN tag only, when the instance-role statement is defined as nni.
·         l2vpn—Enable a Layer 2 VPN on the routing instance. You must configure the interface, route-distinguisher, vrf-import, and vrf-export statements for this type of routing instance.
·         layer2-control—(MX Series routers only) Provide support for RSTP or MSTP in customer edge interfaces of a VPLS routing instance. This instance type cannot be used if the customer edge interface is multihomed to two provider edge interfaces. If the customer edge interface is multihomed to two provider edge interfaces, use the default BPDU tunneling.
·         no-forwarding—This is the default routing instance. Do not create a corresponding forwarding instance. Use this routing instance type when a separation of routing table information is required. There is no corresponding forwarding table. All routes are installed into the default forwarding table. IS-IS instances are strictly nonforwarding instance types.
·         virtual-router—Enable a virtual router routing instance. This instance type is similar to a VPN routing and forwarding instance type, but used for non-VPN-related applications. You must configure the interface statement for this type of routing instance. You do not need to configure the route-distinguisher, vrf-import, and vrf-export statements.
·         virtual-switch—(MX Series routers only) Provide support for Layer 2 bridging. Use this routing instance type to isolate a LAN segment with its Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) instance and to separate its VLAN identifier space.
·         vpls—Enable VPLS on the routing instance. Use this routing instance type for point-to-multipoint LAN implementations between a set of sites in a VPN. You must configure the interface, route-distinguisher, vrf-import, and vrf-export statements for this type of routing instance.
·         vrf—VPN routing and forwarding (VRF) instance. Provides support for Layer 3 VPNs, where interface routes for each instance go into the corresponding forwarding table only. Required to create a Layer 3 VPN. Create a VRF table (instance-name.inet.0) that contains the routes originating from and destined for a particular Layer 3 VPN. For this instance type, there is a one-to-one mapping between an interface and a routing instance. Each VRF instance corresponds with a forwarding table. Routes on an interface go into the corresponding forwarding table. You must configure the interface, route-distinguisher, vrf-import, and vrf-export statements for this type of routing instance.
  • http://www.juniper.net/documentation/en_US/junos13.2/topics/reference/configuration-statement/instance-type-edit-routing-instances-vp.html

 Continuamos definiendo un filtro[1] para elegir los orígenes que queremos enrutar. Se asocia la red origen y la instancia de enrutamiento,  recordemos que esta tiene rutas confguradas previamente.


set firewall filter Filter-DSO term SRV_TEST from source-address Z.Z.Z.Z/32
set firewall filter Filter-DSO term SRV_TEST then log
set firewall filter Filter-DSO term SRV_TEST then routing-instance RI-DSO-WEB
set firewall filter Filter-DSO term default then accept

Y aplicamos el  filtro sobre una de las interfaces del firewall.
set interfaces reth5 unit 20 family inet filter input Filter-DSO


[1] Understanding Filter-Based Forwarding to a Specific Outgoing Interface or Destination IP Address

Policy-based routing (also known as filter-based forwarding) refers to the use of firewall filters that are applied to an interface to match certain IP header characteristics and to route only those matching packets differently than the packets would normally be routed.
Starting in Junos OS Release 12.2, you can use then next-interface, then next-ip, or then next-ip6 as an action in a firewall filter. From specific match conditions, IPv4 and IPv6 addresses or an interface name can be specified as the response action to a match.
The set of match conditions can be as follows:
·         Layer-3 properties (for example, the source or destination IP address or the TOS byte)
·         Layer-4 properties (for example, the source or destination port)
The route for the given IPv4 or IPv6 address has to be present in the routing table for policy-based routing to take effect. Similarly, the route through the given interface has to be present in the forwarding table for next-interface action to take effect. This can be achieved by configuring an interior gateway protocol (IGP), such as OSPF or IS-IS, to advertise Layer 3 routes.
The firewall filter matches the conditions and forwards the packet to one of the following:
·         An IPv4 address (using the next-ip firewall filter action)
·         An IPv6 address (using the next-ip6 firewall filter action)
·         An interface (using the next-interface firewall filter action)
Suppose, for example, that you want to offer services to your customers, and the services reside on different servers. An example of a service might be hosted DNS or hosted FTP. As customer traffic arrives at the Juniper Networks routing device, you can use filter-based forwarding to send traffic to the servers by applying a match condition on a MAC address or an IP address or simply an incoming interface and send the packets to a certain outgoing interface that is associated with the appropriate server. Some of your destinations might be IPv4 or IPv6 addresses, in which case the next-ip or next-ip6 action is useful.
·         http://www.juniper.net/techpubs/en_US/junos15.1/topics/topic-map/filter-based-forwarding-policy-based-routing.html

Por ultimo redistribuimos (RIB)[1] las rutas general sobre la instancia de enrutamiento que creamos inicialmente.


set routing-options interface-routes rib-group inet DO-group
set routing-options rib-groups DO-group import-rib inet.0
set routing-options rib-groups DO-group import-rib RI-DSO-WEB.inet.0


Lo que pasa aca es que de la table general inet.0 se importa a la table de nuestra instancia de enrutamiento. La primera tabla se pasa a la segunda, y a la tercera, y asi si ponemos mas.


[1] http://kb.juniper.net/InfoCenter/index?page=content&id=kb16133&actp=search

jueves, 18 de febrero de 2016

COMANDOS LINUX DE AYUDA



COMANDOS LINUX DE AYUDA


Moverse a una carpeta

                        cd  /var/log

Validar la ruta donde estamos.

pwd 

Verificar los archivos en una carpeta

                        Ls

Listar características de archivos.

ls –l  

Crear una Carpeta

                        mkdir logs_2016_01_SCMA5ECP

Copiar archivos de una ubicación a otra

cp 2016-01-* /var/log/nombre_carpeta_destino

Comprimir una carpeta 

tar zcvf nombre_carpeta_comprimida.tgz carpeta_original

Enviar una carpeta comprimida a un servidor ftp,scp.

scp -rp /var/log/archivo_origen.tgz user@ip_destino:/ruta/destino/carpeta_destino


Borrar un archivo/carpeta

                        rm -r nombre_archiv*
                                              
Listar características de archivos.

ls –l