I love to be the “uncola” of networking sites. I like interop and I don’t do a lot with Cisco because I don’t have access to much of their gear anymore. So, that being the case, I had a need to bring up a l2circuit (in JunOS speak), or VLL (in Brocade speak) between an MX480 and an MLX. Since they are very different platforms, I had to do some digging and playing around to get it to work.
You should have a rudimentary understanding of MPLS (which is about what I have) to do this. l2circuit / pseudowire / vll are all synonymous for the scope of this post.
JunOS:
set protocols l2circuit neighbor interface virtual-circuit-id set protocols l2circuit neighbor interface encapsulation-type ethernet set interfaces xe-3/3/0 description set interfaces xe-3/3/0 vlan-tagging set interfaces xe-3/3/0 encapsulation flexible-ethernet-services set interfaces xe-3/3/0 unit encapsulation vlan-ccc set interfaces xe-3/3/0 unit vlan-id
Brocade:
MLX1#show mpls config router mpls policy no propagate-ttl mpls-interface e1/1 ldp-enable mpls-interface e1/4 ldp-enable vll TEST-ICCN-VLL-1 raw-mode vll-peer vlan tagged e 5/2
Some commands I found helpful for debugging while testing this out:
JunOS:
Useful for debugging connections that won’t come up:
set protocols l2circuit traceoptions file l2-VLL set protocols l2circuit traceoptions file size 20240 set protocols l2circuit traceoptions flag all show log l2-VLL
Brocade:
logging console terminal monitor debug mpls all debug mpls ldp
Show commands that are very useful:
JunOS:
check end to end l2circuit / VLL connectivity
ping mpls l2circuit interfacedetail
Show detail of l2circuit / pseudowire / vll
show interfaces
Brocade:
show VLL detail
Can you guarantee a specific minimum bandwidth or maximum delay with that set up?
Sure.