Tip
This is the documentation for the 23.02 version. Looking for the documentation of the latest version? Have a look here.
BFD Sessions¶
A BFD session defines a relationship between TNSR and a peer so they can
exchange BFD information and detect link faults. These sessions are configured
by using the bfd session <name>
command, which enters config-bfd
mode,
and defines a BFD session using the given word for a name.
Example:
tnsr# conf
tnsr(config)# bfd session otherrouter
tnsr(config-bfd)# interface GigabitEthernet0/14/0
tnsr(config-bfd)# local address 203.0.113.2
tnsr(config-bfd)# peer address 203.0.113.25
tnsr(config-bfd)# desired-min-tx 100000
tnsr(config-bfd)# required-min-rx 100000
tnsr(config-bfd)# detect-multiplier 3
tnsr(config-bfd)# exit
tnsr(config)# exit
tnsr#
Session Parameters¶
- interface <if-name>:
The Ethernet interface on which to enable BFD.
Warning
This interface must be directly connected to the peer (single hop), as the dataplane does not support BFD over multiple hops. It cannot be used with routing protocols running on loopback interfaces, for example.
- local address <ip-address>:
The local address used as a source for BFD packets. This address must be present on
<if-name>
.- peer address <ip-address>:
The remote BFD peer address. The local and remote peer IP addresses must use the same address family (either IPv4 or IPv6)
- desired-min-tx <microseconds>:
The desired minimum transmit interval, in microseconds
- required-min-rx <microseconds>:
The required minimum transmit interval, in microseconds
- detect-multiplier <n-packets>:
A non-zero value that is, roughly speaking, due to jitter, the number of packets that have to be missed in a row to declare the session to be down. Must be between
1
and255
.
Additional parameters for authentication are covered in BFD Session Authentication.
Changing the BFD Administrative State¶
Under normal conditions the state of a link monitored by BFD is handled automatically. The link state can also be set manually when necessary.
To disable a link and mark it administratively down:
tnsr# bfd session <name>
tnsr(config-bfd)# enable false
To remove the administrative down and return the link to BFD management:
tnsr# bfd session <name>
tnsr(config-bfd)# enable true
Viewing BFD Session Status¶
To see the configuration and status of a BFD session, use the show bfd
session
command:
tnsr# show bfd session
Session Number: 0
Local IP Addr: 203.0.113.2
Peer IP Addr: 203.0.113.25
State: down
Required Min Rx Interval: 100000 usec
Desired Min Tx Interval: 100000 usec
Detect Multiplier: 3
BFD Key Id: 123
Configuration Key Id: 14
Authenticated: true
Using BFD Sessions¶
For BFD to function fully, the BFD session status must be consumed by other interested parties. Currently on TNSR this can be BGP, OSPF, or OSPF6 dynamic routing.
- BGP:
BFD can be enabled for specific BGP neighbors with the
bfd enabled true
command from withinconfig-bgp-neighbor
mode.- OSPF/OSPF6:
BFD can be enabled on specific OSPF interfaces with the
bfd enabled true
command from withinconfig-ospf[6]-if
mode.
In each case, the BGP neighbor or OSPF/OSPF6 interface must coincide exactly with the settings on a BFD session.