ISIS

IS-IS Traffic Engineering (TE) is an extension of IS-IS to support MPLS TE. As specified in RFC 5305 and RFC 4205, IS-IS TE defines new TLVsand sub-TLVs in IS-IS LSPs to carry TE information, floods LSPs to implement the flooding and synchronization of TE information, and transmits TE information to the CSPF module. IS-IS TE supports MPLS …

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implementing load balancing through IS-IS: Networking Requirements As shown in Figure 1: CX- A, CX- B, CX- C, and CX- D run IS-IS to implement interconnection in the IP network. CX- A, CX- B, CX- C, and CX- D are Level-2 routers in area 10. Load balancing is required to transmit the traffic of CX- A to CX- D through CX- B and CX- C. Figure 1 Networking diagram of configuring IS-IS load balancing Device Interface IP Address Device …

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Hello guys , as we said before we will start configuring IPRAN , the first thing that you need after you configure the  routing Protocol ” we already configure the ISIS before ”  but we will configure it again here also , we will start the MPLS configuration on the network .   As shown …

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Comparison of Basic Characteristics Similarities: Both protocols are widely used IGP protocols Both protocols are link state protocols Both protocols support IP environment Both protocols adopt hierarchical design and area division Differences: IS-IS supports CLNP environment IS-IS only supports PPP and broadcast network; OSPF supports PPP, broadcast, P2MP and NBMA network. OSPF supports virtual link …

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IS-IS was initially designed by the ISO and is used as a routing protocol based on CLNP addressing. CLNP is a Layer 3 protocol in the OSI reference model posed by the ISO. Figure 1 OSI reference model OSI uses systemized (or hierarchical) addressing. The services at the transport layer in OSI can be addressed …

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