Reference Guide

vrrp-group 10
priority 100
virtual-address fe80::10
virtual-address 1::10
no shutdown
R2(conf-if-te-0/0)#end
R2#show vrrp
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TenGigabitEthernet 0/0, IPv6 VRID: 10, Version: 3, Net:fe80::201:e8ff:fe6a:c59f
VRF: 0 default-vrf
State: Master, Priority: 100, Master: fe80::201:e8ff:fe6a:c59f (local)
Hold Down: 0 centisec, Preempt: TRUE, AdvInt: 100 centisec
Accept Mode: FALSE, Master AdvInt: 100 centisec
Adv rcvd: 0, Bad pkts rcvd: 0, Adv sent: 135
Virtual MAC address:
00:00:5e:00:02:0a
Virtual IP address:
1::10 fe80::10
Router 3
R3(conf)#interface tengigabitethernet 1/0
R3(conf-if-te-1/0)#no ipv6 address
R3(conf-if-te-1/0)#ipv6 address 1::2/64
R3(conf-if-te-1/0)#vrrp-group 10
R2(conf-if-te-1/0-vrid-10)#virtual-address fe80::10
R2(conf-if-te-1/0-vrid-10)#virtual-address 1::10
R3(conf-if-te-1/0-vrid-10)#no shutdown
R3(conf-if-te-1/0)#show config
interface TenGigabitEthernet 1/0
ipv6 address 1::2/64
vrrp-group 10
priority 100
virtual-address fe80::10
virtual-address 1::10
no shutdown
R3(conf-if-te-1/0)#end
R3#show vrrp
------------------
TenGigabitEthernet 1/0, IPv6 VRID: 10, Version: 3, Net:
fe80::201:e8ff:fe6b:1845
VRF: 0 default-vrf
State: Backup, Priority: 100, Master: fe80::201:e8ff:fe6a:c59f
Hold Down: 0 centisec, Preempt: TRUE, AdvInt: 100 centisec
Accept Mode: FALSE, Master AdvInt: 100 centisec
Adv rcvd: 11, Bad pkts rcvd: 0, Adv sent: 0
Virtual MAC address:
00:00:5e:00:02:0a
VRRP in a VRF Configuration
The following example shows how to enable VRRP operation in a VRF virtualized network for the following scenarios.
Multiple VRFs on physical interfaces running VRRP.
Multiple VRFs on VLAN interfaces running VRRP.
To view a VRRP in a VRF configuration, use the show commands described in Displaying VRRP in a VRF Configuration.
VRRP in a VRF: Non-VLAN Scenario
The following example shows how to enable VRRP in a non-VLAN.
The following example shows a typical use case in which you create three virtualized overlay networks by configuring three
VRFs in two switches. The default gateway to reach the Internet in each VRF is a static route with the next hop being the
virtual IP address configured in VRRP. In this scenario, a single VLAN is associated with each VRF.
Both Switch-1 and Switch-2 have three VRF instances defined: VRF-1, VRF-2, and VRF-3. Each VRF has a separate physical
interface to a LAN switch and an upstream VPN interface to connect to the Internet. Both Switch-1 and Switch-2 use VRRP
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Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP)