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}<br />

fxp0 {<br />

unit 0 {<br />

family inet {<br />

address 192.168.70.143/21;<br />

}<br />

}<br />

}<br />

lo0 {<br />

unit 0 {<br />

family inet {<br />

address 10.0.0.1/32;<br />

}<br />

family iso {<br />

address 49.0004.1000.0000.0001.00;<br />

}<br />

}<br />

}<br />

You see that on physical interface so-0/0/2 on the ingress router, the MPLS family is<br />

configured in addition to the inet and iso families. You don’t configure the MPLS<br />

family on either the loopback (lo0) orfxp0 interfaces because they are not transit<br />

interfaces and never carry labeled packets.<br />

Use the show interfaces terse command to verify that the MPLS family is configured<br />

on all expected interfaces. Here’s the output for the ingress router:<br />

aviva@R1> show interfaces terse<br />

Interface Admin Link Proto Local Remote<br />

so-0/0/2 up up<br />

so-0/0/2.0 up up inet 10.1.13.1/30<br />

iso<br />

mpls<br />

fxp0 up up<br />

fxp0.0 up up inet 192.168.70.143/21<br />

lo0 up up<br />

lo0.0 up up inet 10.0.0.1 --> 0/0<br />

iso 49.0004.1000.0000.0001.00<br />

lo0.16385 up up inet<br />

inet6 fe80::2a0:a5ff:fe56:189<br />

Here’s the output for the transit router:<br />

aviva@R3> show interfaces terse<br />

Interface Admin Link Proto Local Remote<br />

so-0/0/2 up up<br />

so-0/0/2.0 up up inet 10.1.13.2/30<br />

iso<br />

mpls<br />

so-0/0/3 up up<br />

so-0/0/3.0 up up inet 10.1.36.1/30<br />

iso<br />

mpls<br />

504 | Chapter 14: MPLS<br />

This is the Title of the Book, eMatter Edition<br />

Copyright © 2008 O’Reilly & Associates, Inc. All rights reserved.

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