lo0.0 interface is to be configured under "set interfaces lo0 blah". Because
you really don't want a changing lo0 IP if there's a switchover.
Usually in re0/1 groups for MX (or member0/1 for Virtual Chassis EX switches,
or member0/1-re0/1 for Virtual Chassis MX) you define a hostname mentioning
Thank you!
However, if I understand correctly that configuration snippet is from the fxp0 interface.
I can't see an lo0 interface being mentioned anywhere in your configuration. Which part
of your configuration comes from "set re0 interfaces lo0 unit 0 family inet address
[address/prefix-lengt
In this example Raphael set two different addresses for fxp0 for each RE
(.10, .11) and a 'virtual' one (.9) which reside only on the master RE.
I do not recommend the use of fxp0, (rather use in -band management, and
serial oob in case of failure), unless you are totally sure of your
manageme
Here the config for the 2 re
groups {
re0 {
system {
host-name re0.mx1.fqdn;
}
interfaces {
fxp0 {
unit 0 {
family inet {
address 10.10.10.9/24 {
master-only;
Well the documentation can be confusing.
In re0 and re1 group you put the configuration specific to one RE. On my
router I only set the host-name.
The loopback does not have to be different between the two RE, so you
can let it on the standard hierarchy.
--
Raphael Mazelier
Le 09/05/2016 à
Hello,
I am new to networking and trying to understand the initial configuration on a
Juniper MX router with dual REs:
http://www.juniper.net/techpubs/en_US/junos14.2/topics/task/configuration/routing-engine-dual-initial-configuration.html
Step 6 is the following:
" Set the loopback interface a
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