Luca, These kind of questions should be send to the LISPmob-users mailing lists, so others can benefit from the answers. Usually you're also likely to get responses faster. I copied the list in my answer. If you will continue the conversation, please keep the list in CC.
On Sep 19, 2013, at 5:32 PM, Luca Ermidoro wrote: > Hi Lori, > > I set up the XTR and it works perfectly if I ping addresses in EID space > (both IPv4 and IPv6) Great to hear! > > Now I would like to try to reach legacy systems, but in the email I didn't > see any PETR to use. What PETR shall I use? Can I use it for both IPv4 and > IPv6? The best place to look for that information is the Beta network topology at http://www.lisp4.net/images/lisp-ddt.pdf However, due to a power failure, that site is down for maintenance. Since you're in Europe, you can try intouch-pxtr-1.rloc.lisp4.net (217.8.98.33) or intouch-pxtr-2.rloc.lisp4.net (217.8.98.35). They both support IPv4 and IPv6. > > Moreover I saw that in the config file there's a list of PITR which shall be > enabled. But, reading the config file, I cannot understand the reason why > these PITRs shall be explicitly enabled. Considering my system as an ETR, > aren't PITR behaving exactly in the same way as standard ITRs? If so, why > shall I tell lispmob of the PITR addresses? PITRs have an EID map cache, just like ITRs. The map cache may have a stale EID-to-RLOC mapping, if you just changed your RLOC, or stopped you client and started it on a different network. To avoid connectivity issues, we send a Solicit-Map-Request control plane message to all known PITRs whenever the LISPmob client is started or changes the RLOC. HTH, -Lori > > Thanks in adance, > > Luca Ermidoro >
