A single Physical
Interface Card (PIC) can host a physical interface that is shared
by different Protected System Domains (PSDs). The Flexible PIC Concentrator
(FPC) and the physical shared interface are owned by the Root System
Domain (RSD). However, the logical interfaces configured under the
shared interface are assigned to and owned by different PSDs. By sharing
a single interface among multiple PSDs, the cost of traffic forwarding
is reduced and resources can be allocated flexibly at a more granular
level.
Any FPC that has
not been assigned to a specific PSD can be used to host shared interfaces.
On the RSD, multiple logical interfaces are configured on the physical
interface and each individual logical interface is assigned to a different
PSD. On the PSD, each assigned logical interface is configured and
peered with an uplink tunnel interface (ut-fpc/pic/slot), which
transports packets between the PSD and the shared interface on the
RSD. See Figure 2.
Figure 2: Shared Interfaces
When applied to shared interfaces:
JUNOS features that are configured under logical interfaces,
such as class-of-service (CoS) classifiers and rewrites, firewall
filters, and policers, are configured on the PSD.
JUNOS features that are configured under physical interfaces,
such as drop profiles and schedule maps, are configured on the RSD.
The packets
belonging to a shared interface pass between the Packet Forwarding
Engine on the PIC in the RSD and the Packet Forwarding Engine on the
uplink tunnel PIC in the PSD through a cross-connect in the forwarding
fabric.
Traffic flow from the PSD to the
RSD over a shared interface is as follows:
A packet destined for the shared PIC at the RSD is received
on an interface at the PSD and sent to the Packet Forwarding Engine
on the PSD’s tunnel PIC. (The tunnel PIC is configured to peer
with the shared PIC at the RSD.)
The packet is sent out of the tunnel interface.
The tunnel PIC loops the packet back to the input side
of its Packet Forwarding Engine and the packet is sent over the switch
fabric to the Packet Forwarding Engine on the shared PIC at the RSD.
The packet is then sent out the shared interface.
Traffic flow from the RSD to the PSD is as follows:
The Packet Forwarding Engine on the shared PIC at the
RSD determines on which logical interface the packet arrived.
Based on the RSD configuration, the PSD that is associated
with this logical interface is known and the packet is sent over the
switch fabric to the tunnel PIC at that PSD.
The packet is sent out the tunnel interface.
The tunnel PIC loops the packet back to the input side
of its Packet Forwarding Engine and the packet is then handled as
if it had arrived on a directly-connected PIC.
Table 6 lists the
PICs that support shared interfaces:
Table 6: PICs Supporting Shared Interfaces
PIC Name
PIC Model Number
First JUNOS Release
Ethernet
1-port 10-Gigabit Ethernet DWDM
PC-1XGE-DWDM-CBAND
9.4
1-port 10-Gigabit XENPAK
PC-1XGE-XENPAK
9.4
10-port 1-Gigabit SFP
PC-10GE-SFP
9.4
SONET/SDH
4-port OC48 SONET, SFP
PC-4OC48-SON-SFP
9.3
1-port OC192 SONET, XFP
PC-10C192-SON-SFP
9.3
4-port OC192 SONET, XFP
PD-4OC192-SON-XFP
9.3
1-port OC768 SONET, SR
PD-1OC768-SON-SR
9.3
Note:
Only SONET PICs that are installed on an Enhanced Services
(ES) FPC on a T320 router or on a T1600 routing node can support shared
interfaces.