Device Interfaces Overview
The interfaces on a device provide network connectivity to the device. This topic discusses about the various device interfaces supported on Junos OS such as transient interfaces, services interfaces, container interfaces, and internal ethernet interfaces. This topic also provides basic interface related information such as interface naming conventions, overview of interface encapsulation, and overview of interface descriptors.
Device Interfaces Overview
Juniper devices typically contain several different types of interfaces suited to various functions. For the interfaces on a device to function, you must configure them. Specifically, you must configure the interface location (that is, the slot where the Flexible PIC Concentrator [FPC], Dense Port Concentrator [DPC], or Modular Port Concentrator [MPC] is installed). You must also specify the location of the Physical Interface Card [PIC] or Modular Interface Card [MIC] and the interface type. Finally, you must specify the encapsulation type and any interface-specific properties that may apply.
You can configure interfaces that are currently present in the device as well as interfaces that are not currently present but that are expected to be added in the future. Junos OS detects the interface after the hardware has been installed and applies the pre-set configuration to it.
To see which interfaces are currently installed in the device, issue the show
interfaces terse
operational mode command. If an interface is listed in the output, it is
physically installed in the device. If an interface is not listed in the output, it is
not installed in the device.
For information about which interfaces are supported on your device, see your device’s Interface Module Reference.
You can configure Junos OS class-of-service (CoS) properties to provide a variety of classes of service for different applications, including multiple forwarding classes for managing packet transmission, congestion management, and CoS-based forwarding.
For more information about configuring CoS properties, see the Junos OS Class of Service User Guide for Routing Devices.
Types of Interfaces
Interfaces can be permanent or transient, and they are used for networking or services:
-
Permanent interfaces—Interfaces that are always present in the device.
Permanent interfaces in the device consist of management Ethernet interfaces and internal Ethernet interfaces, both of which are described separately in the following topics:
-
Transient interfaces—Interfaces that can be inserted into or removed from the device depending on your network configuration needs.
-
Networking interfaces—Interfaces that primarily provide traffic connectivity.
-
Services interfaces—Interfaces that provide specific capabilities for manipulating traffic before it is delivered to its destination.
-
Container interfaces—Interfaces that support automatic protection switching (APS) on physical SONET links using a virtual container infrastructure.
Junos OS internally generates nonconfigurable interfaces, which are described in Interfaces Command Reference and Services Interfaces.
Interface Naming Overview
Each interface has an interface name, which specifies the media type,
the slot in which the Flexible PIC Concentrator (FPC) or Dense Port Concentrator (DPC)
is located, the location on the FPC where the PIC is installed, and the PIC or DPC port.
The interface name uniquely identifies an individual network connector in the system.
You use the interface name when configuring interfaces and when enabling various
functions and properties, such as routing protocols, on individual interfaces. The
system uses the interface name when displaying information about the interface, such as
in the show interfaces
command.
The interface name is represented by a physical part, a channel part, and a logical part in the following format:
physical<:channel>.logical
The channel part of the name is optional for all interfaces except channelized DS3, E1, OC12, and STM1 interfaces.
The EX Series, QFX Series, NFX Series, OCX1100, QFabric System, and EX4600 devices use a naming convention for defining the interfaces that are similar to that of other platforms running under Juniper Networks Junos OS. For more information, see Understanding Interface Naming Conventions.
The following sections provide interface naming configuration guidelines:
- Physical Part of an Interface Name
- Logical Part of an Interface Name
- Separators in an Interface Name
- Channel Part of an Interface Name
- Interface Naming for a Routing Matrix Based on a TX Matrix Router
- Interface Naming for a Routing Matrix Based on a TX Matrix Plus Router
- Chassis Interface Naming
- Examples: Interface Naming
Physical Part of an Interface Name
The physical part of an interface name identifies the physical device, which corresponds to a single physical network connector.
The internal management interface is dependent on the Routing Engine. To identify if the Routing Engine is using this type of interface, use the following command:
show interfaces terse
user@host> show interfaces terse Interface Admin Link Proto Local Remote pfe-1/0/0 up up pfe-1/0/0.16383 up up inet inet6 pfh-1/0/0 up up pfh-1/0/0.16383 up up inet [..........] bcm0 up up <---------------- bcm0.0 up up inet 10.0.0.1/8 [..........] lsi up up mtun up up pimd up up pime up up tap up up
For more information about the Routing Engines that each chassis supports, the first supported release for the Routing Engine in the specified chassis, the management Ethernet interface, and the internal Ethernet interfaces for each Routing Engine, refer to the link titled Supported Routing Engines by Chassis under Related Documentation.
This part of the interface name has the following format:
type-fpc/pic/port[:channel]
type
is the media type, which identifies the
network device that can be one of the following:
-
ae
—Aggregated Ethernet interface. This is a virtual aggregated link and has a different naming format from most PICs; for more information, see Aggregated Ethernet Interfaces Overview. -
as
—Aggregated SONET/SDH interface. This is a virtual aggregated link and has a different naming format from most PICs; for more information, see Configuring Aggregated SONET/SDH Interfaces. -
at
—ATM1 or ATM2 intelligent queuing (IQ) interface or a virtual ATM interface on a circuit emulation (CE) interface. -
bcm
—The bcm0 internal Ethernet process is supported on specific Routing Engines for various M series and T series routers. For more information, refer to the link titled Supported Routing Engines by Chassis under Related Documentation. -
cau4
—Channelized AU-4 IQ interface (configured on the Channelized STM1 IQ or IQE PIC or Channelized OC12 IQ and IQE PICs). -
ce1
—Channelized E1 IQ interface (configured on the Channelized E1 IQ PIC or Channelized STM1 IQ or IQE PIC). -
ci
—Container interface. -
coc1
—Channelized OC1 IQ interface (configured on the Channelized OC12 IQ and IQE or Channelized OC3 IQ and IQE PICs). -
coc3
—Channelized OC3 IQ interface (configured on the Channelized OC3 IQ and IQE PICs). -
coc12
—Channelized OC12 IQ interface (configured on the Channelized OC12 IQ and IQE PICs). -
coc48
—Channelized OC48 interface (configured on the Channelized OC48 and Channelized OC48 IQE PICs). -
cp
—Collector interface (configured on the Monitoring Services II PIC). -
cstm1
—Channelized STM1 IQ interface (configured on the Channelized STM1 IQ or IQE PIC). -
cstm4
—Channelized STM4 IQ interface (configured on the Channelized OC12 IQ and IQE PICs). -
cstm16
—Channelized STM16 IQ interface (configured on the Channelized OC48/STM16 and Channelized OC48/STM16 IQE PICs). -
ct1
—Channelized T1 IQ interface (configured on the Channelized DS3 IQ and IQE PICs, Channelized OC3 IQ and IQE PICs, Channelized OC12 IQ and IQE PICs, or Channelized T1 IQ PIC). -
ct3
—Channelized T3 IQ interface (configured on the Channelized DS3 IQ and IQE PICs, Channelized OC3 IQ and IQE PICs, or Channelized OC12 IQ and IQE PICs). -
demux
—Interface that supports logical IP interfaces that use the IP source or destination address to demultiplex received packets. Only one demux interface (demux0
) exists per chassis. All demux logical interfaces must be associated with an underlying logical interface. -
dfc
—Interface that supports dynamic flow capture processing on T Series or M320 routers containing one or more Monitoring Services III PICs. Dynamic flow capture enables you to capture packet flows on the basis of dynamic filtering criteria. Specifically, you can use this feature to forward passively monitored packet flows that match a particular filter list to one or more destinations using an on-demand control protocol. -
ds
—DS0 interface (configured on the Multichannel DS3 PIC, Channelized E1 PIC, Channelized OC3 IQ and IQE PICs, Channelized OC12 IQ and IQE PICs, Channelized DS3 IQ and IQE PICs, Channelized E1 IQ PIC, Channelized STM1 IQ or IQE PIC, or Channelized T1 IQ). -
dsc
—Discard interface. -
e1
—E1 interface (including channelized STM1-to-E1 interfaces). -
e3
—E3 interface (including E3 IQ interfaces). -
em
—Management and internal Ethernet interfaces. For M Series routers, MX Series routers, T Series routers, and TX Series routers, you can use theshow chassis hardware
command to display hardware information about the router, including its Routing Engine model. To determine which management interface is supported on your router and Routing Engine combination, see Understanding Management Ethernet Interfaces and Supported Routing Engines by Router. -
es
—Encryption interface. -
et
—Ethernet interfaces (10-, 25-, 40-, 50-, 100-, 200-, and 400-Gigabit Ethernet interface). -
fe
—Fast Ethernet interface. -
fxp
—Management and internal Ethernet interfaces. For M Series routers, MX Series routers, T Series routers, and TX Series routers, you can use theshow chassis hardware
command to display hardware information about the router, including its Routing Engine model. To determine which management interface is supported on your router and Routing Engine combination, see Understanding Management Ethernet Interfaces and Supported Routing Engines by Router. -
ge
—Gigabit Ethernet interface.Note:-
The XENPAK 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface PIC, which is supported only on M series routers, is configured using the
ge
interface naming convention instead of thexe
interface naming convention. Refer to the following show commands for more information:show chassis hardware
user@host> show chassis hardware .. FPC 4 REV 02 710-015839 CZ1853 M120 FPC Type 3 PIC 0 REV 09 750-009567 NH1857 1x 10GE(LAN),XENPAK Xcvr 0 REV 01 740-012045 535TFZX6 XENPAK-SR
show configuration interfaces
user@host> show configuration interfaces ge-4/0/0 unit 0 { family inet { address 100.0.0.1/24; } }
-
In MX and SRX Series Firewalls, the 1-Gigabit and 10-Gigabit SFP or SFP+ optical interfaces are always named as
xe
even if a 1-Gigabit SFP is inserted. However, in EX and QFX series devices, the interface name is shown asge
orxe
based on the speed of the optical device inserted.
-
-
gr
—Generic routing encapsulation (GRE) tunnel interface. -
gre
—Internally generated interface that is configurable only as the control channel for Generalized MPLS (GMPLS). For more information about GMPLS, see the Junos OS MPLS Applications User Guide.Note:You can configure GRE interfaces (gre-x/y/z) only for GMPLS control channels. GRE interfaces are not supported or configurable for other applications.
-
ip
—IP-over-IP encapsulation tunnel interface. -
ipip
—Internally generated interface that is not configurable. -
ixgbe
—The internal Ethernet process ixgbe0 and ixgbe1 are used by the RE-DUO-C2600-16G Routing Engine, which is supported on TX Matrix Plus and PTX5000. -
iw
—Logical interfaces associated with the endpoints of Layer 2 circuit and Layer 2 VPN connections (pseudowire stitching Layer 2 VPNs). For more information about VPNs, see the Junos OS VPNs Library for Routing Devices. -
lc
—Internally generated interface that is not configurable. -
lo
—Loopback interface. The Junos OS automatically configures one loopback interface (lo0
). The logical interfacelo0.16383
is a nonconfigurable interface for router control traffic. -
ls
—Link services interface. -
lsi
—Internally generated interface that is not configurable. -
ml
—Multilink interface (including Multilink Frame Relay and MLPPP). -
mo
—Monitoring services interface (including monitoring services and monitoring services II). The logical interfacemo-fpc/pic/port.16383
is an internally generated, nonconfigurable interface for router control traffic. -
ms
—Multiservices interface. -
mt
—Multicast tunnel interface (internal router interface for VPNs). If your router has a Tunnel PIC, the Junos OS automatically configures one multicast tunnel interface (mt
) for each VPN you configure. Although it is not necessary to configure multicast interfaces, you can use themulticast-only
statement to configure the unit and family so that the tunnel can transmit and receive multicast traffic only. For more information, see multicast-only. -
mtun
—Internally generated interface that is not configurable. -
oc3
—OC3 IQ interface (configured on the Channelized OC12 IQ and IQE PICs or Channelized OC3 IQ and IQE PICs). -
pd
—Interface on the rendezvous point (RP) that de-encapsulates packets. -
pe
—Interface on the first-hop PIM router that encapsulates packets destined for the RP router. -
pimd
—Internally generated interface that is not configurable. -
pime
—Internally generated interface that is not configurable. -
pip
—Provider Instance Port (PIP) interface for EVPNs. -
rlsq
—Container interface, numbered from 0 through 127, used to tie the primary and secondary LSQ PICs together in high-availability configurations. Any failure of the primary PIC results in a switch to the secondary PIC, and vice versa. -
rms
—Redundant interface for two multiservices interfaces. -
rsp
—Redundant virtual interface for the adaptive services interface. -
se
—Serial interface (including EIA-530, V.35, and X.21 interfaces). -
si
—Services-inline interface, which is hosted on a Trio-based line card. -
so
—SONET/SDH interface. -
sp
—Adaptive services interface. The logical interfacesp-fpc/pic/port.16383
is an internally generated, nonconfigurable interface for router control traffic. -
stm1
—STM1 interface (configured on the OC3/STM1 interfaces). -
stm4
—STM4 interface (configured on the OC12/STM4 interfaces). -
stm16
—STM16 interface (configured on the OC48/STM16 interfaces). -
t1
—T1 interface (including channelized DS3-to-DS1 interfaces). -
t3
—T3 interface (including channelized OC12-to-DS3 interfaces). -
tap
—Internally generated interface that is not configurable. -
umd
—USB modem interface. -
vsp
—Voice services interface. -
vc4
—Virtually concatenated interface. -
vt
—Virtual loopback tunnel interface. -
vtep
—Virtual tunnel endpoint interface for VXLANS. -
xe
—10-Gigabit Ethernet interface. Some older 10-Gigabit Ethernet interfaces use thege
media type (rather thanxe
) to identify the physical part of the network device. -
xt
—Logical interface for Protected System Domains to establish a Layer 2 tunnel connection.
fpc
identifies the number of the
FPC or DPC card on which the physical interface is located. Specifically, it is the
number of the slot in which the card is installed.
M40, M40e, M160, M320, M120, T320, T640, and T1600 routers each have eight FPC slots that are numbered 0 through 7, from left to right as you face the front of the chassis. For information about compatible FPCs and PICs, see the hardware guide for your router.
On PTX1000 routers, the FPC number is always 0.
The M20 router has four FPC slots that are numbered 0 through 3, from top to bottom as you face the front of the chassis. The slot number is printed adjacent to each slot.
MX Series routers support DPCs, FPCs, and Modular Interface Cards (MICs). For information about compatible DPCs, FPCs, PICs, and MICs, see the MX Series Interface Module Reference.
For M5, M7i, M10, and M10i routers, the FPCs are built in to the chassis; you install the PICs in the chassis.
The M5 and M7i routers have space for up to four PICs. The M7i router also comes with an integrated Tunnel PIC, or an optional integrated AS PIC, or an optional integrated MS PIC.
The M10 and M10i routers have space for up to eight PICs.
A routing matrix can have up to 32 FPCs (numbered 0 through 31).
For more information about interface naming for a routing matrix, see Interface Naming for a Routing Matrix Based on a TX Matrix Router.
pic
identifies the number of the PIC on which the
physical interface is located. Specifically, it is the number of the PIC location on
the FPC. The slots in an FPC with four PIC slots are numbered 0 through 3. The slots
in an FPC with three PIC slots are numbered 0 through 2. The PIC location is printed
on the FPC carrier board. For PICs that occupy more than one PIC slot, the lower PIC
slot number identifies the PIC location.
port
identifies a specific port
on a PIC or DPC. The number of ports varies, depending on the PIC. The port numbers
are printed on the PIC.
channel
identifies the channel identifier part of
the interface name and is required only on channelized interfaces. For channelized
interfaces, channel 0 identifies the first channelized interface.
Logical Part of an Interface Name
The logical unit part of the interface name corresponds to the logical unit number. The range of available numbers varies for different interface types.
In the virtual part of the name, a period (.) separates the port and logical unit numbers:
type-fpc/pic/port[:channel]
.logical-unit
Separators in an Interface Name
There is a separator between each element of an interface name.
In the physical part of the name, a hyphen (-) separates the media type from the FPC number, and a slash (/) separates the FPC, PIC, and port numbers.
In the virtual part of the name, a period (.) separates the channel and logical unit numbers.
A colon (:) separates the physical and virtual parts of the interface name.
Channel Part of an Interface Name
The channel identifier part of the interface name is required only on channelized interfaces. For channelized interfaces, channel 0 identifies the first channelized interface. For channelized IQ and channelized IQE interfaces, channel 1 identifies the first channelized interface. A nonconcatenated (that is, channelized) SONET/SDH OC48 interface has four OC12 channels, numbered 0 through 3.
To determine which types of channelized PICs are currently installed in the router,
use the show chassis hardware
command from the top level of the
CLI. Channelized IQ and IQE PICs are listed in the output with “intelligent queuing
IQ” or “enhanced intelligent queuing IQE” in the description. For more information,
see Channelized Interfaces Overview.
For ISDN interfaces, you specify the B-channel in the form
bc-pim/0/port:n
.
In this example, n
is the B-channel ID and can
be 1 or 2. You specify the D-channel in the form
dc-pim/0/port:0
.
For ISDN, the B-channel and D-channel interfaces do not have any configurable parameters. However, when interface statistics are displayed, B-channel and D-channel interfaces have statistical values.
In the Junos OS implementation, the term logical interfaces generally
refers to interfaces you configure by including the unit
statement at the [edit interfaces
interface-name]
hierarchy level. Logical
interfaces have the .logical
descriptor at
the end of the interface name, as in ge-0/0/0.1
or
t1-0/0/0:0.1
, where the logical unit number is
1
.
Although channelized interfaces are generally thought of as logical or virtual,
the Junos OS sees T3, T1, and NxDS0 interfaces within a channelized IQ or IQE
PIC as physical interfaces. For example, both t3-0/0/0
and
t3-0/0/0:1
are treated as physical interfaces by the Junos
OS. In contrast, t3-0/0/0.2
and t3-0/0/0:1.2
are considered logical interfaces because they have the .2
at
the end of the interface names.
Interface Naming for a Routing Matrix Based on a TX Matrix Router
A routing matrix based on a Juniper Networks TX Matrix router is a multichassis architecture composed of one TX Matrix router and from one to four interconnected T640 routers. From the perspective of the user interface, the routing matrix appears as a single router. The TX Matrix router controls all the T640 routers, as shown in Figure 1.
A TX Matrix router is also referred to as a switch-card chassis (SCC). The CLI
uses scc
to refer to the TX Matrix router. A T640 router in a
routing matrix is also referred to as a line-card chassis (LCC). The CLI uses
lcc
as a prefix to refer to a specific T640 router.
All LCCs are assigned numbers 0 through 3, depending on the hardware setup and connectivity to the TX Matrix router. For more information, see the TX Matrix Router Hardware Guide. A routing matrix can have up to four T640 routers, and each T640 router has up to eight FPCs. Therefore, the routing matrix as a whole can have up to 32 FPCs (0 through 31).
In the Junos OS CLI, an interface name has the following format:
type-fpc/pic/port
When you specify the fpc
number for a T640 router
in a routing matrix, the Junos OS determines which T640 router contains the
specified FPC based on the following assignment:
-
On LCC 0, FPC hardware slots 0 through 7 are configured as 0 through 7.
-
On LCC 1, FPC hardware slots 0 through 7 are configured as 8 through 15.
-
On LCC 2, FPC hardware slots 0 through 7 are configured as 16 through 23.
-
On LCC 3, FPC hardware slots 0 through 7 are configured as 24 through 31.
For example, the 1
in se-1/0/0
refers to FPC
hardware slot 1 on the T640 router labeled lcc0
. The
11
in t1-11/2/0
refers to FPC hardware slot 3
on the T640 router labeled lcc1
. The 20
in
so-20/0/1
refers to FPC hardware slot 4 on the T640 router
labeled lcc2
. The 31
in t3-31/1/0
refers to FPC hardware slot 7 on the T640 router labeled lcc3
.
Table 1 summarizes the FPC numbering for a T640 router in a routing matrix.
LCC Numbers Assigned to the T640 Router |
Configuration Numbers |
---|---|
0 |
0 through 7 |
1 |
8 through 15 |
2 |
16 through 23 |
3 |
24 through 31 |
Table 2 lists each FPC hardware slot and the corresponding configuration numbers for LCCs 0 through 3.
FPC Numbering |
T640 Routers |
|||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
LCC 0 | |||||||
Hardware Slots |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
Configuration Numbers |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
LCC 1 | ||||||||
Hardware Slots |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
Configuration Numbers |
8 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
LCC 2 | ||||||||
Hardware Slots |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
Configuration Numbers |
16 |
17 |
18 |
19 |
20 |
21 |
22 |
23 |
LCC 3 | ||||||||
Hardware Slots |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
Configuration Numbers |
24 |
25 |
26 |
27 |
28 |
29 |
30 |
31 |
Interface Naming for a Routing Matrix Based on a TX Matrix Plus Router
A routing matrix based on a Juniper Networks TX Matrix Plus Router is a multichassis architecture composed of one TX Matrix Plus router and from one to four interconnected T1600 routers. From the perspective of the user interface, the routing matrix appears as a single router. The TX Matrix Plus router controls all the T1600 routers, as shown in Figure 2.
A TX Matrix Plus router is also referred to as a switch-fabric chassis (SFC).
The CLI uses sfc
to refer to the TX Matrix Plus router. A T1600
router in a routing matrix is also referred to as a line-card chassis (LCC).
The CLI uses lcc
as a prefix to refer to a specific T1600
router.
The LCCs are assigned numbers, 0 through 3, depending on the hardware setup and connectivity to the TX Matrix Plus router. For more information, see the TX Matrix Plus Router Hardware Guide. A routing matrix based on a TX Matrix Plus router can have up to four T1600 routers, and each T1600 router has up to eight FPCs. Therefore, the routing matrix as a whole can have up to 32 FPCs (0 through 31).
In the Junos OS CLI, an interface name has the following format:
type-fpc/pic/port
When you specify the fpc
number for a T1600
router in a routing matrix, the Junos OS determines which T1600 router contains the
specified FPC based on the following assignment:
-
On LCC 0, FPC hardware slots 0 through 7 are configured as 0 through 7.
-
On LCC 1, FPC hardware slots 0 through 7 are configured as 8 through 15.
-
On LCC 2, FPC hardware slots 0 through 7 are configured as 16 through 23.
-
On LCC 3, FPC hardware slots 0 through 7 are configured as 24 through 31.
For example, the 1
in se-1/0/0
refers to FPC
hardware slot 1 on the T1600 router labeled lcc0
. The
11
in t1-11/2/0
refers to FPC hardware slot 3
on the T1600 router labeled lcc1
. The 20
in
so-20/0/1
refers to FPC hardware slot 4 on the T1600 router
labeled lcc2
. The 31
in t3-31/1/0
refers to FPC hardware slot 7 on the T1600 router labeled lcc3
.
Table 3 summarizes the FPC numbering for a routing matrix based on a TX Matrix Plus router.
LCC Numbers Assigned to the T1600 Router |
Configuration Numbers |
---|---|
0 |
0 through 7 |
1 |
8 through 15 |
2 |
16 through 23 |
3 |
24 through 31 |
Table 4 lists each FPC hardware slot and the corresponding configuration numbers for LCCs 0 through 3.
FPC Numbering |
T1600 Routers |
|||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
LCC 0 | |||||||
Hardware Slots |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
Configuration Numbers |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
LCC 1 | ||||||||
Hardware Slots |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
Configuration Numbers |
8 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
LCC 2 | ||||||||
Hardware Slots |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
Configuration Numbers |
16 |
17 |
18 |
19 |
20 |
21 |
22 |
23 |
LCC 3 | ||||||||
Hardware Slots |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
Configuration Numbers |
24 |
25 |
26 |
27 |
28 |
29 |
30 |
31 |
Chassis Interface Naming
You configure some PIC properties, such as framing, at the [edit
chassis]
hierarchy level. Chassis interface naming varies, depending on
the routing hardware.
-
To configure PIC properties for a standalone router, you must specify the FPC and PIC numbers, as follows:
[edit chassis] fpc slot-number { pic pic-number { ... } }
-
To configure PIC properties for a T640 or T1600 router configured in a routing matrix, you must specify the LCC, FPC, and PIC numbers, as follows:
[edit chassis] lcc lcc-number { fpc slot-number { # Use the hardware FPC slot number pic pic-number { ... } } }
For the FPC slot in a T640 router in a routing matrix, specify the actual hardware slot number, as labeled on the T640 router chassis. Do not use the corresponding software FPC configuration numbers shown in Table 2.
For the FPC slot in a T1600 router in a routing matrix, specify the actual hardware slot number, as labeled on the T1600 router chassis. Do not use the corresponding software FPC configuration numbers shown in Table 3.
For more information about the [edit chassis]
hierarchy, see the Junos OS Administration Library for Routing Devices.
Examples: Interface Naming
This section provides examples of naming interfaces. For an illustration of where slots, PICs, and ports are located, see Figure 3.
For an FPC in slot 1 with two OC3 SONET/SDH PICs in PIC positions 0 and 1, each PIC with two ports uses the following names:
so-1/0/0.0 so-1/0/1.0 so-1/1/0.0 so-1/1/1.0
An OC48 SONET/SDH PIC in slot 1 and in concatenated mode appears as a single FPC with a single PIC, which has a single port. If this interface has a single logical unit, it has the following name:
so-1/0/0.0
An OC48 SONET/SDH PIC in slot 1 and in channelized mode has a number for each channel. For example:
so-1/0/0:0 so-1/0/0:1
For an FPC in slot 1 with a Channelized OC12 PIC in PIC position 2, the DS3 channels have the following names:
t3-1/2/0:0 t3-1/2/0:1 t3-1/2/0:2 ... t3-1/2/0:11
For an FPC in slot 1 with four OC12 ATM PICs (the FPC is fully populated), the four PICs, each with a single port and a single logical unit, have the following names:
at-1/0/0.0 at-1/1/0.0 at-1/2/0.0 at-1/3/0.0
In a routing matrix on the T640 router labeled lcc1
, for an FPC in
slot 5 with four SONET OC192 PICs, the four PICs, each with a single port and a
single logical unit, have the following names:
so-13/0/0.0 so-13/1/0.0 so-13/2/0.0 so-13/3/0.0
For an FPC in slot 1 with one 4-port ISDN BRI interface card, port 4 has the following name:
br-1/0/4
The first B-channel, the second B-channel, and the control channel have the following names:
bc-1/0/4:1 bc-1/0/4:2 dc-1/0/4:0
Interface Descriptors Overview
When you configure an interface, you are effectively specifying the properties for a physical interface descriptor. In most cases, the physical interface descriptor corresponds to a single physical device and consists of the following parts:
-
The interface name, which defines the media type
-
The slot in which the FPC is located
-
The location on the FPC in which the PIC is installed
-
The PIC port
-
The interface’s channel and logical unit numbers (optional)
Each physical interface descriptor can contain one or more logical interface descriptors. These descriptors enable you to map one or more logical (or virtual) interfaces to a single physical device. Creating multiple logical interfaces enables you to associate multiple virtual circuits, data-link connections, or virtual LANs (VLANs) with a single interface device.
Each logical interface descriptor can have one or more family descriptors to define the protocol family that is associated with and allowed to run over the logical interface.
The following protocol families are supported:
-
Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) suite (inet)
-
Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) suite (inet6)
-
Ethernet (ethernet switching)
-
Circuit cross-connect (CCC)
-
Translational cross-connect (TCC)
-
International Organization for Standardization (ISO)
-
Multilink Frame Relay end-to-end (MLFR end-to-end)
-
Multilink Frame Relay user-to-network interface network-to-network interface (MLFR UNI NNI)
-
Multilink Point-to-Point Protocol (MLPPP)
-
Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS)
-
Trivial Network Protocol (TNP)
-
(M Series, T Series, and MX Series routers only) Virtual private LAN service (VPLS)
Finally, each family descriptor can have one or more address entries, which associate a network address with a logical interface and hence with the physical interface.
You configure the various interface descriptors as follows:
-
You configure the physical interface descriptor by including the
interfaces interface-name
statement. -
You configure the logical interface descriptor by including the
unit
statement within theinterfaces interface-name
statement or by including the.logical
descriptor at the end of the interface name, as inet-0/0/0.1
, where the logical unit number is 1, as shown in the following examples:[edit] user@host# set interfaces et-0/0/0 unit 1 [edit] user@host# edit interfaces et-0/0/0.1 [edit interfaces et-0/0/0] user@host# set unit 1
-
You configure the family descriptor by including the family statement within the
unit
statement. -
You configure address entries by including the address statement within the family statement.
-
You configure tunnels by including the tunnel statement within the
unit
statement.
The address of a logical interface cannot be the same as a tunnel interface’s source or destination address. If you try to configure a logical interface with a tunnel interface’s address or vice versa, a commit failure will occur.
Physical Part of an Interface Name
- Interface Names for ACX Series, PTX Series, and QFX Series Devices
- Interface Names for M Series and T Series Routers
- Interface Names for MX Series Routers
Interface Names for ACX Series, PTX Series, and QFX Series Devices
When you display information about an interface, you specify the interface type, the slot in which the Flexible PIC Concentrator (FPC) is installed, the slot on the FPC in which the Physical Interface Card (PIC) is located, and the configured port number.
Some Juniper devices do not have actual PICs. Instead, they have built-in network ports on the front panel of the router. These ports are named using the same naming convention used for devices with PICs with the understanding that the FPC, PIC, and port are pseudo devices. When you display information about one of these ports, you specify the interface type, the slot for the Flexible PIC Concentrator (FPC), the slot on the FPC for the Physical Interface Card (PIC), and the configured port number.
In the CLI, all PTX3000 PICs are represented as pic0
. For more
information, see PTX3000 PIC Description.
In the physical part of the interface name, a hyphen (-) separates the media type (for example, et) from the FPC number. A slash (/) separates the FPC, PIC, and port numbers. A colon (:) separates the port number and channel (optional):
type-fpc/pic/port[:channel]
Interface Names for M Series and T Series Routers
On M Series and T Series routers, when you display information about an interface, you specify the interface type, the slot in which the Flexible PIC Concentrator (FPC) is installed, the slot on the FPC in which the Physical Interface Card (PIC) is located, and the configured port number.
In the physical part of the interface name, a hyphen (-) separates the media type from the FPC number, and a slash (/) separates the FPC, PIC, and port numbers:
type-fpc/pic/port
Exceptions to the type-fpc/pic/port physical description include the aggregated Ethernet and aggregated SONET/SDH interfaces, which use the syntax ae number and as number, respectively.
Interface Names for MX Series Routers
On MX Series routers when you display information about an interface, you specify the interface type, the Dense Port Concentrator (DPC), Flexible PIC Concentrator (FPC), or Modular Port Concentrator (MPC) slot, the PIC or MIC slot, and the configured port number.
Although the MX Series routers use DPCs, FPCs, MPCs, MICs, and PICs, command syntax in this book is shown as fpc/pic/port for simplicity.
In the physical part of the interface name, a hyphen (-
) separates the media type from the FPC number, and a slash (/
) separates the DPC, FPC or MPC, MIC or PIC, and port numbers:
type-fpc/pic/port
fpc—Slot in which the DPC, FPC, or MPC is installed.
pic—Slot on the FPC in which the PIC is located.
For DPCs, MICs, and the 16-port MPC, the PIC value is a logical grouping of ports and varies on different platforms.
port—Port number on the DPC, PIC, MPC, or MIC.
Displaying Interface Configurations
To display a configuration, use either the show
command in configuration mode or
the show configuration
top-level command. Interfaces are listed in
numerical order, first from lowest to highest slot number, and then from lowest to
highest PIC number, and finally from lowest to highest port number.
Interface Encapsulations Overview
Table 5 lists encapsulation support by interface type.
Interface Type |
Physical Interface Encapsulation |
Logical Interface Encapsulation |
---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
NA |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NA |
NA |
|
NA |
NA |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NA |
NA |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NA |
NA |
|
|
|
|
NA |
NA |
Ethernet interfaces |
|
|
|
NA |
NA |
|
NA |
NA |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NA |
|
|
NA |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Controller-level channelized IQ interfaces ( |
NA |
NA |
Services interfaces ( |
NA |
NA |
Unconfigurable, internally generated interfaces
( |
NA |
NA |
You can configure GRE interfaces (gre-x/y/z) only for GMPLS control channels. GRE interfaces are not supported or configurable for other applications. For more information about GMPLS, see the Junos OS MPLS Applications User Guide.
Understanding Transient Interfaces
The M Series, MX Series, and T Series routers contain slots for installing Flexible PIC Concentrator [FPC] or Dense Port Concentrator [DPC] (for MX Series routers) or Modular Port Concentrator [MPC] (for MX Series routers). Physical Interface Card [PIC] can be installed in FPCs. Modular Interface Card [MIC] can be inserted into MPCs.
The number of PICs that can be installed varies by device and type of FPC. The PICs provide the actual physical interfaces to the network. The MX Series routers contain slots for installing either DPC boards that provide the physical interfaces to the network or for installing FPCs in which PICs can be installed.
You can insert any DPC or FPC into any slot that supports them in the appropriate router. Typically, you can place any combination of PICs, compatible with your router, in any location on an FPC. (You are limited by the total FPC bandwidth, and by the fact that some PICs physically require two or four of the PIC locations on the FPC. In some cases, power limitations or microcode limitations may also apply.) To determine DPC and PIC compatibility, see the see your router’s Interface Module Reference.
You can insert MPC into any slot that supports them in the appropriate router. You can install up to two MICs of different media types in the same MPC as long as the MPC supports those MICs.
These physical interfaces are transient interfaces of the router. They are referred to as transient because you can hot-swap a DPC or FPC or MPC and its PICs or MICs at any time.
You must configure each transient interface based on the slot in which the FPC or DPC or MPC is installed, the location in which the PIC or MIC is installed, and for multiple port PICs or MICs , the port to which you are connecting.
You can configure the interfaces on PICs or MICs that are already installed in the router as well as interfaces on PICs or MICs that you plan to install later. The Junos OS detects which interfaces are actually present, so when the software activates its configuration, it activates only the present interfaces and retains the configuration information for the interfaces that are not present. When the Junos OS detects that an FPC containing PICs or MPC containing MICs has been inserted into the router, the software activates the configuration for those interfaces.
Understanding Services Interfaces
Services interfaces enable you to incrementally add services to your network. The Junos OS supports the following services PICs:
Adaptive Services (AS) PICs—Enable you to provide multiple services on a single PIC by configuring a set of services and applications. The AS PICs offer a special range of services that you configure in one or more service sets.
ES PIC—Provides a security suite for the IP version 4 (IPv4) and IP version 6 (IPv6) network layers. The suite provides functionality such as authentication of origin, data integrity, confidentiality, replay protection, and nonrepudiation of source. It also defines mechanisms for key generation and exchange, management of security associations, and support for digital certificates.
Monitoring Services PICs—Enable you to monitor traffic flow and export the monitored traffic. Monitoring traffic enables you to gather and export detailed information about IPv4 traffic flows between source and destination nodes in your network; sample all incoming IPv4 traffic on the monitoring interface and present the data in cflowd record format; perform discard accounting on an incoming traffic flow; encrypt or tunnel outgoing cflowd records, intercepted IPv4 traffic, or both; and direct filtered traffic to different packet analyzers and present the data in its original format. On a Monitoring Services II PIC, you can configure either monitoring interfaces or collector interfaces. A collector interface enables you to combine multiple cflowd records into a compressed ASCII data file and export the file to an FTP server.
Multilink Services, MultiServices, Link Services, and Voice Services PICs—Enable you to split, recombine, and sequence datagrams across multiple logical data links. The goal of multilink operation is to coordinate multiple independent links between a fixed pair of systems, providing a virtual link with greater bandwidth than any of the members.
Tunnel Services PIC—By encapsulating arbitrary packets inside a transport protocol, tunneling provides a private, secure path through an otherwise public network. Tunnels connect discontinuous subnetworks and enable encryption interfaces, virtual private networks (VPNs), and Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS).
On M Series and T Series routers, logical tunnel interfaces enable you to connect logical systems, virtual routers, or VPN instances. For more information about VPNs, see the Junos OS VPNs Library for Routing Devices. For more information about configuring tunnels, see the Junos OS Services Interfaces Library for Routing Devices.
Understanding Container Interfaces
Container interfaces provide the following features:
Automatic protection switching (APS) on SONET/SDH and ATM links are supported using the container infrastructure.
Container physical interfaces and logical interfaces remain up on switchover.
APS parameters are auto-copied from the container interface to the member links.
Paired groups and true unidirectional APS are not currently supported.
For more information on SONET/SDH configuration, see Configuring Container Interfaces for APS on SONET Links.
Container interfaces features are described in the following sections:
- Understanding Traditional APS Concept
- Container Interfaces Concept
- APS Support for Container-Based Interfaces
- Autocopy of APS Parameters
Understanding Traditional APS Concept
Traditional Automatic Protection Switching (APS) is configured on two independent physical SONET/SDH interfaces: one interface is configured as the working circuit and the other is configured as the protect circuit (see Figure 4). The circuit, named Circuit X in the figure, is the link between the two SONET interfaces.
Traditional APS uses routing protocols that run on each individual SONET/SDH interface (since circuit is an abstract construct, instead of being an actual interface). When the working link goes down, the APS infrastructure brings up the protect link and its underlying logical interfaces and brings down the working link and its underlying logical interfaces, causing the routing protocols to reconverge. This consumes time and leads to traffic loss even though the APS infrastructure has performed the switch quickly.
Container Interfaces Concept
To solve the problem of traffic loss, the Junos OS provides a soft interface construct called a container interface (see Figure 5).
The container interface allows routing protocols to run on the logical interfaces associated with a virtual container interface instead of on the physical SONET/SDH and ATM interfaces. When APS switches the underlying physical link based on a fault condition, the container interface remains up, and the logical interface on the container interface does not flap. The routing protocols remain unaware of the APS switching.
APS Support for Container-Based Interfaces
With the container interface, APS is configured on the container interface itself. Individual member SONET/SDH and ATM links are either marked as primary (corresponding to the working circuit) or standby (corresponding to the protect circuit) in the configuration. No circuit or group name is specified in the container interface model; physical SONET/SDH and ATM links are put in an APS group by linking them to a single container interface. APS parameters are specified at the container interface level and are propagated to the individual SONET/SDH and ATM links by the APS daemon.
Autocopy of APS Parameters
Typical applications require copying APS parameters from the working circuit to the protect circuit, since most of the parameters must be the same for both circuits. This is automatically done in the container interface. APS parameters are specified only once under the container physical interface configuration and are internally copied over to the individual physical SONET/SDH and ATM links.
See Also
Understanding Internal Ethernet Interfaces
Within a Juniper device, internal Ethernet interfaces provide communication between the Routing Engine and the Packet Forwarding Engines. Junos OS automatically configures internal Ethernet interfaces when Junos OS boots. Junos OS boots the packet-forwarding component hardware. When these components run, the Control Board (CB) uses the internal Ethernet interface to transmit hardware status information to the Routing Engine. Hardware status information includes the internal router temperature, the condition of the fans, whether an FPC has been removed or inserted, and information from the LCD on the craft interface.
To determine the supported internal Ethernet interfaces for your router, see Supported Routing Engines by Router.
Do not modify or remove the configuration for the internal Ethernet interface that Junos OS automatically configures. If you do, the device stops functioning.
-
Most Juniper devices—Junos OS creates the internal Ethernet interface. The internal Ethernet interface connects the Routing Engine
re0
to the Packet Forwarding Engines.If the device has redundant Routing Engines, another internal Ethernet interface is created on each Routing Engine (
re0
andre1
) in order to support fault tolerance. Two physical links betweenre0
andre1
connect the independent control planes. If one of the links fails, both Routing Engines can use the other link for IP communication. -
TX Matrix Plus routers—On a TX Matrix Plus router, the Routing Engine and Control Board function as a unit, or host subsystem. For each host subsystem in the router, the Junos OS automatically creates two internal Ethernet interfaces,
ixgbe0
andixgbe1
.The ixgbe0 and ixgbe1 interfaces connect the TX Matrix Plus Routing Engine to the Routing Engines of every line-card chassis (LCC) configured in the routing matrix.
The TX Matrix Plus Routing Engine connects to a high-speed switch through a 10-Gbps link within the host subsystem. The switch provides a 1-Gbps link to each T1600 Routing Engine. The 1-Gbps links are provided through the UTP Category 5 Ethernet cable connections between the TXP-CBs and the LCC-CBs in the LCCs.
-
The TX Matrix Plus Routing Engine connects to a high-speed switch in the local Control Board through a 10-Gbps link within the host subsystem.
-
The Gigabit Ethernet switch connects the Control Board to the remote Routing Engines of every LCC configured in the routing matrix.
If a TX Matrix Plus router contains redundant host subsystems, the independent control planes are connected by two physical links between the two 10-Gigabit Ethernet ports on their respective Routing Engines.
-
The primary link to the remote Routing Engine is at the
ixgbe0
interface; the 10-Gigabit Ethernet switch on the local Control Board also connects the Routing Engine to the 10-Gigabit Ethernet port accessed by theixgbe1
interface on the remote Routing Engine. -
The alternate link to the remote Routing Engine is the 10-Gigabit Ethernet port at the
ixgbe1
interface. This second port connects the Routing Engine to the 10-Gigabit Ethernet switch on the remote Control Board, which connects to the 10-Gigabit Ethernet port at theixgbe0
interface on the remote Routing Engine.
If one of the two links between the host subsystems fails, both Routing Engines can use the other link for IP communication.
-
-
LCC in a routing matrix—On an LCC configured in a routing matrix, the Routing Engine and Control Board function as a unit, or host subsystem. For each host subsystem in the LCC, the Junos OS automatically creates two internal Ethernet interfaces,
bcm0
andem1
, for the two Gigabit Ethernet ports on the Routing Engine.The
bcm0
interface connects the Routing Engine in each LCC to the Routing Engines of every other LCC configured in the routing matrix.-
The Routing Engine connects to a Gigabit Ethernet switch on the local Control Board.
-
The switch connects the Control Board to the remote Routing Engines of every other LCC configured in the routing matrix.
If an LCC in a routing matrix contains redundant host subsystems, the independent control planes are connected by two physical links between the Gigabit Ethernet ports on their respective Routing Engines.
-
The primary link to the remote Routing Engine is at the
bcm0
interface; the Gigabit Ethernet switch on the local Control Board also connects the Routing Engine to the Gigabit Ethernet port accessed by theem1
interface on the remote Routing Engine. -
The alternate link to the remote Routing Engine is at the
em1
interface. This second port connects the Routing Engine to the Gigabit Ethernet switch on the remote Control Board, which connects to the Gigabit Ethernet port at thebcm0
interface on the remote Routing Engine.
If one of the two links between the host subsystems fails, both Routing Engines can use the other link for IP communication.
-
Each device also has one or two serial ports, labeled CON (console) or AUX (auxiliary), for connecting tty type terminals to the device using standard PC-type tty cables. Although these ports are not network interfaces, they do provide access to the device. Refer to your devices hardware guide for details.
See Also
Understanding Interfaces on ACX Series Universal Metro Routers
ACX Series routers support time-division multiplexing (TDM) T1 and E1 interfaces and Ethernet (1 Gigabit Ethernet [GbE] copper, 1GbE, 10 GbE, and 40 GbE fiber) interfaces to support both the legacy and evolution needs of the mobile network. Support for Power over Ethernet (PoE+) at 65 watts per port mitigates the need for additional electrical cabling for microwaves or other access interfaces.
The ACX Series routers support the following:
TDM T1 and E1 ports:
The ACX1000 router contains eight T1 or E1 ports.
The ACX2000 router contains 16 T1 or E1 ports.
Inverse Multiplexing for ATM (IMA)
Note:ACX5048 and ACX5096 routers do not support T1 or E1 ports or Inverse Multiplexing for ATM (IMA).
Gigabit Ethernet ports:
The ACX1000 router contains eight GbE ports. The ACX1000 router also supports either four RJ45 (Cu) ports or installation of four GbE small form-factor pluggable (SFP) transceivers.
The ACX2000 router contains 16 GbE ports and two PoE ports. The ACX2000 router also supports installation of two GbE SFP transceivers and two 10-GbE SFP+ transceivers.
The ACX5448 router is a 10-GbE enhanced small form-factor pluggable (SFP+) top-of-rack router with 48 SFP+ ports and four 100-GbE QSFP28 ports. Each SFP+ port can operate as a native 10-GbE port or as a 1-GbE port when 1-Gigabit optics are inserted. The 48 ports on ACX5448 router can be configured as 1GE or 10GE modes, and these ports are represented by the xe interface type. The PIC 1 of FPC 0 has 4x100GE ports, where each port can be channelized as 1x100GE, 1x40GE, or 4x25GE modes and these ports are represented by the et interface type. By default, the port speed in PIC 1 is 100GE.
Note:The ACX5448 router do not support the Pseudowire Services interface.
Note:Only ACX5048, ACX5096, and ACX5448 routers support 40GbE. The ACX5448 router supports 40GbE channeling to 10GbE.
- T1 and E1 Time-Division Multiplexing (TDM) Interfaces
- Inverse Multiplexing for ATM (IMA)
- Gigabit Ethernet Interfaces
T1 and E1 Time-Division Multiplexing (TDM) Interfaces
On the ACX Series routers, existing Junos OS TDM features are supported without changes to statements or functionality. The following key TDM features for T1 (ct1) interfaces and E1 (ce1) interfaces are supported:
T1 and E1 channelization
T1 and E1 encapsulation
Alarms, defects, and statistics
External and internal loopback
TDM class of service (CoS)
T1 and E1 mode selection is at the PIC level. To set the T1 or E1 mode at the PIC level, include
the framing
statement with the t1 or
e1 option at the [chassis fpc
slot-number pic slot-number] hierarchy
level. All ports can be T1 or E1. Mixing T1s and E1s is not supported.
T1 or E1 BITS Interface (ACX2000)
The ACX2000 router has a T1 or E1 building-integrated timing
supply (BITS) interface that you can connect to an external clock.
After you connect the interface to the external clock, you can configure
the BITS interface so that the BITS interface becomes a candidate
source for chassis synchronization to the external clock. The frequency
of the BITS interface depends on the Synchronous Ethernet equipment client clock (EEC) selected with the network-option
statement at the [edit chassis synchronization] hierarchy
level.
The ACX1000 router does not support the BITS interface.
Inverse Multiplexing for ATM (IMA)
Defined by the ATM Forum, IMA specification version 1.1 is a standardized technology used to transport ATM traffic over a bundle of T1 and E1 interfaces, also known as an IMA group. Up to eight links per bundle and 16 bundles per PIC are supported. The following key IMA features are supported:
IMA Layer 2 encapsulation
ATM CoS
ATM policing and shaping
Denied packets count in the output for the
show interfaces at-fpc/pic/port extensive
command
Gigabit Ethernet Interfaces
On the ACX Series routers, existing Junos OS Ethernet features are supported without changes to statements or functionality. The following key features are supported:
Media type specification (ACX1000 router with GbE SFP and RJ45 interfaces)
Autonegotiation for RJ45 GbE interfaces
Event handling of SFP insertion and removal
Explicit disabling of the physical interface
Flow control
Note:The ACX Series router does not support flow control based on PAUSE frames.
Loopback
Loss of signal (LOS) alarm
Media access control (MAC) layer features
Maximum transmission unit (MTU)
Remote fault notification for 10-GbE interfaces
Statistics collection and handling
Power over Ethernet (PoE) (ACX2000 router)
High-power mode
The GbE ports on the router have the capacity to work as a 1-GbE or a 10-GbE interface, depending on the type of small form-factor pluggable (SFP) transceiver inserted. When you insert an SFP+ transceiver, the interface works at the 10-Gigabit speed. When you insert an SFP transceiver, the interface works at the 1-Gigabit speed. Configuration is not required because the speed is determined automatically based on the type of inserted SFP transceiver. The dual-speed interface is automatically created with the xe prefix, such as xe-4/0/0.
The same configuration statements are used for both speeds, and CoS parameters are scaled as a
percentage of the port speed. To configure a dual-speed GbE interface, include the
interface
xe-fpc/pic/port
statement at the [edit interfaces] hierarchy level. To display the
interface speed and other details, issue the show interfaces
command.
You need to use an industrial-grade SFP below 0dC for ACX 1100 and ACX 2100 boards.
See Also
TX Matrix Plus and T1600 Router (Routing Matrix) Management Ethernet Interfaces
For TX Matrix Plus Routers and for T1600 Core Routers with RE-C1800 configured in a routing matrix, the Junos OS automatically creates the router’s management Ethernet interface, em0. To use em0 as a management port, you must configure its logical port, em0.0, with a valid IP address.
When you enter the show interfaces
command on a TX
Matrix Plus router, the management Ethernet interfaces (and logical
interfaces) are displayed:
user@host> show interfaces ? ... em0 em0.0 ...
The Routing Engines in the TX Matrix Plus router and in the T1600 routers with RE-C1800 configured in a routing matrix do not support the management Ethernet interface fxp0. They don't support the internal Ethernet interfaces fxp1 or fxp2, either.
See Also
T1600 Routers (Routing Matrix) Internal Ethernet Interfaces
On a T1600 router configured in a routing matrix, the Routing Engine (RE-TXP-LCC) and Control Board (LCC-CB) function as a unit, or host subsystem. For each host subsystem in the router, the Junos OS automatically creates two internal Ethernet interfaces, bcm0 and em1, for the two Gigabit Ethernet ports on the Routing Engine.