The “priority” and “weight” are used for priority and load balancing but they will not be discussed in detail here to keep this lab simple. In order to see the LISP database mapping table, we can use the “show ip lisp database” command: We can assign multiple different EIDs to the same RLOC (which will be discussed later in this lab). Therefore in the above command, the “1.1.1.0/24” is the EID while the “10.10.14.1” is the RLOC. The “database-mapping 1.1.1.0/24 10.10.14.1 priority 1 weight 100” is used to configure the LISP database mapping, which describes the Endpoint Identifier-to-Routing locator (EID-to-RLOC) mapping relationship. No LISP related configuration needed on R4. Ipv4 etr map-server 10.10.34.3 key tut_siteB The final configs of all routers can be downloaded here.ĭatabase-mapping 1.1.1.0/24 10.10.14.1 priority 1 weight 100 This lab is created with IOUWeb so you can download the lab file here. It acts as an underlay network (includes multiple WAN transport technologies such as MPLS, broadband, 4G, Internet connections…). Notice that R4 does not have any static route. In this lab we will configure a simple topology so that the Loopback0 interface on R1 can ping the Loopback0 interface on R2 via LISP.
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