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Diffstat (limited to 'docs/configuration/interfaces/dummy.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/configuration/interfaces/dummy.rst | 15 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/docs/configuration/interfaces/dummy.rst b/docs/configuration/interfaces/dummy.rst index c9845230..f5b72e0c 100644 --- a/docs/configuration/interfaces/dummy.rst +++ b/docs/configuration/interfaces/dummy.rst @@ -11,12 +11,15 @@ you can have as many as you want. .. note:: Dummy interfaces can be used as interfaces that always stay up (in the same fashion to loopbacks in Cisco IOS), or for testing purposes. -.. hint:: A Dummy interface is always up, thus it could be used for - management traffic or as source/destination for and :abbr:`IGP (Interior - Gateway Protocol)` like :ref:`bgp` so your internal BGP link is not dependent - on physical link states and multiple routes can be chosen to the - destination. A :ref:`dummy-interface` Interface should always be preferred - over a :ref:`loopback-interface` interface. +.. hint:: On systems with multiple redundant uplinks and routes, + it's a good idea to use a dedicated address for management and dynamic routing protocols. + However, assigning that address to a physical link is risky: + if that link goes down, that address will become inaccessible. + A common solution is to assign the management address to a loopback or a dummy interface + and advertise that address via all physical links, so that it's reachable + through any of them. Since in Linux-based systems, there can be only one loopback interface, + it's better to use a dummy interface for that purpose, since they can be added, removed, + and taken up and down independently. ************* Configuration |