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authorrebortg <github@ghlr.de>2021-07-09 21:37:58 +0200
committerrebortg <github@ghlr.de>2021-07-09 21:37:58 +0200
commit8f63c885d677cae778cdf2f7b28665e4e498fdf0 (patch)
treefbdb02f84b677b0c26481f87a8d9745870c34189
parentdd51a0f8f9ae2e2f3d24bfc8da35b4e8e2cda2eb (diff)
downloadvyos-documentation-8f63c885d677cae778cdf2f7b28665e4e498fdf0.tar.gz
vyos-documentation-8f63c885d677cae778cdf2f7b28665e4e498fdf0.zip
tunnel: correct spelling and grammar
-rw-r--r--docs/configuration/interfaces/tunnel.rst20
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/docs/configuration/interfaces/tunnel.rst b/docs/configuration/interfaces/tunnel.rst
index 7f7cd709..6a5fb171 100644
--- a/docs/configuration/interfaces/tunnel.rst
+++ b/docs/configuration/interfaces/tunnel.rst
@@ -1,3 +1,5 @@
+:lastproofread: 2021-07-09
+
.. _tunnel-interface:
Tunnel
@@ -99,8 +101,8 @@ A full example of a Tunnelbroker.net config can be found at
Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE)
-----------------------------------
-A GRE tunnel operates at layer 3 of the OSI model and is repsented by IP
-protocol 47.The main benefit of a GRE tunnel is that you are able to carry
+A GRE tunnel operates at layer 3 of the OSI model and is represented by IP
+protocol 47. The main benefit of a GRE tunnel is that you are able to carry
multiple protocols inside the same tunnel. GRE also supports multicast traffic
and supports routing protocols that leverage multicast to form neighbor
adjacencies.
@@ -112,12 +114,12 @@ over either IPv4 (gre) or IPv6 (ip6gre).
Configuration
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-A basic configuration requires a tunnel source (source-address), a tunnel destination
-(remote), an encapsulation type (gre), and an address (ipv4/ipv6).Below is a
-basic IPv4 only configuration example taken from a VyOS router and a Cisco IOS
-router. The main difference between these two configurations is that VyOS
-requires you explicitly configure the encapsulation type. The Cisco router
-defaults to gre ip otherwise it would have to be configured as well.
+A basic configuration requires a tunnel source (source-address), a tunnel
+destination (remote), an encapsulation type (gre), and an address (ipv4/ipv6).
+Below is a basic IPv4 only configuration example taken from a VyOS router and
+a Cisco IOS router. The main difference between these two configurations is
+that VyOS requires you explicitly configure the encapsulation type. The Cisco
+router defaults to GRE IP otherwise it would have to be configured as well.
**VyOS Router:**
@@ -224,7 +226,7 @@ GRE is a well defined standard that is common in most networks. While not
inherently difficult to configure there are a couple of things to keep in mind
to make sure the configuration performs as expected. A common cause for GRE
tunnels to fail to come up correctly include ACL or Firewall configurations
-that are discarding IP protocol 47 or blocking your source/desintation traffic.
+that are discarding IP protocol 47 or blocking your source/destination traffic.
**1. Confirm IP connectivity between tunnel source-address and remote:**