If you are using the current version of Cumulus Linux, the content on this page may not be up to date. The current version of the documentation is available here. If you are redirected to the main page of the user guide, then this page may have been renamed; please search for it there.

Troubleshooting

This section provides various commands to help you examine your EVPN configuration and provides troubleshooting tips.

All of the following outputs are from the EVPN Symmetric Cumulus in the Cloud demo.

General Linux Commands

You can use various iproute2 and NCLU commands to examine links, VLAN mappings and the bridge MAC forwarding database known to the Linux kernel. You can also use these commands to examine the neighbor cache and the routing table (for the underlay or for a specific tenant VRF). Some of the key commands are:

  • ip [-d] link show
  • bridge link show
  • bridge vlan show
  • bridge [-s] fdb show
  • ip neighbor show
  • ip route show [table <vrf-name>]

A sample output of ip -d link show type vxlan is shown below for one VXLAN interface. Relevant parameters are the VNI value, the state, the local IP address for the VXLAN tunnel, the UDP port number (4789) and the bridge of which the interface is part (bridge in the example below). The output also shows that MAC learning is disabled (off) on the VXLAN interface.

cumulus@leaf01:~$ ip -d link show type vxlan
14: vni10: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 9216 qdisc noqueue master bridge state UP mode DEFAULT group default qlen 1000
    link/ether 42:83:73:20:46:ba brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff promiscuity 1 minmtu 68 maxmtu 65535
    vxlan id 10 local 10.0.1.1 srcport 0 0 dstport 4789 nolearning ttl 64 ageing 300 udpcsum noudp6zerocsumtx noudp6zerocsumrx
    bridge_slave state forwarding priority 8 cost 100 hairpin off guard off root_block off fastleave off learning off flood on port_id 0x8005 port_no 0x5 designated_port 32773 designated_cost 0 designated_bridge 8000.76:ed:2a:8a:67:24 designated_root 8000.76:ed:2a:8a:67:24 hold_timer    0.00 message_age_timer    0.00 forward_delay_timer    0.00 topology_change_ack 0 config_pending 0 proxy_arp off proxy_arp_wifi off mcast_router 1 mcast_fast_leave off mcast_flood on neigh_suppress on group_fwd_mask 0x0 group_fwd_mask_str 0x0 group_fwd_maskhi 0x0 group_fwd_maskhi_str 0x0 vlan_tunnel off isolated off addrgenmode eui64 numtxqueues 1 numrxqueues 1 gso_max_size 65536 gso_max_segs 65535
...

The following example output for the net show bridge macs command shows:

  • bond1 is an access ports with VLAN ID 10. This is mapped to VXLAN interface vni10.
  • 26:76:e6:93:32:78 is the server01 host MAC learned on bond1.
  • A remote VTEP that participate in VLAN ID 10 is 10.0.1.2 (the FDB entries have a MAC address of 00:00:00:00:00:00). These entries are used for BUM traffic replication.
  • 68:0f:31:ae:3d:7a is a remote host MAC of server04 reachable over the VXLAN tunnel via VTEP 10.0.1.2.
cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show bridge macs

VLAN      Master  Interface  MAC                TunnelDest  State      Flags               LastSeen
--------  ------  ---------  -----------------  ----------  ---------  ------------------  --------
10        bridge  bond1      00:60:08:69:97:ef                                             00:01:40
10        bridge  bond1      26:76:e6:93:32:78                                             <1 sec
10        bridge  bridge     00:00:00:00:00:1a              permanent                      00:13:08
10        bridge  bridge     76:ed:2a:8a:67:24              permanent                      00:13:08
10        bridge  peerlink   c0:8a:e6:03:96:d0              static     sticky              00:12:58
10        bridge  vni10      50:88:b2:3c:08:f9              static     sticky              00:10:01
10        bridge  vni10      68:0f:31:ae:3d:7a                         extern_learn        00:09:58
10        bridge  vni10      94:8e:1c:0d:77:93                         extern_learn        00:09:58
10        bridge  vni10      c8:7d:bc:96:71:f3              static     sticky              00:10:01
20        bridge  bond2      cc:6e:fa:8d:ff:92                                             00:00:26
20        bridge  bond2      f0:9d:d0:59:60:5d                                             00:00:08
20        bridge  bridge     00:00:00:00:00:1b              permanent                      00:36:50
20        bridge  bridge     76:ed:2a:8a:67:24              permanent                      00:36:50
20        bridge  peerlink   c0:8a:e6:03:96:d0              static     sticky              00:36:41
20        bridge  vni20      12:15:9a:9c:f2:e1                         extern_learn        00:33:41
20        bridge  vni20      50:88:b2:3c:08:f9              static     sticky              00:33:44
20        bridge  vni20      c8:7d:bc:96:71:f3              static     sticky              00:33:44
20        bridge  vni20      f8:4f:db:ef:be:8b                         extern_learn        00:33:40
untagged          vni10      00:00:00:00:00:00  10.0.1.2    permanent  self                00:10:01
untagged          vni10      50:88:b2:3c:08:f9  10.0.1.2    static     self, sticky        00:10:01
untagged          vni10      68:0f:31:ae:3d:7a  10.0.1.2               self, extern_learn  00:09:58
untagged          vni10      94:8e:1c:0d:77:93  10.0.1.2               self, extern_learn  00:09:58
untagged          vni10      c8:7d:bc:96:71:f3  10.0.1.2    static     self, sticky        00:10:01
...

The following example output for the net show neighbor command shows:

  • 10.1.10.101 is a locally-attached host server01 on VLAN 10. Interface vlan10-v0 is the virtual VRR address for VLAN10.
  • 10.1.10.104 is remote-host, server04 on VLAN10. This is indicated by the STATE zebra indicating it’s an EVPN learned entry. Use net show bridge macs to see information about which VTEP the host is behind.
  • 10.1.20.105 is remote-host, server05 on VLAN 20.
cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show neigh
Neighbor                   MAC                Interface      AF    STATE
-------------------------  -----------------  -------------  ----  ---------
10.1.10.104                68:0f:31:ae:3d:7a  vlan10         IPv4  zebra
10.1.10.101                26:76:e6:93:32:78  vlan10-v0      IPv4  REACHABLE
169.254.0.1                c0:8a:e6:03:96:d0  peerlink.4094  IPv4  zebra
10.0.1.2                   44:38:39:be:ef:bb  vlan4001       IPv4  zebra
169.254.0.1                c0:99:6b:c0:e1:ca  swp52          IPv4  zebra
10.1.20.3                  c0:8a:e6:03:96:d0  vlan20         IPv4  PERMANENT
169.254.0.1                ac:56:f0:f3:59:0c  swp54          IPv4  zebra
10.1.20.105                12:15:9a:9c:f2:e1  vlan20         IPv4  zebra
169.254.0.1                2c:f3:45:f4:6f:5f  swp53          IPv4  zebra
192.168.200.1              12:72:bc:4c:e1:83  eth0           IPv4  REACHABLE
169.254.0.1                f0:08:5f:12:cc:8c  swp51          IPv4  zebra
192.168.200.250            44:38:39:00:01:80  eth0           IPv4  REACHABLE
10.1.30.3                  c0:8a:e6:03:96:d0  vlan30         IPv4  PERMANENT
192.168.200.2              02:7a:19:45:66:48  eth0           IPv4  STALE
10.1.10.101                26:76:e6:93:32:78  vlan10         IPv4  REACHABLE
10.1.10.3                  c0:8a:e6:03:96:d0  vlan10         IPv4  PERMANENT
...

General BGP Commands

If you use BGP for the underlay routing, run the NCLU net show bgp summary command or the vtysh show bgp summary command to view a summary of the layer 3 fabric connectivity:

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show bgp summary
show bgp ipv4 unicast summary
=============================
BGP router identifier 10.10.10.1, local AS number 65101 vrf-id 0
BGP table version 13
RIB entries 25, using 4800 bytes of memory
Peers 5, using 106 KiB of memory
Peer groups 1, using 64 bytes of memory

Neighbor              V         AS   MsgRcvd   MsgSent   TblVer  InQ OutQ  Up/Down State/PfxRcd
spine01(swp51)        4      65199       814       805        0    0    0 00:37:34            7
spine02(swp52)        4      65199       814       805        0    0    0 00:37:34            7
spine03(swp53)        4      65199       814       805        0    0    0 00:37:34            7
spine04(swp54)        4      65199       814       805        0    0    0 00:37:34            7
leaf02(peerlink.4094) 4      65101       766       768        0    0    0 00:37:35           12

Total number of neighbors 5


show bgp ipv6 unicast summary
=============================
% No BGP neighbors found


show bgp l2vpn evpn summary
===========================
BGP router identifier 10.10.10.1, local AS number 65101 vrf-id 0
BGP table version 0
RIB entries 23, using 4416 bytes of memory
Peers 4, using 85 KiB of memory
Peer groups 1, using 64 bytes of memory

Neighbor        V         AS   MsgRcvd   MsgSent   TblVer  InQ OutQ  Up/Down State/PfxRcd
spine01(swp51)  4      65199       814       805        0    0    0 00:37:35           34
spine02(swp52)  4      65199       814       805        0    0    0 00:37:35           34
spine03(swp53)  4      65199       814       805        0    0    0 00:37:35           34
spine04(swp54)  4      65199       814       805        0    0    0 00:37:35           34

Total number of neighbors 4

Run the NCLU net show route command or the vtysh show route command to examine the underlay routing and determine how remote VTEPs are reached. The following example shows output from a leaf switch:

This is the routing table of the global (underlay) routing table. Use the `vrf` keyword to see routes for specific VRFs where the hosts reside.

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show route
show ip route
=============
Codes: K - kernel route, C - connected, S - static, R - RIP,
       O - OSPF, I - IS-IS, B - BGP, E - EIGRP, N - NHRP,
       T - Table, v - VNC, V - VNC-Direct, A - Babel, D - SHARP,
       F - PBR, f - OpenFabric,
       > - selected route, * - FIB route, q - queued route, r - rejected route

C>* 10.0.1.1/32 is directly connected, lo, 00:40:02
B>* 10.0.1.2/32 [20/0] via fe80::2ef3:45ff:fef4:6f5f, swp53, weight 1, 00:40:04
  *                    via fe80::ae56:f0ff:fef3:590c, swp54, weight 1, 00:40:04
  *                    via fe80::c299:6bff:fec0:e1ca, swp52, weight 1, 00:40:04
  *                    via fe80::f208:5fff:fe12:cc8c, swp51, weight 1, 00:40:04
B>* 10.0.1.254/32 [20/0] via fe80::2ef3:45ff:fef4:6f5f, swp53, weight 1, 00:35:18
  *                      via fe80::ae56:f0ff:fef3:590c, swp54, weight 1, 00:35:18
  *                      via fe80::c299:6bff:fec0:e1ca, swp52, weight 1, 00:35:18
  *                      via fe80::f208:5fff:fe12:cc8c, swp51, weight 1, 00:35:18
C>* 10.10.10.1/32 is directly connected, lo, 00:42:58
B>* 10.10.10.2/32 [200/0] via fe80::c28a:e6ff:fe03:96d0, peerlink.4094, weight 1, 00:42:56
B>* 10.10.10.3/32 [20/0] via fe80::2ef3:45ff:fef4:6f5f, swp53, weight 1, 00:42:55
  *                      via fe80::ae56:f0ff:fef3:590c, swp54, weight 1, 00:42:55
  *                      via fe80::c299:6bff:fec0:e1ca, swp52, weight 1, 00:42:55
  *                      via fe80::f208:5fff:fe12:cc8c, swp51, weight 1, 00:42:55
B>* 10.10.10.4/32 [20/0] via fe80::2ef3:45ff:fef4:6f5f, swp53, weight 1, 00:42:55
  *                      via fe80::ae56:f0ff:fef3:590c, swp54, weight 1, 00:42:55
  *                      via fe80::c299:6bff:fec0:e1ca, swp52, weight 1, 00:42:55
  *                      via fe80::f208:5fff:fe12:cc8c, swp51, weight 1, 00:42:55
B>* 10.10.10.63/32 [20/0] via fe80::2ef3:45ff:fef4:6f5f, swp53, weight 1, 00:42:55
  *                       via fe80::ae56:f0ff:fef3:590c, swp54, weight 1, 00:42:55
  *                       via fe80::c299:6bff:fec0:e1ca, swp52, weight 1, 00:42:55
  *                       via fe80::f208:5fff:fe12:cc8c, swp51, weight 1, 00:42:55
B>* 10.10.10.64/32 [20/0] via fe80::2ef3:45ff:fef4:6f5f, swp53, weight 1, 00:38:07
  *                       via fe80::ae56:f0ff:fef3:590c, swp54, weight 1, 00:38:07
  *                       via fe80::c299:6bff:fec0:e1ca, swp52, weight 1, 00:38:07
  *                       via fe80::f208:5fff:fe12:cc8c, swp51, weight 1, 00:38:07
B>* 10.10.10.101/32 [20/0] via fe80::f208:5fff:fe12:cc8c, swp51, weight 1, 00:42:56
B>* 10.10.10.102/32 [20/0] via fe80::c299:6bff:fec0:e1ca, swp52, weight 1, 00:42:56
B>* 10.10.10.103/32 [20/0] via fe80::2ef3:45ff:fef4:6f5f, swp53, weight 1, 00:42:56
B>* 10.10.10.104/32 [20/0] via fe80::ae56:f0ff:fef3:590c, swp54, weight 1, 00:42:56

Show EVPN address-family Peers

Run the NCLU net show bgp l2vpn evpn summary command or the vtysh show bgp l2vpn evpn summary command to see the BGP peers participating in the layer 2 VPN/EVPN address-family and their states. The following example output from a leaf switch shows eBGP peering with four spine switches to exchange EVPN routes; all peering sessions are in the established state.

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show bgp l2vpn evpn summary
BGP router identifier 10.10.10.1, local AS number 65101 vrf-id 0
BGP table version 0
RIB entries 23, using 4416 bytes of memory
Peers 4, using 85 KiB of memory
Peer groups 1, using 64 bytes of memory

Neighbor        V         AS   MsgRcvd   MsgSent   TblVer  InQ OutQ  Up/Down State/PfxRcd
spine01(swp51)  4      65199       958       949        0    0    0 00:44:46           34
spine02(swp52)  4      65199       958       949        0    0    0 00:44:46           34
spine03(swp53)  4      65199       958       949        0    0    0 00:44:46           34
spine04(swp54)  4      65199       958       949        0    0    0 00:44:46           34

Total number of neighbors 4

Show EVPN VNIs

Run the NCLU net show bgp l2vpn evpn vni command or the vtysh show bgp l2vpn evpn vni command to display the configured VNIs on a network device participating in BGP EVPN. This command is only relevant on a VTEP. If you have configured symmetric routing, this command displays the special layer 3 VNIs that are configured per tenant VRF.

The following example from leaf01 shows three layer 2 VNIs (10, 20 and 30) as well as two layer 3 VNIs (4001, 4002).

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show bgp l2vpn evpn vni
Advertise Gateway Macip: Disabled
Advertise SVI Macip: Disabled
Advertise All VNI flag: Enabled
BUM flooding: Head-end replication
Number of L2 VNIs: 3
Number of L3 VNIs: 2
Flags: * - Kernel
  VNI        Type RD                    Import RT                 Export RT                 Tenant VRF
* 20         L2   10.10.10.1:4          65101:20                  65101:20                 RED
* 30         L2   10.10.10.1:6          65101:30                  65101:30                 BLUE
* 10         L2   10.10.10.1:3          65101:10                  65101:10                 RED
* 4002       L3   10.1.30.2:2           65101:4002                65101:4002               BLUE
* 4001       L3   10.1.20.2:5           65101:4001                65101:4001               RED

Run the NCLU net show evpn vni command to see a summary of VNIs and the number of MAC or ARP entries associated with each VNI.

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show evpn vni
VNI        Type VxLAN IF              # MACs   # ARPs   # Remote VTEPs  Tenant VRF
20         L2   vni20                 8        5        1               RED
30         L2   vni30                 8        4        1               BLUE
10         L2   vni10                 8        6        1               RED
4001       L3   vniRED                1        1        n/a             RED
4002       L3   vniBLUE               0        0        n/a             BLUE

Run the NCLU net show evpn vni <vni> command or the vtysh show evpn vni <vni> command to examine EVPN information for a specific VNI in detail. The following example output shows details for the layer 2 VNI 10 as well as for the layer 3 VNI 4001. For the layer 2 VNI, the remote VTEPs that contain that VNI are shown. For the layer 3 VNI, the router MAC and associated layer 2 VNIs are shown. The state of the layer 3 VNI depends on the state of its associated VRF as well as the states of its underlying VXLAN interface and SVI.

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show evpn vni 10
VNI: 10
 Type: L2
 Tenant VRF: RED
 VxLAN interface: vni10
 VxLAN ifIndex: 14
 Local VTEP IP: 10.0.1.1
 Mcast group: 0.0.0.0
 Remote VTEPs for this VNI:
  10.0.1.2 flood: HER
 Number of MACs (local and remote) known for this VNI: 8
 Number of ARPs (IPv4 and IPv6, local and remote) known for this VNI: 6
 Advertise-gw-macip: No
cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$  
cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show evpn vni 4001
VNI: 4001
  Type: L3
  Tenant VRF: RED
  Local Vtep Ip: 10.0.1.1
  Vxlan-Intf: vniRED
  SVI-If: vlan4001
  State: Up
  VNI Filter: none
  System MAC: 44:38:39:be:ef:aa
  Router MAC: 44:38:39:be:ef:aa
  L2 VNIs: 10 20

Examine Local and Remote MAC Addresses for a VNI

Run the NCLU net show evpn mac vni <vni> command or the vtysh show evpn mac vni <vni> command to examine all local and remote MAC addresses for a VNI. This command is only relevant for a layer 2 VNI:

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show evpn mac vni 10
Number of MACs (local and remote) known for this VNI: 8
Flags: B=bypass N=sync-neighs, I=local-inactive, P=peer-active, X=peer-proxy
MAC               Type   Flags Intf/Remote ES/VTEP            VLAN  Seq #'s
26:76:e6:93:32:78 local        bond1                          10    0/0
94:8e:1c:0d:77:93 remote       10.0.1.2                             0/0
50:88:b2:3c:08:f9 remote       10.0.1.2                             0/0
68:0f:31:ae:3d:7a remote       10.0.1.2                             1/0
c8:7d:bc:96:71:f3 remote       10.0.1.2                             0/0
c0:8a:e6:03:96:d0 local        peerlink                       10    0/0
76:ed:2a:8a:67:24 local        vlan10                         10    0/0
00:60:08:69:97:ef local        bond1                          10    0/0

Run the NCLU net show evpn mac vni all command or the vtysh show evpn mac vni all command to examine MAC addresses for all VNIs.

You can examine the details for a specific MAC addresse or query all remote MAC addresses behind a specific VTEP:

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show evpn mac vni 10 mac 94:8e:1c:0d:77:93
MAC: 94:8e:1c:0d:77:93
 Remote VTEP: 10.0.1.2
 Sync-info: neigh#: 0
 Local Seq: 0 Remote Seq: 0
 Neighbors:
    No Neighbors
cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$
cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show evpn mac vni 20 mac 94:8e:1c:0d:77:93
% Requested MAC does not exist in VNI 20
cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$
cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show evpn mac vni 20 vtep 10.0.1.2
VNI 20

MAC               Type   FlagsIntf/Remote ES/VTEP            VLAN  Seq #'s
12:15:9a:9c:f2:e1 remote       10.0.1.2                             1/0
50:88:b2:3c:08:f9 remote       10.0.1.2                             0/0
f8:4f:db:ef:be:8b remote       10.0.1.2                             0/0
c8:7d:bc:96:71:f3 remote       10.0.1.2                             0/0

Examine Local and Remote Neighbors for a VNI

Run the NCLU net show evpn arp-cache vni <vni> command or the vtysh show evpn arp-cache vni <vni> command to examine all local and remote neighbors (ARP entries) for a VNI. This command is only relevant for a layer 2 VNI and the output shows both IPv4 and IPv6 neighbor entries:

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show evpn arp-cache vni 10
Number of ARPs (local and remote) known for this VNI: 6
Flags: I=local-inactive, P=peer-active, X=peer-proxy
Neighbor                  Type   Flags State    MAC               Remote ES/VTEP                 Seq #'s
10.1.10.2                 local        active   76:ed:2a:8a:67:24                                0/0
fe80::968e:1cff:fe0d:7793 remote       active   68:0f:31:ae:3d:7a 10.0.1.2                       0/0
10.1.10.101               local        active   26:76:e6:93:32:78                                0/0
fe80::9465:45ff:fe6d:4890 local        active   26:76:e6:93:32:78                                0/0
10.1.10.104               remote       active   68:0f:31:ae:3d:7a 10.0.1.2                       0/0
fe80::74ed:2aff:fe8a:6724 local        active   76:ed:2a:8a:67:24                                0/0
...

Run the NCLU net show evpn arp-cache vni all command or the vtysh show evpn arp-cache vni all command to examine neighbor entries for all VNIs.

Examine Remote Router MACs

For symmetric routing, run the NCLU net show evpn rmac vni <vni> command or the vtysh show evpn rmac vni <vni> command to examine the router MACs corresponding to all remote VTEPs. This command is only relevant for a layer 3 VNI:

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show evpn rmac vni 4001
Number of Remote RMACs known for this VNI: 1
MAC               Remote VTEP
44:38:39:be:ef:bb 10.0.1.2

Run the NCLU net show evpn rmac vni all command or the vtysh show evpn rmac vni all command to examine router MACs for all layer 3 VNIs.

Examine Gateway Next Hops

For symmetric routing, you can run the NCLU net show evpn next-hops vni <vni> command or the vtysh show evpn next-hops vni <vni> command to examine the gateway next hops. This command is only relevant for a layer 3 VNI. In general, the gateway next hop IP addresses correspond to the remote VTEP IP addresses. Remote host and prefix routes are installed sing these next hops:

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show evpn next-hops vni 4001
Number of NH Neighbors known for this VNI: 1
IP              RMAC
10.0.1.2        44:38:39:be:ef:bb

Run the NCLU net show evpn next-hops vni all command or the vtysh show evpn next-hops vni all command to examine gateway next hops for all layer 3 VNIs.

You can query a specific next hop; the output displays the remote host and prefix routes through this next hop:

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show evpn next-hops vni 4001 ip 10.0.1.2
Ip: 10.0.1.2
  RMAC: 44:38:39:be:ef:bb
  Refcount: 2
  Prefixes:
    10.1.10.104/32
    10.1.20.105/32

Show the VRF Routing Table in FRRouting

Run the net show route vrf <vrf-name> command to examine the VRF routing table. In the context of EVPN, this command is relevant for symmetric routing to verify that remote host and prefix routes are installed in the VRF routing table and point to the appropriate gateway next hop.

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show route vrf RED
show ip route vrf RED
======================
Codes: K - kernel route, C - connected, S - static, R - RIP,
       O - OSPF, I - IS-IS, B - BGP, E - EIGRP, N - NHRP,
       T - Table, v - VNC, V - VNC-Direct, A - Babel, D - SHARP,
       F - PBR, f - OpenFabric,
       > - selected route, * - FIB route, q - queued route, r - rejected route


VRF RED:
K>* 0.0.0.0/0 [255/8192] unreachable (ICMP unreachable), 00:53:46
C * 10.1.10.0/24 [0/1024] is directly connected, vlan10-v0, 00:53:46
C>* 10.1.10.0/24 is directly connected, vlan10, 00:53:46
B>* 10.1.10.104/32 [20/0] via 10.0.1.2, vlan4001 onlink, weight 1, 00:43:55
C * 10.1.20.0/24 [0/1024] is directly connected, vlan20-v0, 00:53:46
C>* 10.1.20.0/24 is directly connected, vlan20, 00:53:46
B>* 10.1.20.105/32 [20/0] via 10.0.1.2, vlan4001 onlink, weight 1, 00:20:07
...

In the output above, the next hops for these routes are specified by EVPN to be onlink, or reachable over the specified SVI. This is necessary because this interface is not required to have an IP address. Even if the interface is configured with an IP address, the next hop is not on the same subnet as it is usually the IP address of the remote VTEP (part of the underlay IP network).

Show the Global BGP EVPN Routing Table

Run the NCLU net show bgp l2vpn evpn route command or the vtysh show bgp l2vpn evpn route command to display all EVPN routes, both local and remote. The routes displayed here are based on RD as they are across VNIs and VRFs:

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show bgp l2vpn evpn route
BGP table version is 6, local router ID is 10.10.10.1
Status codes: s suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best, i - internal
Origin codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete
EVPN type-1 prefix: [1]:[ESI]:[EthTag]:[IPlen]:[VTEP-IP]
EVPN type-2 prefix: [2]:[EthTag]:[MAClen]:[MAC]:[IPlen]:[IP]
EVPN type-3 prefix: [3]:[EthTag]:[IPlen]:[OrigIP]
EVPN type-4 prefix: [4]:[ESI]:[IPlen]:[OrigIP]
EVPN type-5 prefix: [5]:[EthTag]:[IPlen]:[IP]

   Network          Next Hop            Metric LocPrf Weight Path
                    Extended Community
Route Distinguisher: 10.10.10.1:3
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[00:60:08:69:97:ef]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:10 RT:65101:4001 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:aa
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[26:76:e6:93:32:78]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:10 RT:65101:4001 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:aa
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[26:76:e6:93:32:78]:[32]:[10.1.10.101]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:10 RT:65101:4001 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:aa
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[26:76:e6:93:32:78]:[128]:[fe80::9465:45ff:fe6d:4890]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:10
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[c0:8a:e6:03:96:d0]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:10 RT:65101:4001 MM:0, sticky MAC Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:aa
*> [3]:[0]:[32]:[10.0.1.1]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:10
Route Distinguisher: 10.10.10.1:4
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[c0:8a:e6:03:96:d0]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:20 RT:65101:4001 MM:0, sticky MAC Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:aa
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[cc:6e:fa:8d:ff:92]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:20 RT:65101:4001 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:aa
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[f0:9d:d0:59:60:5d]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:20 RT:65101:4001 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:aa
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[f0:9d:d0:59:60:5d]:[128]:[fe80::ce6e:faff:fe8d:ff92]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:20
*> [3]:[0]:[32]:[10.0.1.1]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:20
Route Distinguisher: 10.10.10.1:6
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[c0:8a:e6:03:96:d0]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:30 RT:65101:4002 MM:0, sticky MAC Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:aa
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[de:02:3b:17:c9:6d]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:30 RT:65101:4002 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:aa
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[de:02:3b:17:c9:6d]:[128]:[fe80::dc02:3bff:fe17:c96d]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:30
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[ea:77:bb:f1:a7:ca]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:30 RT:65101:4002 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:aa
*> [3]:[0]:[32]:[10.0.1.1]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:30
Route Distinguisher: 10.10.10.3:3
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[12:15:9a:9c:f2:e1]
                    10.0.1.2                               0 65199 65102 i
                    RT:65102:20 RT:65102:4001 ET:8 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:bb
*  [2]:[0]:[48]:[12:15:9a:9c:f2:e1]
                    10.0.1.2                               0 65199 65102 i
                    RT:65102:20 RT:65102:4001 ET:8 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:bb
...

You can filter the routing table based on EVPN route type. The available options are shown below:

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show bgp l2vpn evpn route type
    ead        :  EAD (Type-1) route
    es         :  Ethernet Segment (type-4) route
    macip      :  MAC-IP (Type-2) route
    multicast  :  Multicast
    prefix     :  An IPv4 or IPv6 prefix

Show a Specific EVPN Route

To drill down on a specific route for more information, run the NCLU net show bgp l2vpn evpn route rd <rd-value> command or the vtysh show bgp l2vpn evpn route rd <rd-value> command. This command displays all EVPN routes with that RD and with the path attribute details for each path. Additional filtering is possible based on route type or by specifying the MAC and/or IP address. The following example shows the specific MAC/IP route of server05. The output shows that this remote host is behind VTEP 10.10.10.3 and is reachable through four paths; one through each spine switch. This example is from a symmetric routing configuration, so the route shows both the layer 2 VNI (20) and the layer 3 VNI (4001), as well as the EVPN route target attributes corresponding to each and the associated router MAC address.

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show bgp l2vpn evpn route rd 10.10.10.3:3 mac 12:15:9a:9c:f2:e1 ip 10.1.20.105
BGP routing table entry for 10.10.10.3:3:[2]:[0]:[48]:[12:15:9a:9c:f2:e1]:[32]:[10.1.20.105]
Paths: (4 available, best #1)
  Advertised to non peer-group peers:
  spine01(swp51) spine02(swp52) spine03(swp53) spine04(swp54)
  Route [2]:[0]:[48]:[12:15:9a:9c:f2:e1]:[32]:[10.1.20.105] VNI 20/4001
  65199 65102
    10.0.1.2 from spine01(swp51) (10.10.10.101)
      Origin IGP, valid, external, bestpath-from-AS 65199, best (Router ID)
      Extended Community: RT:65102:20 RT:65102:4001 ET:8 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:bb
      Last update: Fri Jan 15 08:16:24 2021
  Route [2]:[0]:[48]:[12:15:9a:9c:f2:e1]:[32]:[10.1.20.105] VNI 20/4001
  65199 65102
    10.0.1.2 from spine04(swp54) (10.10.10.104)
      Origin IGP, valid, external
      Extended Community: RT:65102:20 RT:65102:4001 ET:8 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:bb
      Last update: Fri Jan 15 08:16:24 2021
  Route [2]:[0]:[48]:[12:15:9a:9c:f2:e1]:[32]:[10.1.20.105] VNI 20/4001
  65199 65102
    10.0.1.2 from spine02(swp52) (10.10.10.102)
      Origin IGP, valid, external
      Extended Community: RT:65102:20 RT:65102:4001 ET:8 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:bb
      Last update: Fri Jan 15 08:16:24 2021
  Route [2]:[0]:[48]:[12:15:9a:9c:f2:e1]:[32]:[10.1.20.105] VNI 20/4001
  65199 65102
    10.0.1.2 from spine03(swp53) (10.10.10.103)
      Origin IGP, valid, external
      Extended Community: RT:65102:20 RT:65102:4001 ET:8 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:bb
      Last update: Fri Jan 15 08:16:24 2021

Displayed 4 paths for requested prefix

  • Only global VNIs are supported. Even though VNI values are exchanged in the type-2 and type-5 routes, the received values are not used when installing the routes into the forwarding plane; the local configuration is used. You must ensure that the VLAN to VNI mappings and the layer 3 VNI assignment for a tenant VRF are uniform throughout the network.
  • If the remote host is dual attached, the next hop for the EVPN route is the anycast IP address of the remote MLAG pair, when MLAG is active.

Show the per-VNI EVPN Routing Table

Received EVPN routes are maintained in the global EVPN routing table (described above), even if there are no appropriate local VNIs to import them into. For example, a spine switch maintains the global EVPN routing table even though there are no VNIs present on it. When local VNIs are present, received EVPN routes are imported into the per-VNI routing tables based on the route target attributes. You can examine the per-VNI routing table with the net show bgp l2vpn evpn route vni <vni> command.

In 4.3.0 and earlier, the equivalent vtysh command is show bgp l2vpn evpn route vni <vni> command. In 4.3.1 and later, the equivalent vtysh command is show bgp vni <vni>.

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show bgp l2vpn evpn route vni 10
BGP table version is 16, local router ID is 10.10.10.1
Status codes: s suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best, i - internal
Origin codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete
EVPN type-1 prefix: [1]:[ESI]:[EthTag]:[IPlen]:[VTEP-IP]
EVPN type-2 prefix: [2]:[EthTag]:[MAClen]:[MAC]:[IPlen]:[IP]
EVPN type-3 prefix: [3]:[EthTag]:[IPlen]:[OrigIP]
EVPN type-4 prefix: [4]:[ESI]:[IPlen]:[OrigIP]
EVPN type-5 prefix: [5]:[EthTag]:[IPlen]:[IP]

   Network          Next Hop            Metric LocPrf Weight Path
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[00:60:08:69:97:ef]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:10 RT:65101:4001 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:aa
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[26:76:e6:93:32:78]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:10 RT:65101:4001 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:aa
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[26:76:e6:93:32:78]:[32]:[10.1.10.101]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:10 RT:65101:4001 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:aa
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[26:76:e6:93:32:78]:[128]:[fe80::9465:45ff:fe6d:4890]
                    10.0.1.1                           32768 i
                    ET:8 RT:65101:10
*  [2]:[0]:[48]:[50:88:b2:3c:08:f9]
                    10.0.1.2                               0 65199 65102 i
                    RT:65102:10 RT:65102:4001 ET:8 MM:0, sticky MAC Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:bb
*  [2]:[0]:[48]:[50:88:b2:3c:08:f9]
                    10.0.1.2                               0 65199 65102 i
                    RT:65102:10 RT:65102:4001 ET:8 MM:0, sticky MAC Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:bb
*  [2]:[0]:[48]:[50:88:b2:3c:08:f9]
                    10.0.1.2                               0 65199 65102 i
                    RT:65102:10 RT:65102:4001 ET:8 MM:0, sticky MAC Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:bb
*> [2]:[0]:[48]:[50:88:b2:3c:08:f9]
                    10.0.1.2                               0 65199 65102 i
                    RT:65102:10 RT:65102:4001 ET:8 MM:0, sticky MAC Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:bb
*  [2]:[0]:[48]:[68:0f:31:ae:3d:7a]
                    10.0.1.2                               0 65199 65102 i
                    RT:65102:10 RT:65102:4001 ET:8 Rmac:44:38:39:be:ef:bb
...

To display the VNI routing table for all VNIs, run the net show bgp l2vpn evpn route vni all command.

Show the per-VRF BGP Routing Table

For symmetric routing, received type-2 and type-5 routes are imported into the VRF routing table (against the corresponding address-family: IPv4 unicast or IPv6 unicast) based on a match on the route target attributes. Run the NCLU net show bgp vrf <vrf-name> ipv4 unicast command or the net show bgp vrf <vrf-name> ipv6 unicast command to examine the BGP VRF routing table. The equivalent vtysh commands are show bgp vrf <vrf-name> ipv4 unicast and show bgp vrf <vrf-name> ipv6 unicast.

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show bgp vrf RED ipv4 unicast
BGP table version is 2, local router ID is 10.1.20.2, vrf id 24
Default local pref 100, local AS 65101
Status codes:  s suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best, = multipath,
               i internal, r RIB-failure, S Stale, R Removed
Nexthop codes: @NNN nexthop's vrf id, < announce-nh-self
Origin codes:  i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete

   Network          Next Hop            Metric LocPrf Weight Path
*  10.1.10.104/32   10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*                   10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*                   10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*                   10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*>                  10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*                   10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*                   10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*                   10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*  10.1.20.105/32   10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*>                  10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*                   10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*                   10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*                   10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*                   10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*                   10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i
*                   10.0.1.2<                              0 65199 65102 i

Displayed  2 routes and 16 total paths

Support for EVPN Neighbor Discovery (ND) Extended Community

In an EVPN VXLAN deployment with ARP and ND suppression where the VTEPs are only configured for layer 2, EVPN needs to carry additional information for the attached devices so proxy ND can provide the correct information to attached hosts. Without this information, hosts might not be able to configure their default routers or might lose their existing default router information. Cumulus Linux supports the EVPN Neighbor Discovery (ND) Extended Community with a type field value of 0x06, a sub-type field value of 0x08 (ND Extended Community), and a router flag; this enables the switch to determine if a particular IPv6-MAC pair belongs to a host or a router.

The router flag (R-bit) is used in:

  • A centralized VXLAN routing configuration with a gateway router.
  • A layer 2 switch deployment with ARP/ND suppression.

When the MAC/IP (type-2) route contains the IPv6-MAC pair and the R-bit is set, the route belongs to a router. If the R-bit is set to zero, the route belongs to a host. If the router is in a local LAN segment, the switch implementing the proxy ND function learns of this information by snooping on neighbor advertisement messages for the associated IPv6 address. This information is then exchanged with other EVPN peers by using the ND extended community in BGP updates.

To show the EVPN arp-cache that gets populated by the neighbor table and see if the IPv6-MAC entry belongs to a router, run either the NCLU net show evpn arp-cache vni <vni> ip <address> command or the vtysh show evpn arp-cache vni <vni> ip <address> command. For example:

cumulus@leaf01:mgmt:~$ net show evpn arp-cache vni 20 ip 10.1.20.105
IP: 10.1.20.105
 Type: remote
 State: active
 MAC: 12:15:9a:9c:f2:e1
 Sync-info: -
 Remote VTEP: 10.0.1.2
 Local Seq: 0 Remote Seq: 0

Examine MAC Moves

The first time a MAC moves from behind one VTEP to behind another, BGP associates a MAC Mobilit (MM) extended community attribute of sequence number 1, with the type-2 route for that MAC. From there, each time this MAC moves to a new VTEP, the MM sequence number increments by 1. You can examine the MM sequence number associated with a MAC’s type-2 route with the NCLU net show bgp l2vpn evpn route vni <vni> mac <mac> command or the vtysh show bgp l2vpn evpn route vni <vni> mac <mac> command. The example output below shows the type-2 route for a MAC that has moved three times:

cumulus@switch:~$ net show bgp l2vpn evpn route vni 10109 mac 00:02:22:22:22:02
BGP routing table entry for [2]:[0]:[0]:[48]:[00:02:22:22:22:02]
Paths: (1 available, best #1)
Not advertised to any peer
Route [2]:[0]:[0]:[48]:[00:02:22:22:22:02] VNI 10109
Local
6.0.0.184 from 0.0.0.0 (6.0.0.184)
Origin IGP, localpref 100, weight 32768, valid, sourced, local, bestpath-from-AS Local, best
Extended Community: RT:650184:10109 ET:8 MM:3
AddPath ID: RX 0, TX 10350121
Last update: Tue Feb 14 18:40:37 2017

Displayed 1 paths for requested prefix

Examine Static MAC Addresses

You can identify static or sticky MACs in EVPN by the presence of MM:0, sticky MAC in the Extended Community line of the output from the NCLU net show bgp l2vpn evpn route vni <vni> mac <mac> command or the vtysh show bgp l2vpn evpn route vni <vni> mac <mac> command.

cumulus@switch:~$ net show bgp l2vpn evpn route vni 10101 mac 00:02:00:00:00:01
BGP routing table entry for [2]:[0]:[0]:[48]:[00:02:00:00:00:01]
Paths: (1 available, best #1)
  Not advertised to any peer
  Route [2]:[0]:[0]:[48]:[00:02:00:00:00:01] VNI 10101
  Local
    172.16.130.18 from 0.0.0.0 (172.16.130.18)
      Origin IGP, localpref 100, weight 32768, valid, sourced, local, bestpath-from-AS Local, best
      Extended Community: ET:8 RT:60176:10101 MM:0, sticky MAC
      AddPath ID: RX 0, TX 46
      Last update: Tue Apr 11 21:44:02 2017

Displayed 1 paths for requested prefix

Enable FRRouting Debug Logs

To troubleshoot EVPN, enable FRR debug logs. The relevant debug options are:

Option
Description
debug zebra vxlanTraces VNI addition and deletion (local and remote) as well as MAC and neighbor addition and deletion (local and remote).
debug zebra kernelTraces actual netlink messages exchanged with the kernel, which includes everything, not just EVPN.
debug bgp updatesTraces BGP update exchanges, including all updates. Output is extended to show EVPN specific information.
debug bgp zebraTraces interactions between BGP and zebra for EVPN (and other) routes.

ICMP echo Replies and the ping Command

When you run the ping -I command and specify an interface, you don’t get an ICMP echo reply. However, when you run the ping command without the -I option, everything works as expected.

ping -I command example:

cumulus@switch:default:~:# ping -I swp2 10.0.10.1
PING 10.0.10.1 (10.0.10.1) from 10.0.0.2 swp1.5: 56(84) bytes of data.

ping command example:

cumulus@switch:default:~:# ping 10.0.10.1
PING 10.0.10.1 (10.0.10.1) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from 10.0.10.1: icmp_req=1 ttl=63 time=4.00 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.10.1: icmp_req=2 ttl=63 time=0.000 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.10.1: icmp_req=3 ttl=63 time=0.000 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.10.1: icmp_req=4 ttl=63 time=0.000 ms
^C
--- 10.0.10.1 ping statistics ---
4 packets transmitted, 4 received, 0% packet loss, time 3004ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 0.000/1.000/4.001/1.732 ms

This is expected behavior with Cumulus Linux; when you send an ICMP echo request to an IP address that is not in the same subnet using the ping -I command, Cumulus Linux creates a failed ARP entry for the destination IP address.

For more information, refer to this article.