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Connecting a router to two nexus 9k using layer 2 switch

tieungao
Level 1
Level 1

Hi all,

I want to connect the router to two nexus 9k using a L2 switch.  I follow the document here (https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/ip/ip-routing/118997-technote-nexus-00.html), and this is what I have done so far:

  • Keep alive link: L3 (1GB), Peer link (40GB), and L2 link (10GB).
  • Nexus A and Nexus B is running HSRP on vlan100 with A being active.  Router is on same subnet.
  • I remove vlan100 from the peer link and trunk only vlan100 on the L2 link.
  • All three are running EIGRP. EIGRP appears to be working fine.
  • From Router, Nexus A and B, ping to Server A is working fine.
  • From devices connected to a LAN switch that is trunked to the Router, ping to Server A will randomly get server timeout reply (dot reply).

Would anyone have any suggestion? Would below diagram work?   vpc.png

 Thank you.

1 Accepted Solution

Accepted Solutions

cmonks119
Level 1
Level 1

We recently did something similar.. 

 

1. Most the guides or docs I have seen suggest a separate L3 link between the two 9Ks. Your diagram doesn't have that, but the document you referenced does (they have 'L3 Link' in place of your 'Keepalive). This ensures full L3 routing between the two devices without having to rely on L3 over Peer-Link. So make sure the two are peering with eachother over a dedicated L3 link. 

2. Are you running "7.0(3)I5(1)+"

3. Do you have 'layer3 peer-router' enabled? 

4. I am not good with EIGRP, we use OSPF. But I know in our case the HSRP setup was unneeded. Since OSPF was running on the subnet, the standalone router sees each of the 9ks as a separate 'router' and has two neighbor adjacencies, so it gets routes from each (and uses ECMP mostly depending on the routing topology). I think the HSRP is useful only if you are doing static routing, as long as EIGRP works the same way and will see each of the 9ks as a unique neighbor. 

View solution in original post

5 Replies 5

chrihussey
VIP Alumni
VIP Alumni

Can you please elaborate on the last bullet:

Is it the LAN switch to the router in the diagram or something else?

What VLAN are the devices in that get the periodic timeout?

What is the default gateway for these devices (the router or the Nexus)?

 

Thanks

Hi Chrihussey,

Is it the LAN switch to the router in the diagram or something else?

Yes, LAN switch is trunked to the router with two vlans (50 and 51, data & voice).  It has default gateway point to data on the router (subinterface)

What VLAN are the devices in that get the periodic timeout?

Vlan50

What is the default gateway for these devices (the router or the Nexus)?

Devices are just PCs connected to the LAN switch.  It has default gateway to to the router (data subinterface on the router).

 

Thanks,

 

Do VLANs 50 and 51 also reside on the Nexus?

Have you tried ping the server from the router using VLANs 50 and 51 as the ping source?

Thanks

cmonks119
Level 1
Level 1

We recently did something similar.. 

 

1. Most the guides or docs I have seen suggest a separate L3 link between the two 9Ks. Your diagram doesn't have that, but the document you referenced does (they have 'L3 Link' in place of your 'Keepalive). This ensures full L3 routing between the two devices without having to rely on L3 over Peer-Link. So make sure the two are peering with eachother over a dedicated L3 link. 

2. Are you running "7.0(3)I5(1)+"

3. Do you have 'layer3 peer-router' enabled? 

4. I am not good with EIGRP, we use OSPF. But I know in our case the HSRP setup was unneeded. Since OSPF was running on the subnet, the standalone router sees each of the 9ks as a separate 'router' and has two neighbor adjacencies, so it gets routes from each (and uses ECMP mostly depending on the routing topology). I think the HSRP is useful only if you are doing static routing, as long as EIGRP works the same way and will see each of the 9ks as a unique neighbor. 

Thank you all for your helps.
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