OSPF Router ID and Loopback Interface Myths

Daniel Dib wrote a nice article describing the history of the loopback interface1, triggering an inevitable mention of the role of a loopback interface in OSPF and related flood of ancient memories on my end.

Before going into the details, let’s get one fact straight: an OSPF router ID was always (at least from the days of OSPFv1 described in RFC 1133) just a 32-bit identifier, not an IPv4 address2. Straight from the RFC 1133:

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netlab: Embed Files in a Lab Topology

Today, I’ll focus on another feature of the new files plugin – you can use it to embed any (hopefully small) file in a lab topology (configlets are just a special case in which the plugin creates the relative file path from the configlets dictionary data).

You could use this functionality to include configuration files for Linux containers, custom reports, or even plugins in the lab topology, and share a complete solution as a single file that can be downloaded from a GitHub repository.

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Lab: Hide Transit Subnets in IS-IS Networks

Sometimes you want to assign IPv4/IPv6 subnets to transit links in your network (for example, to identify interfaces in traceroute outputs), but don’t need to have those subnets in the IP routing tables throughout the whole network. Like OSPF, IS-IS has a nerd knob you can use to exclude transit subnets from the router PDUs.

Want to check how that feature works with your favorite device? Use the Hide Transit Subnets in IS-IS Networks lab exercise.

Click here to start the lab in your browser using GitHub Codespaces (or set up your own lab infrastructure). After starting the lab environment, change the directory to feature/4-hide-transit and execute netlab up.

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EVPN Designs: Multi-Pod with IP-Only WAN Routers

In the multi-pod EVPN design, I described a simple way to merge two EVPN fabrics into a single end-to-end fabric. Here are a few highlights of that design:

  • Each fabric is running OSPF and IBGP, with core (spine) devices being route reflectors
  • There’s an EBGP session between the WAN edge routers (sometimes called border leaf switches)
  • Every BGP session carries IPv4 (underlay) and EVPN (overlay) routes.

In that design, the WAN edge routers have to support EVPN (at least in the control plane) and carry all EVPN routes for both fabrics. Today, we’ll change the design to use simpler WAN edge routers that support only IP forwarding.

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Why Can't We Have Good Documentation

Daniel Dib asked a sad question on LinkedIn:

Where did all the great documentation go?

In more detail:

There was a time when documentation answered almost all questions:

  • What is the thing?
  • What does the thing do?
  • Why would you use the thing?
  • How do you configure the thing?

I’ve seen the same thing happening in training, and here’s my cynical TL&DR answer: because the managers of the documentation/training departments don’t understand the true value of what they’re producing and thus cannot justify a decent budget to make it happen.

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netlab: Embed Configuration Templates in a Lab Topology File

A few days ago, I described how you can use the new config.inline functionality to apply additional configuration commands to individual devices in a netlab-powered lab.

However, sometimes you have to apply the same set of commands to several devices. Although you could use device groups to do that, netlab release 25.09 offers a much better mechanism: you can embed custom configuration templates in the lab topology file.

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netlab 25.10: Cisco 8000v, Nicer Graphs

netlab release 25.10 includes:

You’ll find more details in the release notes.

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Changes in ipSpace.net RSS Feeds

TL&DR: You shouldn’t see any immediate impact of this change, but I’ll eventually clean up old stuff, so you might want to check the URLs if you use RSS/Atom feeds to get the list of ipSpace.net blog posts or podcast episodes. The (hopefully) final URLs are listed on this page.

Executive Summary: I cleaned up the whole ipSpace.net RSS/Atom feeds system. The script that generated the content for various feeds has been replaced with static Hugo-generated RSS/Atom feeds. I added redirects for all the old stuff I could find (including ioshints.blogspot.com), but I could have missed something. The only defunct feed is the free content feed (which hasn’t changed in a while, anyway), as it required scanning the documents database. You can use this page to find the (ever-increasing) free content.

And now for the real story ;)

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Working for a Vendor with David Gee

When I first met David Gee, he worked for a large system integrator. A few years later, he moved to a networking vendor, worked for a few of them, then for a software vendor, and finally decided to start his own system integration business.

Obviously, I wanted to know what drove him to make those changes, what lessons he learned working in various parts of the networking industry, and what (looking back with perfect hindsight) he would have changed.

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Spaghetti Pasta Networking

Here’s an interesting data point in case you ever wondered why things are getting slower, even though the CPU performance is supposedly increasing. Albert Siersema sent me a link to a confusing implementation of spaghetti networking.

It looks like they’re trying to solve the how do I connect two containers (network namespaces) without having the privilege to create a vEth pair challenge with plenty of chewing gum and duct tape tap interfaces 🤦‍♂️

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Using BIRD BGP Daemon as a BGP Route Reflector

In this challenge lab, you’ll configure a BIRD daemon running in a container as a BGP route reflector in a transit autonomous system. You should be familiar with the configuration concepts if you completed the IBGP lab exercises, but will probably struggle with BIRD configuration if you’re not familiar with it.

Click here to start the lab in your browser using GitHub Codespaces (or set up your own lab infrastructure). After starting the lab environment, change the directory to challenge/01-bird-rr, build the BIRD container with netlab clab build bird if needed, and execute netlab up.

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netlab: Applying Simple Configuration Changes

For years, netlab has had custom configuration templates that can be used to deploy custom configurations onto lab devices. The custom configuration templates can be Jinja2 templates, and you can create different templates (for the same functionality) for different platforms. However, using that functionality if you need an extra command or two makes approximately as much sense as using a Kubernetes cluster to deploy a BusyBox container.

netlab release 25.09 solves that problem with the files plugin and the inline config functionality.

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EVPN Designs: Multi-Pod Fabrics

In the EVPN Designs: Layer-3 Inter-AS Option A, I described the simplest multi-site design in which the WAN edge routers exchange IP routes in individual VRFs, resulting in two isolated layer-2 fabrics connected with a layer-3 link.

Today, let’s explore a design that will excite the True Believers in end-to-end layer-2 networks: two EVPN fabrics connected with an EBGP session to form a unified, larger EVPN fabric. We’ll use the same “physical” topology as the previous example; the only modification is that the WA-WB link is now part of the underlay IP network.

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