Friday, February 5, 2016

Configuring ERSPAN on Cisco Routers and Switches

In two recent posts, I covered SPAN, for mirroring traffic to a port on a local switch, and RSPAN, for mirroring traffic across a VLAN to a port on a remote switch.  What if we want to mirror traffic traffic to a destination across a L3 link?  Cisco provides the ability to do this natively with a feature called ERSPAN, or encapsulated RSPAN.  However, this feature is only available on higher end platforms such as Catalyst 6500 and 6800 series switches, 7600 series routers, ASR1000, and CSR1000v (this is not a complete list).

ERSPAN

Like SPAN and RSPAN, configuring ERSPAN is pretty straightforward.  ERSPAN simply requires L3 connectivity between source and destination devices.  The ERSPAN monitor session then builds a GRE tunnel that transports mirrored frames from the source port to the destination port.

Basic ERSPAN configuration is as follows:
! Source switch
monitor session SESSION-NUMBER type erspan-source 
 source-interface INTERFACE(S)|VLAN(S) {TX|RX|BOTH}
 no shutdown
 destination
  erspan-id ERSPAN-ID
  ip address DESTINATION-IP
  origin ip address ORIGIN-IP

! Destination switch
monitor session SESSION-NUMBER type erspan-destination
 destination-interface INTERFACE(S)
 no shutdown
 source
  erspan-id ERSPAN-ID
  ip address SOURCE-IP
    It is important to note that when configuring the destination switch "source IP," you should select the source IP on the destination switch itself - the GRE tunnel endpoint.  Source IP does not refer to the GRE tunnel origin IP address.  Therefore, the "ip address" command should match on the source and destination.

    Below is a basic ERSPAN config to mirror data from R1 interface g3 to R3 interface g3.  I created this topology using VIRL using CSR1000V routers for R1 and R3.


    Saturday, January 30, 2016

    Configuring RSPAN on Cisco Catalyst Switches

    I recently wrote a post on configuring port mirroring (SPAN) on Cisco Catalyst switches.  SPAN (switched port analyzer) allows you to mirror traffic from a source or multiple sources on a switch to a destination interface or interfaces on the same switch.  RSPAN (remote SPAN) takes this a step further and allows you to mirror traffic to an interface on a remote switch or switches.

    RSPAN


    RSPAN configuration is relatively simple and builds upon existing SPAN functionality and configuration syntax.
    • Create an RSPAN VLAN on the source switch, destination switch, and all switches in the transit path.
    • Take traffic from a specified source on switch A, and mirror it to an RSPAN VLAN.  
    • Then, on switch B, use traffic from this VLAN as the source and mirror it to a physical interface

    As shown below, traffic mirrored from the switch on the right to the switch on the left can traverse other switches as long as there is end to end L2 connectivity between them (ie. the RSPAN VLAN exists on all switches).



    Basic RSPAN configuration is as follows: