Cisco IOS XR explained
IOS XR is a release train of Cisco Systems' widely deployed Internetwork Operating System (IOS), used on their high-end Network Convergence System (NCS) and carrier-grade routers such as the ASR 9000 series and Carrier Routing System series of routers.
Architecture
According to Cisco's product literature, IOS XR shares very little infrastructure with the other IOS trains, and is instead built upon a "preemptive, memory protected, multitasking, microkernel-based operating system".[1] The microkernel was formerly provided by QNX;[2] versions 6.0 up to 7.5.2 use the Wind River Linux distribution.[3] From version 7.6.1 and onwards, the kernel has been switched to OpenEmbedded.
IOS XR aims to provide the following advantages over the earlier IOS trains:
- Improved high availability (largely through support for hardware redundancy and fault containment methods such as protected memory spaces for individual processes and process restartability)
- Better scalability for large hardware configurations (through a distributed software infrastructure and a two-stage forwarding architecture)
- A package based software distribution model (allowing optional features such as multicast routing and MPLS to be installed and removed while the router is in service)
- The ability to install package upgrades and patches (potentially while the router remains in service)
- A web-based GUI for system management (making use of a generic, XML management interface)
History
IOS XR was announced along with the CRS-1 in May 2004.[4] The first generally available version was 2.0.
Some significant releases include the following.
- 3.2 – first generally available version for the 12000 router series
- 3.9 – first generally available version for the ASR 9000 router series
- 5.0 – first generally available version for the NCS6000 series, which is based upon a Linux kernel instead of QNX, and was released in September 2013[5]
- 6.1.1 - Introduces support for the 64-bit Linux-based IOS XR operating system on ASR 9000 series [6]
Differences between IOS and IOS XR
An example BGP configuration for IOS and IOS XR is shown.
More examples can be found in the Cisco document Converting Cisco IOS Configurations to Cisco IOS XR Configurations.[7]
IOSrouter bgp 109 no synchronization bgp log-neighbor-changes neighbor 203.0.113.1 remote-as 109 neighbor 203.0.113.1 update-source Loopback0 no auto-summary IOS XRrouter bgp 109 neighbor 203.0.113.1 remote-as 109 update-source Loopback0
See also
References
- Web site: Products & Services. Cisco.
- http://www.qnx.com/news/pr_1329_3.html QNX press release
- Web site: Cisco IOS XR Software Release 6.0 Operational Enhancements Data Sheet. Cisco.
- Web site: Cisco press release announcing CRS-1 and IOS XR . https://web.archive.org/web/20050309155945/https://newsroom.cisco.com/dlls/2004/prod_052504.html?CMP=ILC-001 . March 9, 2005.
- Web site: Release Notes for Cisco NCS 6000 Series Routers, Release 5.0.0. Cisco.
- Web site: Release Notes for Cisco ASR 9000 Series Aggregation Services Routers, Release 6.1.2.
- Web site: Converting Cisco IOS Configurations to Cisco IOS XR Configurations. cisco.com. Cisco Systems. August 4, 2017.
External links