Cuir in eagar

Comhroinn trí


Configure ExpressRoute Global Reach

This article helps you configure ExpressRoute Global Reach using PowerShell. For more information, see ExpressRoute Global Reach.

Before you begin

Before you start configuration, confirm the following information:

  • You understand ExpressRoute circuit provisioning workflows.
  • Your ExpressRoute circuits are in a provisioned state.
  • Azure private peering is configured on your ExpressRoute circuits.
  • If you want to run PowerShell locally, verify that the latest version of Azure PowerShell is installed on your computer.

Working with Azure PowerShell

The steps and examples in this article use Azure PowerShell Az modules. To install the Az modules locally on your computer, see Install Azure PowerShell. To learn more about the new Az module, see Introducing the new Azure PowerShell Az module. PowerShell cmdlets are updated frequently. If you are not running the latest version, the values specified in the instructions may fail. To find the installed versions of PowerShell on your system, use the Get-Module -ListAvailable Az cmdlet.

You can use Azure Cloud Shell to run most PowerShell cmdlets and CLI commands, instead of installing Azure PowerShell or CLI locally. Azure Cloud Shell is a free interactive shell that has common Azure tools preinstalled and is configured to use with your account. To run any code contained in this article on Azure Cloud Shell, open a Cloud Shell session, use the Copy button on a code block to copy the code, and paste it into the Cloud Shell session with Ctrl+Shift+V on Windows and Linux, or Cmd+Shift+V on macOS. Pasted text is not automatically executed, press Enter to run code.

There are a few ways to launch the Cloud Shell:

Option Link
Click Try It in the upper right corner of a code block. Cloud Shell in this article
Open Cloud Shell in your browser. https://shell.azure.com/powershell
Click the Cloud Shell button on the menu in the upper right of the Azure portal. Cloud Shell in the portal

Identify circuits

  1. To start the configuration, sign in to your Azure account and select the subscription that you want to use.

    If you are using the Azure Cloud Shell, you sign in to your Azure account automatically after clicking 'Try it'. To sign in locally, open your PowerShell console with elevated privileges and run the cmdlet to connect.

    Connect-AzAccount
    

    If you have more than one subscription, get a list of your Azure subscriptions.

    Get-AzSubscription
    

    Specify the subscription that you want to use.

    Select-AzSubscription -SubscriptionName "Name of subscription"
    
  2. Identify the ExpressRoute circuits that you want use. You can enable ExpressRoute Global Reach between the private peering of any two ExpressRoute circuits, as long as they're located in the supported countries/regions and were created at different peering locations.

    • If your subscription owns both circuits, you can choose either circuit to run the configuration in the following sections.
    • If the two circuits are in different Azure subscriptions, you need authorization from one Azure subscription. Then you pass in the authorization key when you run the configuration command in the other Azure subscription.

Note

ExpressRoute Global Reach configurations can only be seen from the configured circuit.

Enable connectivity

Enable connectivity between your on-premises networks. There are separate sets of instructions for circuits that are in the same Azure subscription, and circuits that are different subscriptions.

ExpressRoute circuits in the same Azure subscription

  1. Use the following commands to get circuit 1 and circuit 2. The two circuits are in the same subscription.

    $ckt_1 = Get-AzExpressRouteCircuit -Name "Your_circuit_1_name" -ResourceGroupName "Your_resource_group"
    $ckt_2 = Get-AzExpressRouteCircuit -Name "Your_circuit_2_name" -ResourceGroupName "Your_resource_group"
    
  2. Run the following command against circuit 1, and pass in the private peering ID of circuit 2.

    • The private peering ID looks similar to the following example:

      /subscriptions/{your_subscription_id}/resourceGroups/{your_resource_group}/providers/Microsoft.Network/expressRouteCircuits/{your_circuit_name}/peerings/AzurePrivatePeering
      
    • -AddressPrefix must be a /29 IPv4 subnet, for example, 10.0.0.0/29. We use IP addresses in this subnet to establish connectivity between the two ExpressRoute circuits. You shouldn’t use the addresses in this subnet in your Azure virtual networks, or in your on-premises network.

      Add-AzExpressRouteCircuitConnectionConfig -Name 'Your_connection_name' -ExpressRouteCircuit $ckt_1 -PeerExpressRouteCircuitPeering $ckt_2.Peerings[0].Id -AddressPrefix '__.__.__.__/29'
      

      Note

      If you wish to enable IPv6 support for ExpressRoute Global Reach, you must specify a /125 IPv6 subnet for -AddressPrefix and an -AddressPrefixType of IPv6.

      Add-AzExpressRouteCircuitConnectionConfig -Name 'Your_connection_name' -ExpressRouteCircuit $ckt_1 -PeerExpressRouteCircuitPeering $ckt_2.Peerings[0].Id -AddressPrefix '__.__.__.__/125' -AddressPrefixType IPv6
      
  3. Save the configuration on circuit 1 as follows:

    Set-AzExpressRouteCircuit -ExpressRouteCircuit $ckt_1
    

When the previous operation completes, you have connectivity between your on-premises networks on both sides through your two ExpressRoute circuits.

ExpressRoute circuits in different Azure subscriptions

If the two circuits aren't in the same Azure subscription, you need authorization. In the following configuration, authorization is generated in the circuit 2 subscription, and the authorization key is passed to circuit 1.

  1. Generate an authorization key.

    $ckt_2 = Get-AzExpressRouteCircuit -Name "Your_circuit_2_name" -ResourceGroupName "Your_resource_group"
    Add-AzExpressRouteCircuitAuthorization -ExpressRouteCircuit $ckt_2 -Name "Name_for_auth_key"
    Set-AzExpressRouteCircuit -ExpressRouteCircuit $ckt_2
    

    Make a note of the private peering ID of circuit 2, and the authorization key.

  2. Run the following command against circuit 1. Pass in the private peering ID of circuit 2 and the authorization key.

    Add-AzExpressRouteCircuitConnectionConfig -Name 'Your_connection_name' -ExpressRouteCircuit $ckt_1 -PeerExpressRouteCircuitPeering "circuit_2_private_peering_id" -AddressPrefix '__.__.__.__/29' -AuthorizationKey '########-####-####-####-############'
    

    Note

    If you wish to enable IPv6 support for ExpressRoute Global Reach, you must specify a /125 IPv6 subnet for -AddressPrefix and an -AddressPrefixType of IPv6.

    Add-AzExpressRouteCircuitConnectionConfig -Name 'Your_connection_name' -ExpressRouteCircuit $ckt_1 -PeerExpressRouteCircuitPeering $ckt_2.Peerings[0].Id -AddressPrefix '__.__.__.__/125' -AddressPrefixType IPv6 -AuthorizationKey '########-####-####-####-############'
    
  3. Save the configuration on circuit 1.

    Set-AzExpressRouteCircuit -ExpressRouteCircuit $ckt_1
    

When the previous operation completes, you have connectivity between your on-premises networks on both sides through your two ExpressRoute circuits.

Verify the configuration

Use the following command to verify the configuration on the circuit where the configuration was made (for example, circuit 1 in the previous example).

$ckt_1 = Get-AzExpressRouteCircuit -Name "Your_circuit_1_name" -ResourceGroupName "Your_resource_group"

If you simply run $ckt_1 in PowerShell, you see CircuitConnectionStatus in the output. It tells you whether the connectivity is established, Connected or Disconnected.

Disable connectivity

To disable connectivity between your on-premises networks, run the commands against the circuit where the configuration was made (for example, circuit 1 in the previous example).

$ckt_1 = Get-AzExpressRouteCircuit -Name "Your_circuit_1_name" -ResourceGroupName "Your_resource_group"
Remove-AzExpressRouteCircuitConnectionConfig -Name "Your_connection_name" -ExpressRouteCircuit $ckt_1
Set-AzExpressRouteCircuit -ExpressRouteCircuit $ckt_1

Note

To delete an IPv6 Global Reach connection, you must specify an -AddressPrefixType of IPv6 like in the following command.

$ckt_1 = Get-AzExpressRouteCircuit -Name "Your_circuit_1_name" -ResourceGroupName "Your_resource_group"
Remove-AzExpressRouteCircuitConnectionConfig -Name "Your_connection_name" -ExpressRouteCircuit $ckt_1 -AddressPrefixType IPv6
Set-AzExpressRouteCircuit -ExpressRouteCircuit $ckt_1

You can run the Get operation to verify the status.

After the previous operation is complete, you no longer have connectivity between your on-premises network through your ExpressRoute circuits.

Update connectivity configuration

To update the Global Reach connectivity configuration, run the following command against one of the ExpressRoute circuits.

$ckt_1 = Get-AzExpressRouteCircuit -Name "Your_circuit_1_name" -ResourceGroupName "Your_resource_group"
$ckt_2 = Get-AzExpressRouteCircuit -Name "Your_circuit_2_name" -ResourceGroupName "Your_resource_group"
$addressSpace = 'aa:bb::0/125'
$addressPrefixType = 'IPv6'
Set-AzExpressRouteCircuitConnectionConfig -Name "Your_connection_name" -ExpressRouteCircuit $ckt_1 -PeerExpressRouteCircuitPeering $ckt_2.Peerings[0].Id -AddressPrefix $addressSpace -AddressPrefixType $addressPrefixType
Set-AzExpressRouteCircuit -ExpressRouteCircuit $ckt_1

Next steps

  1. Learn more about ExpressRoute Global Reach
  2. Verify ExpressRoute connectivity
  3. Link an ExpressRoute circuit to an Azure virtual network