Which statement correctly describes the disabling of IP TTL propagation in an MPLS network?
A.
The TTL field from the IP packet is copied into the TTL field of the MPLS label header at the
ingress edge LSR.
B.
TTL propagation cannot be disabled in an MPLS domain.
C.
TTL propagation is only disabled on the ingress edge LSR,
D.
The TTL field of the MPLS label header is set to 255.
E.
The TTL field of the IP packet is set to 0.
Explanation:
Time-to-Live (TTL) is an 8-bit field in the MPLS label header which has the same function in loopdetection of the IP TTL field. Recall that the TTL value is an integer from 0 to 255 that is
decremented by one every time the packet transits a router. If the TTL value of an IP packet
becomes zero, the router discards the IP packet, and an ICMP message stating that the TTL
expired in transit is sent to the source IP address of the IP packet. This mechanism prevents an IP
packet from being routed continuously in case of a routing loop.
By default, the TTL propagation is enabled so a user can use traceroute command to view all of
the hops in the network.
We can disable MPLS TTL propagation with the no mpls ip propagate-ttl command under global
configuration.
When entering a label-switched path (LSP), the edge router will use a fixed TTL value (255) for the
first label.
This increases the security of your MPLS network by hiding provider network from customers.