Jared,
    Thank you for your reply.  The one issue I have is how can I label traffic 
to match a given table (i.e. ping VRF or snmp VRF).  I don't see any way this 
can be done with normal BSD sockets, finding a way to get my application to 
'color' the traffic has been a little evasive.  The developers I am working 
with are using Mule for their data collection.  I would really prefer to add an 
MPLS tag to mark the traffic, but I will investigate what I can do using the 
Linux routing features and 802.1q tags.

---
Brian Raaen
Network Architect
bra...@zcorum.com

On Tue, Aug 23, 2011 at 09:50:30AM -0400, Jared Mauch wrote:
> 
> On Aug 23, 2011, at 9:45 AM, na...@rhemasound.org wrote:
> 
> > While I have found some information on a project called linux-mpls I am 
> > having a hard time finding any solid VRF framework for Linux.  I have a 
> > monitoring system that needs check devices that sit in overlapping private 
> > ip space, and I was wondering if there is anyway I could use some kind or 
> > VRF type solution that would allow me to label the "site" the traffic is 
> > intended for.  The upstream router supports VRF/MPLS, but I need to know 
> > how I can get the server to label the traffic.  I would appreciate any 
> > input.
> 
> In linux, you can manage the different routing tables.
> 
> You can do this with the iptables + iproute2 series of commands.  The tables 
> 254/255 are the main and local tables.
> 
> You shouldn't have too much trouble finding information via google on how to 
> manage your needs.
> 
> - Jared

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