- What's New
- Function Overview
- Service Overview
- Billing
- Getting Started
-
User Guide
- Permissions Management
- Enterprise Routers
- Attachments
- Route Tables
- Associations
- Propagations
- Routes
-
Routing Control
-
Route Policies
- Route Policy Overview
- Creating a Route Policy
- Associating a Route Policy with an Enterprise Router
- Changing the Route Policy Associated with an Enterprise Router
- Disassociating a Route Policy from an Enterprise Router
- Modifying a Route Policy
- Viewing a Route Policy
- Deleting a Route Policy
- Adding a Policy Node to a Route Policy
- Modifying a Policy Node in a Route Policy
- Exporting Policy Nodes in a Route Policy
- Viewing a Policy Node in a Route Policy
- Deleting a Policy Node from a Route Policy
-
IP Prefix Lists
- IP Prefix List Overview
- Creating an IP Prefix List
- Modifying the Name of an IP Prefix List
- Viewing an IP Prefix List
- Deleting an IP Prefix List
- Adding a Prefix Rule to an IP Address Prefix List
- Modifying an IP Prefix Rule in an IP Prefix List
- Exporting Prefix Rules in an IP Prefix List
- Viewing a Prefix Rule in an IP Prefix List
- Deleting a Prefix Rule from an IP Prefix List
-
AS_Path Lists
- AS_Path List Overview
- Creating an AS_Path List
- Modifying the Name of an AS_Path List
- Viewing an AS_Path List
- Deleting an AS_Path List
- Adding an AS_Path Filter to an AS_Path List
- Exporting AS_Path Filters in an AS_Path List
- Viewing an AS_Path Filter in an AS_Path List
- Deleting an AS_Path Filter from an AS_Path List
-
Route Policies
- Sharing
- Flow Logs
- Monitoring and Auditing
- Tags
- Quotas
-
Best Practices
- Summary on Enterprise Router Best Practices
- Connecting VPCs Across Regions Using Enterprise Router and Central Network
- Using Enterprise Router to Isolate VPCs in the Same Region
- Using a Third-Party Firewall to Protect VPCs Connected by Enterprise Routers
- Enabling an On-Premises Data Center to Access Service VPCs Using an Enterprise Router and Transit VPC
- Setting Up a Hybrid Cloud Network Using Enterprise Router and Direct Connect Global DC Gateway
-
Setting Up a Hybrid Cloud Network Using Enterprise Router and a Pair of Direct Connect Connections (Global DC Gateway)
- Overview
- Network and Resource Planning
- Process of Setting Up a Hybrid Cloud Network Using Enterprise Router and a Pair of Direct Connect Connections (Global DC Gateway)
- Procedure for Setting Up a Hybrid Cloud Network Using Enterprise Router and a Pair of Direct Connect Connections (Global DC Gateway)
-
Setting Up a Hybrid Cloud Network Using Enterprise Router and a Pair of Active/Standby Direct Connect Connections (Global DC Gateway)
- Overview
- Network and Resource Planning
- Process of Setting Up a Hybrid Cloud Network Using Enterprise Router and a Pair of Active/Standby Direct Connect Connections (Global DC Gateway)
- Procedure for Setting Up a Hybrid Cloud Network Using Enterprise Router and a Pair of Active/Standby Direct Connect Connections (Global DC Gateway)
- Setting Up a Hybrid Cloud Network Using Enterprise Router, VPN, and Direct Connect (Global DC Gateway)
- Setting Up a Hybrid Cloud Network Using Enterprise Router and Direct Connect (Virtual Gateway)
- Setting Up a Hybrid Cloud Network Using Enterprise Router and a Pair of Direct Connect Connections (Virtual Gateway)
- Setting Up a Hybrid Cloud Network Using Enterprise Router, VPN, and Direct Connect (Virtual Gateway)
- Allowing VPCs to Share an EIP to Access the Internet Using Enterprise Router and NAT Gateway
- Using Enterprise Router to Migrate the Network Set Up Through VPC Peering
- Using Enterprise Router to Migrate the Network Set Up Through Direct Connect (Global DC Gateway)
- Using Enterprise Router and Central Network to Migrate the Network Set Up Through a Cloud Connection
- API Reference
- FAQs
-
More Documents
-
User Guide (ME-Abu Dhabi Region)
- Service Overview
- Getting Started
- Enterprise Routers
- Attachments
- Route Tables
- Associations
- Propagations
- Routes
- Sharing
- Flow Logs
- Monitoring
- Interconnecting with CTS
- Permissions Management
- Tags
- Quotas
- FAQ
- Change History
-
User Guide (Ankara Region)
- Service Overview
- Getting Started
- Permissions Management
- Enterprise Routers
- Attachments
- Route Tables
- Associations
- Propagations
- Routes
- Sharing
- Flow Logs
- Monitoring
- Quotas
- FAQ
- Change History
- API Reference (Ankara Region)
-
User Guide (ME-Abu Dhabi Region)
- General Reference
Copied.
Overview
Scenario
Before Enterprise Router was launched, you could use Cloud Connect to connect VPCs in different regions. If you want to improve the scalability of a cross-region network and simplify maintenance, you can use Enterprise Router and Central Network to migrate the network.
Relying on the Huawei Cloud backbone network, Cloud Connect allows you to build a central network to easily and securely create and manage global network resources on premises and on the cloud. You can connect enterprise routers in two or more regions to a central network, so that VPCs attached to these enterprise routers can communicate with each other across regions.
This practice describes how you can use enterprise routers and a central network to migrate a network set up through a cloud connection.
Architecture
As shown in Figure 1, the VPCs in three regions (region A, region B, and region C) are connected over a cloud connection. To improve the network scalability and simplify maintenance, you can attach the VPCs to enterprise routers and add the enterprise routers to a central network as attachments, so that these VPCs can communicate with each other.
- Before the migration, the VPCs in different regions are connected using a cloud connection.
- During migration
- Attach the VPCs to an enterprise router in the same region. Ensure that the routes of the cloud connection and of enterprise routers in the VPC route table do not conflict with each other.
- Create a central network and use it to connect the enterprise routers in different regions.
- Verify that the VPCs can communicate with the central network through the enterprise routers.
- After migration: Remove the VPCs from the cloud connection in sequence and then delete the cloud connection.
Advantages
- Enterprise routers improve network scalability.
- Enterprise routers support route learning, which frees you from complex configurations and simplifies O&M.
Constraints
Using Enterprise Router and Central Network to migrate a network set up through a cloud connection may cause intermittent disconnections. Submit a service ticket to evaluate the migration solution.
If a service VPC is being used by ELB, VPC Endpoint, NAT Gateway (private NAT gateway), Distributed Cache Service (DCS), or hybrid DNS, this VPC cannot be attached to an enterprise router.
For details about constraints on enterprise routers, see Notes and Constraints.
Feedback
Was this page helpful?
Provide feedbackThank you very much for your feedback. We will continue working to improve the documentation.See the reply and handling status in My Cloud VOC.
For any further questions, feel free to contact us through the chatbot.
Chatbot