NexthopsΒΆ

Nexthops define intermediary points in routes in SD-WAN. Multiple nexthops can be assigned to a route, providing for custom failover scenarios and granular control over routing configurations.

Nexthops can be one of four types. This is explained in the following table:

Type

Description

Peer

Specifies a peer (tunnel) as the intermediary for routing traffic. The most common nexthop type for SD-WAN configurations. When used in a route, traffic is forwarded through the peer to reach its destination.

Gateway

Routes traffic directly via a gateway device (router or L3 switch) on the local network. An optional interface can be specified to limit forwarding to a specific interface.

Interface

Directs traffic to hosts on a local Layer-2 network. The destination host Layer-2 address will be determined using ARP if IPv4 and NDP if IPv6.

Blackhole

Silently discards matching traffic. Common uses include blocking unwanted traffic (e.g., DDoS mitigation), preventing routing loops, or to avoid sending high-bandwidth traffic over metered or low-bandwidth links when a more appropriate connection is down.

Nexthops work in tandem with routes and VRFs to create SD-WAN routing configurations. See the routes and VRF documentation for details.

Refer to the following links for more information on adding, editing, and deleting nexthops.