Create an Amazon Direct Connect hosted transit virtual interface - Amazon Direct Connect
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Create an Amazon Direct Connect hosted transit virtual interface

To create a hosted transit virtual interface
Important

If you associate your transit gateway with one or more Direct Connect gateways, the Autonomous System Number (ASN) used by the transit gateway and the Direct Connect gateway must be different. For example, if you use the default ASN 64512 for both the transit gateway and the Direct Connect gateway, the association request fails.

  1. Open the Amazon Direct Connect console at https://console.amazonaws.cn/directconnect/v2/home.

  2. In the navigation pane, choose Virtual Interfaces.

  3. Choose Create virtual interface.

  4. Under Virtual interface type, for Type, choose Transit.

  5. Under Transit virtual interface settings, do the following:

    1. For Virtual interface name, enter a name for the virtual interface.

    2. For Connection, choose the Direct Connect connection that you want to use for this interface.

    3. For Virtual interface owner, choose Another Amazon account, and then for Virtual interface owner, enter the ID of the account to own this virtual interface.

    4. For VLAN, enter the ID number for your virtual local area network (VLAN).

    5. For BGP ASN, enter the Border Gateway Protocol Autonomous System Number of your on-premises peer router for the new virtual interface.

      The valid values are 1-2147483647.

  6. Under Additional Settings, do the following:

    1. To configure an IPv4 BGP or an IPv6 peer, do the following:

      [IPv4] To configure an IPv4 BGP peer, choose IPv4 and do one of the following:

      • To specify these IP addresses yourself, for Your router peer ip, enter the destination IPv4 CIDR address to which Amazon should send traffic.

      • For Amazon router peer ip, enter the IPv4 CIDR address to use to send traffic to Amazon.

        Important

        If you let Amazon auto-assign IP addresses, a /29 CIDR will be allocated from 169.254.0.0/16. Amazon does not recommend this option if you intend to use the customer router peer IP address as the source and destination for traffic. Instead you should use RFC 1918 or other addressing, and specify the address yourself. For more information about RFC 1918 see Address Allocation for Private Internets.

      [IPv6] To configure an IPv6 BGP peer, choose IPv6. The peer IPv6 addresses are automatically assigned from Amazon's pool of IPv6 addresses. You cannot specify custom IPv6 addresses.

    2. To change the maximum transmission unit (MTU) from 1500 (default) to 8500 (jumbo frames), select Jumbo MTU (MTU size 8500).

    3. [Optional] Add a tag. Do the following:

      [Add a tag] Choose Add tag and do the following:

      • For Key, enter the key name.

      • For Value, enter the key value.

      [Remove a tag] Next to the tag, choose Remove tag.

  7. Choose Create virtual interface.

  8. After the hosted virtual interface is accepted by the owner of the other Amazon account, you can download the router configuration file for your device. For more information, see Download the router configuration file.

To create a hosted transit virtual interface using the command line or API