Software User's Guide Version 3.4
This chapter describes the Frame Relay configuration and operational
commands and includes the following sections:
Notes:
- For information on monitoring bandwidth reservation over Frame Relay,
refer to "Configuring and Monitoring Bandwidth
Reservation" in Using and Configuring Features.
- The add dev fr command from the Talk 6 Config>
command is used to create Frame Relay subinterfaces. See Subinterfaces for Frame Relay for more information.
This section describes the Frame Relay configuration commands. Enter
all commands at the Frame Relay n> prompt, where
n represents the interface number. You must restart the
router for new configuration changes to take effect. Table 44 shows the commands. To access the Frame Relay
n> prompt, perform the following steps:
- At the OPCON prompt (*), type talk 5.
- At the GWCON prompt (+), enter the interface command to see a
list of interfaces configured on the router.
- Select the Frame Relay interface that you will configure.
- Type exit.
- At the OPCON prompt (*), type talk 6.
- At the Config> prompt, enter the network command
followed by the network number of the frame relay interface. For
example:
Config> net 2
Frame Relay user configuration
FR 2 Config>
Table 44. Frame Relay Configuration Commands Summary
Command
| Function
|
? (Help)
| Displays all the commands available for this command level or lists the
options for specific commands (if available). See "Getting Help".
|
Add
| Adds PVCs, Required PVC groups, SVCs, and destination protocol
addresses to the Frame Relay interface.
|
Change
| Modifies a PVC, SVC, or Required PVC group previously defined by the
add command.
|
Disable
| Disables any enabled Frame Relay features.
|
Enable
| Enables Frame Relay features such as circuit monitoring, management
options, multicast, protocol-broadcast, fragmentation, and
orphans.
|
List
| Displays the current configuration of the LMI, PVCs, Required PVC
groups, SVCs, HDLC information, and protocol addresses.
|
LLC
| Configures LLC parameters on the Frame Relay interface.
These LLC parameters are required when running APPN over the Frame Relay
interface.
|
Remove
| Deletes any previously added PVCs, SVCs, or required PVC groups (if
empty), or protocol addresses.
|
Set
| Configures the Frame Relay management options and parameters
(N1-parameter, N2-parameter, N3-parameter, P1 parameter, and
T1-parameter). Configures the physical-layer parameters for FR serial
interfaces. Sets the maximum frame size.
|
Exit
| Returns you to the previous command level. See "Exiting a Lower Level Environment".
|
Note: | In this section, the terms circuit number and PVC are
synonymous with the term DLCI (Data Link Circuit Identifier).
|
Use the add command to add a circuit, required PVC group, or
destination protocol address supported by the Frame Relay
interface.
Syntax:
- add
- frame-handler-pvc
-
- permanent-virtual-circuit . . .
-
- protocol-address . . .
-
- pvc-group . . .
-
- switched-virtual-circuit . . .
- frame-handler-pvc
- Adds frame handler support to allow routed, bridged, voice, and DCE
traffic over the same interface.
Example:
FR 4 config> add frame-handler-pvc
Circuit Number [16]?
Committed Information Rate (CIR) in bps [64000]?
Committed Burst Size (Bc) in bits [64000]?
Excess Burst Size (Be) in bits [0]?
Assign Circuit name []?
Network number of FH partner PVC [0]?
Circuit number of FH partner PVC [16]?
Maximum outbound queue depth (in number of packets) [10]? 1
- Circuit Number
- Indicates the circuit number for this PVC.
Valid Values: 16 to 1007. The circuit number must
be unique with respect to all other PVCs and FH PVCs on this interface and all
associated subinterfaces.
- Committed Information Rate
- Indicates the committed information rate (CIR). The CIR can be a
value in the range 300 bps to 6 312 000 bps. For
more information, see "Committed Information Rate (CIR)". The maximum is the value of the default CIR configured
for the interface.
Note: | The default value is determined according to the CIR defaults set at the
interface level.
|
- Committed Burst Size
- The maximum amount of data in bits that the network agrees to deliver
during a measurement interval equal to committed burst (Bc) size / CIR
seconds. The range is 300 to
6 312 000 bits. The maximum value is the value
of the default committed burst configured for the interface. See "Committed Burst (Bc) Size" for more information.
Note: | The default value is determined according the Bc defaults set at the
interface level.
|
- Excess Burst Size
- The maximum amount of uncommitted data in bits in excess of committed
burst size that the network attempts to deliver during a measurement interval
equal to (Committed Burst Size/CIR) seconds. The range is 0 to
6 312 000 bits. The maximum value is the value
configured for excess burst size for the interface. For additional
information, see "Excess Burst (Be) Size".
Note: | The default value is determined according to the Be defaults set at the
interface level.
|
- Assign Circuit Name
- Indicates the ASCII string that is assigned to describe the PVC.
The default is unassigned.
- Network number of FH partner PVC
- Specifies the net number of the partner frame handler PVC.
- Circuit number of FH partner PVC
- Specifies the circuit number of the partner frame handler PVC.
- Maximum outgoing queue depth
- Specifies the maximum number of frames that may be queued on the outbound
queue for a frame handler PVC and is used during congestion processing.
Valid Values: 5 to 100
Default Value: 10
- permanent-virtual-circuit
-
Adds a PVC to the Frame Relay interface beyond the reserved range 0 through
15. The maximum number of PVCs that can be added is approximately 992,
but the actual number of PVCs that the interface can support depends upon
these conditions:
- The throughput required for each PVC
- The line speed
- The types of protocol running on the interface
- The number of local management interface PVC information elements that can
fit in the maximum frame size
Example:
add permanent-virtual-circuit
Circuit Number [16]?
Committed Information Rate (CIR) in bps [64000]?
Committed Burst Size (Bc) in bits [64000]?
Excess Burst Size (Be) in bits [0]?
Assign Circuit name []?
Is circuit required for interface operation [N]?y
Does the circuit belong to a required PVC group [N]? y
What is the group name []? group1
Do you want to have data compression performed [Y]?
Do you want to have end-to-end fragmentation performed [Y]?
Fragment size (50 to 8190)[256]?
Fragmented packet reassembly timer (3 to 10 seconds [3]?
Enable circuit for voice forwarding [N]? y
Network number of voice forwarding PVC [0]?
Circuit number of voice forwarding PVC [16]?
Do you want to have data encryption performed [N]? y
Should the encryption algorithm be CDMF (CDMF) or triple-DES (3DES) [CDMF]?
Data encryption requires a key that is 16 hexadecimal characters long for CDMF,
48 hexadecimal characters long for 3DES.
You will be asked to enter the key twice for security reasons
Please enter the key for the first time now
A valid encryption key has been entered
Please confirm the key by entering it again
The encryption keys match - the key has been accepted
- Circuit Number
- Indicates the circuit number for this PVC.
Valid Values: 16 to 1007. The circuit number must
be unique with respect to all other PVCs and FH PVCs on this interface and all
associated subinterfaces.
- Committed Information Rate
- Indicates the committed information rate (CIR). The CIR can be
either 0, or a value in the range 300 bps to 6 312 000
bps. For more information, see "Committed Information Rate (CIR)". The maximum is the value of the default CIR
configured for the interface.
Note: | The default value is determined according the CIR-defaults set at the
interface level.
|
- Committed Burst Size
- The maximum amount of data in bits that the network agrees to deliver
during a measurement interval equal to committed burst (Bc) size / CIR
seconds. The range is 300 to
6 312 000 bits. The maximum value is the value
of the default committed burst configured for the interface. For
additional information, see "Committed Burst (Bc) Size".
Notes:
- The default value is determined according the Bc defaults set at the
interface level.
- CIR configured as 0 is not supported for FH PVCs.
- Excess Burst Size
- The maximum amount of uncommitted data in bits in excess of committed
burst size that the network attempts to deliver during a measurement interval
equal to (Committed Burst Size/CIR) seconds. The range is 0 to
6 312 000 bits. The maximum value is the value
configured for excess burst size for the interface. For additional
information, see "Excess Burst (Be) Size".
Note: | The default value is determined according the Be defaults set at the
interface level.
|
- Assign Circuit Name
- Indicates the ASCII string that is assigned to describe the PVC.
The default is unassigned.
- Is the circuit required for operation?
- Specify Y or N to indicate whether the circuit is
required for interface operation.
- Does the circuit belong to a required PVC group?
- This prompt is displayed only for circuits that are required.
Specify Y or N to indicate whether the circuit should
belong to a required PVC group.
- What is the group name?
- Enables you to specify the name of the required PVC group when the PVC is
defined as belonging to a required group. Enter a question mark (?) for
a list of currently defined groups.
- Do you want to have compression performed?
- Enables you to specify whether or not the circuit will compress data
packets. This question appears only if compression is enabled on the
interface.
Note: | If you enable compression on a PVC and exceed the interface's compression
circuit limit, you will get a message. Compression will be performed on
the circuit, if possible, that is, the active compression limit has not been
exceeded when the circuit becomes active. Compression limit includes
the number of compression contexts allocated to SVCs as well as PVCs.
|
- Enable circuit for voice forwarding?
- Enables you to specify whether or not the circuit will forward voice
packets. If you specify Y (yes), you must specify the
network and circuit number of the PVC to which this PVC will forward voice
frames.
- Do you want to have end-to-end fragmentation performed?
- Enables you to specify whether or not the circuit will perform
fragmentation across the entire circuit. This question appears only if
end-to-end fragmentation has been enabled on the interface. If UNI/NNI
fragmentation is enabled, all circuits on this interface are automatically
enabled for fragmentation, and this question does not appear.
When you specify the fragment size and reassembly timer values, you can
override the defaults for the end-to-end fragment size and reassembly timer
values configured for this interface.
- Do you want to have data encryption performed?
- Enables you to specify whether or not the circuit will encrypt data
packets. This question appears only if encryption is enabled on the
interface. The prompts for the encryption key and algorithm will only
appear if you respond Y (yes) to this question.
Specifying the Encryption Key: You must specify the
encryption key value in hexadecimal characters.
Valid Values: 16 hex characters for CDMF, 48 hex
characters for 3DES
Note: | Encryption support is optional and must be added to your software load using
the load add command. See Load.
|
- protocol-address
- This command adds statically configured destination protocol
(protocol-name) addresses to the Frame Relay interface. Statically
configured destination protocol addresses are useful if neither Inverse ARP
nor ARP is an option, or for other reasons such as security. Adding
protocol name and address mappings (static ARP)
is less efficient than Inverse ARP or ARP.
- Inverse ARP is the preferred, efficient method because of dynamic address
mapping with no broadcasts.
- ARP is recommended if Inverse ARP is not an option. It is less
efficient than Inverse ARP because it uses address broadcast and mappings are
relearned at regular intervals.
This parameter prompts you for different information depending on the type
of protocol that you are adding.
Example:
add protocol-address
Protocol name or number [IP]?
IP protocol:
IP Address [0.0.0.0]?
Circuit Number or name [16]?
IPX protocol:
Host Number (in hex)[]?
Circuit Number or name [16]?
AppleTalk Phase 2 protocol:
Network Number (1-65279) []?
Node Number (1-253) []?
Circuit Number or name[16]?
DN protocol:
Node address [0.0]?
Circuit Number or name[16]?
- Protocol name or number
- Defines the name or number of the protocol that you are adding. If
you should specify an unsupported protocol, the system will prompt you with
the error message:
Unknown protocol name, try again
For example, you may have erroneously specified one of the following:
Prot# Name
0 IP
4 DN
7 IPX
22 AP2
To see a list of supported protocol types, type ? at the
Protocol name or number [IP]? prompt.
- IP Address
- Defines the 32-bit Internet address in dotted-decimal notation of the
remote IP host.
- Host Number
- Defines the 48-bit IPX node address of the remote IPX host.
- Network Number
- Defines the AppleTalk Phase 2 network number of the remote AppleTalk
host.
- Node Number
- Defines the node number of the interface attached to the remote AppleTalk
host.
- Node address
- Defines the DECnet node address of the remote DECnet host.
Configure the node address in the format x.y, where
x is a 6-bit area address and y is a 10-bit node
number.
- Circuit Number or name
- Defines the PVC by DLCI or name or SVC by name that this remote protocol
address is associated with.
- pvc-group groupname
- Adds a required PVC group name.
Note: | SVCs may not belong to a required PVC group.
|
- switched-virtual-circuit
-
Adds a switched virtual circuit (SVC). The SVC will act similar to a
PVC except that the SVC's bandwidth will be allocated for it dynamically
by the FR network only when the SVC is active. The number of SVCs that
can be added is similar to the number of PVCs that can be added in that the
number depends on the throughput required for each circuit, the line speed,
etc. However, since the bandwidth for an SVC is only reserved when the
SVC is active, it may be possible to support more SVCs over an interface than
PVCs.
FR 4 Config>add switched-virtual-circuit
Circuit name []? svc01
Remote party number []? 12345
Remote party number numbering plan (E.164 or X.121) [E.164]?
Remote party number type (Unknown or International) [International]?
Remote party subaddress in hexadecimal []? 01
Remote party subaddress format (private or NSAP) [private]&idotless.?
Requested outgoing Committed Information Rate (CIR) in bps [64000]?
Minimum acceptable outgoing Committed Information Rate (CIR) in bps [64000]?
Requested incoming Committed Information Rate (CIR) in bps [64000]?
Minimum acceptable incoming Committed Information Rate (CIR) in bps [64000]?
Requested outgoing Committed Burst size (Bc) in bits [64000]?
Requested incoming Committed Burst size (Bc) in bits [64000]?
Requested outgoing Excess Burst size (Be) in bits [0]?
Requested incoming Excess Burst size (Be) in bits [0]?
Idle timer in seconds [60]?
Establish circuit to learn remote protocol addresses [Y]?
Is multicast required for this circuit [Y]?
Are call-ins allowed for this circuit [Y]?
- Circuit name
- Specifies the circuit name for the SVC. This name will be used to
associate the call with both a protocol and a BRS definition and will be used
to identify a connection instead of a circuit number.
Valid Values: A 1 to 32 character ASCII string
Default Value: The name is required and must be unique for
this interface
- Remote party number
- Specifies the remote destination's Frame Relay address.
Valid Values: A 1 to 20 character string of decimal digits
Default Value: None
- Remote party numbering plan
- Specifies the format of the remote party number. The numbering plan
must match that used by the FR network.
Valid Values: E.164 (ISDN) or X.121 (Data)
Default Value: E.164
- Remote party number type
- Specifies the destination Frame Relay party number type. The number
type must match that used by the FR network.
Valid Values: International or Unknown
Default Value: International
- Remote party subaddress
- Specifies the party entity (for example, protocol) within the destination
node. If the subaddress is used, it will be matched to the remote
device's subaddress. The subaddress at both ends of the connection
must be the same.
The format of the remote party subaddress can be:
- NSAP
The number of digits entered must be even and in the range of X'0'
- X'F'.
- Private
If the encoding is BCD, then an odd number of digits in the range of 0 - 9
can be entered.
If the encoding is not BCD, then an even number of digits in the range of
X'0' - X'F' can be entered.
The combination of remote party number and remote party subaddress must be
unique on this interface and any associated subinterface. If parallel
connections between two router interfaces are required, the subaddress must be
used to uniquely identify each switched virtual connection definition.
Valid Values: 1 - 40 character hexadecimal string
Default Value: None
- Requested outgoing throughput (CIR)
- Specifies the requested outgoing CIR. The network will provide this
bandwidth, if available.
Valid Values: The CIR can be either 0, or a value in the
range 300 bps to 6 312 000 bps.
Default Value: Default value is determined according to
CIR-defaults at the interface level
- Minimum acceptable outgoing Committed Information Rate (CIR)
- Specifies the minimum CIR that will be accepted if the network cannot
provide the requested CIR.
Valid Values: The CIR can be either 0, or a value in the
range 300 bps to 6 312 000 bps with a maximum of the
requested outgoing throughput (CIR).
Default Value: Default value is determined according to
CIR-defaults at the interface level
- Requested incoming CIR
- Specifies the requested incoming CIR.
Valid Values: The CIR can be either 0 or a value in the
range 300 bps to 6 312 000 bps.
Default Value: Value of the requested outgoing
CIR
- Minimum acceptable incoming Committed Information Rate (CIR)
- Specifies the minimum CIR that will be accepted if the network cannot
provide the requested CIR.
Valid Values: The CIR can be either 0 or a value in the
range 300 bps to 6 312 000 bps with a maximum of the
requested incoming CIR.
Default Value: Same as minimum acceptable outgoing
CIR
- Requested outgoing committed burst size (Bc)
- Specifies the requested outgoing committed burst size.
Valid Values: The CIR can be either 0 or a value in the
range 300 bps to 6 312 000 bps.
Default Value: Value determined according to CIR-defaults
at the interface level
- Requested incoming committed burst size (Bc)
- Specifies the requested incoming committed burst size.
Valid Values: The CIR can be either 0, or a value in the
range 300 bps to 6 312 000 bps.
Default Value: Value equal to requested outgoing
Bc
- Outgoing excess burst size (Be)
- Specifies the requested outgoing burst size.
Valid Values: The CIR can be either 0, or a value in the
range 300 bps to 6 312 000 bps.
Default Value: Value determined according to CIR-defaults
at the interface level
- Requested incoming excess burst size (Be)
- Specifies the requested incoming excess burst size.
Valid Values: The CIR can be either 0, or a value in the
range 300 bps to 6 312 000 bps.
Default Value: Same as requested outgoing excess
burst size (Be)
- Idle timer
- Specifies the time period that a SVC will remain active in the absence of
traffic. Specifying 0 designates this SVC as a fixed circuit that will
be established the first time data arrives for it and will not be disconnected
even if no traffic flows over it.
Valid Values: 0 to 65535 seconds
Default Value: 60
- Establish circuit to learn remote protocol addresses
- Specifies whether this SVC should be established when the interface comes
up to learn the protocol addresses of the adjacent node. This option
can be used in place of statically configured destination protocol names and
addresses for protocols that support dynamic address discovery, such as IP,
IPX, Appletalk2, and DECnet IV to force the router to learn the protocol
addresses associated with the remote device via directed InARP. Using
this option may help reduce ARP broadcasts. The idle timer will be used
to disconnect the SVC once the protocol addresses are learned.
Valid Values: yes or no
Default Value: yes
- Is multicast required for this circuit
- Specifies whether or not this SVC should be used to transmit multicast
packets on this interface even if it means setting the SVC up just to do
so. You may use static routes to keep from requiring multicast over
SVCs so that the SVCs will not be established just to exchange routing
information.
Valid Values: yes or no
Default Value: Defaults according to the multicast
emulation setting at the interface level
- Are call-ins allowed
- Specifies whether or not a call-in from this remote DTE should be
accepted. Specifying no can be used to block call-ins from specific
users and help eliminate call-in/call-out race conditions.
Valid Values: yes or no
Default Value: yes
- Compression capable
- Specifies whether Frame Relay compression is supported.
Valid Values: yes or no
Default Value: yes, if compression is enabled for the
interface. Otherwise, no.
- Encryption capable
- Enables you to specify whether or not the circuit will encrypt data
packets. This question appears only if encryption is enabled on the
interface. The prompts for the encryption key and algorithm will appear
only if you activate encryption on the SVC.
Specifying the Encryption Key: You must specify the
encryption key value in hexadecimal characters.
Valid Values: 16 for CDMF, 48 for 3DES
Note: | Encryption support is optional and must be added to your software load using
the load add command. See Load.
|
Use the change permanent-virtual-circuit command to change any
previous PVCs that were added with the add
permanent-virtual-circuit command. If you use end-to-end type
fragmentation, use the change permanent-virtual-circuit command to
designate the PVCs over which end-to-end fragmentation will take place.
Syntax:
- change
- frame-handler-pvc . . .
-
- permanent-virtual-circuit . . .
-
- switched-virtual-circuit . . .
Example:
change permanent-virtual-circuit
Circuit Number [16]?
Committed Information Rate in bps [64000]?
Committed Burst Size (Bc) in bits [64000]?
Excess Burst Size (Be) in bits [0]?
Assign Circuit Name: []?
Is the circuit required for interface operation [N]?
Does the circuit belong to a required PVC group [N]?
Do you want to have data compression performed [Y]?
Do you want end-to-end fragmentation performed on this circuit [Y]?
Fragment size (50 to 8190) [256]?
Fragmented packet reassembly timer (3 to 10 seconds) [3]?
Do you want to have data encryption performed [N]?
Enable circuit for voice forwarding [N]?
- frame-handler-pvc
-
See the add frame-handler-pvc command on page *** for a description of the parameters.
- permanent virtual circuit
-
See the add permanent-virtual-circuit command on page *** for a description of the parameters, except for the
fragmentation parameters. These are described at the enable
fragmentation command.
- switched-virtual-circuit
-
FR 4 Config>change switched-virtual-circuit
Circuit name []? svc01
Remote party number []? 12345
Remote party number numbering plan (E.164 or X.121) [E.164]?
Remote party number type (Unknown or International) [International]?
Remote party subaddress in hexadecimal []? 01
Remote party subaddress format (private or NSAP) [private]&idotless.?
Requested outgoing Committed Information Rate (CIR) in bps [64000]?
Minimum acceptable outgoing Committed Information Rate (CIR) in bps [64000]?
Requested incoming Committed Information Rate (CIR) in bps [64000]?
Minimum acceptable incoming Committed Information Rate (CIR) in bps [64000]?
Requested outgoing Committed Burst size (Bc) in bits [64000]?
Requested incoming Committed Burst size (Bc) in bits [64000]?
Requested outgoing Excess Burst size (Be) in bits [0]?
Requested incoming Excess Burst size (Be) in bits [0]?
Idle timer in seconds [60]?
Establish circuit to learn remote protocol addresses [Y]?
Is multicast required for this circuit [Y]?
Are call-ins allowed for this circuit [Y]?
See page *** for a description of the parameters.
Use the disable command to disable those features previously
enabled using the enable command.
Syntax:
- disable
- cir-monitor
-
- cllm
-
- compression
-
- congestion-monitor
-
- dn-length-field
-
- encryption
-
- fragmentation
-
- lmi
-
- lower-dtr
-
- multicast-emulation
-
- no-pvc
-
- notify-fecn-source
-
- orphan-circuits
-
- point-to-point
-
- protocol-broadcast
-
- switched-virtual-circuits
-
- throttle-transmit-on-fecn
Note: | The parameters in the following list can be enabled and disabled on an FR
subinterface:
- dn-length-field
- multicast-emulation
- no-pvc
- point-to-point
- protocol-broadcast
These parameters can have different values on an FR subinterface than they
do on the FR base interface.
The remaining parameters can be disabled and enabled only on the FR base
interface. The values of these parameters on the FR subinterfaces are
determined by their values on the FR base interface. For example, if
encryption is disabled on the FR base interface, it is disabled on all FR
subinterfaces that are associated with that base interface.
|
- cir-monitor
- Disabling this feature allows the circuit's information rate to exceed
the maximum information rate that is calculated using the parameters
configured with the add permanent-virtual-circuit or add
switched-virtual-circuit command. The default setting for this
feature is disabled. See "Circuit Congestion" for more information.
- cllm
- Disables the device from throttling down in response to a CLLM
message. The default is disabled. See "Circuit Congestion" for details.
- compression
- Disables compression on the interface. Compression will not be
performed for any VC. FR subinterfaces associated with the FR base
interface will have the same value for compression as the base
interface.
- congestion-monitor
- Disables the congestion monitoring feature. Disabling this feature
prevents a circuit's information rate from varying in response to
congestion between the minimum information rate and the line speed. See
"Circuit Congestion" for more information. The default setting for this
feature is enabled.
- dn-length-field
- Prevents inter-operation with implementations of DECnet Phase IV over
Frame Relay that require a length field to precede DECnet packets in Frame
Relay frames, but allows inter-operation with DECnet Phase IV Frame Relay
software that does not use a length field before the DECnet packet.
Disabling dn-length-field causes Frame Relay not to insert a length field into
transmitted frames containing DECnet packets and not to attempt to remove the
length field from received frames containing DECnet packets.
Note: | This option is presented as a configuration option only when the router
software contains the DECnet Phase IV protocol. This option can be set
on an FR subinterface and can differ from the value on the FR base
interface.
|
- encryption
- Disables encryption on the interface. Even though the PVCs on this
interface may be encryption capable, encryption will not take place.
Encryption cannot be disabled or enabled for FR subinterfaces. FR
subinterfaces will have the same value for encryption as the FR base
interface.
Note: | Encryption support is optional and must be added to your software load using
the load add command. See Load.
|
- fragmentation
- Globally disables fragmentation for this interface. FR
subinterfaces will have the same value for fragmentation as the FR base
interface.
- lmi
- Disabling this parameter allows for normal operation or end-to-end Frame
Relay testing in the absence of a real network or management interface.
With end-to-end Frame Relay testing, it is necessary to add like PVCs (the
same PVC number, such as 16 and 16) on both ends of the link. The
associated Frame Relay subinterfaces will have the same value for this
parameter as the Frame Relay base interface.
- lower-dtr
- This parameter determines how the data terminal ready (DTR) signal is
handled for leased serial-line interfaces on the router. It is not
supported on Frame Relay dial circuit interfaces. See the enable
lower-dtr command for a more complete description of the lower-dtr
parameter.
The following cable types are supported:
- EIA 232 (RS-232)
- V.35
- V.36
The default setting is disable lower-dtr.
- multicast-emulation
-
Disables multicast emulation on each active VC. The default setting
for this feature is enabled. If you disable this feature,
you are required to add protocol static address maps. This option can
be set on a FR subinterface and can differ from the setting on the FR base
interface.
Some protocols, such as IPX RIP, will not function on the Frame Relay
interface if multicast-emulation is disabled. The protocol-broadcast
feature also requires multicast-emulation in order to function
properly. For more information, see "Multicast Emulation and Protocol Broadcast".
- no-pvc
- Controls whether the interface is considered active or inactive. If
no-pvc is disabled, the presence of active PVCs on the interface does not
affect whether the Frame Relay interface is considered active or
inactive. This option can be set on a FR subinterface and can differ
from the setting on the FR base interface.
- notify-fecn-source
- Disables setting a BECN bit on the first packet destined to a device from
which the router received a packet with the FECN bit set. See "Circuit Congestion" for more information.
- orphan-circuits
- Prohibits the use of all non-configured PVC orphan circuits at the
interface. The default setting for orphan circuits is enabled.
Disabling orphan circuits adds a measure of security to your network by
preventing unauthorized entry from a non-configured circuit. However,
if you disable orphan circuits, you are required to add PVCs that will be used
on the interface.
- point-to-point
- Disables point-to-point on the interface. Point-to-point indicates
that the interface is point-to-point from the perspective of IP. This
option can be set on a FR subinterface and can differ from the setting on the
FR base interface.
- protocol-broadcast
-
Prohibits protocols such as IP RIP from functioning over the Frame Relay
interface. For more information, see "Multicast Emulation and Protocol Broadcast". The default setting for this feature is
enabled. This option can be set on a FR subinterface and can differ
from the setting on the FR base interface.
- switched-virtual-circuits
- Prohibits the use of SVCs.
- throttle-transmit-on-fecn
- Prohibits the device from throttling down the transmission of
packets in response to a packet with a FECN bit set on. The default is
disabled. See "Circuit Congestion" for more information.
Use the enable command to enable Frame Relay features.
Syntax:
- enable
- cir-monitor
-
- cllm
-
- compression
-
- congestion-monitor
-
- dn-length-field
-
- encryption
-
- fragmentation
-
- lmi
-
- lower-dtr
-
- multicast-emulation
-
- notify-fecn-source
-
- no-pvc
-
- orphan-circuits
-
- point-to-point
-
- protocol-broadcast
-
- switched-virtual-circuits
-
- throttle-transmit-on-fecn
Note: | The parameters in the following list can be enabled and disabled on an FR
subinterface:
- dn-length-field
- multicast-emulation
- no-pvc
- point-to-point
- protocol-broadcast
These parameters can have different values on an FR subinterface than they
have on the FR base interface.
The remaining parameters can be disabled and enabled only on the FR base
interface. The values of these parameters on the FR subinterfaces are
determined by their values on the FR base interface. For example, if
encryption is enabled on the FR base interface, it is enabled on all FR
subinterfaces that are associated with that base interface.
|
- cir-monitor
- Enables the circuit monitoring feature. The circuit monitoring
feature ensures that the circuit's information rate varies between the
minimum information rate and the maximum information rate, calculated using
the parameters configured with the add permanent-virtual-circuit
command or the change permanent-virtual-circuit command.
Note: | The circuit monitoring feature overrides the congestion monitoring feature if
there is a conflict when both are enabled. The default setting for this
feature is disabled.
|
For additional information on CIR monitoring, see "CIR Monitoring".
Note: | To maximize throughput for circuits running data compression, you should not
enable CIR monitoring on the same interface on which you have enabled
compression. Because the device uses the uncompressed size of frames to
determine if the VIR of a PVC is being exceeded and compressed frames will
require less bandwidth, the CIR of a PVC will be under-utilized if the device
strictly monitors and does not exceed the configured CIR. Instead,
congestion monitoring can be used to allow the device to react to congestion
indications sent by the FR network to avoid frame loss.
|
- cllm
- Enables the device to throttle down in response to a CLLM
message. Contact your FR network provider to see whether this support
is available. See "Circuit Congestion" for more information.
- compression
- Enables compression on the interface. All compression-capable VCs
on the interface can compress data packets, provided that contexts are
available and the active compression circuit limit has not been
exceeded. (See "Configuring and
Monitoring Data Compression" in Using and Configuring Features for details.) FR subinterfaces associated with the FR base interface
will have the same value for compression as the base interface.
Note: | To maximize throughput for circuits running data compression, you should not
enable CIR monitoring on the same interface on which you have enabled
compression. Because the device uses the uncompressed size of frames to
determine if the VIR of a VC is being exceeded and compressed frames will
require less bandwidth, the CIR of a VC will be under-utilized if the device
strictly monitors and does not exceed the configured CIR. Instead,
congestion monitoring can be used to allow the device to react to congestion
indications sent by the FR network to avoid frame loss.
|
- congestion-monitor
- Enables the congestion monitoring feature. This feature allows a
circuit's information rate to vary in response to congestion between the
minimum information rate and the line speed.
Note: | The circuit monitoring feature overrides the congestion monitoring feature if
there is a conflict when both are enabled. The default setting for this
feature is enabled.
|
For additional information on congestion monitoring, see "Congestion Monitoring".
- dn-length-field
- Supports inter-operation with implementations of DECnet Phase IV over
Frame Relay that require a length field to precede DECnet packets in Frame
Relay frames. Enabling dn-length-field causes Frame Relay to insert a
length field into transmitted frames containing DECnet packets and to remove
the length field from received frames containing DECnet packets. This
option is disabled by default. By default, Frame Relay will neither
insert nor attempt to remove the length field.
Note: | This option is presented as a configuration option only when the router
software contains the DECnet Phase IV protocol. This option can be
disabled and enabled for FR subinterfaces and can differ from the value of the
FR base net.
|
- encryption
- Enables encryption on the interface. All VCs that are configured as
encryption enabled, will encrypt all transmitted data.
FR subinterfaces associated with the FR base interface will have the same
value for encryption as the base interface.
Note: | Encryption support is optional and must be added to your software load using
the load add command. See Load.
|
- fragmentation fragmentation-typefragment-size
fragmented packet-reassembly-timer
- Enables fragmentation on an interface. Fragmentation on a circuit
causes frames larger than the fragment size to be broken into smaller pieces
and transmitted as separate frames. If end-to-end fragmentation is
enabled, frames smaller than the fragment size will not be sent with a
fragmentation header and can be interleaved between fragments of other
frames. Fragmentation should be enabled for circuits that are either
forwarding voice frames or communicating with another interface that is
forwarding voice frames. Note however that fragmentation and
interleaving can be done for any high priority data; that is,
interleaving is supported for protocols other than voice over Frame
Relay.
Keep in mind that you should configure the Bandwidth Reservation System
(BRS) when you enable fragmentation to give priority to real-time traffic such
as voice. For information on bandwidth reservation over Frame Relay,
refer to "Using Bandwidth Reservation and
Priority Queuing" and "Configuring and
Monitoring Bandwidth Reservation" in Using and Configuring Features.
FR subinterfaces associated with the FR base interface will have the same
value for fragmentation as the FR base interface.
- fragmentation-type
- The values of this parameter are:
- User Network Interface (UNI)/ Network-to-Network Interface (NNI)
- End-to-end
User Network Interface (UNI)/Network-to-Network Interface (NNI) is the
default type. UNI is DTE to DCE fragmentation; NNI is DCE to DCE
fragmentation; and end-to-end is DCE to DCE fragmentation over particular
specified PVCs within the interface.
When UNI/NNI fragmentation is enabled, fragmentation occurs for all
circuits on the interface, including management PVCs, that is, DLCI 0.
When you configure fragmentation over a PVC, the fragmentation type for that
circuit is always end-to-end. You must enable end-to-end fragmentation
for both ends of the PVC when fragmenting. The fragment size need not
be the same in both directions, however.
If the path to the next router passes through a Frame Relay switch, you
should use the end-to-end fragmentation type. If you use UNI/NNI
connection from the 2212 to the next router, make sure that your Frame Relay
network provider supports UNI/NNI fragmentation.
Valid Values: UNI/NNI, or end-to-end
Default Value: UNI/NNI
- fragment-size
- Displays the fragment size of each fragment in bytes. For UNI/NNI
fragmentation, this parameter specifies the fragment size used for all
circuits on the interface. For end-to-end fragmentation, this parameter
specifies the default fragment size for PVCs on this interface.
The fragment sizes are not negotiated and do not need to be the same on
both sides of the PVC. However, the frame sent cannot be larger than
the MTU of the receiving end of the PVC, regardless of the fragment
size. If the frame exceeds the MTU of the receiving end, when the
fragment arrives that overloads the receiver, the receiver will perform the
following actions:
- send an error message stating that it cannot buffer the fragment
- discard that fragment
- display the message Out of sequence fragments
- eventually discard all the fragments of that frame
Tips for Selecting the Fragment Size:
- When you specify the fragment size, be sure that the fragment size is
appropriate for the capacity of your link. The fragment size chosen
should be based on the access rate and the amount of delay that is tolerable
for any real-time data sharing the link.
- In addition, buffers on the router are allocated for each fragment.
If the frame size is large and the fragment size very small, the router can
allocate so many of its buffers to the fragments that the performance of the
router itself is degraded.
Valid Values: 50 to 8190 bytes
Default Value: 256 bytes
- fragmented-packet-reassembly-timer
- Displays the length of time in seconds that the receiver of the fragments
waits for the next-in-sequence fragment to arrive. If this timer
expires before the next fragment arrives, all the received fragments for that
frame are discarded.
Valid Values: 3 to 10 seconds
Default Value: 3 seconds
- lmi
- Enables management activity.
After issuing the enable lmi command, use the set
lmi-type command to select the management mode for your Frame Relay
interface. See "Enabling Frame Relay PVC Management". The system defaults to ANSI T1.617 Annex D
management.
Use the enable lmi command to resume LMI management if you have
previously disabled Frame Relay management.
LMI only provides information about PVCs on an interface, so it does not
need to be enabled if only SVCs are used unless it is required by the
network. Q.922 determines the usability of all SVCs on an
interface and is an indicator of the state of the interface itself.
When both PVCs and SVCs are on an interface, LMI and Q.922 may be
active at the same time.
LMI is a function that can be configured only on the FR base interface, not
on FR subinterfaces.
- lower-dtr
- This parameter determines how the data terminal ready (DTR) signal is
handled for leased serial-line interfaces that are disabled. It is not
supported on Frame Relay dial circuit interfaces. If this parameter is
set to "disabled" (the default), the DTR signal will remain raised when
the interface is disabled.
When lower-dtr is enabled, DTR will be lowered when the interface is
disabled. This behavior may be desirable in situations where the
interface has been configured as an alternate link for WAN Reroute and the
interface is connected to a dial-out modem which maintains its dial connection
based on the state of the DTR signal.
If this feature is enabled and the interface is disabled, the DTR signal is
low and the modem keeps the dial connection down. When the interface is
enabled, due to a WAN Reroute backup scenario, DTR is raised and the modem
dials a stored number to the backup site. When the primary interface is
restored, the alternate interface is disabled, DTR is lowered, and the modem
hangs up the dial connection.
The following cable types are supported:
- EIA 232 (RS-232)
- V.35
- V.36
The default setting is disable lower-dtr.
- multicast-emulation
-
Enables multicast emulation. This allows a multicast/broadcast frame
to be transmitted on each active VC. This option can be set on a FR
subinterface and can differ from the setting on the FR base
interface.
Protocols such as ARP, IPX RIP, and IP RIP require multicast emulation to
be enabled to function correctly over a Frame Relay interface. For more
information, see "Multicast Emulation and Protocol Broadcast". The default for this parameter is enabled.
- no-pvc
-
Controls whether the interface is considered active or inactive.
When this feature is enabled, the Frame Relay interface becomes inactive when
there are no active PVCs on the interface. If at least one PVC is
active, the Frame Relay interface becomes active when a successful LMI
exchange occurs between the router and the FR switch. This option can
be set on a FR subinterface and can differ from the setting on the FR base
interface.
- notify-fecn-source
- Enables setting a BECN bit on the first packet destined to a device from
which the router received a packet with the FECN bit set. Use this
parameter to enhance the congestion control mechanisms of the device in a
network whether the FR switches do not themselves set BECN but set
FECN. See "Circuit Congestion" for more information.
- orphan-circuits
- Enables the use of all non-configured orphan circuits. The default
for this feature is enabled. See "Orphan Permanent Virtual Circuit CIR" for information about the default CIR values.
- point-to-point
- Enables point-to-point on the interface. Point-to-point indicates
that the interface is point-to-point from the perspective of IP. This
option can be set on a FR subinterface and can differ from the setting on the
FR base interface. Only one PVC or SVC can be defined on a
point-to-point interface.
- protocol-broadcast
-
Allows protocols such as IP RIP to function correctly over the Frame Relay
interface. The multicast emulation feature must be enabled for the
protocol-broadcast feature to function correctly. The default setting
for this feature is enabled. This option can be set on a FR
subinterface and can differ from the setting on the FR base
interface.
- switched-virtual-circuits
- Allows the use of SVCs and prompts you for the local SVC network number,
the numbering plan, whether call-ins from orphan SVCs are allowed, the number
of dial-out retries performed for all SVCs on the interface, and whether
network emulation mode, which is used in back-to-back (for example, dial
circuit) router configurations, is required.
You can also use the enable switched-virtual-circuits command to
change configured SVC interface parameters if SVCs have already been
enabled.
Example:
FR 1 Config> enable switched
Local party number []? 4141990
Local party number numbering plan (E.164 or X.121) [E.164]?
Local party number type (Unknown or International) [International]?
Are call-ins allowed on this interface [Y]?
Call-out redial attempts [2]?
Network emulation mode [N]?
- Local party number
- Specifies the destination's Frame Relay address.
Valid Values: A 1 - 20 character string of decimal digits
Default Value: None
- Local party numbering plan
- Specifies the format of the party number. The numbering plan must
match that used by the FR network.
Valid Values: E.164 (ISDN) or X.121 (Data)
Default Value: E.164
- Local party number type
- Specifies the destination Frame Relay party number type. The number
type must match that used by the FR network.
Valid Values: International or Unknown
Default Value: International
- Call-ins allowed
- Specifies whether calls from unconfigured (orphan) SVCs are allowed on
this interface.
- Call-out redial attempts
- Specifies the number of call-out redial attempts that will be performed
for each SVC in case of a call-out timeout on this interface.
Default Value: 2
- Network emulation mode
- Specifies whether this SVC is in network emulation mode. It is used
for a back-to-back router configuration.
- throttle-transmit-on-fecn
- Enables the device to throttle down the transmission of packets
in response to a packet with a FECN bit set on. Use this parameter to
minimize overall FR network congestion whenever a congestion indication is
received. It causes the device to react to a FECN in the same way that
it reacts to a BECN.
Use the list command to display currently configured management
and PVC information.
Syntax:
- list
- all
-
- fragmentation-capable-pvcs
-
- frame-handler-pvcs
-
- hdlc
-
- interface
-
- lmi
-
- permanent-virtual-circuits
-
- protocol-addresses
-
- pvc-groups
-
- subinterfaces
-
- switched-virtual-circuits
-
- voice-forwarding-circuits
- all
- Displays the Frame Relay configuration. The display is a
combination of the list hdlc, the list lmi, list
switched-virtual-circuits, and the list permanent virtual
circuits commands.
- fragmentation-capable-pvcs
- Displays all PVCs which are end-to-end fragment enabled along with their
fragment size and reassembly timer values.
- frame-handler-pvc
- Displays each frame handler PVC along with the routing partner for the
specified net.
- hdlc
- Displays the Frame Relay High-Level Data Link Control (HDLC)
configuration.
Example for a FR base interface:
list hdlc
Frame Relay HDLC Configuration
Maximum frame size = 2048
Encoding = NRZ
Idle state = Flag
Clocking = External
Cable type = V.35 DTE
Line speed (bps) = 64000
Transmit delay = 0
Lower DTR = Enabled
Example for an FR subinterface:
list hdlc interface
Frame Relay Subinterface Configuration
Frame Relay base network number = 1
Emulate multicast = Yes Protocol broadcast = Yes
Point-to-point = Yes Interface down if no PVCs = No
- Encoding
- The transmission encoding scheme for the serial interface. Encoding
is NRZ (non-return to zero) or NRZI (non-return to zero inverted).
- Idle
- The data link idle state: flag or mark.
- Clocking
- The type of clocking: internal or external.
- Cable type
- The serial adapter cable type: RS-232, V.35, V.36, or
X.21.
- Line Speed (bps)
- Indicates the physical data rate for the Frame Relay interface.
- Maximum frame size
- Indicates the maximum frame size that can be transmitted or received over
the network at any given time.
- Transmit delay
- Indicates the number of additional flag bytes sent between frames.
- Lower DTR
- Indicates whether the router will drop the DTR signal when a WAN Reroute
alternate link is no longer needed. Dropping the DTR signal causes the
modem to terminate the leased-line connection for the alternate link.
Lower DTR does not appear when the cable type is X.21.
- Emulate multicast
- Indicates whether the multicast emulation feature is enabled on each
active PVC, yes or no.
- Protocol broadcast
- Indicates whether protocols such as IP RIP can function over the Frame
Relay interface, yes or no.
- Point-to-point
- Indicates whether interface is point-to-point from an IP
perspective.
- Interface down if no PVCs
- Indicates whether the router considers the interface unavailable when
there are no active PVCs.
Note: | For a FR dial circuit interface, only the maximum frame size is
displayed.
|
- interface
- If the interface is an FR base interface, the same information is
displayed as with the list lmi command. If the interface is
an FR subinterface, the same information is displayed as with the list
hdlc interface command.
- lmi
- Displays logical management and related configuration information about
the Frame Relay interface.
Note: | For FR subinterfaces, this command displays the same information as the
command list hdlc. FR subinterfaces do not support LMI
management.
|
Example:
Frame Relay Configuration
LMI network type = UNI LMI DLCI = 0
LMI type = ANSI LMI Orphans OK = Yes
CLLM enabled = No Timer Ty seconds = 11
SVC network number = 15
SVC Number type = International
SVC Numbering plan = E.164 SVC Call-out redial attempts = 2
SVC Call-ins allowed = Yes SVC Network emulation mode = No
Protocol broadcast = Yes Congestion monitoring = Yes
Emulate multicast = Yes CIR monitoring = No
Notify FECN source = No Throttle transmit on FECN = No
Point-to-point = No
Data compression = No
(1)
Fragmentation Type = END-TO-END
Fragmentation Size = 440 Fragment reassembly timer = 3
Number VCs P1 allowed = 64 Interface down if no PVCs = No
Timer T1 seconds = 10 Timer T2 seconds = 15
LMI N1 increments = 6 LMI N2 error threshold = 3
LMI N3 error threshold = 4
MIR % of CIR = 25 IR % Increment = 12
IR % Decrement = 25 DECnet length field = No
Default CIR = 64000 Default Burst Size = 64000
Default Excess Burst = 0
(1) The two lines that follow this marker appear only when
fragmentation is on (yes).
- LMI enabled
- Indicates whether the management features are enabled on the Frame Relay
interface. If LMI is not enabled, this value is no; if
LMI is enabled, the LMI network type, either UNI or NNI, is displayed.
- LMI DLCI
- Indicates the management circuit number. This number reflects the
LMI type: 0 for ANSI and ITU-T/CCITT and 1023 for REV1.
- LMI Type
- Indicates the LMI type: REV1, ANSI, or CCITT.
- LMI Orphans OK
- Indicates if non-configured circuits are available for use, yes or
no.
- CLLM Enabled
- Indicates whether CLLM is enabled on the Frame Relay interface.
- Timer Ty seconds
- Indicates the amount of time that must elapse without the device receiving
any CLLM messages or BECNs before the device considers a congestion condition
cleared and gradually return the PVC to its configured transmission
rate.
- SVC network number
- Specifies the network number for the SVCs on this interface.
- SVC number type
- Specifies the SVC number type, unknown or international.
- SVC numbering plan
- Specifies whether the numbering plan is E.164 or
X.121.
- SVC call-out redial attempts
- Specifies the number of call-out redial attempts on this interface.
- SVC network emulation mode
- Specifies whether this interface operates in network emulation mode for
SVCs.
- SVC call-ins allowed
- Specifies whether call-ins are allowed on this interface.
- Protocol Broadcast
- Indicates whether protocols such as IP RIP can function over the Frame
Relay interface, yes or no.
- Emulate multicast
- Indicates whether the multicast emulation feature is enabled on each
active PVC, yes or no.
- Congestion Monitoring
- Indicates whether the congestion monitoring feature that responds to
network congestion is enabled, yes or no.
- CIR monitoring
- Indicates whether the circuit monitoring feature that enforces the
transmission rate is enabled, yes or no.
- Notify FECN Source
- Indicates whether this device sets a BECN bit on the first packet destined
to a device from which the router received a packet with the FECN bit
set.
- Throttle Transmit on FECN
- Indicates whether the device will throttle down the
transmission of packets in response to a packet with a FECN bit set on.
- Data compression
- Indicates whether this interface has data compression enabled.
- Data encryption
- Indicates whether this interface has data encryption enabled and the
number of circuits that are encryption capable.
Note: | Encryption support is optional and must be added to your software load using
the load add command. See Load.
|
- Fragmentation
- Indicates whether fragmentation is enabled on this interface.
- Fragmentation type
- Displays the fragmentation type: UNI/NNI (User-to-Network
interface/Network-to-Network interface), or end-to-end, which is fragmentation
by peer DTEs over a specified PVC.
- Fragment size
- Displays the fragment size of each fragment in bytes.
- Fragmentation timer value
- Displays the length of time in seconds that the receiver of the fragments
waits for the next fragment to arrive. If this timer expires before the
next fragment arrives, all the received fragments for that frame are
discarded.
- Orphan compression
- Indicates whether orphan circuits on this interface will have data
compression enabled.
Note: | Enabling compression on orphan circuits will decrease the number of available
compression contexts available for the native PVCs on the device.
Orphan compression applies to both PVCs and SVCs.
|
- Compression circuit limit
- Indicates the maximum number of circuits that can participate in data
compression.
- Number of compression VCs
- Indicates the current number of VCs supporting data compression.
- P1 allowed
- Indicates the aggregate total number of allowable PVCs and SVCs for use
with this interface, including both the FR base interface and any
subinterfaces associated with the base interface.
- Timer T1 seconds
- Indicates the frequency with which the Frame Relay interface performs a
sequence number exchange with the Frame Relay switch LMI entity.
- Counter N1 increments
- Indicates the number of T1 timer intervals which must expire before a
complete PVC LMI status enquiry is made.
- LMI N2 error threshold
- Indicates the number of management event errors occurring within the N3
window that will cause a reset of the Frame Relay interface.
- LMI N3 error threshold window
- Indicates the number of monitored management events used to measure the N2
error threshold.
- MIR % of CIR
- Minimum IR, expressed as a percentage of CIR.
- IR % Increment
- Percentage by which the router increments the IR each time it receives a
frame without BECN until it reaches the maximum IR.
- IR % Decrement
- Percentage by which the router decrements the IR each time it receives a
frame that contains BECN until it reaches the minimum IR.
- Default CIR
- The committed information rate, in bps, used as the default for VCs on
this interface.
- Default Burst Size
- The committed burst size, in bits, used as the default for VCs on this
interface.
- Default Excess Burst Size
- The excess burst size, in bits, used as the default for VCs on this
interface.
- permanent-virtual-circuits
- Displays all the configured PVCs on the Frame Relay interface.
Example:
FR 1 Config>list permanent virtual circuits
Maximum circuits allowable = 64
Circuits configured this interface = 2
PVCs configured this interface = 1
Total circuits configured = 4
Total PVCs configured = 2
Circuit Circuit CIR Burst Excess
Name Number Options in bps Size Burst
---------------------------------- ------- -------- -------- -------- --------
circ16 16 c 64000 64000 0
R = circuit is required
G = circuit is required and belongs to a required PVC group
F = circuit is fragmentation capable
c = circuit is data compression capable
d = circuit is CDMF data encryption capable
t = circuit is triple-DES data encryption capable
V = circuit is voice forwarding enabled
H = frame handler circuit
- Maximum circuits allowable
- Indicates the number of PVCs and SVCs that can exist for this interface,
including the FR base interface and all subinterfaces that are associated with
the FR base interface. This number includes any PVCs that you added
with the add permanent-virtual-circuit command and any SVCs that
you added with the add switched-virtual-circuit command and
dynamically learned through the management interface.
- Circuits configured this interface
- Indicates the number of currently configured PVCs and SVCs for this
interface. This interface is either a FR base interface or a FR
subinterface.
- PVCs configured this interface
- Indicates the number of currently configured PVCs for this interface,
either a FR base interface or a FR subinterface.
- Total circuits configured
- Indicates the total number of currently configured PVCs and SVCs that
exist for both the FR base interface and the subinterfaces.
- Total PVCs configured
- Indicates the total number of currently configured PVCs that exist for
both the FR base interface and the subinterfaces.
- Circuit Name
- Indicates the ASCII designation of the configured PVC.
- Circuit Number
- Indicates the DLCI of a currently configured PVC.
- Options
- See the list of options at the lower part of the display for
definitions.
- Committed Information Rate
- Indicates the information rate at which the network agrees to transfer
data under normal conditions.
- Committed Burst Size
- The maximum amount of data in bits that the network agrees to deliver
during a measurement interval equal to (Committed Burst Size/CIR)
seconds.
- Excess Burst Size
- The maximum amount of uncommitted data in bits in excess of Committed
Burst Size that the network attempts to deliver during a measurement interval
equal to (Committed Burst Size/CIR) seconds.
- protocol-addresses
- Displays all the statically configured protocol addresses of circuit
mappings at the Frame Relay interface.
Example:
list protocol-addresses
Frame Relay Protocol Address Translations
Protocol Type Protocol Address Circuit Number or Name
------------- ---------------- ----------------------
IP 125.2.29.4 21
IPX 000000004503 16
- Protocol Type
- Displays the name of the protocol running over the interface.
- Protocol Address
- Displays the protocol address of the device at the other end of the
circuit.
- Circuit Number or Name
- Displays the DLCI of the PVC or the name of the SVC that is handling the
protocol.
- pvc-groups
- Displays all the Required PVC groups on the Frame Relay interface.
Example:
list pvc-groups
Required PVC group = group1
Circuit # 16
- subinterfaces
- Lists circuit information for all circuits, including those on FR base
interfaces and FR subinterfaces. When the circuit is on the base net,
this command displays the net number of the interface that the circuit is on
and the word base in parentheses.
Example:
FR 1 Config>list subinterfaces
Maximum circuits allowable = 64
Circuits configured this interface = 2
Total circuits configured = 4
Circuit
Circuit Name Number Remote Party Number Interface
-------------------------------- ------- -------------------- ----------
circ16 16 1 (base)
circ17 17 4
svc1 998 1 (base)
svc2 998 4
- Maximum circuits allowable
- Indicates the number of circuits that can exist for this interface, either
the FR base interface or the FR subinterface.
- Circuits configured this interface
- Indicates the number of currently configured PVCs and SVCs for this
interface, either a FR base interface or a FR subinterface.
- Total circuits configured
- Indicates the total number of circuits currently configured for both the
FR base interface and the subinterfaces.
- switched-virtual-circuits
-
FR 0 Config>LIST SWITCHED-VIRTUAL-CIRCUITS
Maximum circuits allowable = 64
Circuits configured this interface = 2
SVCs configured this interface = 1
Total circuits configured = 5
Total SVCs configured = 2
Circuit Opt- Idle Outgoing Incoming
Name ions Timer Value Value
-------------------------------- ------ ------ ---------- ----------
SVC1 ILM c 60 CIR: 64000 64000
Remote party number: IE3445667 Min CIR: 64000 64000
Remote subaddress: Burst: 64000 64000
Pc4456d Excess: 0 0
svc1 ILM c 60 CIR: 64000 64000
Remote party number: IE3445666 Min CIR: 64000 64000
Remote subaddress: Burst: 64000 64000
P344566 Excess: 0 0
Options: I - call-ins allowed, L - learn protocols, M - Multicast required
c - compression capable, F - UNI/NNI fragmentation enabled
Address type: I - International, U - Unknown
Numbering plan: E - E.164, X - X.121
Subaddress format: N - NSAP, P - private
- Maximum circuits allowable
- Indicates the number of circuits that can exist for this interface, either
the FR base interface or the FR subinterface.
- Circuits configured this interface
- Indicates the number of currently configured PVCs and SVCs for this
interface, either a FR base interface or a FR subinterface.
- SVCs configured this interface
- Indicates the number of currently configured SVCs for this interface,
either a FR base interface or a FR subinterface.
- Total circuits configured
- Indicates the total number of circuits currently configured for both the
FR base interface and the subinterfaces.
- Total SVCs configured
- Indicates the total number of SVCs currently configured for both the FR
base interface and the subinterfaces.
- Circuit Name
- Indicates the ASCII designation of the configured circuit.
- Committed Information Rate
- Indicates the information rate at which the network agrees to transfer
data under normal conditions.
- Committed Burst Size
- The maximum amount of data in bits that the network agrees to deliver
during a measurement interval equal to (Committed Burst Size/CIR)
seconds.
- Excess Burst Size
- The maximum amount of uncommitted data in bits in excess of Committed
Burst Size that the network attempts to deliver during a measurement interval
equal to (Committed Burst Size/CIR) seconds.
- Idle Timer
- Time period that the SVC will remain active in the absence of
traffic.
- Options
- Indicates the options configured for the circuit.
- Remote party number
- Remote destination FR address. This address is prefixed by the
address type and numbering plan used.
- Remote subaddress
- Remote party subaddress assigned to this connection. The subaddress
is prefixed by the subaddress format.
- voice-forwarding-circuits
-
FR 2 Config>list voice
Circuit Circuit Forwarding Forwarding
Name Number Network Circuit
---------------------- ----------- ---------- ----------
circ11 17 0 16
- Circuit Name
- Indicates the ASCII designation of the configured circuit.
- Circuit Number
- Indicates the circuit for this PVC.
- Forwarding Network
- Indicates the net number to which this circuit forwards voice
frames.
- Forwarding Circuit
- Indicates the circuit number to which this circuit forwards voice
frames.
Use the LLC command to access the LLC configuration
environment. See "LLC Configuration Commands" for an explanation of each of these commands.
Note: | The LLC command is supported only if APPN is in the software
load.
|
Syntax:
- llc
-
Use the remove command to delete any PVC, Required PVC group,
frame-handler-pvc, or protocol-address previously added using the
add command.
Syntax:
- remove
- frame-handler-pvc. . .
-
- permanent-virtual-circuit . . .
-
- protocol-address
-
- pvc-group
-
- switched-virtual-circuit circuit-name
- frame-handler-pvc pvc#
-
- permanent-virtual-circuit pvc#
-
Deletes any configured PVC in the range 16 to 1007.
Notes:
- When you delete a PVC that is running compression, the interface decreases
the count of active compression PVCs. If this action brings the count
of compression PVCs below the limit, you will receive a message to that
effect.
- When you delete a PVC that is running encryption, the interface decreases
the count of active encryption PVCs.
Note: | Encryption support is optional and must be added to your software load using
the load add command. See the CONFIG process load command
in Access Integration Services Software User's Guide.
The use of multiple encryption (using encryption at both the IP Security
Layer and at the Frame Relay or PPP data-Link Layer) within the router is
restricted by U.S.A. Government export
regulations. It is only supported in software loads that are under
strict export control (software loads that support RC4 with 128 bit keys and
Triple DES).
|
- protocol-address
- Deletes any configured protocol addresses (static ARP entries).
This parameter prompts you for different information depending on the type of
protocol that you are adding.
Example:
remove protocol-address
Protocol name or number [IP]?
IP protocol:
IP Address [0.0.0.0]?
Circuit Name or Number [16]?
IPX protocol:
Host Number (in hex)[]?
Circuit Name or Number [16]?
AppleTalk Phase 2 protocol:
Network Number (1-65279) []?
Node Number (1-253) []?
Circuit Name or Number [16]?
DN protocol:
Node address [0.0]?
Circuit Name or Number [16]?
- Protocol name or number
- Defines the name or number of the protocol that you are deleting.
If you try to delete an unsupported protocol the system will display the error
message:
Unknown protocol name, try again
To see a list of supported protocols, type ? at the
Protocol name or number [IP]? prompt.
- IP Address
- Defines the 32-bit internet address of the remote IP host in
dotted-decimal notation.
- Host Number
- Defines the 48-bit node address of the remote IPX host.
- Network Number
- Defines the AppleTalk Phase 2 network number.
- Node Number
- Defines the node number of the interface attached to the remote AppleTalk
host.
- Node address
- Defines the DECnet node address of the remote DECnet host.
Configure the node address in the format x,y, where
x is a 6-bit area address and y is a 10-bit node
number.
- Circuit Number
- Defines the name of a PVC or SVC that the protocol runs over.
- pvc-group groupname
- Deletes any configured PVC group by name. The group is removed only
if it has no member circuits.
Example: remove pvc-group PVC group name
[IP]?
- switched-virtual-circuit
-
Deletes any configured SVC by circuit name.
Use the set command to configure the interface to run the Frame
Relay protocol.
Note: | The Talk 6 set command is not applicable for FR
subinterfaces.
|
Set Command Considerations
Two parameters, the n2-parameter and the n3-parameter, require further
explanation before you configure them. The n2-parameter sets the error
threshold for management events, and the n3-parameter sets the number of
events that are monitored in the event window. If the number of
management errors in the event window equals n2, the Frame Relay interface
resets. For example:
set n3-parameter 4
set n2-parameter 3
You now have a window size of 4 (n3 = 4) and an error threshold of 3 (n2 =
3). That means the system is monitoring 4 management events and
checking to determine if any of those are in error. If the number of
events in error equals 3 (the n2 parameter), the Frame Relay interface is
reset and the status of the network is considered network
down.
For the status of the network to be considered network up, the
number of events in error within the window must be less than n2 prior to any
change in status.
Syntax:
- set
- cable*
-
- cir-defaults
-
- clocking*
-
- encoding*
-
- frame-size
-
- idle . . .*
-
- ir-adjustment . . .
-
- line-speed*
-
- lmi-network-type
-
- lmi-type
-
- n1-parameter
-
- n2-parameter
-
- n3-parameter
-
- p1-parameter
-
- redials
-
- t1-parameter
-
- t2-parameter
-
- transmit-delay . . .*
-
- ty-parameter
* Note: | The commands with an * following them are not available for FR dial circuit
interfaces.
|
- cable physical-interface-link-type
data-connection-type
- Sets the cable type for the network physical link.
A DTE cable is used when you are attaching the router to some type of DCE
device (for example, a modem or a DSU/CSU). A DCE cable is used when
the router is acting as the DCE and providing the clocking for direct
attachment.
The available options are:
Physical Interface Link Type
| Data Connection Type
|
EIA 232 (RS-232)
| DTE, DCE
|
V35
| DTE, DCE
|
V36
| DTE
|
X21
| DTE, DCE
|
- cir-defaults
- Sets the default values for the circuit congestion parameters. The
parameters are:
- cir
- Sets the default value of cir to the value provided by a Frame
Relay network provider.
Valid Values: 0 or 300 to 204 800 bps
Default Value: 64 000
- bc
- Sets the default value of bc to the value provided by a Frame
Relay network provider.
Valid Values: See "Committed Burst (Bc) Size"
Default Value: 64 000
- be
- Sets the default value of be to the value provided by a Frame
Relay network provider.
Valid Values: See "Excess Burst (Be) Size"
Default Value: 0
Example:
FR 6 config> set cir-default
Default Committed Information Rate (CIR) in bps [64000]? 48000
Default Committed Burst Size (Bc) in bits [64000]? 40000
Default Excess Burst Size (Be) in bits [0]? 52000
- clocking [external or internal]
- To connect to a modem or DSU, configure external clocking and select the
appropriate DTE cable with the set cable command. Use the
set line-speed command to configure the line speed.
To connect directly to another DTE device, configure internal clocking,
select the appropriate DCE cable with the set cable command, and
configure the clocking/line speed with the set line-speed
command.
Default: external
- encoding [NRZ or NRZI]
- Sets the HDLC transmission encoding scheme as NRZ (non-return to zero) or
NRZI (non-return to zero inverted). Most configurations use NRZ, which
is the default.
- frame-size #
- Sets the maximum size of the network layer portion of the frames
transmitted and received on the interface. This maximum size includes
the 2-byte DLCI address and the user data shown in figure 39-4. The
size you configure must be consistent with the maximum frame size supported by
the Frame Relay switch and by the other FR DTEs in the Frame Relay
network. Values are 262 to 8190. The default is 2048.
Since the configured frame size includes the DLCI address and the FR RFC 1490
and RFC 2427 multi-protocol encapsulation header, the maximum protocol packet
size that can be transmitted is less than the configured frame size and is
protocol dependent. The following table shows how many bytes to
subtract from the configured frame size to determine the maximum protocol
packet size that can be transmitted and received on the interface.
IP
| 4 bytes
|
IPX
| 10 bytes
|
Appletalk Phase 2
| 10 bytes
|
DECnet Phase IV (DNA IV)
| 12 bytes
|
Banyan Vines
| 10 bytes
|
OSI
| 10 bytes
|
Bridging
| 10 bytes
|
APPN
| 58 bytes (see note)
|
Note: | Assumes worst case for APPN BAN where a T/R MAC address header and LLC header
are added in addition to the FR header bytes.
|
If FR data encryption is enabled then you must subtract up to an
additional 12 bytes.
When using Frame Relay SVCs, the maximum information field size must be the
same at both ends of the virtual circuit. To determine the maximum
information field size, subtract 16 bytes from the frame size if encryption is
enabled on the SVC and subtract 4 bytes if encryption is not enabled on the
SVC.
- idle [flag or mark]
- Sets the transmit idle state for HDLC framing. The default value is
flag, which provides continuous flags (7E hex) between
frames. The mark option puts the line in a marking state (OFF, 1)
between frames.
- ir-adjustment increment-% decrement-% minimum-IR
- Sets the minimum information rate (IR) and the percentages for
incrementing and decrementing the IR in response to network congestion.
The minimum IR, expressed as a percentage of CIR, is the lower limit of the
information rate. The minimum percentage is 1 and the maximum
percentage is 100. The default is 25.
When network congestion clears, the information rate is gradually
incremented by the IR adjustment increment percentage until the maximum
information rate is reached. The minimum percentage is 1 and the
maximum percentage is 100. The default is 12.
When network congestion occurs, the information rate is decremented by the
IR adjustment decrement percentage each time a frame containing BECN is
received until the minimum information rate is reached. The minimum
percentage is 1, and the maximum percentage is 100. The default is
25.
Example:
set ir-adjustment
IR adjustment % increment [12]?
IR adjustment % decrement [25]?
Minimum IR as % of CIR [25]?
- line-speed rate
-
For internal clocking, use this command to specify the speed of the
transmit and receive clock lines.
For external clocking, this command does not affect the operation of the
WAN/serial line but it does set the speed that some protocols, such as IPX,
use to determine routing cost parameters. You should set the speed to
match the actual line speed. If the speed is not configured, the
protocols assume a speed of 1 000 000 bps.
Valid Values:
Internal Clocking: 2400 to 2 048 000 bps
External Clocking: 2400 to 6 312 000 bps
Note: | If you want to use a line speed greater than 2 048 000 bps when external
clocking is configured, you can only do this on:
- port 1 of the integrated WAN ports
- port 1 of the 4-port WAN CPCI or PMC adapter
All other WAN ports on the same adapter must be clocked at 64 000 bps or
less.
|
- lmi-network-type
- Specifies how the interface operates with respect to LMI.
Note: | The LMI network type must be compatible with the adjacent FR node. For
example, if the adjacent node is configured as UNI, this FR interface must be
configured with a LMI network type of NUI, and when using the NNI support both
this interface and the adjacent FR node's interface must be using a LMI
network type of NNI.
|
Valid Values:
- UNI - user-to-network interface
- NUI - network-to-user interface
- NNI - network-to-network interface
Default Value: UNI
- lmi-type [rev1 or ansi or ccitt]
- Sets the management type for the interface. See "Enabling Frame Relay PVC Management" for details on setting Frame Relay management. The
default is type ansi enabled.
Table 45. Frame Relay Management Options
Command
| Management Type
| Description
|
set
| lmi-type rev1
| Conforms to LMI Revision 1, (Stratacom's Frame Relay Interface
Specification)
|
set
| lmi-type ansi
| Conforms to ANSI T1.617 ISDN-DSS1-Signalling Specification for
Frame Relay Bearer Service (known as Annex D)
|
set
| lmi-type ccitt
| Conforms to Annex A of ITU-T/CCITT Recommendation Q.933 - DSS1
Signalling Specification for Frame Mode Basic Call Control.
|
- n1-parameter count
- Configures the number of T1 timer intervals that must expire before a
complete PVC status enquiry is made. Count is the interval
in the range 1 to 255. The default is 6.
- n2-parameter max#
- Configures the number of errors that can occur in the management event
window monitored by the n3-parameter before the Frame Relay interface
resets. Max# is a number in the range 1 to 10. The default is
3. This parameter must be less than or equal to the n3-parameter or you
will receive an error message.
- n3-parameter max#
- Configures the number of monitored management events for measuring the
n2-parameter. Max# is a number in the range 1 to 10. The default
is 4.
- p1-parameter max#
- Configures the maximum number of PVCs supported by the Frame Relay
interface. This includes active, inactive, removed, and congested
PVCs. Max# is a number in the range 0 to 992. The default is
64. 0 (zero) implies that the interface supports no PVCs.
- t1-parameter time
- Configures the interval (in seconds) between sequence number exchanges
with Frame Relay management. The management's T2 timer is the
allowable interval for an end station to request a sequence number exchange
with the manager. The T1 interval must be less than the T2 interval of
the network. Time is a number in the range 5 to 30.
The default is 10.
- t2-parameter time
- Specifies the amount of time FR waits for an LMI status inquiry to be
received before deciding that an error has occurred, if this interface is
configured with an LMI network type of either NUI or NNI. The t2
interval must be less than the adjacent FR node's t1 timer. The
value is a number in the range of 5 to 30 and the default is 15
seconds.
- transmit-delay #
- Allows the insertion of a delay between transmitted packets. The
purpose of this command is to slow the serial line so that it is compatible
with older, slower serial devices at the other end. It can also prevent
the loss of serial line hello packets between the lines. #
is between 0 and 15 extra flags. The default is zero (0).
Setting this parameter provides 0 to 15 extra flags between transmit
frames. Table 46 lists the units and range values for serial
interfaces.
Table 46. Transmit Delay Units and Range for the 2212 Serial Interface
Unit
| Minimum
| Maximum
|
Extra Flags
| 0
| 15
|
- ty-parameter time
- Configures the interval after which the device considers an existing
congestion condition indicated by the receipt of a CLLM message to be
cleared. If the device receives a CLLM message before the timer
expires, the device resets this timer.
Valid Values: 5 to 30 seconds.
Default Value: 11 seconds.
To access the Frame Relay operating commands and to
monitor Frame Relay on your router, perform the following steps:
- At the OPCON prompt (*), type talk 5.
- At the GWCON prompt (+), enter the interface command to see a
list of interfaces configured on the router.
- Enter the network command followed by the network number of the
frame relay interface. For example:
+ net 2
Frame Relay Monitoring
FR 2 >
This section summarizes and then explains the Frame Relay Monitoring
commands. Use these commands to gather information from the
database. Table 47 shows the commands.
Table 47. Frame Relay Monitoring Commands Summary
Command
| Function
|
? (Help)
| Displays all the commands available for this command level or lists the
options for specific commands (if available). See "Getting Help".
|
Clear
| Clears statistical information on the Frame Relay
interface.
|
Disable
| Disables CIR monitoring and congestion monitoring on the Frame Relay
interface.
|
Enable
| Enables CIR monitoring and congestion monitoring on the Frame Relay
interface.
|
List
| Displays statistics specific to the data-link layer and Frame Relay
management.
|
LLC
| Displays the LLC monitoring prompt.
|
Notrace
| Disables packet tracing capability for individual circuits or for
the entire interface.
|
Set
| Sets CIR, Committed Burst Size, and Excess Burst Size for a Frame
Relay VC.
|
Trace
| Enables packet tracing capability for individual circuits or for the
entire interface.
|
Exit
| Returns you to the previous command level. See "Exiting a Lower Level Environment".
|
Note: | In this section, the terms circuit number and PVC are
equivalent to the term data link circuit identifier (DLCI).
|
Use the clear command to zero statistical counters on the Frame
Relay interface.
Note: | Statistics can also be cleared by using the OPCON clear
command.
|
Syntax:
- clear
-
Use the disable command to disable the Frame Relay CIR
monitoring and congestion monitoring features.
The disable command dynamically changes the router
configuration. These changes will be lost when the router is
restarted.
Syntax:
- di sable
- cir-monitor
-
- cllm
-
- congestion-monitor
-
- notify-fecn-source
-
- throttle-transmit-on-fecn
Use the enable command to enable the Frame Relay CIR monitoring
and congestion monitoring features.
The enable command dynamically changes the router
configuration. These changes will be lost when the router is
restarted.
Syntax:
- e nable
- cir-monitor
-
- cllm
-
- congestion-monitor
-
- notify-fecn-source
-
- throttle-transmit-on-fecn
Use the list command to display statistics specific to the
data-link layer and the Frame Relay interface.
Syntax:
- list
- all
-
- circuit . . .
-
- frame-handler-pvcs
-
- interface
-
- lmi
-
- permanent-virtual-circuits
-
- pvc-groups
-
- queues
-
- subinterfaces
-
- svcs
-
- switched-virtual-circuit
-
- virtual-circuits
-
- voice-forwarding-circuits
- all
- Displays circuit, management, and VC statistics on the Frame Relay
interface. The output displayed for this command is a combination of
the list lmi and list permanent-virtual-circuit
commands.
- circuit name or number
- Displays detailed virtual circuit configuration and statistical
information for the specified VC using the input circuit name or DLCI.
Example:
list circuit 347
Circuit name = Valencia
Circuit state = Active Circuit is orphan = No
Frames transmitted = 0 Bytes transmitted = 0
Frames received = 0 Bytes received = 0
Total FECNs = 0 Total BECNs = 0
Times congested = 0 Times Inactive = 0
CIR in bits/second = 64000 Potential Info Rate = 56000
Committed Burst (BC) = 1200 Excess Burst (Be) = 54800
Minimum Info Rate = 16000 Maximum Info Rate = 64000
Required = Yes PVC group name = group1
Compression capable = Yes Operational = Yes
R-Rs received = 0 R-Rs transmitted = 0
R-As received = 0 R-As transmitted = 0
R-R mode discards = 0 Enlarged frames = 0
Decompress discards = 0 Compression errors = 0
Compression ratio = 1.72 to 1 Decompression ratio = 1.10 to 1
Fragmentation type = END-TO-END
Fragmentation Size = 0 Reassembly timer = 0
Fragments xmitted = 0 Fragments received = 0
Voice Frames xmitted = 0 Voice Frames rcv'd = 0
Encryption capable = Yes Operational = Yes
Encryption errors = 0 Decryption errors = 0
Rcv error discards = 0
Current number of xmit frames queued = 0
Xmit frames dropped due to queue overflow = 0
- Circuit state
- Indicates the state of the circuit: inactive, active, or
congested. Inactive indicates that the circuit is not available for
traffic because either the Frame Relay interface is down or the Frame Relay
management entity has not notified the Frame Relay protocol that the circuit
is active. Active indicates that data is being transferred.
Congested indicates that data flow is being controlled.
- Circuit is orphan
- Indicates if the circuit is a non-configured PVC learned through LMI
management or a callin-in for a non-configured SVC.
- Frames/Bytes transmitted
- Indicates how many frames and bytes this VC has transmitted.
- Frames/Bytes received
- Indicates how many frames and bytes this VC has received.
- Total FECNS
- Indicates the number of times that this VC has been notified of inbound or
downstream congestion.
- Total BECNS
- Indicates the number of times that this VC has been notified of outbound
or upstream congestion.
- Times congested
- Indicates the number of times that this VC has become congested.
- Times inactive
- Indicates the number of times that this VC was inoperable.
- CIR in bits/sec
- Indicates the information rate of the VC within the range 300 bps to
6 312 000 bps. A value of 0 is also
supported.
- Potential Info Rate
- Indicates the current maximum rate in bps at which data will be
transmitted for the circuit. The actual data rate will depend on the
queue depths and priorities associated with the circuit.
If this field has a value of "Line Speed", then the maximum data rate
is the actual line speed even if the line speed was not configured or was
configured incorrectly for this interface.
- Committed Burst (BC)
- Maximum amount of data, in bits, that the router can transmit during the
time interval (Tc). (Tc=Bc/CIR.)
- Excess Burst (Be)
- Maximum amount of uncommitted data in bits the router can transmit on a VC
in excess of the Bc during the time interval (Tc).
- Minimum Info Rate
- Minimum Information Rate. The minimum data rate for a VC that the
router throttles down to when it is notified of congestion.
- Maximum Info Rate
- Maximum Information Rate. The maximum data rate at which the router
transmits for a VC.
- Required
- Yes or No. If yes, the PVC is a Required PVC.
- PVC group name
- If the PVC is a member of a required PVC group, the name appears
here; otherwise, "Unassigned" appears.
- Compression capable
- Indicates whether the circuit can compress data packets.
- Operational
- Indicates whether compression is active on the circuit. When this
is yes, data is being compressed on this link.
- R-Rs received
- Indicates the number of Reset-Request packets sent by the peer
decompressor. A peer decompressor sends a Reset-Request whenever the
peer detects that it is out of synch with its peer compressor. If this
number increases rapidly, packets are being lost or corrupted on this
circuit.
- R-Rs transmitted
- Indicates the number of Reset-Request packets sent since compression
started on the circuit. If this number increases rapidly, packets are
being lost or corrupted on this circuit.
- R-As received
- Indicates the number of Reset-Acknowledgements received in response to
Reset-Requests. The compressor also sends out this packet to signal
that it has reset its compression history.
- R-As transmitted
- This is the number of Reset-Acknowledgements sent to the peer.
- R-R mode discards
- Indicates the number of compressed data frames that were discarded while
waiting for an R-A after sending out an R-R.
- Enlarged frames
- This is a count of the frames that could not be compressed. Usually
an incompressible frame is sent in its uncompressed format within a special
compression frame type allowing the compressor and decompressor to remain
synchronized.
- Decompress discards
- Indicates the number of compressed frames that were discarded because of
decompression errors.
- Compression errors
- Indicates the number of frames that had compression errors which were
transmitted in an uncompressed form.
- Compression ratio
- Indicates the approximate effectiveness of the compressor.
- Decompression ratio
- Indicates the approximate effectiveness of the decompressor.
- Fragmentation type
- Indicates the fragmentation type. The values are UNI/NNI and
end-to-end. See the talk 6 enable fragmentation command for
more information.
- Fragmentation size
- Indicates the size of the fragment. See the talk 6 enable
fragmentation command for more information.
Note: | If end-to-end fragmentation is configured, the fragment size shows the size
configured of the interface, not the size for every PVC.
|
- Reassembly timer
- Indicates the time set on the fragmented packet reassembly timer.
If the next-in-sequence fragment in a fragmented packet fails to arrive before
this timer expires, the fragment is discarded when it arrives and all the
fragments of that frame are dropped.
- Encryption capable
- Indicates whether this circuit is encryption enabled.
Note: | Encryption support is optional and must be added to your software load using
the load add command. See Load.
|
- Operational
- Indicates whether encryption is active on the circuit. When this is
yes, data is being encrypted on this link.
- Encryption errors
- Indicates the number of frames that had encryption errors.
- Decryption errors
- Indicates the number of frames that had decryption errors.
- Rcv error discards
- Indicates the number of compressed frames that were discarded because of
reception problems.
- Current number of xmit frames queued
- Indicates the number of frames currently queued for this circuit by
FR. These frames are waiting for space to become available on the
serial device handler transmit queue for this interface.
- Xmit frames dropped due to queue overflow
- Indicates the number of frames that could not be transmitted for this VC
due to output queue overflow.
- frame-handler-pvcs
-
Example:
Frame Relay Frame Handler Configuration
Circuit Circuit Status Forwarding Max
Name Number (L/R) Net/Circuit Queue (L/R)
-------------------------------- ------- ------ ----------- -----------
Raleigh 16 A/A 2/18 10/10
Sum of outbound queue limits = 10 Input buffers allocated = 24
Total congested frms discard = 0 Total frms currently queued = 0
Total BECNs set = 0 Total FECNs set = 0
Local/Remote circuit states: A - Active I - Inactive R - Removed
- Status (local/remote)
- Indicates the state of this PVC (local), either active or inactive and the
status of this FH PVC's partner circuit (remote).
- Forwarding Net/Circuit
- Network number and circuit number of the forwarding PVC.
- Max Queue (local/remote)
- The configured maximum queue length for this circuit (local) and his
partner (remote).
- Sum of outbound queue limits
- The aggregate of the queue limits for all FH PVCs on this
interface. If this number is greater than the Input buffers
allocated field, then input frames will be dropped before the outbound
queue limit for all FH circuits can be reached. This occurs because the
input buffers for this interface are queued for output on the outbound partner
circuit.
- Input buffers allocated
- The input buffers allocated for this interface.
- Total congested frames discarded
- The total number of frames discarded by this FH circuit due to either
inbound or outbound congestion.
- Total frms currently queued
- The total number of outbound frames currently queued for this
circuit.
- Total BECNs set
- The total number of times BECN was set in a frame due to
congestion.
- Total FECNs set
- The total number of times FECN was set in a frame due to
congestion.
- interface
- For an FR base interface, the list interface command displays
the same information as the list lmi command. For an FR
subinterface, this command displays the same information as the Talk 6
list hdlc command.
- lmi
-
Displays statistics relevant to the logical management on the Frame Relay
interface. If you enter this command for an FR subinterface, the
information for its FR base interface is displayed.
Example:
list lmi
Management Status:
------------------
LMI network type = UNI LMI DLCI = 0
LMI type = ANSI LMI Orphans OK = YES
CLLM enabled = No
SVC local net number = 12345678
SVC Number type = International
SVC Numbering plan = E.164 SVC Call-out retries = 2
SVC Call-ins allowed = Yes SVC Network emulation mode = No
Protocol broadcast = Yes Congestion monitoring = Yes
Emulate multicast = Yes CIR monitoring = No
Notify FECN source = No Throttle transmit on FECN = No
Number VCs P1 allowed = 64 Interface down if no PVCs = No
Line speed (bps) = 1000000 Maximum frame size (bytes) = 2048
Timer T1 seconds = 10 Counter N1 increments = 6
LMI N2 threshold = 3 LMI N3 threshold window = 4
MIR % of CIR = 25 IR % Increment = 12
IR % Decrement = 25 DECnet length field = No
Default CIR = 64000 Default Burst Size = 64000
Default Excess Burst = 0
Current receive sequence = 0
Current transmit sequence = 1
Total status enquiries = 9 Total status responses = 0
Total sequence requests = 0 Total responses = 0
Data compression enabled = No
Data encryption enabled = No
Fragmentation enabled = No
Virtual Circuit Status:
-----------------------
Total allowed = 64 Total configured = 2
Total active = 0 Total congested = 0
Total PVCs left net = 0 Total PVCs join net = 0
Management Status:
- LMI enabled
- If Frame Relay management is not active, the value is
no. If LMI is active, this entry displays UNI, NUI, or NNI,
depending upon the network interface being used by LMI.
- LMI DLCI
- Indicates the management circuit number. This number is either 0
(ANSI default or ITU-T/CCITT) or 1023 (interim LMI REV1).
- LMI type
- Indicates the type of frame relay management being used, ANSI,
ITU-T/CCITT, or LMI Revision 1.
- LMI orphans OK
- Indicates if all non-configured circuits learned from Frame Relay LMI
management are available for use (yes or no).
- CLLM enabled
- Specifies whether this circuit will throttle transmission on receiving
CLLM frames.
- Timer Ty seconds
- Indicates the value of the CLLM Ty timer. This field is only
displayed if CLLM is enabled.
- Last CLLM cause code
- Indicates the congestion cause code given in the last CLLM message
received or None if no CLLM messages have been received.
This field is only displayed if CLLM is enabled.
- SVC local net number
- Specifies the network number for the SVCs on this interface.
- SVC number type
- Specifies the SVC number type, unknown or international.
- SVC numbering plan
- Specifies whether the numbering plan is E.164 or
X.121.
- SVC call-out retries
- Specifies the number of call-out redial attempts on this interface.
- SVC network emulation mode
- Specifies whether this interface operates in network emulation mode for
SVCs.
- SVC call-ins allowed
- Specifies whether call-ins are allowed on this interface.
- Protocol broadcast
- Indicates if protocols such as IP RIP are able to operate over the Frame
Relay interface.
- Congestion monitoring
- Indicates whether the congestion monitor feature that responds to network
congestion is enabled (yes or no).
- Emulate multicast
- Indicates whether the multicast emulation feature is enabled on each
active PVC (yes or no).
- CIR monitoring
- Indicates whether the circuit monitoring feature that enforces the
transmission rate is enabled (yes or no).
- PVCs P1 allowed
- Indicates the number of allowable VCs for use with this interface.
This number is the maximum number of active, congested, inactive, and removed
VCs that can be supported on the interface.
- Interface down if no PVCs
- Indicates whether the router considers the interface unavailable when
there are no active PVCs.
- Line speed (bps)
- Indicates the configured data rate of the Frame Relay interface.
- Timer T1 seconds
- Indicates the frequency with which the Frame Relay interface performs a
sequence number exchange with the Frame Relay switch LMI entity.
- Counter N1 increments
- Indicates the number of T1 timer intervals which must expire before a
complete PVC LMI status enquiry is made.
- LMI N2 error threshold
- Indicates the number of management event errors occurring within the N3
window that will cause a reset of the Frame Relay interface.
- LMI N3 error threshold window
- Indicates the number of monitored management events used to measure the N2
error threshold.
- MIR % of CIR
- Minimum IR, expressed as a percentage of CIR.
- IR % Increment
- Percentage by which the router increments the IR each time it receives a
frame without BECN until it reaches the maximum IR.
- IR % Decrement
- Percentage by which the router decrements the IR each time it receives a
frame that contains BECN until it reaches the minimum IR.
- DECnet length field
- Indicates whether or not the DECnet length field feature is
enabled. Some Frame Relay DECnet Phase IV implementations require a
length field between the Frame Relay multiprotocol encapsulation header and
the DECnet packet. A length field is inserted if the DECnet length
field feature is enabled.
- Default CIR
- Specifies the default CIR for this interface.
- Default Burst Size
- Specifies the default burst size for this interface.
- Default Excess CIR
- Specifies the default excess burst size for this interface.
- Current receive sequence
- Indicates the current receive sequence number that the Frame Relay
interface has received from the Frame Relay management entity.
- Current transmit sequence
- Indicates the current transmit sequence number that the Frame Relay
interface has sent to the Frame Relay management entity.
- Total status enquiries
- Indicates the total number of status enquiries that the Frame Relay
interface has made of the Frame Relay management entity.
- Total status responses
- Indicates the total number of responses that the Frame Relay interface has
received from the Frame Relay management entity in response to status
enquiries.
- Total sequence requests
- Indicates the total number of sequence number requests that the Frame
Relay interface has sent to the Frame Relay management entity.
- Total responses
- Indicates the total number of sequence number responses that the Frame
Relay interface has received from the Frame Relay management entity.
- Data compression enabled
- Indicates whether data compression is enabled on this interface.
- Data encryption enabled
- Indicates whether data encryption is enabled on this interface.
Note: | Encryption support is optional and must be added to your software load using
the load add command. See Load.
|
- Fragmentation enabled
- Indicates whether Frame Relay packet fragmentation is enabled on this
interface.
- Fragmentation type
- Displayed only when Frame Relay packet fragmentation is enabled on this
interface.
- Orphan compression
- Indicates whether orphan circuits on this interface will have data
compression enabled.
Note: | Enabling compression on orphan circuits will decrease the number of available
compression contexts available for the native VCs on the device.
Orphan compression applies to both PVCs and SVCs.
|
- Compression circuit limit
- Specifies the maximum number of VCs that can compress data on this
interface.
- Active compression circuits
- Specifies the number of VCs currently compressing data on this
interface.
- Data encryption enabled
- Indicates whether data encryption is enabled on this interface.
Note: | Encryption support is optional and must be added to your software load using
the load add command. See Load.
|
- Active encryption circuits
- Indicates the number of VCs that are currently encrypting data.
- Virtual Circuit Status:
-
- Total allowed--Indicates the number of allowable VCs
(including orphans) whose state is active, congested, removed, or inactive for
use with this interface.
- Total configured--Indicates the total number of currently
configured VCs for this interface.
- Total active--Indicates the number of active VCs on this
interface.
- Total congested--Indicates the number of VCs that are
throttled down because of congestion within the network.
- Total PVCs left net--Indicates the total number of PVCs
that have been removed from the network.
- Total PVCs joined net--Indicates the total number of PVCs
that have been added to the network.
- permanent-virtual-circuit
- Displays general link-layer statistics and configuration information for
all configured PVCs on the Frame Relay interface.
Example:
FR 0>LIST PERMANENT-VIRTUAL-CIRCUITS
Circuit Type/ Frames Frames
Number Circuit Name Options State Transmitted Received
------- -------------------------------- ------- ----- ----------- ----------
16 Unassigned R P/I 0 0
17 Bigcir F V P/I 0 0
18 Unassigned P/I 0 0
Circuit type: O - Orphan P - PVC S - SVC
Circuit state: A - Active I - Inactive R - Removed C - Congested
R - Required G - Required and belongs to a PVC group
F - circuit is fragmentation capable
c - Data compression capable but not operational
C - Data compression capable and operational
d - CDMF DES data encryption capable but not operational
D - CDMF DES data encryption capable and operational
t - 3DES data encryption capable but not operational
T - 3DES data encryption capable and operational
V - circuit is voice forwarding enabled
H - Frame Handler circuit
- Circuit#
- Indicates the DLCI of the PVC.
- Circuit Name
- Name of the circuit, an ASCII string.
- Orphan Circuit
- Indicates whether the PVC is a non-configured circuit (yes or no).
- Type/State
- Indicates the state of the circuit, A (active), I (inactive), P
(permanent), C (congested), or R (removed).
- Frames Transmitted
- Indicates how many frames this PVC has transmitted.
- Frames Received
- Indicates how many frames this PVC has received.
- pvc-groups
- Displays required PVC group information for all required PVC
groups. For each group this consists of the group name, the circuits in
the group and the state (active, inactive, or removed) of each circuit.
Example:
list pvc-groups
Group name Circuits in group Circuit status
---------- ----------------- --------------
group1 16 active
44 inactive
240 removed
- queues
- Displays the counts of frames transmitted and received, the number of
frames discarded, the current number of frames queued and the high queue
count. The high queue count is the maximum number of frames that were
ever queued for this circuit.
Example:
Frames Frames Frames Frames High
DLCI Circuit Name Sent Rcv'd Discard Queued Queue
---- -------------------------------- -------- -------- -------- ------ ------
18 Phoenix 11946 12041 2 41 41
- subinterfaces
- Lists circuit information for all circuits, including those on FR base
interfaces and FR subinterfaces. When the circuit is on the base net,
this command displays the net number of the interface that the circuit is on
and the word base in parentheses.
Example:
FR 1>list subinterfaces
Circuit Circuit Circuit Interface
Name Number Type Number
-------------------------------- ------- --------- ----------
svc1 Switched 1 (base)
circ16 16 Permanent 1 (base)
svc2 Switched 4
circ17 17 Permanent 4
- svcs
- Displays all SVCs, either configured or orphaned, on the interface
regardless of state.
Example:
FR 1>list svcs
Circuit Call
Circuit Name Remote party number State State DLCI
-------------------------------- -------------------- ------- ----- -----
flotsam 911 R N 0
jetsam 666 R N 0
Circuit states: A - Active I - Inactive R - Removed C - Congested
Call states: N - Null I - Call Initiated O - Outgoing call proceeding
A - Active D - Disconnect request R - Release request
- switched-virtual-circuit
- The following example displays configuration and operational information
for a single SVC by name.
Example:
FR 1>list switched-virtual-circuit flotsam
Circuit Opt- Idle Outgoing Incoming
Name ions Timer Value Value
-------------------------------- ----- ------ ---------- ----------
flotsam ILMF 60 CIR: 0 0
Call state: Null Burst: 0 0
Call Initiated by: None DLCI: 0 Excess: 0 0
Remote party number: IE14
Remote subaddress: None
Options: I - call-ins allowed, L - learn protocols, M - multicast required
F - UNI/NNI fragmentation capable C - compression capable and operational
c - compression capable, d - CDMF DES data encryption capable but not operational
D - CDMF DES data encryption capable and operational t - 3DES data encryption
capable but not operational T - 3DES data encryption capable and operational
Address type: I - International, U - Unknown Numbering plan: E - E.164,
X - X.121 Subaddress format: N - NSAP, P - private
- virtual-circuits
- Displays all PVCs and all active SVCs with associated information that is
identical to the list permanent-virtual-circuit command.
FR 1>list virtual-circuits
Circuit Type/ Frames Frames
Number Circuit Name Options State Transmitted Received
------- -------------------------------- ------- ----- ----------- ----------
16 Unassigned F P/I 0 0
17 Unassigned F H P/I 0 0
23 To-Kitty F H P/I 0 0
Circuit type: O - Orphan P - PVC S - SVC
Circuit state: A - Active I - Inactive R - Removed C - Congested
R - Required G - Required and belongs to a PVC group
F - circuit is fragmentation capable
c - Data compression capable but not operational
C - Data compression capable and operational
d - CDMF DES data encryption capable but not operational
D - CDMF DES data encryption capable and operational
t - 3DES data encryption capable but not operational
T - 3DES data encryption capable and operational
V - circuit is voice forwarding enabled
- voice-forwarding-circuits
- Displays all PVCs that have been defined as being capable of forwarding
voice packets.
FR 2>list voice-forwarding-circuits
Circuit Circuit Forwarding Forwarding
Name Number Network Circuit
--------------- ----------- ------------- ------------
circ16 16 2 17
circ17 17 2 16
Use the LLC command to access the LLC monitoring prompt.
LLC commands are entered at this new prompt. See "LLC Monitoring Commands" for an explanation of each of these commands.
Syntax:
- llc
-
Note: | The LLC command is supported only if APPN is in the software load.
|
Use the notrace command to disable packet tracing for individual
circuits or the entire interface. This command can be used as a filter
when tracing specific circuits or interfaces is required. The default
setting is to trace all circuits.
Syntax:
- notrace
- circuit#
-
- circuitname
-
- all
Example:
notrace 16
Disables packet tracing on circuit (PVC or SVC) with DLCI 16.
notrace circuit phoenix
Disables packet tracing on circuit (PVC or SVC) named phoenix.
notrace circuit all
Disables packet tracing on all circuits on this interface.
Use the set command to set the values for Committed Information
Rate (CIR), Committed Burst Rate, and Excess Burst Rate for the specified
VC. You also can set values for IR adjustment rates.
Changes made with this command do not affect the configuration data.
They are in effect only until the router is restarted.
Syntax:
- set
- circuit . . .
-
- ir-adjustment . . .
- circuit circuit# or name cirvol bcval beval
- Sets the values for Committed Information Rate (CIR), Committed Burst
Rate, and Excess Burst Rate for the specified VC and can be used to change the
operational outgoing CIR, Bc, and Be for a PVC or an active SVC.
Example:
set circuit
Circuit number [16]?
Committed Information Rate (CIR) in bps [1200]?
Committed Burst Size (Bc) in bits [1200]?
Excess Burst Size (Be) in bits [56000]?
- Circuit Number
- Indicates the circuit number in the range 16 to 1007.
- Committed Information Rate
- Indicates the committed information rate (CIR). The CIR can be
either 0, or a value in the range 300 bps to
6 312 000 bps. The default is 64 kbps.
For more information, see "Committed Information Rate (CIR)".
- Committed Burst Size
- The maximum amount of data in bits that the router will send during a
measurement interval equal to committed burst (Bc) size / CIR seconds.
The range is 300 to 6 312 000 bits. The default
value is 64 Kb.
Note: | If CIR is configured as 0 then the committed burst size is set to 0 and you
are not prompted for a value. For additional information, see "Committed Burst (Bc) Size".
|
- Excess Burst Size
- The maximum amount of uncommitted data in bits in excess of committed
burst size that the router attempts to deliver during a measurement interval
equal to (Committed Burst Size/CIR) seconds. Range is 0 to
6 312 000 bits. Default is 0. For
additional information, see "Excess Burst (Be) Size".
- ir-adjustment increment-% decrement-% minimum-IR
- Sets the minimum information rate (IR) and the percentages for
incrementing and decrementing the IR in response to network congestion.
Note: | The Talk 5 set ir-adjustment command is not applicable for FR
subinterfaces.
|
The minimum IR, expressed as a percentage of CIR, is the lower limit of the
information rate. The minimum percentage is 1 and the maximum
percentage is 100. The default is 25.
When network congestion clears, the information rate is gradually
incremented by the IR adjustment increment percentage until the maximum
information rate is reached. The minimum percentage is 1 and the
maximum percentage is 100. The default is 12.
When network congestion occurs, the information rate is decremented by the
IR adjustment decrement percentage each time a frame containing BECN is
received until the minimum information rate is reached. The minimum
percentage is 1, and the maximum percentage is 100. The default is
25.
Example:
set ir-adjustment
IR adjustment % increment [12]?
IR adjustment % decrement [25]?
Minimum IR as % of CIR [25]?
Use the Trace command to enable packet tracing for individual
circuits or the entire interface and to list the tracing capability of all
circuits on this interface. This command can be used as a filter when
tracing specific circuits or interfaces is required. The default
setting is to trace all circuits.
Syntax:
- trace
- all
-
- circuitname
-
- circuit#
-
- list
Example:
trace 16
Enables packet tracing on circuit (PVC or SVC) with DLCI 16.
trace circuit phoenix
Enables packet tracing on circuit (PVC or SVC) named phoenix.
trace circuit all
Enables packet tracing on all circuits on this interface.
trace list
The following circuits are available for packet trace
Circuit Name Circuit Number
-------------------------------- --------------
Unassigned 16
phoenix 25
jetsam 0
Lists the packet tracing capability of all circuits on this
interface.
While Frame Relay interfaces have a monitoring process for
monitoring purposes, the router also displays complete statistics for
installed interfaces when you use the interface command from the
GWCON environment. (For more information on the interface
command, refer to "The Operating/Monitoring Process (GWCON - Talk 5) and Commands")
Statistics similar to the following are displayed when you execute the
interface command from the GWCON environment for Frame Relay
interfaces. The actual display will vary somewhat depending upon the
adapter type, for example, X.21, V.35, or HSSI.
If FR subinterfaces have been configured, the GWCON statistics and error
commands for the FR base interface will display cumulative counts for all
circuits on the FR base interface and all associated subinterfaces. For
a subinterface, these commands will list counts for only the circuits defined
for the subinterface.
- Nt
- Indicates the interface number as assigned by software during initial
configuration.
- Nt'
- Indicates the interface number as assigned by software during initial
configuration.
Note: | For FR dial circuit interfaces, Nt' is different from Nt.
Nt' indicates the base interface (ISDN) that the dial circuit is running
over.
|
- Interface
- Indicates the type of interface and its instance number. Frame
relay has a FR designation.
- Slot
- Indicates the slot of the interface running Frame Relay
- Port
- Indicates the port of the interface that is running Frame Relay
- Self-test Passed
- Indicates the total number of times the Frame Relay interface passed
self-test.
- Self-test Failed
- Indicates the total number of times the Frame Relay interface failed
self-test.
- Maintenance Failed
- Indicates the total number of times the interface was unable to
communicate with Frame Relay management.
- V.24 circuit, Nicknames, and State
- The circuits, control signals, pin assignments and their state (ON or
OFF).
Note: | The symbol - - - in monitoring output indicates that the value or state is
unknown.
|
- Line speed
- The transmit clock rate.
- Last port reset
- The length of time since the last port reset.
Input frame errors:
- CRC error
- The number of packets received that contained checksum errors, and as a
result were discarded.
- Alignment
- The number of packets received that were not an even multiple of 8 bits in
length, and as a result were discarded.
- Too long
- The number of packets that were greater than the configured size, and as a
result were discarded.
- Aborted frame
- The number of packets received that were aborted by the sender or a line
error.
- DMA/FIFO overrun
- The number of times the serial interface could not send data fast enough
to the system packet buffer memory to receive them from the network.
- Missed frame
- When a frame arrives at the device and there is no buffer available, the
hardware drops the frame and increments the missed frame counter.
- L & F bits not set
- On serial interfaces, the hardware sets input-descriptor information for
arriving frames. If the buffer can accept the complete frame upon
arrival, the hardware sets both the last and first bits of the frame,
indicating that the buffer accepted the complete frame. If either of
the bits is not set, the packet is dropped, the L & F bits not
set counter is incremented, and the buffer is cleared for reuse.
This counter will not be displayed for all types of adapter.
Note: | It is unlikely that the L & F bits not set counter will be
affected by traffic.
|
Output frame counters:
- DMA/FIFO underrun errors
- The number of times the serial interface could not retrieve data fast
enough from the system packet buffer memory to transmit them to the
network.
- Output aborts sent
- The number of transmissions that were aborted as requested by upper-level
software.
Statistics similar to the following are displayed for Frame Relay dial
circuits when you execute the interface command from the GWCON
environment:
+interface 3
Self-Test Self-Test Maintenance
Nt Nt' Interface Passed Failed Failed
3 2 FR/1 1 0 0
Frame Relay MAC/data-link on ISDN Primary Rate interface
This section describes dynamic reconfiguration (DR) as it affects Talk 6
and Talk 5 commands.
Frame Relay supports the CONFIG (Talk 6) delete interface
command with no restrictions.
Frame Relay supports the GWCON (Talk 5) activate interface
command with the following considerations:
- You cannot activate a Frame Relay dial circuit interface unless the dial
circuit's base net is already active.
- You cannot activate a Frame Relay dial circuit if its base net is set for
channelized ISDN.
- An activate for a Frame Relay dial circuit will fail if the
frame size, MAC header, or trailer required by the spare interface is larger
than the values of these parameters configured for other dial circuits already
assigned to the base net.
All Frame Relay configuration changes are automatically activated except
the following changes:
Commands whose changes are not activated by the GWCON (Talk 5)
activate interface command
|
CONFIG, net, enable compression
Note: | If data compression is not already active on another Frame Relay interface,
then it cannot be enabled when the interface is activated.
|
|
Frame Relay supports the GWCON (Talk 5) reset interface
command with the following considerations:
- A Frame Relay dial circuit cannot be reset if any of the dial circuit
parameters that are configured at the Dial Circuit config>
prompt have changed.
- You cannot reset a Frame Relay interface that is being used for WAN
Reroute
All Frame Relay configuration changes are automatically activated except
the following changes:
Commands whose changes are not activated by the GWCON (Talk 5)
reset interface command
|
CONFIG, net, set frame-size
Note: | You cannot increase the frame size.
|
|
CONFIG, net, enable compression
Note: | You cannot enable compression on the interface if it is not enabled already
or enabled on another Frame Relay Interface.
|
|
Frame Relay supports the following GWCON commands that temporarily
change the operational state of the device. These changes are lost
whenever the device is reloaded, restarted, or you execute any dynamically
reconfigurable command.
Commands
|
GWCON, net, set circuit
|
GWCON, net, set ir-adjustment
|
GWCON, net, enable cir-monitor
|
GWCON, net, enable cllm
|
GWCON, net, enable congestion-monitor
|
GWCON, net, enable notify-fecn-source
|
GWCON, net, enable throttle-transmit-on-fecn
|
GWCON, net, disable cir-monitor
|
GWCON, net, disable cllm
|
GWCON, net, disable congestion-monitor
|
GWCON, net, disable notify-fecn-source
|
GWCON, net, disable throttle-transmit-on-fecn
|
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