massivearticlelist.com
  Site Home :> About Us :> Place Your Link :> Privacy of Info :> Terms & Conditions :> Add Article
Search:   
 
 

The Power of Viral Marketing

When I first heard of the term Viral Marketing I thought immediately of a virus. No, not the flu, a ... - Peter Dobler
 

You Need Traffic For Your Blog, Here's How To See It.

For those who blog, or write in online journals, keeping track of visitors can be a great way to see ... - Rudolf Freidlander
 

Search Trends & Management

How to setup a simple trend analysis for searches in your area of expertise. - Hans Bool
 
 

Salon Inventory Management Software

The beauty care industry has emerged today as one of the most lucrative and competitive industries. ... - Alison Cole
 

The Necessity of Small Business Advertising

Small business advertising is a skill. It is a must for small business advertisers to have that clev ... - Jay Peterson
 
 

Site Home –› Internet & Computers –› Computer Professional Certification
 

Cisco CCNA Certification Exam Tutorial: Frame Relay DLCIs And Mappings

 

Author: Chris Bryant

Passing the CCNA is tough, and one of the toughest parts is keeping all the acronyms straight! Frame Relay has plenty of those, and today we're going to examine what DLCIs do and how they're mapped on a Cisco router.

Frame Relay VCs use Data-Link Connection Identifiers (DLCI - pronounced "del-see") as their addresses. Unlike other Cisco technologies, VCs have only a single DLCI in their header. They do not have a source and destination.

DLCIs have local significance only. DLCI numbers are not advertised to other routers, and other routers can use the same DLCI numbers without causing connectivity issues.

Cisco uses the term global addressing to describe a technique by which a router in a frame relay network is reached via the same DLCI number from each router in the network. For example, in a 25-router network, the same DLCI number would be used to reach Router A by each router.

Global Addressing is an organizational tool that does not affect the fact that DLCIs have local significance only.

The locally significant DLCI must be mapped to the destination routers IP address. There are two options for this, Inverse ARP and static mapping.

In both of the following examples, the single physical Serial interface on Router 1 is configured with two logical connections through the frame relay cloud, one to Router 2 and one to Router 3.

Inverse ARP runs by default once Frame Relay is enabled, and starts working as soon as you open the interface. By running show frame-relay map after enabling Frame Relay, two dynamic mappings are shown on this router. If a dynamic mapping is shown, Inverse ARP performed it.

R1#show frame map

Serial0 (up): ip 200.1.1.2 dlci 122(0x7A,0x1CA0), dynamic,

broadcast,, status defined, active

Serial0 (up): ip 200.1.1.3 dlci 123(0x7B,0x1CB0), dynamic,

broadcast,, status defined, active

Static mappings require the use of a frame map statement. To use static mappings, turn Inverse ARP off with the no frame-relay inverse-arp statement, and configure a frame map statement for each remote destination that maps the local DLCI to the remote IP address. Frame Relay requires the broadcast keyword to send broadcasts to the remote device.

R1#conf t

R1(config)#interface serial0

R1(config-if)#no frame-relay inverse-arp

R1(config-if)#frame map ip 200.1.1.2 122 broadcast

R1(config-if)#frame map ip 200.1.1.3 123 broadcast

The syntax of the frame map statement maps the remote IP address to the local DLCI.
Broadcasts will not be transmitted by default; the broadcast option must be configured.

R1#show frame map

Serial0 (up): ip 200.1.1.2 dlci 122(0x7A,0x1CA0), static,

broadcast,

CISCO, status defined, active

Serial0 (up): ip 200.1.1.3 dlci 123(0x7B,0x1CB0), static,

broadcast,

CISCO, status defined, active

Hands-on practice is the best way to prepare for CCNA exam success. Working with Frame Relay in a lab environment practically guarantees that you'll truly master the concepts shown here - and then you're on your way to the CCNA and becoming a master network engineer.

Author Bio:

Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933, is the owner of The Bryant Advantage , home of free CCNA and CCNP tutorials! Pass the CCNA exam with Chris Bryant!

You can also reach this article by using: Cisco CCNA Certification Exam Tutorial: Frame Relay DLCIs And Mappings, Internet & Computers
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
7 Surefire Secrets to Increase Your Web Site Traffic Starting Yesterday
 
From Pods to Mobs
 
The History Of Blogs
 
The Top 3 Problems With Plasma TVs
 
Why are ebooks growing so rapidly?
 
Tracking Autoresponder Responses
 
Maintain Focus and Online Marketing Fortune Will Follow
 
The Many Faces Of Computer Games
 
Sitemaps and SEO - Do sitemaps help your Google PageRank?
 
The Rich Jerk, the Right Jerk?
 
 
 
Add Url
 
 

Children & Teens

 

Employment & Careers

 

Policies & Law

 

Automotive

 

Online & Indoor Games

 

People & Communities

 

Food & Recipe

 

Shopping & Auction

 

Banking & Finance

 

Garden & Home

 

Art & Creative

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Companies & Business

 

Science & Research

 

News & Events

 

Outdoor & Sports

 

Internet & Computers

 

Healthcare & Medicine

 

Realty & Property

 

Self Help

 

Music & Entertainment

 

Tour & Travel

 

Education & Learning

 

Hygiene & Health

 
Site Home :> Privacy of Info :> Terms & Conditions
© www.massivearticlelist.com - All Rights Reserved Worldwide