274
C
HAPTER
17: C
ONFIGURING
F
RAME
R
ELAY
In the legacy BDR implementation of Frame Relay over ISDN, a dialer interface and
all the ISDN physical interfaces (including BRI and PRI interfaces) attached to it will
be Configured with Frame Relay.
■
Adopt dialer profiles
In the dialer profiles implementation of Frame Relay over ISDN, the
dialer
number
command must be configured, besides using the
link-protocol fr
command to change the link layer protocol on the interface. The configuration
is necessary because the negotiation of user name is disabled after the dialer
interface is configured with Frame Relay, so the called party will identify
different dialer interfaces according to the dial strings of the calling parties. In
this case, however, there is no need to configure the
dialer user
command.
In addition, the
dialer call-in
command must be configured for the called
party to pre-process a dial-in number, thereby to determine whether the user
dialing the number should be accessed. For other configurations, refer to the
Dial-up
.
Perform the following configuration in physical ISDN or dialer interface view.
Table 316
Configure parameters related to dialer profiles
The two ends of a BDR call should work with the same link layer protocol.
For a dialer interface adopting dialer profiles to implement Frame Relay over ISDN,
it should be configured with Frame Relay. In addition, Frame Relay and PPP are
probably carried on a B channel for supporting the dynamic configuration on the
channel. Therefore, the ISDN physical interface should be configured with PPP.
After the dynamic B channel is disconnected, the link layer protocol of the ISDN
interface will be automatically restored to PPP (by default, physical interface will
inherit the configurations of dialer interface).
Multiple
dialer number
is allowed to configure for the calling party, which is the
so-called dialer string rotary backup. For the called party, after a dialer interface
link layer protocol is configured to Frame Relay, the
dialer number
s configured
on other dialer interfaces cannot be the same
dialer number
configured on it.
Otherwise, calls will fail.
Display and debug
Frame Relay
Please use the
display
and
debugging
commands in all views.
Table 317
Display and Debug Frame Relay
Operation
Command
Configure a dialer interface with Frame Relay
link-protocol fr [ ietf |
nonstandard ]
Enable dialer profiles
dialer bundle
number
Configure the dial string for calling a remote
end
dialer number
dial-string
[
:
isdn_subaddress
]
Pre-process ISDN dial-in numbers
dialer call-in
remote-number
[
callback ]
Operation
Command
Display receiving/sending statistics information
of Frame Relay LMI type packets
display fr lmi-info [ interface
type
number
]
Display protocol address and Frame Relay
address mapping table
display fr map-info
Summary of Contents for 3036
Page 1: ...http www 3com com 3Com Router Configuration Guide Published March 2004 Part No 10014299 ...
Page 4: ...VPN 615 RELIABILITY 665 QOS 681 DIAL UP 721 ...
Page 6: ...2 ABOUT THIS GUIDE ...
Page 7: ...I GETTING STARTED Chapter 1 3Com Router Introduction Chapter 2 3Com Router User Interface ...
Page 8: ...4 ...
Page 16: ...12 CHAPTER 1 3COM ROUTER INTRODUCTION ...
Page 34: ...30 ...
Page 60: ...56 CHAPTER 3 SYSTEM MANAGEMENT ...
Page 98: ...94 CHAPTER 6 DISPLAY AND DEBUGGING TOOLS ...
Page 110: ...106 ...
Page 114: ...110 CHAPTER 8 INTERFACE CONFIGURATION OVERVIEW ...
Page 158: ...154 CHAPTER 10 CONFIGURING WAN INTERFACE ...
Page 168: ...164 ...
Page 188: ...184 CHAPTER 13 CONFIGURING PPPOE CLIENT ...
Page 192: ...188 CHAPTER 14 CONFIGURING SLIP Router ip route static 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 110 0 1 ...
Page 248: ...244 CHAPTER 16 CONFIGURING LAPB AND X 25 ...
Page 320: ...316 ...
Page 330: ...326 CHAPTER 20 CONFIGURING IP ADDRESS ...
Page 362: ...358 CHAPTER 21 CONFIGURING IP APPLICATION ...
Page 374: ...370 CHAPTER 23 CONFIGURING IP COUNT ...
Page 406: ...402 CHAPTER 25 CONFIGURING DLSW ...
Page 408: ...404 ...
Page 452: ...448 CHAPTER 29 CONFIGURING OSPF ...
Page 482: ...478 CHAPTER 30 CONFIGURING BGP ...
Page 494: ...490 CHAPTER 31 CONFIGURING IP ROUTING POLICY ...
Page 502: ...498 ...
Page 508: ...504 CHAPTER 33 IP MULTICAST ...
Page 514: ...510 CHAPTER 34 CONFIGURING IGMP ...
Page 526: ...522 CHAPTER 36 CONFIGURING PIM SM ...
Page 528: ...524 ...
Page 532: ...528 CHAPTER 37 CONFIGURING TERMINAL ACCESS SECURITY ...
Page 550: ...546 CHAPTER 38 CONFIGURING AAA AND RADIUS PROTOCOL ...
Page 590: ...586 CHAPTER 40 CONFIGURING IPSEC ...
Page 599: ...IX VPN Chapter 42 Configuring VPN Chapter 43 Configuring L2TP Chapter 44 Configuring GRE ...
Page 600: ...596 ...
Page 638: ...634 CHAPTER 43 CONFIGURING L2TP ...
Page 649: ...X RELIABILITY Chapter 45 Configuring a Standby Center Chapter 46 Configuring VRRP ...
Page 650: ...646 ...
Page 666: ...662 ...
Page 670: ...666 CHAPTER 47 QOS OVERVIEW ...
Page 700: ...696 CHAPTER 49 CONGESTION MANAGEMENT ...
Page 706: ...702 CHAPTER 50 CONGESTION AVOIDANCE ...
Page 707: ...XII DIAL UP Chapter 51 Configuring DCC Chapter 52 Configuring Modem ...
Page 708: ...704 ...
Page 762: ...758 CHAPTER 52 CONFIGURING MODEM ...