Free Article titled - Cisco CCNA And CCNP BCRAN Exam Training:  Frame Relay PVC, SVC, DLCI, and Map Statements Get Free Content For Your Website

Free Articles on Certification and many other topics
Another free Certification article for you by Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933
Titled: Cisco CCNA And CCNP BCRAN Exam Training: Frame Relay PVC, SVC, DLCI, and Map Statements
Get the Certification category RSS Feed Certification RSS Feed

Print This Article Instant Copy Text

Please support the Sponsors of uPublish.info

Cisco CCNA And CCNP BCRAN Exam Training: Frame Relay PVC, SVC, DLCI, and Map Statements

By: Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933
Posted on: 2006-12-05
Downloads: 171

Article Summary: To earn your CCNA and CCNP, you have to know the details of frame relay! Learn all about PVCs, SVCs, DLCIs, and frame map statements from Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933.

In today's CCNP certification tutorial, we'll concentrate on the BCRAN exam and Frame Relay PVCs, SVC, and DLCIs in particular.


There are actually two kinds of virtual circuits - Permanent Virtual Circuits (PVCs) and Switched Virtual Circuits (SVCs). An SVC doesn't have anything to do with an L2 switch - it's a VC that is built only under predefined circumstances, similar to an ISDN connection that is only built when interesting traffic hits the line. SVCs go through a basic four-step process, and it's a lot like ISDN:


Call Setup -- Just what it sounds like, the circuit between the two DTEs is created.


Data Transfer -- Again, just what it sounds like.


Idle -- The connection is active, but no data is going across the line. As with an ISDN call, if the call stays idle too long, the call will be torn down.


Call Termination - The call is torn down.


A PVC is just what the name says - it's permanent, and is already built when traffic needs to be sent. PVCs have two steps, data transfer and idle. Unlike an SVC, when a PVC goes to idle, the PVC will not be torn down.


The DLCI (pronounced "del-see") is simply an identifier for the connection between the DTE and the closest DCE in the frame switch. You don't just make the DLCI number up - the Frame provider will provide you with the DLCIs you should use.


The key to a successful Frame configuration is remembering that the local DLCI must be mapped to a remote IP address. There are two ways to do this, one being dynamic and the other involving a static configuration. Those of you who have read my previous books know that I'm all for the router and the switch using dynamic methods as often as possible, since dynamically learned information is the easiest information to keep current. However, in this case, the static method of DLCI - IP address mapping is considered more reliable than the dynamic method, Inverse Address Resolution Protocol (IARP).


To allow IARP to perform dynamic mappings, just enable Frame Relay with “encapsulation frame-relay” and open the interface. When you see the word dynamic in the output of show frame map, that particular mapping was performed by Inverse ARP.


It's highly recommended that you run either static or dynamic DLCI mappings - don't use them both on the same interface. This can result in incomplete mappings if and when the router is reloaded.

Article Source: http://www.upublish.info

About the Author:
Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933
Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933, is the owner of The Bryant Advantage, home of over 200 free certification exam tutorials, including CCNA certification training articles. His exclusive CCNA study guide is also available! Visit his blog and sign up for Cisco Certification Central, a daily newsletter packed with CCNA, Network+, Security+, A+, and CCNP certification exam practice questions! A free 7-part course, "How To Pass The CCNA", is also available, and you can attend an in-person or online Cisco CCNA training boot camp with The Bryant Advantage!

Free Articles on Certification and many other topics
Free Articles on Certification and many other topics - Add this category to your RSS Reader

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Certification Articles Via RSS!


Above are more free articles on Certification
U Publish Articles

© 2005-2008 uPublish.info All Rights Reserved.
Use of our service is protected by our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service
U Publish - Source for Free Articles - Free Reprint Articles - Free Article Publishing