- Wide-Area Networking Overview
- Configuring Frame Relay
- Frame Relay Queueing and Fragmentation at the Interface
- Frame Relay MIB Enhancements
- Frame Relay PVC Interface Priority Queueing
- ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Frame Relay show Command and debug Command Enhancements
- L2VPN Local Switching—Frame Relay-Ethernet/VLAN
Contents
- ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Finding Feature Information
- Prerequisites for ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Restrictions for ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Information About ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Benefits of ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Flexible Pool of Bandwidth
- Increased Service Resilience
- Scalability
- Link Integrity Protocol Control Messages
- Variable Bandwidth Class Support
- Class A Single Link
- Class B All Links
- Class C Threshold
- Load Balancing
- ASR1K FRF.12 Support on MFR Interfaces
- Benefits of ASR1K FRF.12
- Limitations of ASR1K FRF.12
- Selecting a Fragment Size
- How to Enable ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Configuring an MFR Bundle
- Configuring an MFR Bundle Link
- Configuring FRF.12 on an MFR Bundle Interface
- Monitoring and Maintaining MFR Bundles and Bundle Links
- Configuration Examples for ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Example: Configuring Multilink Frame Relay
- Example: Configuring Variable Bandwidth Class Support
- Example: Configuring FRF.12 on an MFR Interface
- Additional References
- Feature Information for ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Glossary
ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
The ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16) feature is based on the Frame Relay Forum Multilink Frame Relay User-to-Network Interface/Network-to-Network Interface (UNI/NNI) Implementation Agreement (FRF.16.1) on Cisco Aggregation Services Routers. This feature provides a cost-effective way to increase the bandwidth for particular applications by enabling multiple serial links to be aggregated into a single bundle of bandwidth. Multilink Frame Relay (MFR) is supported on UNI in Frame Relay networks.
- Finding Feature Information
- Prerequisites for ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Restrictions for ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Information About ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- How to Enable ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Configuration Examples for ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Additional References
- Feature Information for ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Glossary
Finding Feature Information
Your software release may not support all the features documented in this module. For the latest feature information and caveats, see the release notes for your platform and software release. To find information about the features documented in this module, and to see a list of the releases in which each feature is supported, see the Feature Information for ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16).
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco Feature Navigator, go to http://www.cisco.com/go/cfn . An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Prerequisites for ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
Restrictions for ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
Only the 2-octet Frame Relay format is supported.
Only T1 and E1 speed members are supported in a bundle.
All member links of a bundle must be of the same type.
The following Shared Port Adapter (SPA) types are supported: The following features are not supported with the ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16) feature: - 3- or 4-octet headers
- Data-link connection identifier (DLCI) address mapping
- Discard Eligibility (DE) bit manipulation
- E1/T1 fractional links within the bundle
- Frame Relay broadcast queue
- Frame Relay backward explicit congestion notification (BECN) and forward explicit congestion notification (FECN) counting
- Frame Relay Permanent Virtual Circuit (PVC) interface priority queuing (PIPQ) including DLCI prioritization
- Frame Relay switching including NNI and FRF2.1
- Frame Relay Traffic Policing (FRTP)
- Frame Relay Traffic Shaping (FRTS)
- FRF.16.1 Fragmentation
- Generic Traffic Shaping (GTS)
- Inverse Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)
- PVC configuration over MFR bundle interface
- Point-to-multipoint subinterfaces
- Switched Virtual Circuits (SVC)
An ISDN interface and any type of virtual interface cannot be a bundle link.
The Multilink Frame Relay MIB (RFC 3020) is not supported.
FRF.9 hardware compression over MFR is not supported.
Information About ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Benefits of ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Link Integrity Protocol Control Messages
- Variable Bandwidth Class Support
- Load Balancing
- ASR1K FRF.12 Support on MFR Interfaces
Benefits of ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
Flexible Pool of Bandwidth
By combining multiple physical interfaces into a bundle, you can design a Frame Relay interface that has more bandwidth than is available from any single physical interface. For example, many new network applications require more bandwidth than is available on a T1 line. One option is to invest in a T3 line; however, T3 lines can be expensive and are not available in some locations. MFR provides a cost-effective solution to this problem by allowing multiple T1 lines to be aggregated into a single bundle of bandwidth.
Increased Service Resilience
When multiple physical interfaces are provisioned as a single bundle, they provide more service resilience than a single physical interface. If a link fails, the bundle continues to support the Frame Relay service by transmitting across the remaining bundle links.
Scalability
ASR1K supports up to 992 MFR bundles.
MFR bundles—The following table shows the maximum number of MFR bundles supported on ASR1K based on the number of links in a bundle:
Links per Bundle |
Number of MFR Bundles |
---|---|
1 |
992 |
2 |
496 |
3 |
330 |
4 |
248 |
Frame Relay DLCI—The number of Frame Relay DLCIs that can be configured on MFR subinterfaces equals the maximum number of MFR bundles on ASR1K. The maximum number of Frame Relay DLCIs that you can configure on MFR subinterfaces and in one MFR bundle is 992.
MFR subinterface—Because only point-to-point interfaces are supported, the number of DLCIs supported is equal to the number of MFR subinterfaces. Therefore, the maximum number of MFR subinterfaces and the maximum number of MFR interfaces supported in one bundle is 992.
Physical Links—The maximum number of physical links supported in a bundle is 10.
Link Integrity Protocol Control Messages
For link management, each end of a bundle link follows the MFR Link Integrity Protocol and exchanges link control messages with its peer (the other end of the bundle link). To bring up a bundle link, both ends of the link must complete an exchange of ADD_LINK and ADD_LINK_ACK messages. To maintain the link, both ends periodically exchange HELLO and HELLO_ACK messages. This exchange of hello messages and acknowledgments serve as a keepalive mechanism for the link. If a router is sending hello messages but not receiving acknowledgments, it will resend the hello message up to a configured maximum number of times. If the router exhausts the maximum number of retries, the bundle link line protocol is considered down (unoperational).
The bundle link interface’s line protocol status is considered up (operational) when the peer device acknowledges that it will use the same link for the bundle. The line protocol remains up when the peer device acknowledges the hello messages from the local router.
The bundle interface’s line status becomes up when at least one bundle link has its line protocol status up. The bundle interface’s line status goes down when the last bundle link is no longer in the up state. This behavior complies with the class A bandwidth requirement defined in FRF.16.
The bundle interface’s line protocol status is considered up when the Frame Relay data-link layer at the local router and peer device synchronize using the Local Management Interface (LMI), when LMI is enabled. The bundle line protocol remains up as long as the LMI keepalives are successful.
Variable Bandwidth Class Support
MFR FRF.16 variable bandwidth class support allows you to specify the criterion used to activate or deactivate a Frame Relay bundle.
Class A Single Link
The Frame Relay bundle is provisioned when one or more bundle links issue a BL_ACTIVATE message to indicate that an operational bandwidth is available. When this occurs, the bundle emulates a physical link by issuing a PH_ACTIVATE message to the data link layer.
When the operational bandwidth of a bundle link fails to meet operational requirements (for instance, if a bundle link is in rollback mode), the bundle link issues a BL_DEACTIVATE message. When all bundle links are down in a class A bundle, a PH_DEACTIVATE message is sent to the data link layer, indicating that the Frame Relay bundle cannot accept frames.
Note | Activate and deactivate messages are implementation-oriented messages only. They are not visible in the output of the debug commands. |
Class B All Links
The Frame Relay bundle is provisioned when all bundle links issue a BL_ACTIVATE message to indicate that an operational bandwidth is available. When this occurs, the bundle emulates a physical link by issuing a PH_ACTIVATE message to the data link layer.
When the operational bandwidth of a bundle link fails to meet operational requirements (for instance, if it is in loopback mode), the bundle link issues a BL_DEACTIVATE message. When any bundle link is down in a class B bundle, a PH_DEACTIVATE message is sent to the data link layer, indicating that the Frame Relay bundle cannot accept frames.
Class C Threshold
A Frame Relay bundle is provisioned when a minimum number of links in the configured bundle issue a BL_ACTIVATE message, causing the bundle to emulate a physical link by issuing a PH_ACTIVATE message to the data link layer.
When the number of bundle links issuing a BL_ACTIVATE message falls below the configured threshold value, a PH_DEACTIVATE message is sent to the data link layer, indicating that the Frame Relay bundle cannot accept frames.
Load Balancing
MFR provides load balancing across bundle links within a bundle. If a bundle link that is chosen for transmission happens to be busy transmitting a long packet, the load-balancing mechanism can try another link, thus solving problems encountered when delay-sensitive packets have to wait.
ASR1K FRF.12 Support on MFR Interfaces
The ASR1K FRF.12 Support on MFR Interfaces feature enables the transport of realtime, delay-sensitive (voice) and nonrealtime, delay-insensitive (data) packets over the same, relatively slow-speed PVC.
During the transmission of packets, the larger, nonrealtime packets are fragmented into a sequence of smaller, mostly fixed-sized packets, also called fragments. The realtime packets are interleaved among the fragments. While receiving the packets, the nonrealtime fragments are reassembled and the resulting packets are forwarded along with the realtime packets. This approach minimizes the delay that can occur when nonrealtime and realtime traffic flow over the same PVC.
Benefits of ASR1K FRF.12
The ASR1K FRF.12 functionality prevents delay in Frame Relay networks by allowing edge routers to fragment large data packets before transmitting them across the network.
Limitations of ASR1K FRF.12
If a Frame Relay access device does not support FRF.12 fragmentation, the ASR1K FRF.12 Support on MFR Interfaces feature will not benefit the interface between the Frame Relay access device and the edge router. Fragmentation and reassembly occur on the interface between the edge router and the Frame Relay network.
If the Frame Relay access device is sending voice and unfragmented data on the same PVC, voice quality will suffer. The edge router will not reorder packets on PVCs.
Selecting a Fragment Size
You should set the fragment size based on the lowest port speed between routers. For example, for a hub-and-spoke Frame Relay topology, where the hub has a T1 speed and the remote routers have 64 kb/s port speeds, the fragmentation size must be set for 64 kb/s speed on both routers. Any other PVCs that share the same physical interface must use the same fragmentation size used by the voice PVC.
With pure end-to-end FRF.12 fragmentation, you should select a fragment size that is larger than the voice packet size.
The following table shows the recommended fragmentation sizes for a serialization delay of 10 ms:
Lowest Link Speed in Path |
Recommended Fragment Size |
---|---|
56 kb/s |
70 bytes |
64 kb/s |
80 bytes |
128 kb/s |
160 bytes |
256 kb/s |
320 bytes |
512 kb/s |
640 bytes |
768 kb/s |
1000 bytes |
1536 kb/s |
1600 bytes |
How to Enable ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Configuring an MFR Bundle
- Configuring an MFR Bundle Link
- Configuring FRF.12 on an MFR Bundle Interface
- Monitoring and Maintaining MFR Bundles and Bundle Links
Configuring an MFR Bundle
Perform this task to configure an MFR bundle.
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
interface mfrinterface-number
4.
frame-relay
multilink
bandwidth-class
[a
|
b
|
c [threshold]]
5.
frame-relay
intf-type
[dce |
dte]
6.
frame-relay
multilink
bid
name
7.
exit
8.
interface
mfrinterface-number.subinterface-number
point-to-point
9.
ip
address
ip-address
mask
10.
frame-relay
interface-dlci
dlci
11.
end
12.
show
frame-relay
multilink
DETAILED STEPS
Configuring an MFR Bundle Link
Tip | To minimize the latency that results from the arrival order of packets, Cisco recommends bundling physical links of the same line speed in one bundle. |
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
interface
serial
number
4.
encapsulation
frame-relay
mfrnumber [name]
5.
frame-relay
multilink
lid
name
6.
frame-relay
multilink
hello
seconds
7.
frame-relay
multilink
ack
seconds
8.
frame-relay
multilink
retry
number
9.
end
10.
show
frame-relay
multilink
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Router> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 2 |
configure
terminal
Example: Router# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
interface
serial
number
Example: Router(config)# interface serial 5/0 |
Selects a physical interface and enters interface configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
encapsulation
frame-relay
mfrnumber [name]
Example: Router(config-if)# encapsulation frame-relay mfr1 |
Creates an MFR bundle link and associates the link with a bundle. |
Step 5 |
frame-relay
multilink
lid
name
Example: Router(config-if)# frame-relay multilink lid first-link |
(Optional) Assigns a bundle link identification name to an MFR bundle link. |
Step 6 |
frame-relay
multilink
hello
seconds
Example: Router(config-if)# frame-relay multilink hello 9 |
(Optional) Configures the interval in seconds after which a bundle link will send out hello messages. |
Step 7 |
frame-relay
multilink
ack
seconds
Example: Router(config-if)# frame-relay multilink ack 6 |
(Optional) Configures the interval (in seconds) for which a bundle link will wait for a hello message acknowledgment before resending the hello message. |
Step 8 |
frame-relay
multilink
retry
number
Example: Router(config-if)# frame-relay multilink retry 3 |
(Optional) Configures the maximum number of times a bundle link will resend a hello message while waiting for an acknowledgment. |
Step 9 |
end
Example: Router(config-if)# end |
Ends the configuration session and returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 10 |
show
frame-relay
multilink
Example: Router# show frame-relay multilink |
(Optional) Displays the current Frame Relay multilink configuration. |
Configuring FRF.12 on an MFR Bundle Interface
You must create a class map and a policy map before enabling FRF.12 fragmentation of Frame Relay frames. For the class map, define a differentiated services code point (DSCP) value as the match criterion.
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
interface mfrinterface-number
4.
no ip address
5.
frame-relay fragment
fragment-size
end-to-end
6.
service-policy output
policy-map-name
7.
exit
8.
interface mfrinterface-number.subinterface-number
point-to-point
9.
ip address
ip-address
mask
10.
frame-relay interface-dlci
dlci-value
11.
end
12.
show frame-relay fragment [interface
interface [dlci]]
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Router> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 2 |
configure
terminal
Example: Router# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
interface mfrinterface-number
Example: Router(config)# interface mfr1 |
Configures an MFR bundle interface and enters interface configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
no ip address
Example: Router(config-if)# no ip address |
Disables IP processing. |
Step 5 |
frame-relay fragment
fragment-size
end-to-end
Example: Router(config-if)# frame-relay fragment 300 end-to-end |
Enables FRF.12 end-to-end fragmentation of Frame Relay frames. |
Step 6 |
service-policy output
policy-map-name
Example: Router(config-if)# service-policy output pmap1 |
Attaches a policy map to an output interface that is to be used as the service policy for that interface. |
Step 7 |
exit
Example: Router(config-if)# exit |
Exits interface configuration mode and returns to global configuration mode. |
Step 8 |
interface mfrinterface-number.subinterface-number
point-to-point
Example: Router(config)# interface mfr1.1 point-to-point |
Configures a point-to-point MFR subinterface and enters subinterface configuration mode. |
Step 9 |
ip address
ip-address
mask
Example: Router(config-subif)# ip address 10.1.1.1 255.255.255.0 |
Configures the IP address of the subinterface. |
Step 10 |
frame-relay interface-dlci
dlci-value
Example: Router(config-subif)# frame-relay interface-dlci 100 |
Assigns a DLCI to the MFR subinterface and enters Frame Relay DLCI configuration mode. |
Step 11 |
end
Example: Router(config-fr-dlci)# end |
Exits Frame Relay DLCI configuration mode and returns to privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 12 | show frame-relay fragment [interface
interface [dlci]]
Example: Router# show frame-relay fragment |
(Optional) Displays statistics about Frame Relay fragmentation. |
Monitoring and Maintaining MFR Bundles and Bundle Links
1.
enable
2.
debug
frame-relay
multilink
[control [mfrnumber |
serial
number]]
3.
show
frame-relay
multilink
[mfrnumber |
serial
number] [detailed]
4.
show
interfaces
mfrnumber
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Router> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 2 |
debug
frame-relay
multilink
[control [mfrnumber |
serial
number]]
Example: Router# debug frame-relay multilink control mfr1 |
(Optional) Displays debug messages for MFR bundles and bundle links. |
Step 3 |
show
frame-relay
multilink
[mfrnumber |
serial
number] [detailed]
Example: Router# show frame-relay multilink mfr1 detailed |
(Optional) Displays configuration information and statistics about MFR bundles and bundle links. |
Step 4 |
show
interfaces
mfrnumber
Example: Router# show interfaces mfr1 |
(Optional) Displays information and packet statistics for the bundle interface. |
Examples
The following is sample output from the show frame-relay multilink command. Because a particular bundle or bundle link is not specified, information about all bundles and bundle links is displayed.
Router# show frame-relay multilink Bundle: mfr1, State = down, class = A, fragmentation disabled BID = router1 Bundle links: Serial3/1, HW state = Administratively down, link state = Down, LID = second-link Serial3/2, HW state = up, link state = Add_sent, LID = first-link Bundle: mfr1, State = down, class = B, fragmentation disabled BID = router1 Bundle links: Serial3/0, HW state = Administratively down, link state = Down, LID = third-link Serial3/1, HW state = Administratively down, link state = Down, LID = second-link Serial3/2, HW state = up, link state = Add_sent, LID = first-link
The following is sample output from the show frame-relay multilink command when a Frame Relay bundle is configured as bandwidth class C (threshold):
Router# show frame-relay multilink Bundle: mfr2, State = down, class = C (threshold 100), fragmentation disabled BID = router2 Bundle links: Serial3/1, HW state = Administratively down, link state = Down, LID = cisco2 Serial3/0, HW state = Administratively down, link state = Down, LID = cisco1
The following is sample output from the show frame-relay multilink command when the serial number keyword and argument pair is specified. It displays information about the specified bundle link.
Router# show frame-relay multilink Serial 3/2 Bundle links: Serial3/2, HW state = up, link state = Add_sent, LID = first-link Bundle interface = mfr1, BID = router1
The following is sample output from the show frame-relay multilink command when the serial number keyword and argument pair and the detailed option are specified. Detailed information about the specified bundle links is displayed.
Router# show frame-relay multilink Serial 3/2 detail Bundle links: Serial3/2, HW state = up, link state = Add_sent, LID = first-link Bundle interface = mfr1, BID = router1 Cause code = none, Ack timer = 6, Hello timer = 9, Max retry count = 3, Current count = 0, Peer LID = , RTT = 0 ms Statistics: Add_link sent = 110, Add_link rcv'd = 0, Add_link ack sent = 0, Add_link ack rcv'd = 0, Add_link rej sent = 0, Add_link rej rcv'd = 0, Remove_link sent = 0, Remove_link rcv'd = 0, Remove_link_ack sent = 0, Remove_link_ack rcv'd = 0, Hello sent = 0, Hello rcv'd = 0, Hello_ack sent = 0, Hello_ack rcv'd = 0, outgoing pak dropped = 0, incoming pak dropped = 0
Configuration Examples for ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
- Example: Configuring Multilink Frame Relay
- Example: Configuring Variable Bandwidth Class Support
- Example: Configuring FRF.12 on an MFR Interface
Example: Configuring Multilink Frame Relay
The following example shows the configuration of bundle MFR1, where serial interfaces 3/0 and 3/2 are configured as bundle links:
interface MFR1 no ip address frame-relay intf-type dce frame-relay multilink bid router1 ! interface MFR1.1 point-to-point ip address 10.0.0.1 255.255.255.0 frame-relay interface-dlci 100 interface Serial3/0 encapsulation frame-relay MFR1 frame-relay multilink lid first-link frame-relay multilink hello 9 frame-relay multilink retry 3 frame-relay multilink ack 4 interface Serial3/2 encapsulation frame-relay MFR1 frame-relay multilink lid first-link frame-relay multilink hello 8 frame-relay multilink ack 3 frame-relay multilink retry 2
Example: Configuring Variable Bandwidth Class Support
The following example shows how to configure Frame Relay bundle MFR2 to use the class B (all links) criterion to get activated or deactivated:
interface MFR2 frame-relay multilink bandwidth-class b frame-relay intf-type dce frame-relay multilink bid router2 exit interface MFR2.2 point-to-point ip address 10.1.1.10 255.255.255.0 frame-relay interface-dlci 145 end
Example: Configuring FRF.12 on an MFR Interface
The following example shows how to configure FRF.12 on an MFR interface:
class-map match-any tos_111 match dscp cs7 policy-map voip class tos_111 priority percent 100 interface mfr1 frame-relay multilink bid 1 frame-relay multilink bandwidth-class a frame-relay fragment 100 end-to-end service-policy output voip interface mfr1.1 point-to-point ip address 70.1.1.1 255.255.255.0 frame-relay interface-dlci 100
The following output shows the result of the above configuration:
Router# show frame-relay fragment interface dlci frag-type size in-frag out-frag dropped-frag mfr1.1 100 end-to-end 100 0 0 0
The size column displays the configured fragment size in bytes.
Additional References
Related Documents
Related Topic |
Document Title |
---|---|
Cisco IOS commands |
|
WAN commands: complete command syntax, command mode, defaults, usage guidelines, and examples |
|
Frame Relay configuration |
Standards and RFCs
Standard/RFC |
Title |
---|---|
FRF.16.1 |
Multilink Frame Relay UNI/NNI Implementation Agreement, May 2002 |
Technical Assistance
Description |
Link |
---|---|
The Cisco Support and Documentation website provides online resources to download documentation, software, and tools. Use these resources to install and configure the software and to troubleshoot and resolve technical issues with Cisco products and technologies. Access to most tools on the Cisco Support and Documentation website requires a Cisco.com user ID and password. |
Feature Information for ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16)
The following table provides release information about the feature or features described in this module. This table lists only the software release that introduced support for a given feature in a given software release train. Unless noted otherwise, subsequent releases of that software release train also support that feature.
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco Feature Navigator, go to . An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Feature Name |
Releases |
Feature Information |
---|---|---|
ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16) |
Cisco IOS XE Release 3.4S |
The ASR1K Frame Relay - Multilink (MLFR-FRF.16) feature is based on the Frame Relay Forum Multilink Frame Relay UNI/NNI Implementation Agreement (FRF.16.1) on Aggregation Service Routers. The following commands were introduced or modified: debug frame-relay multilink, encapsulation frame-relay mfr, frame-relay multilink ack, frame-relay multilink bandwidth-class, frame-relay multilink bid, frame-relay multilink hello, frame-relay multilink lid, frame-relay multilink retry, interface mfr, show frame-relay multilink. |
ASR1K FRF.12 Support on MFR Interfaces |
Cisco IOS XE Release 3.5S |
The following sections provide information about this feature: |
Glossary
BID --Bundle identification. The BID is the name used to identify the bundle. The BID can be assigned, or the default can be used.
BL_ACTIVATE --A message that controls the addition of a bundle link to a Frame Relay bundle.
BL_DEACTIVATE --A message that controls the removal a bundle link from a Frame Relay bundle.
bundle --A logical grouping of one or more physical interfaces using the formats and procedures of multilink Frame Relay. A bundle emulates a physical interface to the Frame Relay data-link layer. The bundle is also referred to as the MFR interface .
bundle link --An individual physical interface that is a member of a bundle.
DLCI --data-link connection identifier. A value that identifies a permanent virtual circuit (PVC) in a Frame Relay network.
HELLO message --A message that notifies a peer endpoint that the local endpoint is in the operational state (up).
HELLO_ACK --A message that notifies a peer endpoint that a hello message has been received.
LID --link identification. The LID is the name used to identify a bundle link. The LID can be assigned, or the default can be used.
LMI --Local Management Interface. A set of enhancements to the basic Frame Relay specification. LMI includes support for a keepalive mechanism, which verifies that data is flowing; a multicast mechanism, which provides the network server with its local DLCI and the multicast DLCI; global addressing, which gives DLCIs global rather than local significance in Frame Relay networks; and a status mechanism, which provides an ongoing status report on the DLCIs known to the switch.
NNI --Network-to-Network Interface. The interface between two Frame Relay devices that are both located in a private network or both located in a public network.
PH_ACTIVATE --A message that indicates that the Frame Relay bundle is up.
PH_DEACTIVATE --A message that indicates that the Frame Relay bundle is down.
UNI --User-to-Network Interface. The interface between a Frame Relay device in a public network and a Frame Relay device in a private network.