Zhone Technologies, Inc. | IMACS Product Book, Version 4 |
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3. FRAD Card
The 823160 Frame Relay Assembler/Disassembler (FRAD) user card provides eight ports for transport of low speed data across Frame Relay Networks. The FRAD can encapsulate HDLC protocols (such as SDLC). Each port can be independently configured for asynchronous, transparent synchronous data or HDLC.
When taking data from the
When processing HDLC data, the flags and the CRC are removed before assembling the frames. For asynchronous data, start and stop bits are removed before the frames are assembled. Other data is treated as a transparent data stream and all bits will be encapsulated into transmitted frames. The FRAD card supports proprietary sub- addressing over a PVC. This
The FRAD card also maintains performance statistics detailing the number of frames transmitted, number of frames received, number of octets transmitted, number of octets received, number of frames dropped before being received during a 15 minute interval and a status field describing the conditional that caused the dropped packets (DTE port down, loop back in progress or port in standby). All these performance statistics are gather for 24 hours, in
In the application represented by the Figure 16 , the router on the left (at a remote office) is connected to the IMACS via the FRAD card at 9.6Kbps, along with other voice traffic from a PBX. The router traffic is mapped onto a DS0 on the T1 link to the Central Office where it is separated by a DACS and directed towards a Frame Relay network and switched/routed to the destination router at the headquarters. See Figure 15 for an illustration of the FRAD Card’s capabilities and Table 16 for the FRAD Card’s specifications.
March 2001 | Page 51 |