Cisco Systems BC-281 manual DLSw+ Peer Cluster Feature Configuration Example, BC-328

Page 48

Configuring Data-Link Switching Plus

DLSw+ Configuration Examples

DLSw+ Peer Cluster Feature Configuration Example

Figure 141 shows a DLSw+ network configured with the DLSw+ Peer Clusters feature.

Figure 141 DLSw+ Peer Cluster Feature

X

Peer cluster

ID 5

MPA

BP1 BP2

MPB

Peer group 1

Peer group 2

Token

Ring

Y

17268

Because BP2 is configured as the border peer with the DLSw+ Peer Clusters feature, it does not forward explorers to both MPA and MPB since they are part of the same peer cluster.

BP2

source-bridge ring-group 310

dlsw local-peer 10.1.1.3 border group 2 promiscuous

MPA

source-bridge ring-group 310

dlsw local-peer 10.1.1.1 group 2 promiscuous cluster 5 dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 10.1.1.3

MPB

source-bridge ring-group 310

dlsw local-peer 10.1.1.2 group 2 promiscuous cluster 5 dlsw remote-peer tcp 0 10.1.1.3

MPC

dlsw local-peer 10.1.1.4 group 2 promiscuous dlsw remote-peer tcp 0 10.1.1.3

 

Cisco IOS Bridging and IBM Networking Configuration Guide

BC-328

78-11737-02

Image 48
Contents Configuring Data-Link Switching Plus BC-281DLSw Standard DLSw Version 2 StandardIP Multicast BC-282DLSw+ Features Enhanced Peer-on-Demand Routing FeatureUDP Unicast Expedited TCP ConnectionLocal Acknowledgment BC-284BC-285 LLC2 Session without Local AcknowledgmentBC-286 DLSw+ Support for Other SNA Features BC-287Command Purpose Defining a DLSw+ Local Peer for the RouterDefines the DLSw+ local peer Following is a sample dlsw local peer statementDefining a DLSw+ Remote Peer TCP EncapsulationBC-289 TCP/IP with RIF Passthrough Encapsulation FST EncapsulationDefines a remote peer with FST encapsulation BC-290Direct Encapsulation DLSw Lite EncapsulationDefines a remote peer with direct encapsulation Defines a remote peer with DLSw Lite encapsulationMapping DLSw+ to a Local Data-Link Control Token RingBC-292 Ethernet BC-293Enables DLSw+ on an Sdlc interface Associated with this serial interfaceBC-294 Configuring Advanced Features BC-295Scalability Peer Groups and Border PeersBC-296 BC-297 Enables peer groups and border peers BC-298Configures peer-on-demand defaults Local, remote, and group cachesBC-299 Displays content of group, local and remote caches NetBIOS Dial-on-Demand RoutingFollowing command enables NetBIOS DDR Explorer FirewallsFollowing command configures the SNA DDR feature UDP Unicast FeatureSNA Dial-on-Demand Routing BC-301Configures a dynamic peer Promiscuous Peer DefaultsLLC1 Circuits Dynamic PeersConfigures promiscuous peer defaults AvailabilityLoad Balancing BC-303Local router BC-304Configures transparent redundancy Backup PeersEthernet Redundancy Addresses on a transparent bridged are mappedConfigures a backup peer Modes of OperationBC-306 Access Control Network ManagementTraffic Bandwidth and Queueing Management BC-307Defines a port list DLSw+ Bridge Group ListBC-308 Filter Lists in the Remote-Peer Command Static PathsStatic Resources Capabilities Exchange BC-309Configuring DLSw+ Timers BC-310BC-311 Following sections provide DLSw+ configuration examples BC-312Router a Router BBC-313 BC-314 DLSw+ with Peer Groups Specified ExampleRouter C BC-315BC-316 FEPRouter D BC-317DLSw+ with Sdlc Multidrop Support Configuration Examples Router EFollowing example, all devices are type PU BC-318Following example, all devices are type PU 2.1 Method BC-319BC-320 Hostname Router aBC-321 DLSw+ Translation Between Fddi and Token RingDLSw+ Translation Between Sdlc and Token Ring Media Example BC-322BC-323 Sdlc partner 1000.5aed.1f53 d2 sdlc dlsw d2DLSw+ over Frame Relay Configuration Example RingBC-324 DLSw+ over Qllc Configuration Examples Following three examples describe Qllc support for DLSw+Example BC-325DLSw+ with RIF Passthrough Configuration Example BC-326DLSw+ with Enhanced Load Balancing Configuration Example BC-327DLSw+ Peer Cluster Feature Configuration Example BC-328DLSWRTR2 BC-329Shows a DLSw+ border peer network configured with DLSw+ Rsvp BC-330DLSw+ with Ethernet Redundancy Configuration Example BC-331DLSw+ with Ethernet Redundancy in a Switched Environment BC-332BC-333 BC-334