Cisco Systems BC-281 manual Shows a DLSw+ border peer network configured with DLSw+ Rsvp, BC-330

Page 50

Configuring Data-Link Switching Plus

DLSw+ Configuration Examples

DLSw+ RSVP Bandwidth Reservation Feature with Border Peers Configuration Example

Figure 143 shows a DLSw+ border peer network configured with DLSw+ RSVP.

Figure 143 DLSw+ RSVP Bandwidth Reservation Feature in a Border Peer Network

 

 

 

 

DLSW RTR 1

IP RTR 1

IP RTR 2

DLSW RTR

2

 

 

 

 

Token

 

 

 

 

 

Token

 

Ring

 

 

 

 

 

Ring

 

10.2.17.1

10.3.15.2

10.3.16.2

10.14.25.2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Workstation 1

Workstation 2

Group 1

Group 2

51974

The following example configures DLSWRTR1 to send PATH messages at rates of 40 kbps and 10 kbps and DLSWRTR2 to send PATH messages at rates of 10.

DLSWRTR1

dlsw local-peer peer-id 10.2.17.1 group 1 promiscuous dlsw rsvp default

dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 10.3.15.2

dlsw peer-on-demand-defaults rsvp 40 10

IPRTR1

dlsw local-peer peer-id 10.3.15.2 group 1 border promiscuous dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 10.3.16.2

IPRTR2

dlsw local-peer peer-id 10.3.16.2 group 2 border promiscuous dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 10.3.15.2

DLSWRTR2

dlsw local-peer peer-id 10.14.25.2 group 2 promiscuous dlsw rsvp default

dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 10.3.16.2

The following output of the show ip rsvp sender command on DLSWRTR2 verifies that PATH messages are being sent from DLSWRTR2:

DLSWRT2#show ip rsvp sender

 

 

 

 

 

To

From

Pro DPort

Sport Prev Hop

I/F BPS

Bytes

10.2.17.1

10.14.25.2

TCP

2065

11003

10K

28K

10.14.25.2

10.2.17.1

TCP

11003

2065 10.2.17.1

Et1/1 10K

28K

The following output of the show ip rsvp request command on DLSWRTR2 verifies that RESV messages are being sent from DLSWRTR 2:

 

 

 

DLSWRT2#show ip rsvp req

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

To

From

Pro DPort Sport Next Hop

I/F

Fi

Serv

BPS

Bytes

10.14.25.2

10.2.17.1

TCP 11003 2065 10.2.17.1

Et1/1 FF

RATE

10K

28K

 

 

 

Cisco IOS Bridging and IBM Networking Configuration Guide

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BC-330

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

78-11737-02

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Image 50
Contents Configuring Data-Link Switching Plus BC-281IP Multicast DLSw StandardDLSw Version 2 Standard BC-282UDP Unicast DLSw+ FeaturesEnhanced Peer-on-Demand Routing Feature Expedited TCP ConnectionLocal Acknowledgment BC-284BC-285 LLC2 Session without Local AcknowledgmentBC-286 DLSw+ Support for Other SNA Features BC-287Defines the DLSw+ local peer Command PurposeDefining a DLSw+ Local Peer for the Router Following is a sample dlsw local peer statementBC-289 Defining a DLSw+ Remote PeerTCP Encapsulation Defines a remote peer with FST encapsulation TCP/IP with RIF Passthrough EncapsulationFST Encapsulation BC-290Defines a remote peer with direct encapsulation Direct EncapsulationDLSw Lite Encapsulation Defines a remote peer with DLSw Lite encapsulationBC-292 Mapping DLSw+ to a Local Data-Link ControlToken Ring Ethernet BC-293BC-294 Enables DLSw+ on an Sdlc interfaceAssociated with this serial interface Configuring Advanced Features BC-295BC-296 ScalabilityPeer Groups and Border Peers BC-297 Enables peer groups and border peers BC-298BC-299 Configures peer-on-demand defaultsLocal, remote, and group caches Following command enables NetBIOS DDR Displays content of group, local and remote cachesNetBIOS Dial-on-Demand Routing Explorer FirewallsSNA Dial-on-Demand Routing Following command configures the SNA DDR featureUDP Unicast Feature BC-301LLC1 Circuits Configures a dynamic peerPromiscuous Peer Defaults Dynamic PeersLoad Balancing Configures promiscuous peer defaultsAvailability BC-303Local router BC-304Ethernet Redundancy Configures transparent redundancyBackup Peers Addresses on a transparent bridged are mappedBC-306 Configures a backup peerModes of Operation Traffic Bandwidth and Queueing Management Access ControlNetwork Management BC-307BC-308 Defines a port listDLSw+ Bridge Group List Static Resources Capabilities Exchange Filter Lists in the Remote-Peer CommandStatic Paths BC-309Configuring DLSw+ Timers BC-310BC-311 Following sections provide DLSw+ configuration examples BC-312BC-313 Router aRouter B BC-314 DLSw+ with Peer Groups Specified ExampleRouter C BC-315BC-316 FEPRouter D BC-317Following example, all devices are type PU DLSw+ with Sdlc Multidrop Support Configuration ExamplesRouter E 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 d2BC-324 DLSw+ over Frame Relay Configuration ExampleRing Example DLSw+ over Qllc Configuration ExamplesFollowing three examples describe Qllc support for DLSw+ 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