FIGURES
xix
Ethernet Card Software Feature and Configuration Guide, R7.2
January 2009
Figure 3-1 CTC IOS Window 3-3
Figure 3-2 CTC Node View Showing IP Address and Slot Number 3-4
Figure 3-3 Console Cable Adapter 3-5
Figure 3-4 Connecting to the Console Port 3-6
Figure 5-1 ML-Series Card to ML-Series Card POS Configuration 5-11
Figure 5-2 ML-Series Card to Cisco 12000 Series Gigabit Switch Router (GSR) POS Configuration 5-12
Figure 5-3 ML-Series Card to G-Series Card POS C onfiguration 5-14
Figure 5-4 ML-Series Card to ONS 15310 CE-100T-8 Card Configuration 5-14
Figure 6-1 Bridging Example 6-3
Figure 7-1 Spanning-Tree Topology 7-5
Figure 7-2 Spanning-Tree Interface States 7-6
Figure 7-3 Spanning Tree and Redundant Connectivity 7-8
Figure 7-4 Proposal and Agreement Handshaking for Rapid Convergence 7-12
Figure 7-5 Sequence of Events During Rapid Convergence 7-13
Figure 8-1 VLANs Spanning Devices in a Network 8-2
Figure 8-2 Bridging IEEE 802.1Q VLANs 8-4
Figure 9-1 IEEE 802.1Q Tunnel Ports in a Service-Provider Network 9-2
Figure 9-2 Normal, IEEE 802.1Q, and IEEE 802.1Q-Tunneled Ethernet Packet Formats 9-3
Figure 9-3 ERMS Example 9-7
Figure 10-1 EtherChannel Example 10-3
Figure 10-2 POS Channel Example 10-6
Figure 10-3 Encapsulation over EtherChannel E xample 10-8
Figure 11-1 IP Routing Protocol Example Using OSP F 11-11
Figure 12-1 Configuring IRB 12-3
Figure 13-1 VRF Lite—Sample Network Scenario 13-3
Figure 14-1 IP Precedence and DSCP 14-3
Figure 14-2 Ethernet Frame and the CoS Bit (IE EE 802.1p) 14-3
Figure 14-3 ML-Series QoS Flow 14-4
Figure 14-4 Dual Leaky Bucket Policer Model 14-5
Figure 14-5 Queuing and Scheduling Model 14-7
Figure 14-6 QinQ 14-9