4.6 Configuring Bridging

This Chapter describes the GRF bridging implementation and provides configuration information.

4.6.1 GRF Bridging Implementation

The GRF implements IEEE 802.1d transparent bridging on GRF Ethernet and FDDI interfaces, and on ATM OC-3c interfaces using RFC-1483 encapsulated bridging over PVCs.

Transparent bridging provides a mechanism for interconnecting stations attached to physically separate Local Area Networks (LANs) as if they are attached to a single LAN. This interconnection happens at the 802 MAC layer and is transparent to protocols operating above this boundary in the Logical Link Control (LLC) or Network layers. Participating stations are unable to identify that peers are on anything other than the directly attached physical media.

The GRF implementation consists of the transparent bridging function described in 802.1d, and does not include any capability for Source Route or Source Route Transparent (SRT) bridge operation.

Summary of bridging features:

Bridging on FDDI, Ethernet, and ATM OC-3c per the 802.1d standard

Participation in 802.1d spanning tree protocol

Layer-2 transparent bridging of MAC frames through the GRF from one interface to another

Conversion of frames between Ethernet and FDDI formats as necessary

Fragmentation of IPv4 frames if necessary

Simultaneous bridging and routing over the same interface (a GRF interface participating in a bridge group can still route normally)

Routing IP to or from a bridge group from any GRF media

RFC-1483 encapsulated bridging over ATM OC-3c PVCs with either VC-based multiplexing or LLC encapsulation

Up to 16 bridge groups per GRF

Up to 32 GRF interfaces per bridge group

142IBM 9077 SP Switch Router: Get Connected to the SP Switch

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Lexmark IBM 9077 manual Configuring Bridging, GRF Bridging Implementation