
G.SHDSL ports one through four do not need to be set to be the same end of the connection as G.SHDSL ports five through eight. For example, G.SHDSL ports one through four could be set to be
The following example sets an
192.168.1.1 gshdsl> set bondr r1
Make sure you set all of the bonded ports to have the same PVID see section 31.3.3 PVID Command.
If the ports are enabled and you change them from central side to remote side or vice versa (all ports are set to the central side by default), the system will take a few moments to process the change. If the ports are not enabled, the processing occurs when you enable them. During this processing the system appears to be hanging.
25.3.26Port Bonding for 4-wire Groups Examples
This example creates three
This line sets an
192.168.1.1 gshdsl> set nwirer 4w
This line sets an
192.168.1.1 gshdsl> set nwirer 4w
This line sets an
192.168.1.1 gshdsl> set nwirer 4w
This line sets an
192.168.1.1 gshdsl> set bondr 4w r1
25.3.27Port Bonding for 8-wire Groups Examples
This example creates two
This line sets an
192.168.1.1 gshdsl> set nwirer 8w
This line sets an
192.168.1.1 gshdsl> set nwirer 8w
This line creates an
192.168.1.1 gshdsl> set bondr 8w r1 1 2
25.3.28Delete N-wire Group Command
Syntax:
G.SHDSL Commands |