Title: FRAME RELAY
1CCNA 4 Chapter 6
2What is FRAME RELAY ?
- Frame Relay is a WAN technology that provides
LAN-to-LAN connectivity - Frame Relay is a way of sending information over
a WAN by dividing data into packets - It operates at the Physical and Data Link layers
of the OSI reference model - It relies on upper-layer protocols such as TCP
for error correction - Frame Relay is a switched data link-layer
protocol that handles multiple virtual circuits
using (HDLC) encapsulation - Frame Relay interface can be either a
carrier-provided public network or a network of
privately owned equipment, serving a single
enterprise
3Benefits of FRAME RELAY
- Reduced internetworking costs
- Lower Equipment Costs
- Lower cost than dedicated leased lines
- Increased performance reduced network
complexity - Reduces the amount of processing (as compared to
X.25) - Frame relay can improve performance and response
times of applications by efficiently utilizing
high speed digital transmission lines. - Increased interoperability via international
standards - Frame relay can be implemented over existing
technology - Access devices often require only software
changes or simple hardware modifications to
support the interface standard - Existing packet switching equipment and T1/E1
multiplexers often can be upgraded to support
frame relay over existing backbone networks.
4Carrier-Provided Public Network vs. Network of
Privately-Owned Equipment
- Public Frame Relay network - the Frame Relay
equipment is located in the central offices of a
telecommunications carrier/service provider. - Subscribers charged based on network usage but
relieved from administering and maintaining the
equipment and service. - Private Frame Relay network - equipment,
administration and maintenance are the
responsibility of the private company. - Note A majority of todays Frame Relay networks
are public carrier-provided networks.
5Frame Relay Networks
- A typical Frame Relay network consists of a
number of DTE devices, such as routers, connected
to remote ports on a multiplexer via traditional
point-to-point services such as T1, fractional
T1, or 56kbps circuits.
6Frame Relay Networks
- Frame Relay is an ideal, cost effective solution
for networks with bursty traffic that require
connections to multiple locations and where a
certain degree of delay is acceptable. - Frame Relay is called a fast packet technology.
7LAN-to-LAN Connections
- Without Frame Relay, a multiport router and
separate CSU/DSUs are required for each LAN.
8LAN-to-LAN Connections
- Using Frame Relay, only a single access is needed
into the Frame Relay cloud
9LAN-to-LAN Connections
- Another way of looking at it
-
- Private vs.
Public
10FRAME RELAY Overview
- Packet Switched technology
- Uses Virtual Circuits (Connection-Oriented
Service) - A logical connection is created between two
(DTE) devices across a Frame Relay
packet-switched network (PSN)
11FRAME RELAY Technology
- Access rate
- The clock speed (port speed) of the connection
(local loop) to the Frame Relay cloud - Data-link connection identifier (DLCI)
- DLCI number identifies the end point in a Frame
Relay network - Each Virtual Circuit is uniquely identified by a
DLCI number - The Frame Relay switch maps the DLCIs between a
pair of routers to create a permanent virtual
circuit -
- Local management interface (LMI)
- A set of enhancements to the basic Frame Relay
Specification - includes a keepalive mechanism which verifies
that data is flowing.
12Establishing Connections
- Frame Relay must first establish a connection
before two routers can communicate. - Frame Relay relies on Permanent Virtual Circuits
(PVCs) instead of establishing and maintaining a
permanent, dedicated link. - Thus PVCs establish a logical connection between
two sites, instead of a physical one.
13PVC Identification using DLCIs
- Frame Relay PVCs are identified by DLCIs.
- DLCI (Data Link Connection Identifier)
- DLCIs identify a particular PVC endpoint.
- Subinterfaces are required to configure multiple
DLCIs on a single router interface. - DLCIs have local significance.
14More on DLCIs
- A DLCI is a channel number which is attached to a
data frame to tell the network how to route the
data. - Frame Relay is statistically multiplexed which
means that only one frame can be transmitted at a
time but many logical connections can co-exist on
a single physical line. - The DLCI allows the data to be logically tied to
one of the logical connections.
15DLCIs Frame Relay Addressing
- Frame Relay DLCIs have local significance
- The values themselves are not unique in the Frame
Relay WAN - Two DTE devices connected by a virtual circuit
might use a different DLCI value to refer to the
same connection
16LMI (Local Management Interface)
- LMI
- is a set of enhancements to basic Frame Relay
- determines the operational status of the various
PVCs - transmits keepalive packets to ensure that the
PVC stays up and does not shut down due to
inactivity
17LMI EXTENSIONS
- LMI offers a number of features (called
extensions) for managing complex internetworks - Key Frame Relay LMI extensions include
- Virtual-circuit status messages
- Multicasting
- Global Addressing
18LMI EXTENSIONS/FEATURES
- Virtual circuit status messages (common)
- PVC integrity information about new and
existing PVC. - Multicasting (optional)
- Allows a sender to transmit a single frame but
have it delivered to multiple recipients. - Global addressing (optional)
- Gives DLCIs global rather than local
significance - allows them to be used to identify a specific
interface to the Frame Relay network. - makes the Frame Relay network resemble a LAN in
terms of addressing.
19FRAME RELAY Technology
- Committed information rate (CIR)
- The CIR is the guaranteed rate, in bits per
second, that the service provider commits to
providing. - Committed burst
- The maximum number of bits that the switch
agrees to transfer during a time interval. - Excess burst
- Maximum number of uncommitted bits that the
Frame Relay switch attempts to transfer beyond
the CIR - Typically limited to the port speed of the local
access loop - Discard eligibility (DE) indicator
- A set bit that indicates the frame may be
discarded in preference to other frames if
congestion occurs. When the router detects
network congestion, the Frame Relay switch will
drop packets with the DE bit set first. The DE
bit is set on the oversubscribed traffic
(Anything over the CIR).
20FRAME RELAY Congestion
- Forward explicit congestion notification (FECN)
A bit set in a frame that notifies a DTE that
congestion avoidance procedures should be
initiated. - When a Frame Relay switch recognizes congestion
in the network, it sends a FECN packet to the
destination device, indicating that congestion
has occurred. - Backward explicit congestion notification (BECN)
A bit set in a frame that notifies a DTE
that congestion avoidance procedures should be
initiated. - When a Frame Relay switch recognizes congestion
in the network, it sends a BECN packet to the
source router, instructing the router to reduce
the rate at which it is sending packets. - If the router receives any BECNs during the
current time interval, it decreases the transmit
rate by 25.
21FRAME RELAY Congestion
22FRAME RELAY Multiplexing
- Statistical Time Division Multiplexing (STDM)
- Multiplexes multiple virtual circuits, through a
shared physical medium by assigning DLCIs to each
DTE/DCE pair of devices
23FRAME RELAY Mapping
- Frame relay maps - bind next router hop IP
addresses to DLCIs - work together with standard routing tables
- can be statically configured, or can be
dynamically created by the invocation of inverse
ARP
24INVERSE ARP
- Allows the router to automatically build the
Frame Relay map - The router learns the DLCIs that are in use from
the switch during the initial LMI exchange. - The router then sends an Inverse ARP request to
each DLCI for each protocol configured on the
interface if the protocol is supported. - The return information from the Inverse ARP is
then used to build the Frame Relay map.
25FRAME RELAY Switching tables
- The Frame Relay switching table consists of four
entries - 2 for incoming port and DLCI
- 2 for outgoing port and DLCI
26Subinterfaces
- A single physical interface can be split into
multiple logical interfaces - Subinterfaces can resolve split horizon issues
- Routing updates can be sent out subinterfaces as
if they were separate physical interfaces - Overall cost of implementing a Frame Relay
network can be reduced.
27One-to-One or One-to-Many
- Point-to-Point Multipoint are connection types
that are supported on an interface in Frame Relay
28Multipoint Frame Relay Connection
- A single subinterface is used to establish
multiple PVC connections to multiple physical
interfaces or subinterfaces on remote routers - Only ONE subnet is required on a multipoint Frame
Relay connection
29Point-to-Point vs. Multipoint
- Multipoint can be used if you want the router to
forward broadcasts and routing updates (all
routers in the same subnet) .
30Split Horizon
- Split horizon reduces routing loops by not
allowing a routing update received on one
physical interface to be sent back out that same
interface.
31The Frame Relay Frame
- The flag field is used to indicate the beginning
and end of the frame
32Basic FRAME RELAY Configuration
- BASIC FRAME RELAY CONFIGURATION ASSUMES THAT
- Configure Frame Relay on one or more physical
interfaces - LMI and Inverse ARP are supported by the remote
router(s) -
33Basic FRAME RELAY Configuration
- Select the interface (S0, S1) get into the
interface configuration mode - Configure network layer address (IP address)
- Configure the encapsulation type (cisco is
default, ietf is used if connecting to non-cisco
routers) - Cisco IOS release 11.1 or earlier, specify the
LMI type used by the Frame relay switch ansi
cisco q933a - Cisco IOS 11.2 or later, the LMI type is
autosensed - Configure bandwidth for the link (Affects many
routing protocols which use it for a metric) - Inverse ARP is on by default
34Verifying FRAME RELAY Operation
- After configuring Frame Relay, you can verify
that the - connections are active by using the show commands
- Show interface serial (Displays DLCI used on the
configured interface, LMI DLCI used for the LMI) - Show frame-relay pvc (Displays status of each
configured connection shows the number of BECN
FECN packets received by the router) - Show frame-relay map (Displays the IP address
associated DLCI for each remote destination to
which the router is connected to) - Show frame-relay lmi (Displays LMI traffic
statistics- it will show the number of status
messages between the router the FR Switch)
35Configuring Subinterfaces
- Select interface get into interface
configuration mode - Remove any existing network-layer address
assigned to the physical interface - Configure Frame Relay encapsulation
router(config-if)encapsulation frame-relay - Select the subinterface you want to configure
router(config-if)interface serial 0.1
multipoint point to point - Configure the network-layer address on the
subinterface - Configure the DLCI for the subinterface to
distinguish it from the physical interface
router(config-if)frame-r
elay interface-dlci dlci-number -
36THE END
- Remember to check out the links listed at the
bottom of each section in Chapter 6 of the
On-Line Curriculum - before you take your test.
- Good Luck!