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Table of Contents

Configuring Data-Link Switching Plus

Configuring Data-Link Switching Plus

This chapter describes how to configure data-link switching plus (DLSw+), our implementation of the DLSw standard for Systems Network Architecture (SNA) and NetBIOS devices. For a complete description of the commands in this chapter, refer to the "DLSw+ Configuration Commands" chapter of the Bridging and IBM Networking Command Reference. To locate documentation of specific commands that appear in this chapter, use the command reference master index or search online.

DLSw+ Configuration Task List

DLSw+ supports local or remote media conversion between LANs and SDLC or QLLC. For clarity, the configuration task list below describes configuration in a Token Ring environment. The only differences for SDLC and Ethernet are the specific commands needed to configure those media, plus a media-specific command to associate the interface with DLSw+.


Note By default, the Cisco IOS software translates Token Ring LLC2 to Ethernet 802.3 LLC2. To configure the router to translate Token Ring LLC2 frames into Ethernet 0x80d5 format frames, refer to the section "Enable Token Ring LLC2-to-Ethernet Conversion" in the "Configuring Source-Route Bridging" chapter of the Bridging and IBM Networking Command Reference.

To configure DLSw+, complete the tasks in the following sections:

See the end of this chapter for "DLSw+ Configuration Examples." Media-specific configuration examples for Ethernet and SDLC are also provided. For details of SDLC commands in the sample SDLC configuration, refer to the "LLC2 and SDLC Commands" chapter of the Bridging and IBM Networking Command Reference.

Define a Source-Bridge Ring Group for DLSw+

The source-bridge ring can be shared between DLSw+ and SRB/RSRB. In DLSw+, the source-bridge ring group specifies the virtual ring that will appear to be the last ring in the RIF. Because RIFs are terminated at the router, there is no correlation between the ring-group number specified in DLSw+ peers. The numbers can be the same for management simplicity, but they do not have to be. To define a source-bridge ring group for DLSw+, perform the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Define a ring group.

source-bridge ring-group ring-group [virtual-mac-address]

Refer to "DLSw+ Using TCP Encapsulation and LLC2 Local AcknowledgmentBasic Configuration Example" for a sample configuration file.

Define a DLSw+ Local Peer for the Router

Defining a DLSw+ local peer for a router enables DLSw+. You specify all local DLSw+ parameters as part of the local peer definition. To define a local peer, perform the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Define the DLSw+ local peer.

dlsw local-peer [peer-id ip-address] [group group] [border] [cost cost] [lf size] [keepalive seconds] [passive] [promiscuous] [ init-pacing-window size] [max-pacing-window size][biu-segment]

Refer to "DLSw+ Using TCP Encapsulation and LLC2 Local AcknowledgmentBasic Configuration Example" for a sample configuration.

Define a DLSw+ Ring List or Port List

DLSw+ ring lists map traffic on a local interface to remote peers. You can create a ring list of local ring numbers and apply the list to remote peer definitions. Traffic received from a remote peer is only forwarded to the rings specified in the ring list. Traffic received from a local interface is only forwarded to peers if the input ring number appears in the ring list applied to the remote peer definition. The definition of a ring list is optional. If you want all peers and all rings to receive all traffic, you do not have to define a ring list. Specify 0 for the list number in the remote peer statement.

To define a ring list, perform the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Define a ring list.

dlsw ring-list list-number rings ring-number

DLSw+ port lists map traffic on a local interface (either Token Ring or serial) to remote peers. You can create a port list of local ports and apply the list to remote peer definitions. Traffic received from a remote peer is only forwarded to peers if the input port number appears in the port list applied to the remote peer definition. The port list command provides a single command to specify both serial and Token Ring interfaces. Figure 81 shows how port lists are used to map traffic.


Figure 81: Mapping Traffic Using Port Lists


The definition of a port list is optional. If you want all peers and all interfaces to receive all traffic, you do not have to define a port list. Simply specify 0 for the list number in the remote peer statement.

To define a port list, perform the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Define a port list.

dlsw port-list list-number type number


Note Either the ring list or the port list command can be used to associate rings with a given ring-list. The ring list command is easier to type in if you have a large number of rings to define.

Define a DLSw+ Bridge Group List

DLSw+ bridge group lists map traffic on the local Ethernet bridge group interface to remote peers. You can create a bridge group list and apply the list to remote peer definitions. Traffic received from a remote peer is only forwarded to the bridge group specified in the bridge group list. Traffic received from a local interface is only forwarded to peers if the input bridge group number appears in the bridge group list applied to the remote peer definition. The definition of a bridge group list is optional. Because each remote peer has a single list number associated with it, if you want traffic to go to a bridge group and to either a ring list or port list, you should specify the same list number in each definition.
Task Command

Define a ring list.

dlsw bgroup-list list-number bgroups number

Define DLSw+ Remote Peers

You can define three types of encapsulation on a remote peer by performing the following tasks:

The configuration commands for each of the encapsulation methods share some optional parameters that permit support for specific features, such as backup peers. There are some command options for TCP encapsulation support features that are not available with other encapsulation types: SNA dial-on-demand routing (DDR) and configured dynamic peers. The configuration combinations for each of the encapsulation methods and features are described in greater detail following the task tables.

Configure Direct Encapsulation

Direct encapsulation is supported over HDLC and Frame Relay. Direct encapsulation over Frame Relay comes in two forms: DLSw Lite (LLC2 encapsulation) and Passthru. To configure direct encapsulation, perform the following tasks in global configuration mode:


Note To distinguish between DLSw Lite and Passthru, use the pass-thru option in the dlsw remote peer command.
Task Command

Define a direct encapsulation in Frame Relay for the remote peer.

dlsw remote-peer list-number frame-relay interface serial number dlci-number [backup-peer [ip-address | frame-relay interface serial number dlci-number | interface name]] [bytes-netbios-out bytes-list-name] [cost cost] [dest-mac mac-address] [dmac-output-list access-list-number] [host-netbios-out host-list-name] [keepalive seconds] [lf size] [linger minutes] [lsap-output-list list] [pass-thru]

Define a direct encapsulation in HDLC for the remote peer.

dlsw remote-peer list-number interface serial number [backup-peer [ip-address | frame-relay interface serial number dlci-number | interface name]] [bytes-netbios-out bytes-list-name] [cost cost] [dest-mac mac-address] [dmac-output-list access-list-number] [host-netbios-out host-list-name] [keepalive seconds] [lf size] [linger minutes] [lsap-output-list list] [pass-thru]


Configure FST Encapsulation

To configure FST encapsulation on a remote peer, perform the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Define an FST encapsulation remote peer.

dlsw remote-peer list-number fst ip-address [backup-peer [ip-address | frame-relay interface serial number dlci-number | interface name]] [bytes-netbios-out bytes-list-name] [cost cost] [dest-mac mac-address] [dmac-output-list access-list-number] [host-netbios-out host-list-name] [keepalive seconds] [lf size] [linger minutes] [lsap-output-list list]

Configure TCP Encapsulation

To configure TCP encapsulation on a remote peer, perform the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Define a TCP encapsulation remote peer.

dlsw remote-peer list-number tcp ip-address [backup-peer [ip-address | frame-relay interface serial number dlci-number | interface name]] [bytes-netbios-out bytes-list-name] [cost cost] [dest-mac mac-address] [dmac-output-list access-list-number] [dynamic] [host-netbios-out host-list-name] [keepalive seconds] [lf size] [linger minutes] [lsap-output-list list] [no-llc minutes] [priority] [tcp-queue-max size] [timeout seconds]

Table 4 is a list of valid port numbers used for TCP connections when the priority keyword is used with the dlsw remote-peer command:


Table 4:
Priority Port

High

2065

Medium

1981

Normal

1982

Low

1983

Valid port Numbers for TCP Connections

Backup Peers

The backup-peer option is common to all encapsulation types (direct, FST, and TCP) on a remote peer and specifies that this remote peer is a backup peer for the router with the specified IP-address, Frame Relay DLCI number, or interface name. When the primary peer fails, all circuits over this peer are disconnected and the user can start a new session via their backup peer. Prior to Cisco IOS Release 11.2(6)F, you could configure backup peers only for primary FST and TCP.

Also, when you specify the backup-peer option in a dlsw remote-peer tcp command, the backup peer is activated only when the primary peer becomes unreachable. Once the primary peer is reactivated, all new sessions use the primary peer and the backup peer remains active only as long as there are LLC2 connections using it. You can use the linger option to specify a period (in minutes) that the backup peer remains connected after the connection to the primary peer is reestablished. When the linger period expires, the backup peer connection is taken down.


Note Because the expiration of the linger period may cause active SNA sessions to be terminated, you should not use the linger option unless you want active SNA sessions over the backup peer to be terminated.

SNA Dial-on-Demand Routing

In TCP encapsulation you can use the keepalive and timeout options to run DLSw+ over a switched line and have the Cisco IOS software take the switched line down dynamically when it is not in use. Utilizing these options gives the IP Routing table more time to converge when a network problem hinders a remote peer connection. In small networks with good IP convergence time and ISDN lines that start quickly, it is not as neccesary to use the keepalive option. To use this feature, you must set the keepalive value to zero, and you may need to use a lower value for the timeout option than the default, which is 90 seconds.

Configured Dynamic Peers

In TCP encapsulation, the dynamic option and its suboptions no-llc and inactivity allow you to specify and control the activation of dynamic peers, which are configured peers that are activated only when required. Dynamic peer connections are established only when there is DLSw+ data to send. The dynamic peer connections are taken down when the last LLC2 connection using them terminates and the time period specified in the no-llc option expires. You can also use the inactivity option to take down dynamic peers when the circuits using them are inactive for a specified number of minutes.


Note Because the inactivity option may cause active SNA sessions to be terminated, you should not use this option unless you want active SNA sessions to be terminated.

The dest-mac and dmac-output-list options allow you to specify filter lists as part of the dlsw remote-peer command to control access to remote peers. For static peers in direct, FST, or TCP encapsulation, these filters control which explorers are sent to remote peers. For dynamic peers in TCP encapsulation, these filters also control the activation of the dynamic peer. For example, you can specify at a branch office that a remote peer is only activated when there is an explorer frame destined for the MAC address of an FEP.

The dest-mac option permits the connection to be established only when there is an explorer frame destined for the specified MAC address. The dmac-output-list option permits the connection to be established only when the explorer frame passes the specified access list. To permit access to a single MAC address, use the dest-mac option, because it is a configuration "short-cut" compared to the dmac-output-list option.

Refer to "DLSw+ Using TCP Encapsulation and LLC2 Local AcknowledgmentBasic Configuration Example" for a sample configuration.

Enable DLSw+ over Frame Relay

You can configure the Cisco IOS software for direct encapsulation of DLSw+ in Frame Relay according to RFC 1490. DLSw+ direct encapsulation over RFC 1490 supports either pass-through or local acknowledgment (data link control termination). DLSw+ supports transport for both SNA and NetBIOS data. SNA PU 2.0 and PU 2.1 are supported.

The configuration requires a minimum number of PVCs (since multiple protocols can share a single PVC). A minimum number of PVCs simplifies configuration because multiple PUs can share a PVC without requiring configuration of multiple SAPs.

The pass-thru option adds the smallest amount of link overhead and requires minimal processing cycles in the attaching routers when compared to TCP/IP encapsulation.

The local acknowledgment option prevents data link control timeouts during periods of WAN congestion. It also minimizes WAN traffic by keeping data link control acknowledgments and keepalives off the WAN.

No controller or FEP upgrades are required to take advantage of this feature (if already Token Ring attached), reducing costs and simplifying migration to Frame Relay.

To enable DLSw+ over Frame Relay with passthrough, perform the following tasks, beginning in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Specify the serial port.

interface serial number

Enable Frame Relay encapsulation.

encapsulation frame-relay

Define the mapping between DLSw+ and the DLCI.

frame-relay map dlsw dlci-number

Define direct encapsulation in Frame Relay.

dlsw remote-peer list-number frame-relay interface serial number dlci-number pass-thru


Note The DLSw+ remote peer statement should specify pass-thru.

To enable DLSw+ over Frame Relay with local acknowledgment (also known as DLSw Lite), perform the following tasks, beginning in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Specify the serial port.

interface serial number

Enable Frame Relay encapsulation.

encapsulation frame-relay

Define the mapping between DLSw+ and the DLCI.

frame-relay map llc2 dlci-number

Define direct encapsulation in Frame Relay.

fdlsw remote-peer list-number frame-relay interface serial number dlci-number

Enable DLSw+ on a Token Ring or FDDI Interface

To enable DLSw+ on a Token Ring or FDDI interface, perform the following task in interface configuration mode:
Task Command

Enable DLSw+ on a Token Ring or FDDI interface.

source-bridge local-ring bridge-number ring-group

Enable DLSw+ on an Ethernet Interface

To enable DLSw+ on certain Ethernet interfaces, perform the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Enable DLSw+ on an Ethernet interface.

dlsw bridge-group group-number

In interface mode, the interfaces must also be put into the bridge-group.

Enable DLSw+ on an SDLC Interface

To establish devices as SDLC stations, complete the following tasks in interface configuration mode:
Task Command

Set the encapsulation type of the serial interface to SDLC.

encapsulation sdlc

Establish the role of the interface.

sdlc role {none | primary | secondary | prim-xid-poll}

Configure a MAC address for the serial interface.

sdlc vmac mac-address1

Assign a set of secondary stations attached to the serial link.

sdlc address hexbyte [echo]

Specify the destination address with which an LLC session is established for the SDLC station.

sdlc partner mac-address sdlc-address

1The last byte of the MAC address must be 00.

To enable DLSw+ on an SDLC interface, perform the following task in interface configuration mode:
Task Command

Enable DLSw+ on an SDLC interface.

sdlc dlsw {sdlc-address | default | partner mac address [inbound | outbound]}

Use the default option if you have more than 10 SDLC devices to attach to the DLSw+ network. To configure an SDLC multidrop line downstream, you configure the SDLC role as either primary or prim-xid-poll. SDLC role primary specifies that any PU without the xid-poll parameter in the sdlc address command is a PU 2.0 device. SDLC role prim-xid-poll specifies that every PU is type 2.1. We recommend that you specify sdlc role primary if all SDLC devices are type PU 2.0 or a mix of PU 2.0 and PU 2.1. Specify sdlc role prim-xid-poll if all devices are type PU 2.1

To configure DLSw+ to support LLC2-to-SDLC conversion for PU 4 or PU 5 devices, specify the echo option in the sdlc address command. A PU 4-to-PU 4 configuration requires that none be specified in the sdlc role command.

Refer to the sections "DLSw+ with SDLC Multidrop Support Configuration Example" and "DLSw+ with LLC2-to-SDLC Conversion between PU 4-to-PU 4 Communication" for sample configurations.

Enable DLSw+ over QLLC

You can configure DLSw+ for QLLC connectivity, which enables both of the following two scenarios:

Our QLLC support allows remote X.25-attached SNA devices to access a FEP without requiring NPSI in the FEP. This may eliminate the requirement for NPSI (if GATE and DATE are not required), thereby eliminating the recurring license cost. In addition, because the QLLC attached devices appear to be Token Ring-attached to the NCP, they require no preconfiguration in the FEP. Remote X.25-attached SNA devices can also connect to an AS/400 over Token Ring using this support.
For environments just beginning to migrate to LANs, our QLLC support allows deployment of LANs in remote sites while maintaining access to the FEP over existing NPSI links. Remote LAN-attached devices (physical units) or SDLC- attached devices can access a FEP over an X.25 network without requiring X.25 hardware or software in the LAN-attached devices. The Cisco IOS software supports direct attachment to the FEP over X.25 without the need for routers at the data center for SNA traffic.

To enable QLLC connectivity for DLSw+, perform the following tasks in interface configuration mode:
Task Command

Specify an interface as an X.25 device.

encapsulation x.25

Activate X.25 subaddresses.

x25 address subaddress

Associate a virtual MAC address with the X.121 address of the remote X.25 device.

x25 map qllc x121-addr [x25-map-options]

Enable DLSw+ over QLLC.

qllc dlsw {subaddress subaddress | pvc pvc-low [pvc-high]} [vmac vmacaddr [poolsize]] [partner partner-macaddr] [sap ssap dsap] [xid xidstring] [npsi-poll]

Enable NetBIOS Dial-on-Demand Routing

DLSw+ can filter NetBIOS Session Alive packets from the WAN. NetBIOS periodically sends Session Alive packets as LLC2 I-frames. These packets do not require a response and are superfluous to the function of proper data flow. Furthermore, these packets keep dial-on-demand interfaces up and this up time causes unwanted per-packet charges in DDR networks. By filtering these NetBIOS Session Alive packets, you reduce traffic on the WAN as well as some costs that are associated with DDR.

To enable NetBIOS Dial-on-Demand Routing, perform the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Enable NetBIOS DDR.

dlsw netbios keepalive-filter

Tune the DLSw+ Configuration

To modify an existing configuration parameter, perform one or more of the tasks in the following sections:

Configure DLSw+ Timers

To configure DLSw+ timers (including group cache entries), perform the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Configure DLSw+ timers.

dlsw timer {icannotreach-block-time | netbios-cache-timeout | netbios-explorer-timeout | netbios-group-cache | netbios-retry-interval | netbios-verify-interval | sna-cache-timeout | sna-explorer-timeout | sna-group-cache | sna-retry-interval | sna-verify-interval} time

Configure Maximum Entries in Group Cache

To define the maximum entries in a group cache, perform the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Define the maximum entries in a group cache.

dlsw group-cache max-entries number

Configure Peer-on-Demand Defaults

To configure peer-on-demand defaults, perform one of the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Configure peer-on-demand defaults.

dlsw peer-on-demand-defaults [fst] [bytes-netbios-out bytes-list-name] [cost cost] [dest-mac destination mac address] [dmac-output-list access list number] [host-netbios-out host-list-name] [inactivity minutes] [keepalive seconds] [lf size] [lsap-output-list list] [port-list port-list-number] [priority] [tcp-queue-max]

Configure Promiscuous Peer Defaults

To configure promiscuous peer defaults, perform one of the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Configure promiscuous peer defaults.

dlsw prom-peer-defaults [bytes-netbios-out bytes-list-name] [cost cost] [dest-mac destination mac address] [dmac-output-list access list number] [host-netbios-out host-list-name] [keepalive seconds] [lf size] [lsap-output-list list] [tcp-queue-max size]

Configure Static Resources Capabilities Exchange

To reduce explorer traffic destined for this peer, the peer can send other peers a list of resources for which it has information (icanreach) or does not have information (icannotreach). This information is exchanged as part of a capabilities exchange.To configure static resources that will be exchanged as part of a capabilities exchange, perform one of the following tasks in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Configure a resource not locally reachable by the router.

dlsw icannotreach saps sap [sap...]

Configure a resource locally reachable by the router.

dlsw icanreach {mac-exclusive | netbios-exclusive | mac-address mac-addr [mask mask] | netbios-name name | saps}

Configure Static Paths

To configure static paths to minimize explorer traffic originating in this peer, perform one of the following tasks in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Configure the location or path of a static MAC address.

dlsw mac-addr mac-addr {ring ring number | remote-peer {interface serial number | ip-address ip-address} | rif rif string | group group}

Configure a static NetBIOS name.

dlsw netbios-name netbios-name {ring ring number| remote-peer {interface serial number | ip-address ip-address} | rif rif string | group group}

Configure Duplicate Path Handling

To configure duplicate path handling, perform the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Configure duplicate path handling.

dlsw duplicate-path-bias [load-balance]

Disable Border Peer Caching

To disable the border peer caching feature, perform the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Disable the border peer caching feature.

dlsw group-cache disable

Disable UDP Unicast

To disable UDP Unicast, perform the following task in global configuration mode:
Task Command

Disable UDP Unicast.

dlsw udp-disable

Monitor and Maintain the DLSw+ Network

To monitor and maintain activity on the DLSw+ network, perform one or more of the following tasks in privileged EXEC mode:
Task Command

Close all the DLSw+ circuits

clear dlsw circuit

Remove all entries from the DLSw+ reachability cache.

clear dlsw reachability

Reset to zero the number of frames that have been processed in the local, remote, and group caches.

clear dlsw statistics

Display capabilities of a direct-encapsulated remote peer.

show dlsw capabilities interface type number

Display capabilities of a TCP/FST remote peer.

show dlsw capabilities ip-address ip-address

Display capabilities of the local peer.

show dlsw capabilities local

Display DLSw+ circuit information.

show dlsw circuits

Display the fast cache for FST and direct-encapsulated peers.

show dlsw fastcache

Display DLSw+ peer information.

show dlsw peers

Display DLSw+ reachability information.

show dlsw reachability

Disable and re-enable DLSw+ without altering the configuration.

dlsw disable

Display the number of frames that have been processed in the local, remote, and group caches.

show dlsw statistics [border-peers]

DLSw+ Configuration Examples

The following sections provide DLSw+ configuration examples:

DLSw+ Using TCP Encapsulation and LLC2 Local Acknowledgment---Basic Configuration Example

This sample configuration requires the following tasks, which are described in earlier sections of this document:

Encapsulate the source-route bridged traffic inside IP datagrams passed over a TCP connection between two routers with local acknowledgment enabled when you have LANs separated by wide geographic distances, and you want to avoid multiple retransmissions or loss of user sessions that can occur with time delays.

Logical Link Control, type 2 (LLC2) is an ISO standard data-link level protocol used in Token Ring networks. LLC2 was designed to provide reliable transmission of data across LAN media and to cause minimal or at least predictable time delays. However, RSRB and WAN backbones created LANs that are separated by wide, geographic distances spanning countries and continents. As a result, LANs have time delays that are longer than LLC2 allows for bidirectional communication between hosts. Local acknowledgment addresses the problem of unpredictable time delays, multiple retransmissions, and loss of user sessions.

In a typical LLC2 session, when one host sends a frame to another host, the sending host expects the receiving host to respond positively or negatively in a predefined period of time commonly called the T1 time. If the sending host does not receive an acknowledgment of the frame it sent within the T1 time, it retries a few times (normally 8 to 10). If there is still no response, the sending host drops the session.

Figure 82 illustrates an LLC2 session. A 37x5 on a LAN segment can communicate with a 3x74 on a different LAN segment separated via a wide-area backbone network. Frames are transported between Router A and Router B by means of DLSw+. However, the LLC2 session between the 37x5 and the 3x74 is still end-to-end; that is, every frame generated by the 37x5 traverses the backbone network to the 3x74, and the 3x74, on receipt of the frame, acknowledges it.


Figure 82: LLC2 Session without Local Acknowledgment


On backbone networks consisting of slow serial links, the T1 timer on end hosts could expire before the frames reach the remote hosts, causing the end host to retransmit. Retransmission results in duplicate frames reaching the remote host at the same time as the first frame reaches the remote host. Such frame duplication breaks the LLC2 protocol, resulting in the loss of sessions between the two IBM machines.

One way to solve this time delay is to increase the timeout value on the end nodes to account for the maximum transit time between the two end machines. However, in networks consisting of hundreds or even thousands of nodes, every machine would need to be reconfigured with new values. With local acknowledgment for LLC2 enabled, the LLC2 session between the two end nodes would not be not end-to-end, but instead, would terminate at two local routers. Figure 83 shows the LLC2 session with the 37x5 ending at Router A and the LLC2 session with the 3x74 ending at Router B. Both Router A and Router B execute the full LLC2 protocol as part of local acknowledgment for LLC2.


Figure 83: LLC2 Session with Local Acknowledgment


With local acknowledgment for LLC2 enabled in both routers, Router A acknowledges frames received from the 37x5. The 37x5 still operates as if the acknowledgments it receives are from the 3x74. Router A looks like the 3x74 to the 37x5. Similarly, Router B acknowledges frames received from the 3x74. The 3x74 operates as if the acknowledgments it receives are from the 37x5. Router B looks like the 3x74 to 37x5. Because the frames no longer have to travel the WAN backbone networks to be acknowledged, but instead are locally acknowledged by routers, the end machines do not time out, resulting in no loss of sessions.

Enabling local acknowledgment for LLC2 has the following advantages:

Notes on Using LLC2 Local Acknowledgment

LLC2 local acknowledgment is enabled with TCP and DLSw+ lite remote peers.

If the LLC2 session between the local host and the router terminates in either router, the other will be informed to terminate its connection to its local host.

If the TCP queue length of the connection between the two routers reaches the high-water mark, the routers sends Receiver-Not-Ready (RNR) messages to the local hosts until the queue limit is reduced to below this limit. It is possible, however, to prevent the RNR messages from being sent by using the dlsw llc2 nornr command.

The configuration of the LLC2 parameters for the local Token Ring interfaces can affect overall performance. Refer to the chapter "Configuring LLC2 and SDLC Parameters" in this manual for more details about fine-tuning your network through the LLC2 parameters.

The routers at each end of the LLC2 session execute the full LLC2 protocol, which could result in some overhead. The decision to use local acknowledgment for LLC2 should be based on the speed of the backbone network in relation to the Token Ring speed. For LAN segments separated by slow-speed serial links (for example, 56 kbps), the T1 timer problem could occur more frequently. In such cases, it might be wise to turn on local acknowledgment for LLC2. For LAN segments separated by a T1, backbone delays will be minimal; in such cases, FST or direct should be considered. Speed mismatch between the LAN segments and the backbone network is one criterion to help you decide to use local acknowledgment for LLC2.

There are some situations (such as the receiving host failing between the time the sending host sends data and the time the receiving host receives it), in which the sending host would determine, at the LLC2 layer, that data was received when it actually was not. This error occurs because the router acknowledges that it received data from the sending host before it determines that the receiving host can actually receive the data. But because both NetBIOS and SNA have error recovery in situations where an end device goes down, these higher-level protocols will resend any missing or lost data. Because these transaction request/confirmation protocols exist above LLC2, they are not affected by tight timers, as is LLC2. They also are transparent to local acknowledgment.

If you are using NetBIOS applications, note that there are two NetBIOS timers---one at the link level and one at the next higher level. Local acknowledgment for LLC2 is designed to solve link timeouts only. If you are experiencing NetBIOS session timeouts, you have two options:

Figure 84 illustrates a DLSw+ configuration with local acknowledgment.


Figure 84: DLSw+ with Local Acknowledgment---Simple Configuration


Configuration for Router A
source-bridge ring-group 10
!
dlsw local-peer peer-id 10.2.25.1
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 10.2.5.2
interface loopback 0
ip address 10.2.25.1 255.255.255.0
.
.
.
interface tokenring 0
no ip address
ring-speed 16
source-bridge active 25 1 10 
source-bridge spanning
Configuration for Router B
source-bridge ring-group 12
dlsw local-peer peer-id 10.2.5.2
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 10.2.25.1
interface loopback 0
ip address 10.2.5.2 255.255.255.0
.
.
.
interface tokenring 0
no ip address
ring-speed 16
source-bridge active 5 1 12
source-bridge spanning

DLSw+ Using TCP Encapsulation with Local Acknowledgment---Peer Groups Configuration Example 1

Figure 85 illustrates DLSw+ configured using acknowledgmentborder peers, showing circuits to each other. Router A is configured to operate in promiscuous mode, and border peers Routers B and C forward broadcasts. This configuration reduces processing requirements in Router A (the access router) and still support any-to-any networks.


Figure 85: DLSw+ with Peer Groups Specified (Example 1)


The following are configuration files for the routers in Figure 85.

Configuration for Router A
hostname RouterA
!
source-bridge ring group 31
dlsw local-peer peer-id 128.207.152.5 group 70 promiscuous
dlsw remote peer 0 tcp 128.207.150.8
!
interface serial 0
ip unnumbered tokenring
clockrate 56000
!
interface tokenring 0
ip address 128.207.152.5 255.255.255.0
ring-speed 16
source-bridge 200 13 31
source-bridge spanning
!
.
.
.
router igrp 777
network 128.207.0.0
Configuration for Router B
hostname RouterB
!
.
.
.
source-bridge ring-group 31
dlsw local-peer peer-id 128.207.150.8 group 70 border promiscuous
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 128.207.169.3
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 128.207.152.5
!
.
.
.
interface serial 0
ip unnumbered tokenring 0
bandwidth 56
!
.
.
.
interface tokenring 0
ip address 128.207.150.8 255.255.255.0
ring-speed 16
source-bridge 3 14 31
source-bridge spanning
!
router igrp 777
network 128.207.0.0
Configuration for Router C
hostname RouterC
!
.
.
.
source-bridge ring-group 69
dlsw local-peer peer-id 128.207.169.3 group 69 border promiscuous
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 128.207.150.8
!
.
.
.
interface tokenring 3/0
description fixed to flashnet
ip address 128.207.2.152 255.255.255.0
ring-speed 16
multiring all
!
interface tokenring 3/1
ip address 128.207.169.3 255.255.255.0
ring-speed 16
source-bridge 33 2 69
source-bridge spanning
!
.
.
.
router igrp 777
network 128.207.0.0
 

DLSw+ Using TCP Encapsulation with Local Acknowledgment---Peer Group Configuration Example 2

Figure 86 illustrates a peer group configuration that allows any-to-any connection except for Router B. Router B has no connectivity to anything except router C because the promiscuous keyword is omitted


Figure 86: DLSw+ with Peer Groups Specified (Example 2)


The following are configuration files for the routers in Figure 86.

Configuration for Router A
hostname Router A
!
.
.
.
source-bridge ring-group 2000
dlsw local-peer peer-id 150.150.99.1 group 2 promiscuous
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 150.150.100.1
!
interface loopback 0
ip address 150.150.99.1 255.255.255.192
!
interface serial 0
ip address 150.150.9.1 255.255.255.192
!
.
.
.
interface tokenring 0
no ip address
ring-speed 16
source-bridge 99 1 2000
source-bridge spanning
!
.
.
.
router eigrp 202
network 150.150.0.0
Configuration for Router B
hostname RouterB
!
.
.
.
source-bridge ring-group 2000
dlsw local-peer peer-id 150.150.98.1 group 2
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 150.150.100.1
!
interface loopback 0
ip address 150.150.98.1 255.255.255.192
!
.
.
.
interface serial 1
no ip address
encapsulation sdlc
no keepalive
priority-group 1
clockrate 9600
sdlc role primary
sdlc vmac 4000.8888.0100
sdlc address 01
sdlc xid 01 05d20006
sdlc partner 4000.1020.1000 01
sdlc dlsw 1
!
interface tokenring 0
no ip address
ring-speed 16
multiring all
source-bridge 98 1 2000
source-bridge spanning
!
.
.
.
router eigrp 202
network 150.150.0.0
Configuration for Router C
hostname RouterC
!
.
.
.
source-bridge ring-group 2000
dlsw local-peer peer-id 150.150.100.1 group 2 border promiscuous
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 150.150.96.1
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 150.150.98.1
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 150.150.99.1
!
interface loopback 0
ip address 150.150.100.1 255.255.255.192
!
.
.
.
interface serial 7
ip address 150.150.9.2 255.255.255.192
clockrate 56000
!
interface serial 8
ip address 150.150.10.2 255.255.255.192
!
interface serial 9
ip address 150.150.8.2 255.255.255.192
!
interface tokenring 0
no ip address
ring-speed 16
multiring all
source-bridge 500 1 2000
!
router eigrp 202
network 150.150.0.0
Configuration for Router D
hostname RouterD
!
.
.
.
source-bridge ring-group 2000
dlsw local-peer peer-id 150.150.96.1 group 1 border promiscuous
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 150.150.97.1
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 150.150.100.1
!
interface loopback 0
ip address 150.150.96.1 255.255.255.192
!
.
.
.
interface serial 1/0
ip address 150.150.8.1 255.255.255.192
clockrate 56000
!
interface serial 1/1
ip address 150.150.16.1 255.255.255.192
!
.
.
.
interface tokenring g0/0
ip address 150.150.2.1 255.255.255.192
ring-speed 16
source-bridge 96 1 2000
source-bridge spanning
!
interface tokenring 0/1
ip address 150.150.13.1 255.255.255.192
no ip address
ring-speed 16
source-bridge 92 1 2000
source-bridge spanning
!
.
.
.
router eigrp 202
network 150.150.0.0
Configuration for Router E
hostname RouterE
!
.
.
.
source-bridge ring-group 2000
dlsw local-peer peer-id 150.150.97.1 group 1 promiscuous
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 150.150.96.1
!
interface loopback 0
ip address 150.150.97.1 255.255.255.192
!
interface serial 0
mtu 1400
ip address 150.150.16.2 255.255.255.192
!
.
.
.
interface tokenring 0
no ip address
no ip route-cache
ring-speed 16
source-bridge 97 1 2000
source-bridge spanning
!
.
.
.
router eigrp 202
network 150.150.0.0

DLSw+ with SDLC Multidrop Support Configuration Example

In the following example all devices are type PU 2.0:

interface serial 2
 mtu 4400
 no ip address
 encapsulation sdlc
 no keepalive
 clockrate 19200
 sdlc role primary
 sdlc vmac 4000.1234.5600
 sdlc N1 27200
 sdlc address C1
 sdlc xid C1 05DCCCC1
 sdlc partner 4001.3745.1088 C1
 sdlc address C2 
 sdlc xid C2 05DCCCC2
 sdlc partner 4001.3745.1088 C2
 sdlc dlsw C1 C2
 

The following example shows mixed PU 2.0 (device using address C1) and PU 2.1 (device using address C2) devices:

interface serial 2
 mtu 4400
 no ip address
 encapsulation sdlc
 no keepalive
 clockrate 19200
 sdlc role primary
 sdlc vmac 4000.1234.5600
 sdlc N1 27200
 sdlc address C1
 sdlc xid C1 05DCCCC1
 sdlc partner 4001.3745.1088 C1
 sdlc address C2 xid-poll
sdlc partner 4001.3745.1088 C2
 sdlc dlsw C1 C2
 

In the following example all devices are type PU 2.1 (Method 1):

interface serial 2
 mtu 4400
 no ip address
 encapsulation sdlc
 no keepalive
 clockrate 19200
 sdlc role primary
 sdlc vmac 4000.1234.5600
 sdlc N1 27200
 sdlc address C1 xid-poll
sdlc partner 4001.3745.1088 C1
 sdlc address C2 xid-poll
sdlc partner 4001.3745.1088 C2
 sdlc dlsw C1 C2
 

In the following example all devices are type PU 2.1 (Method 2):

interface serial 2
 mtu 4400
 no ip address
 encapsulation sdlc
 no keepalive
 clockrate 19200
 sdlc role prim-xid-poll
 sdlc vmac 4000.1234.5600
 sdlc N1 27200
 sdlc address C1 xid-poll
sdlc partner 4001.3745.1088 C1
 sdlc address C2 
 sdlc xid C2 05DCCCC2
 sdlc partner 4001.3745.1088 C2
 sdlc dlsw C1 C2

DLSw+ with LLC2-to-SDLC Conversion between PU 4-to-PU 4 Communication

The following example is a sample configuration for LLC2-to-SDLC conversion for PU 4-to-PU 4 communication as shown in Figure 87:


Figure 87: LLC2-to-SDLC Conversion for PU 4-to-PU 4 Communication


Router A
interface serial 0
mtu 4096
ip address 10.4.21.2 255.255.255.0
encapsulation frame-relay IETF
keepalive 12
frame-relay map llc2  46
frame-relay map llc2  45
frame-relay map ip 10.4.21.1 43 broadcast
frame-relay map ip 10.4.21.3 45 broadcast
frame-relay map ip 10.4.21.4 46 broadcast
frame-relay lmi-type ansi
 
interface TokenRing 0
mac-address 4000.1250.1001
no ip address
ring-speed 16
fras map llc 4000.1060.1000 4 4 Serial0 frame-relay 45 4 4
Router B
interface serial 0
mtu 4096
ip address 10.4.21.3 255.255.255.0
encapsulation frame-relay IETF
keepalive 12
no fair-queue
frame-relay map llc2  53
frame-relay map llc2  54
frame-relay map llc2  56
frame-relay map ip 10.4.21.1 53 broadcast
frame-relay map ip 10.4.21.2 54 broadcast
frame-relay map ip 10.4.21.4 56 broadcast
frame-relay lmi-type ansi
 
interface serial 1
no ip address
encapsulation sdlc
no keepalive
clockrate 9600
sdlc address 01 echo
fras map sdlc 1 Serial0 frame-relay 54 4 4 fid4

DLSw+ Translation between Ethernet and Token Ring Configuration Example

DLSw+ also supports Ethernet media. Except for configuring for a specific media, in this case Ethernet, the configuration is similar to other DLSw+ configuration (see Figure 88).


Figure 88: DLSw+ Translation between Ethernet and Token Ring


The following are the configuration files for the routers in Figure 88.

Configuration for Router A
hostname RouterA
!
.
.
.
source-bridge ring-group 31
dlsw local-peer peer-id 128.207.111.1
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 128.207.1.145 lf 1500
dlsw bridge-group 5
!
interface Ethernet 0
ip address 128.207.111.1 255.255.255.0
bridge-group 5
!
.
.
bridge 5 protocol ieee
!
.
Configuration for Router B
hostname RouterB
!
.
.
.
source-bridge ring-group 500
source-bridge transparent 500 1000 1 1
dlsw local-peer peer-id 128.207.1.145
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 128.207.111.1 lf 1500
dlsw bridge-group 5
.
.
.
interface ethernet 1/2
ip address 128.207.1.145 255.255.255.0
bridge-group 5
 
.
.
.
interface tokenring 2/0
no ip address
ring-speed 16
source-bridge 7 1 500
source-bridge spanning
!
.
.
.
bridge 5 protocol ieee
 

Because DLSw+ does not do local translation between different LAN types, Router B must be configured for SR/TLB by issuing the source-bridge transparent command. Also, note that the bridge groups are configured on the ethernet interfaces.

DLSw+ Translation between FDDI and Token Ring Configuration Example

DLSw+ also supports FDDI media. Except for configuring for a specific media type, in this case FDDI (see Figure 89), the configuration is similar to other DLSw+ configurations.


Figure 89: DLSw+ Translation between FDDI and Token Ring


In the following example, an FDDI ring on Router A is connected to a Token Ring on Router B across a DLSw+ link.

Configuration for Router A
source-bridge ring-group 10
dlsw local-peer peer-id 132.11.11.2
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 132.11.11.3
interface fddi 0
no ip address
source-bridge active 26 1 10
source-bridge spanning
Configuration for Router B
source-bridge ring-group 10
dlsw local peer peer-id 132.11.
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 132.11.11.2
interface tokenring 0
no ip address
source-bridge active 25 1 10
source-bridge spanning
 

DLSw+ Translation between SDLC and Token Ring Media Example

DLSw+ provides media conversion between local or remote LANs and SDLC. For additional information about configuring SDLC parameters, refer to the chapter "Configuring LLC2 and SDLC Parameters."

Figure 90 illustrates DLSw+ with SDLC encapsulation. For this example, 4000.1020.1000 is the MAC address of the FEP host (PU 4.0). The MAC address of the AS/400 host is 1000.5aed.1f53, which is defined as Node Type 2.1. Router B serves as the primary station for the remote secondary station 01. Router B can serve as either primary station or secondary station to remote station D2.


Figure 90:
DLSw+ Translation between SDLC and Token Ring Media


The following is the configuration file for Router A.

Configuration for Router A
hostname RouterA
!
.
.
.
source-bridge ring-group 2000
dlsw local-peer peer-id 150.150.10.2
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 150.150.10.1
!
.
.
.
interface serial 8
ip address 150.150.10.2 255.255.255.192
clockrate 56000
!
.
.
.
interface tokenring 0
no ip address
ring-speed 16
source-bridge 500 1 2000
source-bridge spanning
!
.
.
.
router eigrp 202
network 150.150.0.0
Configuration for Router B
hostname RouterB
!
.
.
.
source-bridge ring-group 2000
dlsw local-peer peer-id 150.150.10.1
dlsw remote-peer 0 tcp 150.150.10.2
!
.
.
.
interface serial 0
ip address 150.150.10.1 255.255.255.192
!
interface serial 1
description PU2 with SDLC station role set to secondary
no ip address
encapsulation sdlc
no keepalive
clockrate 9600
sdlc role primary
sdlc vmac 4000.9999.0100
sdlc address 01
sdlc xid 01 05d20006
sdlc partner 4000.1020.1000 01
sdlc dlsw 1
!
interface serial 2
description Node Type 2.1 with SDLC station role set to negotiable or primary
encapsulation sdlc
sdlc role none
sdlc vmac 1234.3174.0000
sdlc address d2
sdlc partner 1000.5aed.1f53 d2
sdlc dlsw d2
!
interface tokenring 0
no ip address
early-token-release
ring-speed 16
multiring all
source-bridge 100 1 2000
source-bridge spanning
!
interface tokenring 1
no ip address
ring-speed 16
multiring all
source-bridge 400 1 2000
source-bridge spanning
!
router eigrp 202
network 150.150.0.0

DLSw+ over Frame Relay Configuration Example

Frame Relay support extends the DLSw+ capabilities to include Frame Relay in direct mode. Frame Relay support includes permanent virtual circuit capability . DLSw+ runs over Frame Relay with or without local acknowledgement. It supports the Token Ring-to-Token Ring connections similar to Fast-Sequenced Transport and other direct data link controls. Figure 91 illustrates a DLSw+ configuration over Frame Relay with local acknowledgement.


Figure 91:
DLSw+ over Frame Relay


The following configuration examples are based on Figure 91. The Token Rings in the illustration are in Ring 2.

Configuration for Router A
source-bridge ring-group 100
dlsw local-peer peer-id 1.1.1.1
dlsw remote-peer 0 frame-relay interface serial 0 30
!
interface tokenring 0
ring-speed 16
source-bridge active 1 1 100
!
interface serial 0
mtu 3000
no ip address
encapsulation frame-relay
frame-relay lmi-type ansi
frame-relay map llc2 30
Configuration for Router B
source-bridge ring-group 100
dlsw local-peer peer-id 1.1.1.2
dlsw remote-peer 0 frame-relay interface serial 0 30
!
interface tokenring 0
ring-speed 16
source-bridge active 2 1 100
!
interface serial 0
mtu 3000
no ip address
encapsulation frame-relay
frame-relay lmi-type ansi
frame-relay map llc2 30

DLSw+ over QLLC Configuration Examples

The following three examples describe QLLC support for DLSw+.

Example 1

In this configuration, DLSw+ is used to allow remote devices to connect to a DLSw+ network over an X.25 public packet-switched network.

In this example, all QLLC traffic is addressed to destination address 4000.1161.1234, which is the MAC address of the FEP.

The remote X.25-attached IBM 3174 cluster controller is given a virtual MAC address of 1000.0000.0001. This virtual MAC address is mapped to the X.121 address of the 3174 (31104150101) in the X.25 attached router.

interface serial 0
encapsulation x25
x25 address 3110212011
x25 map qllc 1000.0000.0001 31104150101
qllc dlsw partner 4000.1611.1234
 
Example 2

In this configuration, a single IBM 3174 cluster controller needs to communicate with both an AS/400 and a FEP. The FEP is associated with subaddress 150101 and the AS/400 is associated with subaddress 151102.

If an X.25 call comes in for 33204150101, the call is mapped to the FEP and forwarded to MAC address 4000.1161.1234. The IBM 3174 appears to the FEP as a Token Ring-attached resource with MAC address 1000.0000.0001. The IBM 3174 uses a source SAP of 04 when communicating with the FEP, and a source SAP of 08 when communicating with the AS/400.

interface serial 0
encapsulation x25
x25 address 31102
x25 map qllc 1000.0000.0001 33204
qllc dlsw subaddress 150101 partner 4000.1161.1234
qllc dlsw subaddress 150102 partner 4000.2034.5678 sap 04 08
Example 3

In this example, two different X.25 resources want to communicate over X.25 to the same FEP.

In the router attached to the X.25 network, every X.25 connection request for X.121 address 31102150101 is directed to DLSw+. The first SVC to be established will be mapped to virtual MAC address 1000.0000.0001. The second SVC to be established will be mapped to virtual MAC address 1000.0000.0002.

interface serial 0
encapsulation x25
x25 address 31102
x25 map qllc 33204
x25 map qllc 35765
qllc dlsw subaddress 150101 vmacaddr 1000.0000.0001 2 partner 4000.1611.1234


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Posted: Tue Apr 20 09:26:26 PDT 1999
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