Cabletron Systems Netlink FRX4000 User Manual - page 228
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FRX4000/FRX6000 4.0 User Guide, Rev 01
Bandwidth Allocation Group
assigns the IP interface to one of sixteen groups whose parameters regulate bandwidth
usage. See "
Configuring Bandwidth Allocation Groups
" on page 7-6.
Interface Type
specifies the physical interface over which this IP interface will run.
Source Card/Port/DLCI
identifies the physical and logical interface of this end of the frame relay link.
Make sure the physical frame relay port is not reserved for
backup DLCIs (as determined by the
For Backup Use Only?
parameter in the port record).
Also Make sure this DLCI is not configured as a Frame Relay
Backup DLCI or as part of an intra-nodal frame relay PVC.
Enable Inverse ARP
allows (if
Y
) the frame relay interface to be configured without specifying a desti-
nation IP address. Once the frame relay interface and its DLCI become active, the IP
function in the FRX4000/6000 sends an Inverse ARP (Address Resolution Protocol)
request over the interface. The response will contain the destination IP address,
allowing the IP interface to become active.
If an ARP request from the FRX4000/6000 receives no response within 5 seconds, the
request will be resent every 5 seconds, up to 5 times. After the 5th attempt, a 30-
second timer will start, after which the re-send sequence will be repeated.
If
Enable Inverse ARP
is changed from
N
to
Y
, the FRX4000/6000 will immediately
generate an Inverse ARP request.
If this parameter is set to
N
, a
Destination IP Address
(see next entry) must be con-
figured.
Destination IP Address
is the IP address of the end-to-end receiver for point-to-point connections (frame relay
or X.25). The valid range of values guarantees that you cannot configure all
0
s or all
1
s for a network ID, node ID, or subnet ID. (See
page 13-1
.)
Unnumbered Interface
allows the point-to-point frame relay interface to be configured without specifying a
source IP address. If
Y
, the address of the lowest IP interface number (not the lowest
address, but the number, in the range
0–256
, that identifies the interface) in the
FRX4000/6000 is used as a default source IP address. (It does not matter what type
that interface is.) All un-numbered interfaces on the FRX4000/6000 use the same
default address.
If a new interface with a lower number is added, that interface’s address will become
the new default source IP address, but only after the next IPL of the FRX4000/6000.
Naturally, this feature works only if there is at least one numbered interface in the
device. If there are none, all un-numbered interfaces remain disabled. Once a num-
bered interface is added, all un-numbered interfaces will become active.