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CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking . 2. Objectives. Describe PPP encapsulationConfigure PPP encapsulation and its optionsDescribe and enable PPP multilinkExplain how to implement ISDN BRI on Cisco routersConfigure an ISDN BRI connection. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking . 3. PPP. Internet standard pr
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1. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking
Chapter 11: PPP and ISDN
2. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 2 Objectives Describe PPP encapsulation
Configure PPP encapsulation and its options
Describe and enable PPP multilink
Explain how to implement ISDN BRI on Cisco routers
Configure an ISDN BRI connection
3. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 3 PPP Internet standard protocol
Considered a peer technology
Used over dial-up or leased lines
Support for multiple Network layer protocols
Most widely use WAN connection protocol
4. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 4 PPP (continued) SLIP
Supports
Encryption
Compression
Error correction
Works with synchronous and asynchronous connections
Can be applied on many different physical interfaces
Asynchronous serial
ISDN synchronous
High-Speed Serial Interface (HSSI)
5. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 5 PPP In The Protocol Stack Link control protocol
Data Link layer
Establish
Configure
Test
Network control protocols (NCPs)
Allows multiple protocols to used at the same time
IP control protocol (IPCP)
IPX control protocol (IPXCP)
AppleTalk control protocol (ATCP)
6. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 6 PPP In The Protocol Stack (continued)
7. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 7 Frame Format
8. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 8 Frame Format (continued) Frame fields of PPP
Flag: Binary sequence 01111110, which indicates the beginning of the frame
Address: Binary sequence 11111111; because PPP is used to create a point-to- point connection, there is no need for PPP to assign an individual address for each host
Control: Binary sequence 00000011, which indicates that the transmission of user data will not be sequenced and is to be delivered over a connectionless link
Protocol: Two bytes used to identify the protocol that is encapsulated
9. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 9 Frame Format (continued) Frame fields of PPP (continued)
LCP or Data: The LCP field is also known as the Data field, which is the location contains the LCP information and the data that has been encapsulated from the higher layers
Frame Check Sequence (FCS): Cyclical redundancy check (CRC) to verify the integrity of the frame
Flag: Binary sequence 01111110, which identifies the end of the data frame
10. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 10 LCP LCP field of the PPP packet may include
Asynchronous character map
Maximum receive unit size
Compression
Authentication
PAP
CHAP
Magic number
Link quality monitoring (LQM)
Multilink
11. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 11 LCP Link Configuration LCP link configuration process includes
Link establishment
Authentication (optional)
Link-quality determination (optional)
Network layer protocol configuration negotiation
Link termination
12. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 12 Establishing PPP Communications Link establishment phase
First phase
Testing and configuration of the data link
Second phase
Optional authentication
PAP and CHAP
Third phase
Network layer protocol configuration negotiation
Data packet transfer may begin
13. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 13 Establishing PPP Communications (continued)
14. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 14 Configuring PPP Authentication Configure PPP authentication on each PPP host
Link flapping will occur if authentication is only on one host
PAP
Two-way handshake
Usernames and Passwords sent in clear text
CHAP
Three-way handshake
Usernames and passwords are protected
15. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 15 Configuring PPP Authentication (continued)
16. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 16 Configuring PPP Authentication (continued)
17. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 17 Configuring PPP Authentication (continued)
18. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 18 Confirming PPP Communications “show interface” command
Router# show interface serial 0/0
19. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 19 ISDN Circuit-switched service
Existing telephone service
Data
Voice
Video
Audio transmission
Faster than traditional modem speeds
20. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 20 ISDN (continued) Basic Rate Interface (BRI)
128 kbps total data transfer bandwidth
2 B-channels
Bearer channel for data transfer
64 kbps
1 D-channel
Delta or data channel for signaling
Out of band signaling
Link Access Procedure-D
16 kbps
21. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 21 ISDN (continued) Primary Rate Interface (PRI)
1.544 mbps total data transfer bandwidth
23 B-channels
Bearer channel for data transfer
64 kbps
1 D-channel
Delta or data channel for signaling
Out of band signaling
Link Access Procedure-D
64 kbps
22. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 22 ISDN (continued)
23. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 23 ISDN Standards
24. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 24 ISDN Operations
25. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 25 ISDN Operations (continued) Functions and references
Function groups
Terminal adapter
Terminal equipment 1 (TE1)
Terminal equipment 2 (TE2)
Network termination 1 (NT1)
Network termination 2 (NT2)
26. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 26 ISDN Operations (continued) Functions and references (continued)
Reference points
U: Demarc between client and telco
R: Point between non-ISDN equipment (TE2) and TA
S: Point between customer’s TE1 or TA and the network termination (NT1 or NT2)
T: Point between a NT1 and a NT2
S/T: Point between TA and NT1 in the absence of a NT2
27. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 27 SPID Connect to service provider switch
Service Profile Identifier (SPIDs)
Dial-in access
ISDN phone numbers
Provide a profile
Service level agreement
AutoSPID
28. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 28 SPID (continued) Service provider switch types
dms-100: Northern Telecom DMS-100 (as previously described)
ni1: National ISDN-1; used in North America
net3: Net3 switch; used in Europe and the United Kingdom
ntt: Switch from NTT; used in Japan
1tr6: 1TR6 switch; used in Germany
ts013:TS013 Australian switch
none: Used when a switch has not been specified
29. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 29 SPID (continued)
30. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 30 Multilink PPP Combine the bandwidth of individual links or channels
Multilink provides
Load balancing
Packet fragmentation and reassembly
Sequencing for packets
Creates one logical connection
Function over synchronous or asynchronous connections
Router(config-if)# ppp multilink
31. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 31 DDR Dial-on-demand routing (DDR)
Intermittent WAN access
Saves money on metered lines
Used with circuit switched access
Define interesting traffic
Common configuration commands
“dialer-list” command
“dialer-group” command
“access-list” command
32. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 32 DDR (continued)
33. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 33 DDR (continued)
34. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 34 ISDN BRI Configuration Examples
35. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 35 ISDN BRI Configuration Examples (continued) Dialer profiles
Scalable compared to legacy DDR
Configuration of dialer profiles involves
Dialer interface
Logical configuration
Dial string for each destination subnet
Dialer map class
Optional commands
Define characteristics for each call
Dialer pool
Identify the physical interface that will be used by the dialer interface
36. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 36 ISDN BRI Configuration Examples (continued)
37. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 37 Monitoring ISDN ISDN problems are often associated with
PPP configuration
“debug ppp authentication”
“debug ppp negotiation”
“clear interface”
Dialer configurations
“show dialer”
“show interface”
“debug dialer”
ISDN monitoring commands
“show isdn status”
“show interface bri 0”
“debug q921”
38. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 38 Digital Lines T1: 24-channel, 1.544 mbps
T1C: 48-channel, 3.152 mbps
T2: 96-channel, 6.312 mbps
T3: 672-channel, 44.376 mbps
T4: 4032-channel, 274.176 mbps
E1: 30-channel, 2.048 mbps
Fractional T1 or E1
Digital Subscriber Line (DSL)
39. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 39 Summary Many WAN connectivity options are available for modern networks, including digital lines, Frame Relay, and analog modems
WAN technologies typically define Data Link and Physical layer standards
The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) is the most widely used WAN protocol today
On Cisco routers, PPP is used mainly as a Data Link layer encapsulation method; however, it does provide an interface to the Network layer via specific Network Control Protocols (NCPs)
40. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 40 Summary (continued) PPP provides link establishment, quality determination, Network layer protocol encapsulation, and link termination services
PPP is often used over Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) connections
ISDN is a digital service provided by several telecommunications companies worldwide
ISDN was developed as a faster WAN connection to replace analog modems, and as a cheaper alternative to Frame Relay and full T1 connections
ISDN service comes in Basic Rate Interface (BRI) and Primary Rate Interface (PRI)
41. CCNA Guide to Cisco Networking 41 Summary (continued) BRI offers connections of up to 128 Kbps for data transfer, and PRI offers up to 24 channels in the United States, each with the ability to transfer data at 64 Kbps
Connections over ISDN can take advantage of dial-on-demand routing (DDR) and multilink services offered through PPP connections
DDR allows the router using an ISDN connection to dial only when there is interesting traffic and to add more channels as needed to support given traffic levels
DDR can be implemented using dialer profiles, which allow more flexibility regarding the calling parameters
Multilink allows ISDN to use multiple channels evenly by spreading the load across those channels