Thanks William, but I do not agree 100% with your statement.
Dialer Interfaces are used for both Rotary Groups and Dialer Profiles.
When using Rotary Groups, you assign a Dialer Interface to one or more
Physical Interfaces, but only one Dialer Interface can be associated with
each Physical Interface.
When using Dialer Profiles, you create a Dialer Pool where you make Dialer
Interfaces and Physical Interfaces members off. Here a Physical Interface
can be a member of one or more Dialer Pool's that each have an associated
Dialer Interface.
In both scenario's, the layer 1 stuff are specified on the Physical
Interface, and the layer 2 & 3 stuff are specified on the Dialer Interface.
Let me know if you or others disagree.
Ole
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ole Drews Jensen
Systems Network Manager
CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I
RWR Enterprises, Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-----Original Message-----
From: William Swedberg [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, August 24, 2000 1:37 PM
To: Ole Drews Jensen; 'Oz'; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Legacy???
The original question was dealing with DDR. The way
the term "legacy" was described below is correct, but
in terms of DDR it means that you statically configure
a physical interface for a specific destination. You
are unable to use that interface for other dialing
uses. Legacy DDR is from point A to point B.
Dialer profiles are the NEW way to do DDR and enables
you to define Dialer interfaces that can be associated
with physical interfaces so you can go from point A to
point B, or point C, or point D, etc.
So when asked to a Legacy DDR implementation,
configure everything on the physical, and don't use
dialer profiles.
William Swedberg CCNP CCDP
--- Ole Drews Jensen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks Oz,
>
> Does that mean that the note says that Rotary Groups
> will only be used with
> DDR?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Ole
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Ole Drews Jensen
> Systems Network Manager
> CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I
> RWR Enterprises, Inc.
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Oz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Wednesday, August 23, 2000 7:22 PM
> To: Ole Drews Jensen; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: Legacy???
>
>
> Legacy means specific to a particular company it's
> really I guess its a
> nice way of saying odd ball, off the wall, also .
> As in each "legacy" piece
> of hardware/ software has to be dealt with
> seperately. As in DEC Vines etc
> In the software world legacy usually means an
> application that is specific
> to the company. Like say a bank that hass there own
> accounting system
> built . That would be legacy application compared
> to say word or netcape
> If you look at this link you will see what I mean
>
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios120/12cgcr/dial_
> c/dchubddr.htm#41851
> Oz
> http://www.mcseco-op.com/helpfull_links.htm
>
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