In a lab, it's to emulate the Telco's. In production, it's to save money
with a very sound transport mode. Though I think you'll never see it @
work, I know of one reseller that sold a handful of AGS's (all serial
interfaces) to Sprint, for just that reason...
.02
Phil
----- Original Message -----
From: "Deepak Sharma" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "cisco" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, December 16, 2000 1:14 AM
Subject: *** frame reley
> Has anyone configured there router to act as a frame-reley switch?...why
>
> would someone want to do this in a production environment?... can see
> why in a lab...but in a business?...can it be useful in some way>?
>
> interface Serial1/0
> no ip address
> encapsulated frame-relay
> keepalive 15
> frame-relay lmi - type ansi
> frame-relay intf - type dce
> frame-relay route 500 interface Serial2 600
> !
> interface Serial2/0
> encapsulation frame-relay
> keepalive 15
> frame-relay intf-type dce
> frame-relay route 600 interface Serial1 500
>
> thanks
> Deepak
>
>
>
> *** bcz finest ***
>
>
>
>
>
>
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