Multichassis Multilink is normally used for Dial applications. I've used it
a bit with the Access Path products. In this case we used 2 7206's for the
Master of the Stack, the AS5300's were just the ingress ports. Normally
speaking this is done to bond two ISDN B Channels together from seperate
PRI's on seperate routers. Works really well for this, but is still low
bandwidth as compared to two T1's.

David C Prall [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://dcp.dcptech.com

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
> Michael Williams
> Sent: Monday, March 11, 2002 3:24 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Multichassis PPP Multilink?!?!? [7:37892]
>
>
> Hey all.  Has anyone here gotten to use Multichassis PPP Multilink?
> All of the documentation I read keeps referring to dial-up and Access
> Servers, but one Cisco doc says:
>
> "MMP is supported on the Cisco 7500, 4500, and 2500 series
> platforms and on
> synchronous serial, asynchronous serial, ISDN BRI, ISDN PRI, and dialer
> interfaces."
>
> Does this mean I can use this to bond multiple T1 between different
> routers?  Here's the scenario.  Let's say I have two 7500s at headquarters
> and a remote with with two 2500's, each with a single point-to-point T1
> connection back to one of the HQ 7500s (2500A has a T1 back to 7500A, and
> 2500B has a T1 back to 7500B).  Can I use Multichassis PPP Multilink to
> combine those two into a single bundle for load-balancing purposes?
>
> Any input would be appreciated since the Cisco docs aren't very
> clear as to
> what you can/can't do with this protocol.
>
> Thanks!
> Mike W.




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