Did Jeff's suggestion work?

: interface POS0/0/0
: frame-relay intf-type dce

If so, please let the list know, so when someone comes 
across this thread while searching for the fix they can 
figure it out without having to email the list.  If it 
didn't help contact me off-line and I will be happy to 
troubleshoot it with you.

scott





________________________________________
From: Righa Shake [[email protected]]
Sent: Saturday, November 19, 2011 11:11 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Flapping POS Interface on Frame-relay between a Juniper and Cisco

Hi,

Am having a problem that is buffling.

I recently changed a POS link encapsulation from PPP to Frame-relay.
Since that time the POS interface keeps resetting from time to time.

On my BGP session am receiving cease notifications from my upstream
provider.

The setup is such that we have a cisco on one end and a Juniper on the
other.

interface POS0/0/0
 mtu 4474
 no ip address
 no ip unreachables
 encapsulation frame-relay
 logging event link-status
 crc 32
 pos scramble-atm
 frame-relay lmi-type ansi
end

ROUTERshow run int pos0/0/0.101
Building configuration...


!
interface POS0/0/0.101 point-to-point
ip address X.X.X.X 255.255.255.252
frame-relay interface-dlci 101
end

ROUTER#show int pos0/0/0
POS0/0/0 is up, line protocol is up
  Hardware is SPA-2XOC12-POS
  MTU 4474 bytes, BW 622000 Kbit/sec, DLY 100 usec,
     reliability 255/255, txload 6/255, rxload 38/255
  Encapsulation FRAME-RELAY, crc 32, loopback not set
  Keepalive set (10 sec)
  Scramble enabled
  LMI enq sent  81981, LMI stat recvd 77480, LMI upd recvd 0, DTE LMI up
  LMI enq recvd 0, LMI stat sent  0, LMI upd sent  0
  LMI DLCI 0  LMI type is ANSI Annex D  frame relay DTE  segmentation
inactive
  FR SVC disabled, LAPF state down
  Broadcast queue 0/256, broadcasts sent/dropped 26/0, interface broadcasts
0
  Last input 00:00:00, output 00:00:00, output hang never
  Last clearing of "show interface" counters 1w2d
  Input queue: 0/375/0/0 (size/max/drops/flushes); Total output drops: 0
  Queueing strategy: fifo
  Output queue: 0/40 (size/max)
  5 minute input rate 94336000 bits/sec, 13151 packets/sec
  5 minute output rate 16470000 bits/sec, 7049 packets/sec
     12211574207 packets input, 10967607038364 bytes, 0 no buffer
     Received 0 broadcasts (0 IP multicasts)
     6970870 runts, 2179 giants, 0 throttles
              0 parity
     892493293 input errors, 882184781 CRC, 0 frame, 0 overrun, 0 ignored,
3335463 abort
     6379191154 packets output, 1614018181446 bytes, 0 underruns
     0 output errors, 0 applique, 4 interface resets
     0 unknown protocol drops
     0 output buffer failures, 0 output buffers swapped out
     0 carrier transitions


Any assistance on this will be greatly appreciated.






--- [email protected] wrote:

From: Jeff Saxe <[email protected]>
 
I believe this is the explanation for your flapping: a PPP link is intended to 
go between two routers over, for instance, a private leased line, so both of 
the devices are peers, neither one particularly special. Frame-relay, by 
contrast, was originally designed so that your router was an "end user" device 
and its directly-connected partner device was not your other router, which you 
control, but the frame carrier's frame-relay switch. Your router was a DTE 
device, and their switch, which was in a more "important" position in control 
of the frame-relay NBMA cloud, was the DCE device. Your router then slaved to 
the frame switch via LMI signaling, so that the upstream switch instructed you 
which DLCIs existed and were up at the moment.

So if you connect up two routers with frame-relay encap and each thinks it is 
the DTE, and neither one is taking the role of the frame switch, then when you 
bring them up, they will initially optimistically think their DLCIs are up and 
working, and the routing protocol and traffic will come up... but both of them 
will be waiting for the frame switch to send them LMI indicating that their 
idea of the DLCI up/down status is correct. When a couple minutes go by and 
they don't hear the responses to their LMI enquiries, they will bring all the 
DLCI's down. I thought they would then stay down forever, i.e., not flap, but 
maybe you are shutting / no shutting the POS circuit to try again. Anyway, I 
believe the very simple fix is

interface POS0/0/0
frame-relay intf-type dce

So this will turn your Cisco side of the circuit into "DCE" mode, and if the 
Juniper side stays in "DTE" mode (the default, so probably not listed in the 
config), then the LMI should start behaving between the two. And yes, as Jay 
Hennigan suggested, you might need to use "encap frame-relay ietf" to be 
compatible with non-Cisco gear, or you might need to adjust the frame-relay 
lmi-type -- one type sends the LMI on DLCI number 0, one of them on DLCI 1023, 
whatever. I think you'll need to adjust the two ends until you see LMI 
enquiries both sent and received; right now the "show interface" from the Cisco 
side shows it has not received any LMI enq yet.


Good luck, and I hope it's that simple.   :-)

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