Reconfiguring A Trunk; Table 18-2 Interface Types Supported On The Same Card - Cisco BPX 8620 Installation And Configuration Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for BPX 8620:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Chapter 18
Configuring Trunks and Adding Interface Shelves
The interface types that are supported on the same card are listed in Table 18-2.

Table 18-2 Interface Types Supported on the Same Card

Interface Type
Physical trunks
Virtual trunk
Interface shelf (feeder) trunks
Ports (UNI/NNI)
To set up a trunk, use the following procedure.
Step 1
Use the uptrk command to activate the trunk.
Use the uptrk command to activate the trunk so that it can start to generate framing. It also determines
whether the trunk is a physical-only trunk or a virtual trunk. The third digit you specify in the
command (represented by
see Chapter 24, "Configuring BXM Virtual Trunks."
Use the uptrk command at each end of the trunk. When the trunk is upped at only one end, the node
detects the trunk as being in an alarm state. For more information, refer to the dsptrks command of the
Cisco WAN Switching Command Reference, Reference 9.3.30. If you up the trunk at both ends, the alarm
is cleared.
Use the cnftrk command to override the trunk default values. You must use the cnftrk command for
Step 2
virtual trunks, but it is an optional command for physical trunks. For virtual trunks, you must change the
VPI to a nonzero value before executing the addtrk command.
If you use the cnftrk command, you must make the same changes at both ends of the trunk. To display
existing trunk parameters, use the dsptrkcnf command. The configurable parameters are listed for each
card type in Table 18-1. (The possible parameters are PKT for FastPackets, ATM cells, BNI if the trunk
is a BNI card, or All.) Not all of these parameters apply to the BPX node.
After you configure the trunk and add the trunk (addtrk), you can specify certain parameters again. For
example, a period of trunk use can give you enough information to indicate that you should change
parameters to optimize how the trunk is used.
Use the addtrk command to add the trunk. Adding the trunk makes the trunk a usable resource, so you
Step 3
can add connections (addcon) to carry traffic. You need to add only one end of the trunk.

Reconfiguring a Trunk

This section describes how to change trunk parameters after you have added the trunk.
After you have added a trunk, you can reconfigure some parameters without first deleting the trunk by
using the deltrk command. This means that you can reconfigure the following list of trunk parameters
when the trunk is in use. The
that are not configurable.
Release 9.3.30, Part Number 78-12907-01 Rev. E0, May 2005
BXM
supported
supported
supported
supported
) indicates that the trunk is virtual. For details on virtual trunking,
slot.port.vtrk
display highlights all configurable parameters, and dims parameters
cnftrk
Cisco BPX 8600 Series Installation and Configuration
Configuring Trunks
UXM
supported
supported
not supported
supported
uptrk
18-3

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Bpx 8650Bpx 8680Bpx 8680-ip

Table of Contents