Lucent Technologies 6000 User Manual

Page 24

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xxiv

MAX 6000/3000 Network Configuration Guide

Figures

Figure 6-5 ISDN packet mode .......................................................................................... 6-29
Figure 6-6 T3POS setup ................................................................................................... 6-30
Figure 6-7 Example of a T3POS configuration ................................................................ 6-31
Figure 7-1 Incoming IP fax from fax machine to Internet .................................................. 7-2
Figure 7-2 Outgoing IP fax from Internet to fax machine .................................................. 7-2
Figure 7-3 Receiving and forwarding incoming IP faxes ................................................... 7-6
Figure 7-4 Sending an outgoing IP fax to a fax machine ................................................... 7-8
Figure 8-1 Adjacency between neighboring routers ........................................................... 8-3
Figure 8-2 Designated and Backup Designated Routers .................................................... 8-4
Figure 8-3 OSPF costs for different types of links ............................................................. 8-5
Figure 8-4 Dividing an AS into areas ................................................................................. 8-6
Figure 8-5 Sample network topology ................................................................................. 8-7
Figure 8-6 Example of an OSPF setup ............................................................................... 8-9
Figure 9-1 Default mask for class C IP address ................................................................. 9-2
Figure 9-2 A 29-bit subnet mask and the number of supported hosts ................................ 9-2
Figure 9-3 Typical routing table ......................................................................................... 9-5
Figure 9-4 Interface-based routing example ....................................................................... 9-6
Figure 9-5 Sample dual IP network .................................................................................... 9-7
Figure 9-6 Creating a subnet for the MAX ......................................................................... 9-9
Figure 9-7 Address assigned dynamically from a pool .................................................... 9-12
Figure 9-8 Local DNS table example ............................................................................... 9-17
Figure 9-9 A dial-in user requiring dynamic IP address assignment ................................ 9-36
Figure 9-10 A dial-in user requiring a static IP address (a host route) ............................... 9-39
Figure 9-11 Directing incoming IP packets to one local host ............................................ 9-40
Figure 9-12 A router-to-router IP connection ..................................................................... 9-41
Figure 9-13 A connection between local and remote subnets ............................................ 9-43
Figure 9-14 Example of a numbered interface ................................................................... 9-45
Figure 9-15 Two-hop connection that requires a static route when RIP is off ................... 9-60
Figure 10-1 MAX forwarding multicast traffic to dial-in multicast clients ....................... 10-5
Figure 10-2 MAX acting as a multicast forwarder on Ethernet and WAN interfaces ....... 10-6
Figure 11-1 ATMP tunnel across the Internet .................................................................... 11-2
Figure 11-2 Path MTU on an Ethernet segment ................................................................. 11-3
Figure 11-3 Home Agent routing to the home network ................................................... 11-11
Figure 11-4 Home Agent in gateway mode ...................................................................... 11-15
Figure 11-5 MAX acting as both Home Agent and Foreign Agent ................................. 11-23
Figure 11-6 PPTP tunnel .................................................................................................. 11-28
Figure 11-7 PPTP tunnel across multiple POPs ............................................................... 11-29
Figure 11-8 L2TP tunnel across the Internet .................................................................... 11-32
Figure 11-9 L2TP tunnel setup using tunnel assignment IDs ........................................ 11-35
Figure 11-10 Example of L2TP tunnel authentication ..................................................... 11-39
Figure 11-11Typical VRouter implementation ................................................................. 11-48
Figure 12-1 A dial-in NetWare client ............................................................................... 12-12
Figure 12-2 A connection with NetWare servers on both sides ....................................... 12-14
Figure 12-3 A dial-in client that belongs to its own IPX network ................................... 12-17
Figure 13-1 AppleTalk LAN .............................................................................................. 13-3
Figure 13-2 Routed connection .......................................................................................... 13-4
Figure 14-1 Negotiating a bridge connection (PPP encapsulation) .................................... 14-3
Figure 14-2 How the MAX creates a bridging table .......................................................... 14-4
Figure 14-3 An example of a connection bridging AppleTalk ......................................... 14-10
Figure 14-4 An example of an IPX client bridged connection ......................................... 14-14
Figure 14-5 An example of an IPX server bridged connection ........................................ 14-15
Figure 15-1 Data filters drop or forward certain packets ................................................... 15-2

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