Understanding redundant interconnect, Characteristics of ri on the ml-series card, Figure 17-15 – Cisco 15327 User Manual

Page 289

Advertising
background image

17-37

Ethernet Card Software Feature and Configuration Guide, R7.2

Chapter 17 Configuring Cisco Proprietary Resilient Packet Ring

Understanding Redundant Interconnect

Understanding Redundant Interconnect

Ring interconnect (RI) is a mechanism to interconnect RPRs, both RPR-IEEE and Cisco proprietary
RPR, for protection from failure. It does this through redundant pairs of back-to-back Gigabit Ethernet
connections that bridge RPR networks. One connection is the active node and the other is the standby
node. During a failure of the active node, link, or card, the detection of the failure triggers a switchover
to the standby node.

Figure 17-15

illustrates an example of RPR RI.

Figure 17-15

RPR RI

Characteristics of RI on the ML-Series Card

RI on the ML-Series card has these characteristics:

Supported only on Gigabit Ethernet

Provisioned by identifying peer RPR MACs as either primary or standby

Uses an OAM frame to flush the spatially aware sublayer (SAS) table and MAC table at the add
stations

Provides protection between individual RPRs, including:

Two RPRs

Two Cisco proprietary RPRs

A Cisco proprietary ring and an IEEE 802.17 ring

GEC

151968

Primary

pair

A

ML1000-2

West

East

B

ML1000-2

West

East

C

ML1000-2

West

East

D

ML1000-2

West

East

OC-N

OC-N

Secondary

pair

Advertising