1 overview, 1 ppp-encapsulated circuits and binding, Overview – QTECH SmartEdge 100 PPP and PPPoE User Manual

Page 5: Ppp-encapsulated circuits and binding, 1overview

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Overview

1

Overview

This document describes how to configure, monitor, and troubleshoot
Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) or PPP over Ethernet (PPPoE) on ports,
channels, and PPP or PPPoE encapsulated circuits.

Note:

Unless otherwise noted, the SmartEdge

®

100 router supports all

commands described in this document.

1.1

PPP-Encapsulated Circuits and Binding

PPP and PPPoE features comply with the following RFCs:

RFC 1332, The PPP Internet Protocol Control Protocol (IPCP)

The current implementation does not support compression.

RFC 1334, PPP Authentication Protocols

RFC 1661, The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)

RFC 1877, PPP Internet Protocol Control Protocol Extensions for Name
Server Addresses

RFC 1990, The Multilink Protocol (MLPPP)

RFC 1994, PPP Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol (CHAP)

RFC 2364, PPP Over AAL5

RFC 2516, A Method for Transmitting PPP Over Ethernet, including the
Extensions to a Method for Transmitting PPP over Ethernet (PPPoE)

RFC 2615, PPP over SONET/SDH

The SmartEdge OS supports PPP on the following ports, channels, and circuits:

POS ports

ATM PVCs on ATM OC ports

On ATM PVCs, PPP encapsulation types include virtual circuit-multiplexed
(VC-multiplexed), logical link control (LLC), Network Layer Protocol Identifier
(NLPID), and serial (High-Level Data Link Control [HDLC]) encapsulations
as described in RFC 2364.

PPP-encapsulated ATM PVCs, unlike RFC 1483-encapsulated ATM
PVCs, can be dynamically bound to an interface; you can use the bind
authentication

command (in ATM PVC configuration mode) to dynamically

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2012-12-04

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