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Cisco CCNA Certfication: Introduction to ISDN, Part I
by: Chris Bryant
From the CCNA to the CCIE, ISDN is one of the most important
technolgies you'll work with. It's also very common in the field; ISDN
is frequently used as a backup connection in case an organization's
Frame Relay connections go down. Therefore, it's important to know ISDN
basics not only for your particular exam, but for job success.
ISDN is used between two Cisco routers that have BRI or PRI interfaces.
Basically, with ISDN one of the routers places a phone call to the
other router. It is vital to understand not only what causes one router
to dial another, but what makes the link go down.
Why? Since ISDN is basically a phone call from one router to another,
you're getting billed for that phone call -- by the minute. If one of
your routers dials another, and never hangs up, the connection can
theoretically last for days or weeks. The network manager then receives
an astronomical phone bill, which leads to bad things for everyone
involved!
Cisco routers use the concept of interesting traffic to decide when one
router should call another. By default, there is no interesting
traffic, so if you don't define any, the routers will never call each
other.
Interesting traffic is defined with the dialer-list command. This
command offers many options, so you can tie interesting traffic down
not only to what protocols can bring the link up, but what the source,
destination, or even port number must be for the line to come up
.
One common misconception occurs once that link is up. Interesting
traffic is required to bring the link up, but by default, any traffic
can then cross the ISDN link.
What makes the link come down? Again, the concept of interesting
traffic is used. Cisco routers have an idle-timeout setting for their
dialup interfaces. If interesting traffic does not cross the link for
the amount of time specified by the idle-timeout, the link comes down.
To summarize: Interesting traffic brings the link up; by default, any
traffic can cross the link once it's up; a lack of interesting traffic
is what brings the link down.
In tomorrow's article, we'll take a look at some common scenarios that
make the ISDN link stay up, and what can be done about it. Keep
studying, and I'll see you tomorrow!
Chris Bryant
Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert #12933
About The Author
Chris Bryant, CCIE (TM) #12933, has been active in the Cisco
certification community for years. He worked his way up from the CCNA
to the CCIE, and knows what CCNA and CCNP candidates need to know to be
effective on the job and in the exam room.
He is the owner of http://www.thebryantadvantage.com,
where he teaches CCNA and CCNP courses to small groups of exam
candidates, ensuring they each receive the individual attention they
deserve. Classes are offered over the Internet and in select cities.
Chris has custom-written the Study Guide and Lab Workbook used in each
course - no third-party training materials or simulators are used.
You're invited to visit our site and check out our CCNA and CCNP
courses and study aids, and to sign up for our weekly newsletter
written personally by Chris. Chris is always glad to hear from Cisco
certification candidates at chris@thebryantadvantage.com.
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