On Fri, Oct 24, 2008 at 8:43 AM, a nice guy wrote in private mail: >> I can't believe this isn't simple! I just want to change the PVC on >> the [expletive] ATM cells and push them back the same way they came, >> how can that be so difficult? > > at the risk of sounding stupid - isn't that what an ATM switch is for ? > > ie, if you had an ATM switch at the head end you could just PVC switch?
I think so, yes. I suppose an ATM switch can deal with sending cells out the same physical interface that they came in on, at least I hope so. The problem is that I do not have an ATM switch :-( If I'd known there would be a problem five months ago, I could *maybe* have bought one and set it up :-( Even if I did buy one now (how much could one ATM switch with at least two STM SMI interfaces cost?) I'd have to wait a week or so to set up a planned service disruption for all those *other* clients who are happily using L3 services over that ATM link. Getting the operator of the ATM switch on the other end to bridge will be extremely difficult, lengthy, and expensive (at least a thousand dollars for something that has to be a ten-line config change, yes, I know, but they're the only game in town and not expensive as long as you don't deviate from the norm). I just can't believe a 7200 can't do this. I can't get a definitive response either way from the Cisco docs. Anyone? Please? -- Nathan _______________________________________________ cisco-nsp mailing list cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/