excerpted below:

"Bandwidth ON Demand Interoperability Group (BONDING)

Bandwidth ON Demand Interoperability Group (BONDING) is used for combining B
channels
together to increase bandwidth. Inverse multiplexing is used to take a
single signal
from a user's equipment and divide the signal into a number of channels for
transmission
over lines. An inverse demultiplexer at the receiving end then reassembles
the data
streams into the original single signal. Control for bonding resides in the
application
of a device, not in the EWSD switch"
--
Jonathan

"Howard C. Berkowitz" wrote:

> >Hello,
> >
> >We have a Cisco2621 with two T1 going to the same place.  Does anyone
have a
> >link to some IOS examples that would allow them to be bonded together?  \
> >
> >We would like the ability to download at the combined T1 speed of 3 mb.
> >Currently we seem to max out at only 1 T1 speed.  I did searches at Cisco
on
> >bonding, but could not come up with anything.
> >
> >Thank you.
> >Matt Goodhue
>
> "Bonding," to be specific, is a layer 1 technique intended for
> videoconferencing, and is not supported by routers.  It's actually
> BONDING, an acronym for something that escapes me.
>
> To do it on the router, look at multilink PPP for a layer 2 solution,
> and also per-packet and per-flow load balancing at layer 3.




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