do you have more than one frame-relay map statements on each of the spokes?
do you have the "broadcast" switch turned on in your map statements?

One more thing on frame relay in this kind of scenario. Very often,
depending upon the exact topology and routing protocol used, you will find
that you cannot use standard ping with any success.

Ping by default uses the address of the outgoing interface as it's source
address. If you were to set up rudimentary routing, and use, say, a loopback
as your source address ( using the extended ping feature ) you would find
that your pings are successful.

IIRC, the issue is common when using the physical interface on all routers,
or when using a multipoint at the hub and p2p on the spokes.

HTH

Chuck

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Kenneth Yeung
Sent: Saturday, October 27, 2001 6:04 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Frame-relay [7:24332]


Based on the frame-relay (Chapter 4 2nd Edition)in Caslow's book:
S1 ------------- HQ -------------S2
172.16.1.1       172.16.1.2      172.16.1.3

With home lab testing as the above setting,
I can ping from HQ to S1 and S2.
I cannot ping from S1 and S2 even though I have put in the frame-relay map
ip x.x.x.x local DLCI in both S1 and S2.
I still got the same debug message "encapsulation fail".

Any advice?!




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