John, All,

Actually, both router interfaces(DCE or DTE) will

show "down/down" if the both ports remain "administratively down".:->

Seriously, where I work since alot of our circuit are located in

various locations within a number of our building we make use

of what we call an Automatic Network Control Circuit (ANCC)

system which logically maps our DCE devices from our Demarc

to our NOC equipment area.

Nonetheless, in answering Priscilla's question there is no

one answer to the question. Basically, if the CSU/DSU is

configured with a mismatch on the framing then the router

port will come up/up. If the encoding is mismatched then

this will cause the CSU/DSUs to lose "SYNC". Technically

this will cause the router port to continually flap(up/down).

When the CSU/DSU is configured correctly with the

bandwidth(the configuration of the DSO slots(Nx64))

mismatch, this will allow the equipment to "SYNC" and

the router ports will indicate up/up, however no data

will traverse the link.

 

John, is very correct in that the DTR on the DTE device

has to be asserted for the DCE device and obviously for

the DTE device to indicate an up/up.

Howard, also brings up a good point in that framing and

encoding does relate to layer one. Question? If encoding

and framing are thought of as sub-layers of layer1, then

what parallel can be drawn to other layered tecnologies

 that would allow/indicate an active interface without all the

requirements being met. (i.e ISDN, ATM, and an IP interface)

 

Chuck, I took your comments to heart and took down a

number of of T1 customers to prove my noted few points.:->

I hope youre happy.

Nigel

 >From: "John Neiberger" >Reply-To: "John Neiberger" >To:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] >Subject: Re: serial interface down/down or up/down
[7:47101] >Date: Fri, 21 Jun 2002 01:42:20 -0400 > >This isn't quite
true. For example, a DCE router interface will be >down/down if DTR is
not raised by the DTE device. I see this quite >often at work and faulty
cabling is generally not the culprit. It's >almost always bad hardware in
the DTE. > >John > >Michael L. Williams wrote: > > According to CCIE exam
materials, the *only* time the serial will show > > down/down is when
there is NO serial cable or a bad serial cable connected. > > So even if
you have a misconfigured framing method, you should at least see > >
up/down..... > > > > Mike W. > > > > "Bob Timmons" wrote in message > >
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... > > > >>I can't say I've
ever seen a down/up condition. Up/Down perhaps. > >> > >>I'm sure there
are exceptions, but it's my belief that the router doesn't > >>care about
encoding, but rather a layer-1 connection to the dce/dte > > > > device.
> > > >>If the router can 'talk' to the device on the other end of the
cable, you > >>should get an up/x condition, where x would depend on the
csu/dsu > > > > condition > > > >>of the line. > >> > >>I don't have a
csu handy, otherwise I'd check that right now. I can do > > > > that > >
> >>tomorrow morning (10:30 pm est here), but you may have an answer
prior to > >>that... > >> > >> > >> > >>>Hi Priscilla, > >>> > >>>I have
actually had this scenario (multiple times), but due to the > >> > >
Telco's > > > >>>misconfiguration. > >>>Specifically we were expecting
b8zs/esf. Unfortunately I can't confirm > >>>which was configured
incorrectly, but I can confirm that going through > >>>all of the
different combinations available at the router you will > >>>get all
combinations on the serial interface (up/up, down/up and > >> >
>>down/down). > >> > >>>I can also confirm, you will not establish
connectivity, regardless. I > >>>believe > >>>either b8zs/esf or sf/ami
are the only valid combinations. At least that > >> > >>is > >> > >>>all
I've > >>>ever worked with. > >>> > >>>Hope this helps, > >>>-TV > >>> >
>>> > >>>""Priscilla Oppenheimer"" wrote in message >
>>>[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... > >>> > >>>>Hi Group
Study, > >>>> > >>>>While writing some questions for a practice test, I
found myself > >>>>questioning what I thought was the right answer.
Here's the scenario: > >>>> > >>>>A Cisco router serial interface is
correctly connected with a good > >>> > > V.35 > > > >>>>cable to the
data port on the DSU side of a CSU/DSU. The CSU/DSU has > >>> > >>been >
>> > >>>>misconfigured for the framing method (SF instead of ESF). The
framing > >>>>doesn't match what the provider is using. (The question
refers to a > >>> > >>>CSU/DSU > >>> > >>>>that is external to the
router, not one that is built into the > >>> > > router.) > > > >>>>Will
the Cisco router serial interface be down/down or up/down? > >>>> >
>>>>And, would the answer be any different if the question has to do with
> >>>>misconfiguring the encoding (AMI versus B8ZS)? > >>>> > >>>>If you
have real-world experience with this, that would help. I have > >>> >
>>read > >> > >>>>the Cisco documentation and the troubleshooting charts,
etc. > >>>> > >>>>Thanks > >>>> > >>>>Priscilla > >>>> >
>>>>________________________ > >>>> > >>>>Priscilla Oppenheimer >
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