I take it, 3 consecutive dots [one per line] does something to ixnay the
remainder of an email??

-----Original Message-----
From: COULOMBE, TROY 
Sent: Tuesday, January 07, 2003 5:52 PM
To: 'mlehr'; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Bridging Question? [7:60546]


Mike,

Well, we have an ATM PVC into the public cloud where the ISP later converts
it to Frame, and on our 2600 we take the frame circuit & bridge it...

here's a snippet of the configs:::

frame-router#
interface Serial0/0
 description Frame Relay to datacenter
 no ip address
 ip directed-broadcast
 encapsulation frame-relay IETF
 no ip mroute-cache
 no fair-queue
!
interface Serial0/0.1 point-to-point
 frame-relay interface-dlci 41 IETF   
 bridge-group 1

interface BVI1
 ip address xxx.xxx.125.33 255.255.255.248



and on the ATM interface [in a 6509]:::
interface ATM0
 atm preferred phy A
 atm uni-version 4.0
 atm pvc 125 2 41 aal5snap
 atm bind pvc vlan 125 125 
 no atm auto-configuration
 atm ilmi-keepalive
 no atm address-registration


-----Original Message-----
From: mlehr [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 07, 2003 5:11 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Bridging Question? [7:60546]


I have studied for and successfully tested CCNA & CCNP and now I am studying
for the CCIE written exam. At this point in my studies, I am reading up on
the subject of Bridging.  I fully understand the concept of bridging when it
comes to switches, but I am perplexed as to why a router would need to
perform a bridging function.  Obviously bridging capabilities are built into
the routers IOS but what need would prompted anyone to use this feature.  In
the other studies Bridging was not a covered subject so this is new
territory for me.



Help!

Mike L.




Message Posted at:
http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=60558&t=60546
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