Re: ISDN question. [7:71653]

2003-07-01 Thread Ronnie Higginbotham
Check you Spids they are not valid on both the router and simulator. If they
are correct issue the command clear int bri0 which will clear the bri
interface. If this doesn't work you may have to reboot your routers and
simulator.


Rajesh Kumar  wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Hello all,

 I have a practice lab setup as follows :


 R1 ( bri int ) --  ISDN switch ---
 (bri int ) -- R2.


 I have configured the ISDN simulator with Basic-ni1 settings and the
 directory #s and SPIDs for both the ports.

 The following output I see when I issue  sh isdn status

 R1.

 ==
  ISDNSW1#sh isdn status
 Global ISDN Switchtype = basic-ni
 ISDN BRI1/0 interface
 dsl 8, interface ISDN Switchtype = basic-ni
 Layer 1 Status:
 ACTIVE
 Layer 2 Status:
 TEI = 65, Ces = 1, SAPI = 0, State = MULTIPLE_FRAME_ESTABLISHED
 TEI 65, ces = 1, state = 8(established)
 spid1 configured, spid1 sent, spid1 NOT valid
 TEI Not Assigned, ces = 2, state = 1(terminal down)
 spid2 configured, spid2 NOT sent, spid2 NOT valid
 Layer 3 Status:
 0 Active Layer 3 Call(s)
 Active dsl 8 CCBs = 0
 The Free Channel Mask:  0x8003
 
 on R2

 ===
 Global ISDN Switchtype = basic-ni
 ISDN BRI1/0 interface
 dsl 8, interface ISDN Switchtype = basic-ni
 Layer 1 Status:
 ACTIVE
 Layer 2 Status:
 TEI = 64, Ces = 2, SAPI = 0, State = TEI_ASSIGNED
 TEI = 255, Ces = 1, SAPI = 0, State = ESTABLISH_AWAITING_TEI
 TEI Not Assigned, ces = 1, state = 3(await establishment)
 spid1 configured, spid1 NOT sent, spid1 NOT valid
 TEI 64, ces = 2, state = 1(terminal down)
 spid2 configured, spid2 sent, spid2 valid
 Endpoint ID Info: epsf = 0, usid = 3, tid = 1
 Layer 3 Status:
 0 Active Layer 3 Call(s)
 CCB:callid=0, sapi=0, ces=1, B-chan=0, calltype=INTERNAL (BR1/0)
 SPC Call
 Active dsl 8 CCBs = 1
 The Free Channel Mask:  0x8003
 =

 Can anybody suggest what could be the reason for this inconsistent
 output?

 Thanks,
 Rajesh




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RE: ISDN Question [7:66610]

2003-04-02 Thread Martin J.
maybe with

debug isdn q921

or debug isdn events

regards martin


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Re: ISDN Question [7:54356]

2002-09-27 Thread Russell Heilling

Christopher Dumais  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hello all,
 I have an ISDN line set up for vendor support. It is dedicated to one
 vendor. They are always the one to initiate the call, their system does
not
 allow incoming calls. They are telling me that I have to set the
thresholds
 on my router(Cisco 2620). I have never heard of the receiving side asking
 for the second connection and can't find any commands either. The only
 command I see is the dialer load-threshold command and that's for dial
out.
 Am I missing something? Any thought? Thanks in advance!

This sort of thing is possible using Bandwidth Allocation Protocol
(RFC2125).

Try this CCO URL for config info (mind the wrap)...  The option you're
interested in is ppp bap callback request.

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios120/12cgcr/dial_
c/dcbacp.htm

This is assuming that they are configured for BAP/BACP at their end though,
they may just be plain wrong in what they're asking you to do :)

--
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http://www.ccie.org.uk/




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Re: ISDN Question [7:54356]

2002-09-27 Thread Steven A. Ridder

You can use dialer-load threshold for incoming traffic as well.


Christopher Dumais  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hello all,
 I have an ISDN line set up for vendor support. It is dedicated to one
 vendor. They are always the one to initiate the call, their system does
not
 allow incoming calls. They are telling me that I have to set the
thresholds
 on my router(Cisco 2620). I have never heard of the receiving side asking
 for the second connection and can't find any commands either. The only
 command I see is the dialer load-threshold command and that's for dial
out.
 Am I missing something? Any thought? Thanks in advance!

 Chris Dumais, CCNP, CNA
 Sr. Network Administrator
 NSS Customer and Desktop Services Team
 Maine Medical Center
 (207)871-6940
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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Re: ISDN question

2001-01-24 Thread Timothy Ouellette

Mauro,

I am not an expert on this as my only experience with this particular
technology is when preparing for the bcran with an 800 series cisco
box.I do recall seeing in one the many books that i've read over the
past little while that you may assign an interface (bri) into multiple
dialer pools therefor giving it a set of characteristics for each pool
it's in. For example

Pool 1 may be setup so that when your t1 get's saturated that it brings
up the bri and calls the destination to help relieve this congestion.

Pool 2 could be setup when interesting traffic hits the interface it
brings it up in order to transmit that interesting traffic (as defined
by your access-list)

So in conclusion I don't see why you could make your bri act as a
transmitter of information to your "remote support site" as well as
being able to receive a call. I would try and check out on the cisco
site for any configs you can find.  

Tim


Mauro Conosciani wrote:
 
 I have the following situation:
 A company (alfa) needs to connect to a server inside my intra using an ISDN
 connection (they do have a 1600)
 I have a 1600 with 1 bri which is used to connect our net to a remote
 support site (beta), I have a simple dialer map that open the connection to
 this remote site whanever we need it.
 Is it possible to use my 1600 to receive the connection from company alfa as
 well  can I use one channel for call beta and the other one for
 receiving call from alfa ??
 Do I need to configure dialer interface 
 Cheers
 
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RE: isdn question

2000-11-09 Thread Sebastien Venturoso

What about put a dialer map in Router B without a number to call ?

That should work.

Regards,
Sebastien.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Brian
Sent: 09 November 2000 07:54
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: isdn question



I am trying to setup an isdn scenerio, where routerA has 1 B channel, and
routerB has 1 B channel.  routerA calls routerB, and then traffic
bi-directionally flows over the single B channel.

What i am running into though, is if I leave the dialer map off routerB,
then it complains "no dialer string" for the return path packets.  If I
put the dialer map in place, it complains "no channel available" (because
its "busy" since its already connected from answering routerA's call).

So my question is, how do you get the traffic to flow bi-directional over
a single channel, so that routerB needs no dialer map.

routerA
===
interface BRI0
 ip address 212.1.22.146 255.255.255.240
 encapsulation ppp
 bandwidth 128
 dialer wait-for-carrier-time 10
 dialer map ip 212.1.22.145 6711173
 dialer-group 1
 isdn spid1 31867111720101

ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 212.1.22.145

dialer-list 1 protocol ip permit

routerB
===
interface BRI0
 ip address 212.1.22.145 255.255.255.240
 encapsulation ppp
 bandwidth 128
 isdn spid1 31867111730101
 dialer wait-for-carrier-time 10
 dialer-group 1

ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 212.1.22.146

dialer-list 1 protocol ip permit


Thanks for any help,

Brian

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Network Administrator
ShreveNet Inc. (ASN 11881)

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RE: isdn question

2000-11-09 Thread Brian

On Thu, 9 Nov 2000, Sebastien Venturoso wrote:

 What about put a dialer map in Router B without a number to call ?
 
 That should work.

I don't believe thats valid is it?

Brian


 
 Regards,
 Sebastien.
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
 Brian
 Sent: 09 November 2000 07:54
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: isdn question
 
 
 
 I am trying to setup an isdn scenerio, where routerA has 1 B channel, and
 routerB has 1 B channel.  routerA calls routerB, and then traffic
 bi-directionally flows over the single B channel.
 
 What i am running into though, is if I leave the dialer map off routerB,
 then it complains "no dialer string" for the return path packets.  If I
 put the dialer map in place, it complains "no channel available" (because
 its "busy" since its already connected from answering routerA's call).
 
 So my question is, how do you get the traffic to flow bi-directional over
 a single channel, so that routerB needs no dialer map.
 
 routerA
 ===
 interface BRI0
  ip address 212.1.22.146 255.255.255.240
  encapsulation ppp
  bandwidth 128
  dialer wait-for-carrier-time 10
  dialer map ip 212.1.22.145 6711173
  dialer-group 1
  isdn spid1 31867111720101
 
 ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 212.1.22.145
 
 dialer-list 1 protocol ip permit
 
 routerB
 ===
 interface BRI0
  ip address 212.1.22.145 255.255.255.240
  encapsulation ppp
  bandwidth 128
  isdn spid1 31867111730101
  dialer wait-for-carrier-time 10
  dialer-group 1
 
 ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 212.1.22.146
 
 dialer-list 1 protocol ip permit
 
 
 Thanks for any help,
 
 Brian
 
 ---
 Brian Feeny, CCNP, CCDP   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Network Administrator
 ShreveNet Inc. (ASN 11881)
 
 _
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Network Administrator 
ShreveNet Inc. (ASN 11881)

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Re: ISDN question

2000-09-29 Thread Jay Hennigan

On Fri, 29 Sep 2000, Quadri, Habeeb wrote:

 Hello,
 
 I have a scenario that needs explanation from somebody who knows how ISDN
 switches work in carrier enviornment.
 Lets say, I am connected to ISDN provided by LEC (GTE) in Dallas that needs
 to be connected to a ISDN provided by Ameritech in Indy.
 Here is the question,  How long distance carrier like ATT or Sprint or
 1010288 will know that this is ISDN digital signal with 2B+D channels.

The D channel is only for communication between your ISDN equipment 
and your LEC switch, and doesn't enter into the picture on the long
distance portion of the call.  

The two B channels are considered separate calls as far as the carrier 
is concerned. 

In these days, virtually all LD telephone circuits are a 56K or 64K
digital bitstream.  There may be some long-distance circuits that can't 
hand a 64K clear channel, in which case you'll get a 56K throughput per
channel.  

-- 
Jay Hennigan  -  Network Administration  -  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
NetLojix Communications, Inc.  NASDAQ: NETX  -  http://www.netlojix.com/
WestNet:  Connecting you to the planet.  805 884-6323 

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Re: ISDN question

2000-09-29 Thread Richard A. Holland

In my understanding, the signaling will be switched to something like ss7 to
traverse the PSTN, and back at the remote ISDN switch.



Richard A. Holland
Voice/Data Integrator
Telec, Inc.
http://www.telecinc.com

CCDA,CCNP,MCSE,CSE
-Original Message-
From: Quadri, Habeeb [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Friday, September 29, 2000 4:23 PM
Subject: ISDN question


Hello,

I have a scenario that needs explanation from somebody who knows how ISDN
switches work in carrier enviornment.
Lets say, I am connected to ISDN provided by LEC (GTE) in Dallas that needs
to be connected to a ISDN provided by Ameritech in Indy.
Here is the question,  How long distance carrier like ATT or Sprint or
1010288 will know that this is ISDN digital signal with 2B+D channels.


Thanks.
Habeeb


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RE: ISDN question

2000-06-15 Thread Rampley, Jim


It depends on what type of traffic the BRI is being used for and how much
data is being sent/received.  The best thing you could do is to pull stats
off the pipeline 50 with SNMP with a tool like MRTG, Lucent VitalNet,
Concord NetHealth, HP Openview depending on your budget ;) so you can view
stats over time.

Jim

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Dave Santeramo
Sent: Monday, June 12, 2000 2:52 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: ISDN question


How many users can I reasonably connect to a ISDN BRI before I start
to see a latency issue?  I have a customer that has 60-70 customers
connected
to a pipeline P50. IMHO this is killing the ISDN connection.
Any other things I need to look out for because I am not that familiar
with ISDN.





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