I have her book (second edition) and I think she agrees with John. She says 
this about the LES:

LES: The node that keeps the mapping from MAC address to ATM address. A LEC 
registers its own (MAC, ATM) address with the LES and finds out the ATM 
address of other LECs by asking the LES. A LES supports one ELAN. A LES 
maintains a point-to-multipoint VC from itself to all LECs in the ELAN.

(She doesn't say that the LES sits in the middle between LEC conversations).

On the next page, she gets into the rest of the story and says "the LEC 
asks the LES for the ATM address corresponding to layer 2 address D. When 
it finds out (from the LES), the LEC establishes a VC to that ATM address, 
and future packets for D are forwarded over that VC.

To send a multicast (or broadcast), the LEC must find the ATM address of 
the BUS. It finds that by asking the LES for the ATM address of 
FFFFFFFFFFFF. The LEC then establishes a VC to the BUS.... When a LEC sends 
it a packet to multicast, the BUS retransmits the packet onto the 
point-to-multipoint VC.

In other words, Radia agrees with all the other experts. Not a big surprise 
there! ;-)

Priscilla

At 10:36 AM 12/13/01, John Neiberger wrote:
>I don't have her book available so I can't comment directly on the
>content.  However, read through the following document:
>
>http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios120/12cgcr/switch_c/xcprt7/xcovlane.htm
>
>
>What out for line wrap on that one.
>
>You can see that once the LEC has resolved the address of the remote
>LEC to which it wants to communicate, a bi-directional data direct VCC
>is setup and all data flow *directly* between the two LANE clients.  The
>LES gets involved when a LEC wants to join an ELAN and when address
>resolution is required.  Beyond that it doesn't do much.
>
>Regards,
>John
>
> >>> "nettable_walker"  12/13/01 7:14:12 AM
> >>>
>12/13/2001   8:15am  Thursday
>
>I am really stumped --- Radia Perlman's book seem to say the oposite of
>what
>you are saying --- page 289
>
>
>  HELP !!!
>
>
>
>""John Neiberger""  wrote in message
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > No.  Once SVCs are setup between the LECs, traffic flows
> > directly between them without the use of the LES.  The LES
> > facilitates the initial connections but is not involved in the
> > traffic flow after the end-to-end SVC is in place.
> >
> > I think. :-)  You may want to double check that answer.  It's
> > been a while since I've even thought about LANE.
> >
> > Regards,
> > John
> >
> > ---- On Wed, 12 Dec 2001, nettable_walker
> > ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> >
> > > 12/12/2001   10:45pm  Wednesday
> > >
> > > Professionals,
> > >
> > > Is the LES a transit point for all traffic between LEC's ?
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> > >
> > > Richard
> > >
> > > //
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > >
> > >
> >
> >
> > ________________________________________________
> > Get your own "800" number
> > Voicemail, fax, email, and a lot more
> > http://www.ureach.com/reg/tag
________________________

Priscilla Oppenheimer
http://www.priscilla.com




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