03-10-2008 11:21 AM - edited 03-05-2019 09:39 PM
Can someone please explain if DLSW ER+ transport mechanism encapsulates the SNA packets into IP or using Layer 2 communication?
thnx...
03-10-2008 11:35 AM
Ax man:
What the heck is DLSW ER+?? Never heard of it...
As far as DLSW+ is concerned, the short answer to your question is both.
The long answer is as follows...
SSP is used. Switch-to-Switch Protocol (SSP) is a protocol used between DLSw nodes (routers) to establish connections, locate resources, forward data, and handle flow control and error recovery. This is truly the essence of DLSw.
In general, SSP does not provide for full routing between nodes because this is generally handled by common routing protocols such as RIP, OSPF, or IGRP/EIGRP. Instead, SSP switches packets at the SNA data link layer.
It also encapsulates packets in TCP/IP for transport over IP-based networks and uses TCP as a means of reliable transport between DLSw nodes.
HTH
If so, please rate my post.
Victor
03-10-2008 12:25 PM
Thanks for your response..DLSw+ ER is ethernet redundancy, that works a bit different from the usual bridged DLSw..
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