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jamesleecoleman wrote: » Yea, I still don't understand. Sorry.
wbosher wrote: » I think Jeremy summed up DLCIs the best in CBT Nuggets. He said to think of DLCIs like the gates at an airport terminal. When you board the plane (the FR cloud) you leave at gate 100 (DLCI 100), when you land at your destination, you exit the plane (the FR cloud) on gate 200 (DLCI 200). You not going to DLCI 200. When configuring DLCIs on a router you always map the remote IP address to the local DLCI, the one you are using to enter the FR cloud, not the one you exit out of at the other end. If you can, I would suggest watching that video. It makes it really clear and easy to understand.
pham0329 wrote: » The Local/Global DLCI is just a term that we use to make it easier when documenting...it's not a type of DLCI. As such, there isn't a command that would show you whether a DLCI was "Global" or "Local"....it's all the same to the router. Just think of a global DLCI as an ip address. If R1 has to contact R2, we would configure R1 to use R2's global DLCI.
pham0329 wrote: » Well, I guess my response would be, does it matter? Does it change the way the packet travels in any way? In any case, it depends on how the network is documented. For example, if you have a network diagram with "100" above R1, and "200" above R2, chances are, you're looking at global DLCIs
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