When
you configure an interface, you are specifying the properties for
a physical interface descriptor. In most cases, the physical interface
descriptor corresponds to a single physical device and consists of
the following parts:
The interface name, which defines the media type
The slot in which the Flexible PIC Concentrator (FPC)
is located
The location on the FPC in which the PIC is installed
The PIC port
The channel and logical unit numbers of the interface
(optional)
Each physical interface descriptor can contain
one or more logical interface descriptors. These allow you to map
one or more logical (or virtual) interfaces to a single physical device.
Creating multiple logical interfaces is useful for ATM, Frame Relay,
and Gigabit Ethernet networks, in which you can associate multiple
virtual circuits, data-link connections, or virtual LANs (VLANs) with
a single interface device.
Each logical interface descriptor can have one
or more family descriptors to define the protocol family that it is
associated with and are allowed to run over the logical interface. The following protocol families are supported:
Internet
Protocol version 4 (IPv4)
Internet
Protocol version 6 (IPv6)
Circuit cross-connect (CCC)
Translational cross-connect
(TCC)
International
Organization for Standardization (ISO)
Multilink Frame Relay (MLFR)
Multilink PPP (MLPPP)
Multiprotocol
Label Switching (MPLS)
Trivial Network Protocol (TNP)
Each family descriptor can have one or more
address entries, which associate a network address with a logical
interface and hence with the physical interface.
You configure the various interface descriptors
as follows:
Configure the physical interface descriptor by including
the interfaces interface-namestatement.
Configure the logical interface descriptor by including
the unit statement within the interfaces interface-namestatement.
Configure the family descriptor by including the family statement within the unit statement.
Configure address entries by including the
address statement within the family statement.
Configure tunnels by including the tunnel statement within the unit statement.