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Serial Interfaces Overview
Devices that communicate over a serial interface
are divided into two classes: data terminal equipment (DTE) and data
circuit-terminating equipment (DCE). Juniper Networks Serial Physical
Interface Cards (PICs) have two ports per PIC and support full-duplex
data transmission. These PICs support DTE mode only. On the Serial
PIC, you can configure three types of serial interfaces:
- EIA-530—An Electronics Industries Alliance (EIA)
standard for the interconnection of DTE and DCE using serial binary
data interchange with control information exchanged on separate control
circuits.
- V.35—An ITU-T standard describing a synchronous,
physical layer protocol used for communications between a network
access device and a packet network. V.35 is most commonly used in
the United States and in Europe.
- X.21—An ITU-T standard for serial communications
over synchronous digital lines. The X.21 protocol is used primarily
in Europe and Japan.
The following standards apply to serial interfaces:
- TIA/EIA Standard 530, High-Speed 25-Position
Interface for Data Terminal Equipment and Data Circuit-Terminating
Equipment, defines the signals on the cable and specifies
the connector at the end of the cable.
- TIA/EIA Standard 232, Interface between Data
Terminal Equipment and Data Circuit-Terminating Equipment Employing
Serial Binary Data Interchange, describes the physical
interface and protocol for serial data communication.
- ITU-T Recommendation V.35, Data Transmission
at 48 kbit/s Using 60-108 kHz Group Band Circuits. Note
that the Juniper Networks Serial PIC supports V.35 interfaces with
speeds higher than 48 kilobits per second.
- ITU-T Recommendation X.21, Interface Between
Data Terminal Equipment and Data Circuit-Terminating Equipment for
Synchronous Operation on Public Data Networks.
There are no serial interface-specific logical
properties. For information about general logical properties that
you can configure, see Configuring Logical Interface Properties. On J-series
Services Routers, link fragmentation and interleaving (LFI) and Multilink
Point-to-Point Protocol (MLPPP) support has been extended to serial
interfaces. This support on serial interfaces is the same as the existing
LFI and MLPPP support on T1 and E1 interfaces.
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