Juniper Networks
Log in
|
How to Buy
|
Contact Us
|
United States (Change)
Choose Country
Close

Choose Country

North America

  • United States

Europe

  • Deutschland - Germany
  • España - Spain
  • France
  • Italia - Italy
  • Россия - Russia
  • United Kingdom

Asia Pacific

  • Asean Region (Vietnam, Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia)
  • Australia
  • 中国 - China
  • India
  • 日本 - Japan
  • 대한민국 - Korea
  • 台灣 - Taiwan
Solutions
Products & Services
Company
Partners
Support
Education
Community
Security Intelligence Center

Technical Documentation

Support
Technical Documentation
Content Explorer New
 
Enterprise MIBs
 
EOL Documentation
 
Feature Explorer Login required New
 
File Format Help
 
Glossary
 
Portable Libraries
 
 
Home > Support > Technical Documentation > JunosE Software > OAM Elements Overview
Print
Rate and give feedback:  Feedback Received. Thank You!
Rate and give feedback: 
Close
This document helped resolve my issue.  Yes No

Additional Comments

800 characters remaining

May we contact you if necessary?

Name:  
E-mail: 
Submitting...
 

Related Documentation

  • OAM Feature Overview
  • OAM Messages
 

OAM Elements Overview

IEEE 802.3ah defines OAM procedures for a single point-to-point Ethernet link. Ethernet OAM is a slow protocol with limited bandwidth requirements. The frame transmission rate is limited to a maximum of 10 frames per second. As a result, the impact of OAM on normal operations is negligible. However, when link monitoring is enabled, the CPU must poll error counters frequently. In this case, the required processor memory and usage are proportional to the number of interfaces that have to be polled.

Two major elements, the OAM client and the OAM sublayer, make up the Ethernet OAM. The OAM sublayer resides above the MAC layer and below the logical link control (LLC) layer. The OAM sublayer presents a MAC data interface to MAC clients and an OAM client interface to OAM clients. Figure 1 shows the OAM sublayer interfaces. For effective interoperation and enhanced collaboration with 802.3ad link aggregation, the OAM sublayer exists below the LAG bundle. The LAG bundle is present between the OAM sublayer and the MAC client.

Figure 1: OAM Sublayer Interfaces

OAM Sublayer Interfaces

The following sections describe the OAM elements:

  • OAM Client
  • OAM Sublayer
 

Related Documentation

  • OAM Feature Overview
  • OAM Messages
 

Published: 2012-06-26

 
  • About Juniper
  • Investor Relations
  • Press Releases
  • Newsletters
  • Juniper Offices
  • Green Networking
  • Resources
  • How to Buy
  • Partner Locator
  • Image Library
  • Visio Templates
  • Security Center
  • Community
  • Forums
  • Blogs
  • Junos Central
  • Social Media
  • Developers
  • Support
  • Technical Documentation
  • Knowledge Base (KB)
  • Software Downloads
  • Product Licensing
  • Contact Support
Site Map / RSS Feeds / Careers / Accessibility / Feedback / Privacy & Policy / Legal Notices
Copyright© 1999-2012 Juniper Networks, Inc. All rights reserved.
Help
|
My Account
|
Log Out