.: Cisco CCNA / CCNP Certification Exam: Frame Relay Encapsulation Types

By:Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933

Category:Home / Computers / Computer Certification

When you're studying to pass the Cisco CCNA and CCNP certification exams, you quickly learn that there's always something else to learn. (You'll really pick up on this in your CCIE studies, trust me!) Today we'll take a look at an often-overlooked topic in Frame Relay, the encapsulation type. You don't exactly change this on a daily basis in production networks (not if you want to stay employed, anyway!), but it's an important exam topic that you must be familiar with.



The DCE and DTE must agree on the LMI type, but there's another value that must be agreed upon by the two DTEs serving as the endpoints of the VC. The Frame encapsulation can be left at the default of Cisco (which is Cisco-proprietary), or it can be changed to the industry-standard IETF, as shown below. If a non-Cisco router is the remote endpoint, IETF encapsulation must be used. Note that the default of Cisco isn't listed as an option by IOS Help, so you better know that one by heart!



R1(config)#int s0



R1(config-if)#encap frame ?


ietf Use RFC1490/RFC2427 encapsulation






R1(config-if)#encap frame ietf



What if a physical interface is in use and some remote hosts require Cisco encapsulation and others require IETF? The encapsulation type can be configured on a per-PVC basis as well. One encap type can be used on the interface, and any map statements that require a different encap type can have that specified in the appropriate map statement. In the following example, all PVCs will use the default Cisco encapsulation type except for PVC 115. The frame map statement using that PVC has ietf specified.



R1(config)#int s0/0



R1(config-if)#encap frame



R1(config-if)#frame map ip 172.12.123.3 123 broadcast



R1(config-if)#frame map ip 172.12.123.2 122 ietf broadcast



show frame map shows us that the mapping to DLCI 123 is using Cisco encapsulation, and DLCI 122 is using IETF.



R1#show frame map



Serial0 (up): ip 172.12.123.3 dlci 123(0x7B,0x1CB0), static


broadcast, CISCO, status defined, active



Serial0 (up): ip 172.12.123.2 dlci 122(0x7B,0x1CB0), static


broadcast, ietf, status defined, active



Just remember that Cisco is the default, and all PVCs will use Cisco unless you specify IETF in the frame map statement itself. You could also change the entire interface to use IETF for all mappings with the frame-relay encapsulation IETF command. For Cisco exams, as well as work on production networks, it's always a good idea to know more than one way to do something!

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Article keywords: ccna, ccnp, cisco, certification, frame, relay, ietf, pvc, router, serial, interface, exam, pass

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Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933, is the owner of The Bryant Advantage, home of free CCNA and CCNP tutorials, The Ultimate CCNA Study Package, and Ultimate CCNP Study Packages.

You can also join his RSS feed and visit his blog, which is updated several times daily with new Cisco certification articles, free tutorials, and daily CCNA / CCNP exam questions! Details are on the website.

For a FREE copy of his latest e-books, “How To Pass The CCNA” and “How To Pass The CCNP”, visit the website and download your free copies. You can also get FREE CCNA and CCNP exam questions every day! And coming in 2007 -- Microsoft Vista certification from The Bryant Advantage!





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