Lucent Technologies 6000 User Manual

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MAX 6000/3000 Network Configuration Guide
Configuring IPX Routing
Introduction to IPX routing
identify callers. For that reason, use PAP and CHAP, which require password authentication, 
unless you configure IP routing in the same Connection profile. 
Note:
If you have a MAX unit running Multiband Simulation, disable IPX routing.
IPX Service Advertising Protocol (SAP) tables
A MAX unit follows standard IPX SAP behavior for routers. However, when it connects to 
another Lucent INS unit configured for IPX routing, the two units exchange their entire SAP 
tables. Each unit immediately adds all remote services to its SAP table.
NetWare servers broadcast SAP packets every 60 seconds to make sure that routers (such as a 
MAX unit) know about their services. Each router builds a SAP table with an entry for each 
service advertised by each known server. When a router stops receiving SAP broadcasts from a 
server, it ages its SAP-table entry for that server and eventually removes it from the table.
Routers use SAP tables to respond to client queries. When a NetWare client sends a SAP 
request to locate a service, the MAX unit consults its SAP table and replies with its own 
hardware address and the internal address of the requested server. The process is analogous to 
proxy ARP in an IP environment. The client then transmits packets whose destination address 
is the internal address of the server. When the MAX unit receives the packets, it consults its 
RIP table. If it finds an entry for their destination address, it brings up the connection or 
forwards the packets across the active connection.
IPX Routing Information Protocol (RIP) tables
A MAX unit follows standard IPX RIP behavior for routers when connecting to non-Lucent 
units. However, when two Lucent INS units configured for IPX routing connect, they 
immediately exchange their entire RIP tables. In addition, each unit maintains the imported 
RIP entries as static until you reset or power cycle the unit. If the remote device to which the 
MAX connects is a non-Lucent router, the MAX ages and removes the imported entries from 
its routing table. The WAN link disconnects.
Note:
In this chapter, RIP always refers to IPX RIP. IPX RIP is similar to the routing 
information protocol in the TCP/IP protocol suite, but it is a different protocol.
The destination of an IPX route is the internal network of a server. For example, the network 
administrator assigns NetWare file servers an internal IPX network number, and the servers 
typically use the default node address of 000000000001. This is the destination network 
address for file read/write requests. (If you are not familiar with internal network numbers, see 
your NetWare documentation for details.) 
IPX routers broadcast RIP updates both periodically and each time you establish a WAN 
connection. The MAX receives RIP broadcasts from a remote device, increments the hop 
count of each advertised route, updates its own RIP table, and broadcasts updated RIP packets 
on connected networks in a split-horizon fashion. 
A MAX unit recognizes network number –2 (0xFFFFFFFE) as the IPX RIP default route. 
When the unit receives a packet for an unknown destination, it forwards the packet to the IPX 
router advertising the default route. For example, if the unit receives an IPX packet destined 
for network 77777777, and it does not have a RIP-table entry for that destination, it forwards 
the packet toward network number FFFFFFFE, if available, instead of simply dropping the