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About the CyberSWITCH 100 Router
14 CyberSWITCH 100 Advanced User Information
Operation of the CyberSWITCH 100 is influenced by routing and bridging controls and filters set 
during router configuration as well as automatic spoofing and filtering performed by the 
CyberSWITCH 100. General IP routing, and routing or bridging from specific remote routers are 
controls set during the configuration process. Spoofing and filtering, which minimize the number 
of packets across the WAN, are performed automatically by the CyberSWITCH 100. For example, 
RIP routing packets and certain NetBEUI packets are spoofed even if only bridging is enabled. 
IEEE 802.1d Bridging —
The CyberSWITCH 100 supports the IEEE 802.1d standard for LAN 
to LAN bridging. Bridging is provided over PPP as well as adjacent LAN ports. The bridging 
software uses transparent bridging. Configured as a bridge, the unit bridges data packets to the 
destination, regardless of the network protocols used.   
Also included is the Spanning Tree Protocol allowing the CyberSWITCH 100 to provide bridging 
redundancy while preventing data loops and duplicate data. This is a learning bridge; i.e., the 
bridge builds and updates an address table with each MAC source address and associated 
information when the packets are received.
IP and IPX Routing
IP Routing —
IP rrouting support provides the ability to process TCP/IP frames at the network 
layer for routing. IP routing support includes the Routing Information Protocol (RIP) that allows 
the exchange of routing information on a TCP/IP network. The router receives and broadcasts RIP 
messages to adjacent routers and workstations. Since IP sends out periodic RIP frames that could 
keep dial-up links permanently connected, filtering and spoofing are performed to minimize these 
broadcasts on the WAN links. The router filters service packets on one end and emulates them at 
the other end with spoofing. The router uses the “piggyback method” to send RIP update packets 
to the WAN port. The piggyback method means that RIP update packets are sent only when the 
dial-up link is established because of data traffic.
Network Information Diagrams
It is helpful to draw a diagram (see Figure 2 on the following page) including all locations, 
addresses, router names, etc. This section includes sample diagrams needed to configure the 
CyberSWITCH 100. You may need different addressing information depending on whether you 
are configuring IP routing and/or NetWare IPX routing.
TCP/IP Route Addresses —
If the CyberSWITCH 100 is to direct IP traffic over the ISDN 
connection, the routing table in the CyberSWITCH 100 must be “seeded” with static IP routes so 
that it dials out to the appropriate remote router when IP traffic is targeted to networks and stations