3com S330 Manuale Utente

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A
PPENDIX
 B: P
ATH
B
UILDER
 S330/S310 M
ODULE
 
AND
 A
PPLICATION
 O
VERVIEW
Segmentation
Once it is determined that a packet should go across the bridge, the packet is 
encapsulated per RFC 1483 and a pad and trailer conforming to AAL5 (ATM 
Adaption Layer 5) is added at the end of the packet. See Figure 166. The trailer is 
fixed at eight bytes and contains information such as the new length of the packet 
and cyclic redundancy check bytes (CRC facilitates error checking at the receive 
end). The pad is set to 0 to 47 bytes to make the full packet length including the 
trailer divisible by 48 bytes. The packet with the RFC 1483 encapsulation is then 
segmented into 48-byte (384-bit) cells by the SAR function.
Figure 166   AAL5 Pad and Trailer
The cells are assigned to a virtual circuit defined between the incoming and 
outgoing ports based on the destination address of the original packet. A 5-byte 
header containing the virtual circuit assignment, along with other information, is 
added to each cell. The cells are queued in the output FIFO (First In First Out 
memory) of the Ethernet based on the bandwidth and quality of service 
requirements assigned to the virtual circuit at configuration. The FIFO provides 
elastic storage between the Ethernet and the CTX.
Reassembly
When the CTX receives a cell from the T1/E1 UNI interface, it broadcasts it to the 
Ethernet port. As cells are received by the reassembler, their headers are read to 
determine if they belong to the port. If so, the header is stripped and the cell is 
stored in memory, appended to the previous ones for that virtual circuit. The 
system also looks for the AAL5 trailer that signifies the end of a packet. When it 
finds a trailer, it performs the CRC calculation, checks the length of the cells since 
the previous trailer to be sure no cells were missed, strips the trailer, appends the 
cell to the others to reform the original packet, and sends the packet through the 
Ethernet interface to the LAN.
Typical Ethernet and
Voice Application
Configurations
A typical Ethernet and voice application configuration involves multiple 
PathBuilder S330s connected through an ATM network that could consist of 
simply an ATM switch or of an ATM network consisting of multiple switches. 
Figure 167 shows the latter configuration.
Ethernet Packet
PAD  
(0-47 Bytes)
Reserved  
2 Bytes
Length  
2 Bytes
CRC 
4 Bytes
Trailer