Avaya M-ACCF/SF Manual Do Utilizador

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Chapter 1
Overview
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Avaya M770 M-ACCF/SF ATM Access Modules User’s Guide
Physical Layer
The physical layer is responsible for transmitting and receiving ATM cells over a 
physical medium. It is also responsible for checking the integrity of the bits being 
transferred over a physical media, and for making sure that they are error-free. 
The ATM access module is compliant with both SONET STS-3c and SDH STM-1 
physical layer standards. 
These standards are similar, and most devices allow you to use either framing 
standard on each link in the ATM network.The same framing standard must be 
used at each end of the link.
Many users prefer to use the same framing standard throughout their network (for 
example SONET STS-3c).
The physical layer is sub-divided into:
Path
 — SONET and SDH are capable of carrying traffic for a number of upper 
layers, and ATM is only one of those layers. Each upper layer uses its own Path 
through the SONET/SDH layer.
Line
 — A line is the whole path between one ATM device and the adjacent ATM 
switch or ATM end-station. 
Extending VLANs into the ATM Network
You can use LAN Emulation to define and extend VLANs seamlessly through the 
ATM network, as shown in the example in Figure 1.17.
Traffic from one Emulated LAN (ELAN) is not seen on another ELAN as they are 
logically separate domains. For this reason, when you plan your network, you 
should consider what ELANs you require, and how the VLANs will map to these 
ELANs.
The ATM access module has a LEC for each of the Switch’s 16 VLANS, and each 
VLAN/LEC can be mapped onto an ELAN. In this way, Ethernet traffic is mapped 
to an ELAN by a VLAN-to-LEC association. The mapping of VLANs to ELANs is 
shown in Figure 1.16.
When an Ethernet device attached to a Switch generates traffic, the Switch forwards 
the frames to the appropriate port.
A unicast frame is only forwarded to a port if the address of the destination device 
is known to be on that port and the destination port is in the same VLAN as the 
source port. If a unicast frame is forwarded to the ATM port, the ATM port uses the 
destination MAC address to identify the ATM connection to use.
A broadcast or multicast frame is forwarded to all ports in the same VLAN as the 
source port. If a frame is received by the ATM port, the ATM port forwards it to the 
BUS for the associated VLAN.