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Bridging Services
Page 29-14
Bridging Services
All Frame Relay Virtual Circuits (VCs) belong to a service, whether it be a Bridge, Router, or 
Trunk service. By default, a virtual circuit belongs to a bridge service. No configuration is 
necessary for a VC to support bridging on Group 1. However, configuration is necessary for a 
VC to support Frame Relay Routing, Trunking, or Bridging on a Group other than Group 1.
For bridging there is a one-to-one map between Frame Relay virtual circuits and switch virtual 
ports. When data is received from a virtual circuit at the physical port level it automatically 
maps to the corresponding virtual port. For example, if Frame Relay virtual circuit 16 maps to 
virtual port 8, then all incoming data on this circuit would be incoming data on switch virtual 
port 8. And if virtual circuit 17 maps to virtual port 9, then all incoming data would be on 
virtual port 9. 
One-to-One Mapping Between Virtual Ports and Virtual Circuits
Frame Relay bridging uses standard Spanning Tree as defined in 802.1d. Typically, one bridge 
port within the WAN will act as the designated root bridge (and may be the actual root 
bridge) and maintain a single path through the Frame Relay network. To avoid duplication 
and loops, some paths will not be allowed.
As far as Spanning Tree is concerned, the virtual ports that map off a Frame Relay physical 
port are 
LAN
 ports. Each port will come up as default bridging on 
VLAN 1
.
A unique aspect of Frame Relay bridging is that 
MAC
 addresses must be learned for each 
DLCI
 
and for each virtual port. So, although the virtual circuits map directly to virtual ports, the 
bridge must still learn their 
MAC
 addresses separately. Also, Frame Relay 
BPDUs
 do not have 
MAC
 addresses.
One of the disadvantages of bridging in Frame Relay is that broadcasts must be sent across all 
virtual circuits that are associated with a given physical port for a given group. This require-
ment can create duplication across the Frame Relay network. At the extreme, on a full T1 line 
with 96 virtual circuits defined, 96 copies of each broadcast would have to be sent for the 
same Group. When using access rates at the higher end of the Frame Relay spectrum, you 
could separate virtual circuits into separate Groups to decrease the size of each broadcast 
domain. Or, you could use a Routing (
IP
 or 
IPX
) or Trunking configuration to more efficiently 
manage the data flow.
Data on VC 16
WSX
Physical
Port
Virtual
Port 8
Virtual
Port 9
Data on VC 17
Omni Switch/Router