Enterasys csx200 用户手册

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CSX200 Firmware Support
CSX200 Installation Guide
2-7
The ANSI standard defines a mechanism for the network to signal the existence of congestion, 
called Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) bits. Frame Relay uses FECN (Forward ECN) and 
BECN (Backward ECN) bits to notify end user devices about network congestion. Although the 
Frame Relay Protocol does not respond to congestion, some higher layer protocols for end-user 
devices may respond to ECNs by recognizing that delays have increased, or that frames have been 
dropped.
Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)
PPP is a data link layer industry standard WAN protocol for transferring multi-protocol data traffic 
over point-to-point connections. With this protocol, options such as security, data compression, 
and network protocols can be negotiated over the connection. Data compression allows Frame 
Relay to negotiate compression over Frame Relay permanent virtual circuits (PVCs). Frame Relay 
is a packet-switching data communications protocol that statistically multiplexes many data 
conversations over a single transmission link. 
The CSX200 supports synchronous PPP over an ISDN WAN port (WPIM-S/T). In Single Link 
Mode, PPP uses one ISDN B channel for data transmission. PPP runs over each ISDN B channel 
for two separate conversations (split B channel). In Multi-Link Protocol mode, PPP 
simultaneously sends and receives data over two ISDN B channels on the same connection to 
optimize bandwidth usage. The STAC Electronics Stacker LZS Compression Protocol is supported 
over PPP, providing up to 4:1 data compression.
PAP and CHAP Security
The CSX200 supports the Password Authentication Protocol (PAP) and Challenge Handshake 
Authentication Protocol (CHAP) under PPP. 
PAP provides verification of passwords between devices using a two-way handshake. One device 
(peer) sends the system name and password to the other device (authenticator). Then the 
authenticator checks the peer’s password against the configured remote peer’s password and 
returns acknowledgment.
CHAP is more secure than PAP as unencrypted passwords are not sent across the network. CHAP 
uses a 3-way handshake and supports full or half-duplex operation. In half-duplex operation, the 
authenticator device challenges the peer device by generating a CHAP challenge. The challenge 
contains an MD5 algorithm with a random number that your encrypted password and system 
name. The peer device then applies a one-way hash algorithm to the random number and returns 
this encrypted information along with the system name in the CHAP response. The authenticator 
then runs the same algorithm and compares the result with the expected value. This authentication 
method depends upon a password or secret, known only to both ends locally.