Ppp Operational Background; Applications - Patton electronics IM2RC/I-100B User Manual

Ethernet bridge module
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3.0 PPP OPERATIONAL BACKGROUND

PPP is a protocol used for multi-plexed transport over a point-to-point
link. PPP operates on all full duplex media, and is a symmetric peer-to-
peer protocol, which can be broken into three main components: 1. A
standard method to encapsulate datagrams over serial links; 2. A Link
Control Protocol (LCP) to establish, configure, and test the data-link con-
nection; 3. A family of Network Control Protocols (NCPs) to establish and
configure different network layer protocols.
In order to establish communications over a point-to-point link, each end
of the PPP link must first announce its capabilities and agree on the
parameters of the link's operation. This exchange is facilitated through
LCP Configure-Request packets.
Once the link has been established and optional facilities have been
negotiated, PPP will attempt to establish a network protocol. PPP will
use Network Control Protocol (NCP) to choose and configure one or
more network layer protocols. Once each of the network layer protocols
have been configured, datagrams from the established network layer
protocol can be sent over the link. The link will remain configured for
these communications until explicit LCP or NCP packets close the link
down, or until some external event occurs.
The PPP Bridging Control Protocol (BCP), defined in RFC 1638, config-
ures and enables/disables the bridge protocol on both ends of the point-
to-point link. BCP uses the same packet exchange mechanism as the
Link Control Protocol (LCP). BCP is a Network Control Protocol of PPP,
bridge packets may not be exchanged until PPP has reached the net-
work layer protocol phase.

3.1 APPLICATIONS

In situations where a routed network requires connectivity to a remote
Ethernet network, the interface on router can be configured as a PPP IP
Half Bridge. The serial line to the remote bridge functions as Virtual
Ethernet interface, effectively bridge functions as a Virtual Ethernet inter-
face, effectively extending the routers serial port connection to the
remote network. The bridge device sends bridge packets (BPDU's) to the
router's serial interface. The router will receive the layer three address
information and will forward these packets based on its IP address.
Figure 2 on page 9 shows a typical Cisco router with a serial interface
configured as a PPP Half Bridge. The router serial interface uses a
remote device that supports PPP bridging to functions as a node on the
remote Ethernet network. the serial interface on the Cisco will have an IP
address on the same Ethernet subnet as the bridge.
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