Frame Relay
About Frame Relay
Frame Relay is a widely used wide-area network technology that uses packet switching to define the physical and data connection levels of digital telecommunications channels.
Frame Relay for voice (VoFR) and data is a typical encapsulation method used between local area networks (LANs) over a wide area network (WAN). To a Frame Relay node, each end user is given a private connection (or leased line). All widely used WAN protocols for end users are transparent to how the Frame Relay network manages the transmission over a constantly shifting channel.
Why is Frame Relay important?
Frame relay transmits data in a unit of variable size known as a frame and leaves it up to the endpoints to do any necessary error correction or resend. Data transfer is sped up by this method. The network offers a persistent virtual circuit for the majority of services (PVC).
Who should take the Frame Relay Exam?
- IT managers, senior executives, executives
- Network Professionals
- CCNA Students
Frame Relay Certification Course Outline
- Overview of Frame relay
- Configuring the Frame-Relay Switch using the Connect Command
- Configuring the LMI Types
- The Status of the PVCs
- Configuring Frame-Relay Multipoint Sub-Interfaces
- Understanding the Frame-Relay Inverse-ARP
- Issues with EIGRP
- The OSPF Network Type
- The OSPF Neighbor Command
- Solving the DR Issue
- The OSPF Point-to-Multipoint Network Type
- Configuring Frame Relay point-to-point Sub-Interfaces