
Getting Started
114062 Rev. B
1-3
In addition, you should have read Configuring Routers and done the following:
• Selected a COM, MCT1, or MCE1 port and configured a leased interface only
(dial backup or bandwidth-on-demand service only). When you configure
dial-up circuits, you designate these leased interfaces as dial backup primaries
or bandwidth circuits. You do not need to do this for dial-on-demand service,
even if you configure demand circuits to use bandwidth-on-demand service.
• Opened a configuration file.
• Selected the router hardware modules, if this is a local mode configuration.
Chapter 2 of this manual lists the types of leased lines that you can select.
Refer to Configuring Routers for instructions on setting up leased interfaces.
Setting Up a Dial Service
Each dial service has many configurable parameters, but for a basic configuration,
you change only a subset of these parameters.
Setting up a dial service involves three main tasks:
1. Enabling a physical interface
2. Creating line pools
3. Assigning and configuring circuits that use the configured line pools
Each task involves several steps.
T
able 1-2 on page 1-4 lists the basic tasks required to set up a dial service. These
tasks apply to modem and ISDN configurations. This basic configuration assumes
the following:
• Your router interfaces are synchronous.
• PPP is the layer 2 protocol.
• IP is the layer 3 protocol.
• There is no ISDN caller ID service; therefore, no incoming phone list is
required.
This basic configuration does not address every application.
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