On Mon, Jul 14, 1997 at 11:48:31AM -0700, Stephen Stuart wrote:
For example, (and yes, I know there's a world of difference) a MLPPP link is at (effectively) layer 2 (if not 1.5), and if one side of the link drops, the other side will carry what it can.
That is what happens within an aggregate. The multi-link PPP channel corresponds to an "aggregate" in the terminology that I am using.
Ok. Got that.
The topic being discussed is not what happens within an aggregate, but what happens when two aggregates are using. This would be akin to having two multi-link PPP connections (each constructed out of some number of physical links).
Ok, then a fair description of the problem is that "circuits cannot be aggregated across multiple switch chassis". And that's not, in and of itself, bad component design. However, it pretty apparently limits the ability to make the best use of your circuits in your system design... or Mae West wouldn't have taken last Friday morning off. Cheers, -- jra -- Jay R. Ashworth jra@baylink.com Member of the Technical Staff Unsolicited Commercial Emailers Sued The Suncoast Freenet "People propose, science studies, technology Tampa Bay, Florida conforms." -- Dr. Don Norman +1 813 790 7592