98
C
HAPTER
7: LAN-
TO
-LAN R
OUTING
■
Local and remote LAN
■
WAN link between the two devices
■
Telephone numbers of each side of the connection
■
Usernames and passwords used to identify each side to the other
Configuring
LAN-to-LAN
Routing
Connecting to a remote LAN is similar to connecting to a remote user
station (with the addition of a few more parameters); remote LANs are
defined as users.
Use the following steps to configure a LAN-to-LAN routing connection:
■
Step One: Add a LAN-to-LAN user
■
Step Two: Configure the user network parameters
■
Step Three: Configure the user dial_out parameters
■
Step Four: Configure the user routing parameters
■
Step Five: Configure the user PPP parameters
■
Step Six: Configure phone numbers
■
Step Seven: Configure authentication
■
Step Eight: Save your work
Step One: Add the
LAN-to-LAN User
To add a LAN-to-LAN user, use the following command:
1
Add a user.
Add the user, password, user type “dial_out,network,” and enable the
user.
Example:
add user main_office password boston type dial_out,network
enable yes
show user <username>
2
(Optional) Set the idle timeout interval. Idle timeout specifies the time
interval a dial-out connection can remain idle before the RAS 1500
disconnects the connection. RIP (with spoofing enabled) and keep-alive
packets do not reset the idle timeout.
Summary of Contents for REMOTE ACCESS SYSTEM 1500
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Page 297: ...INDEX 295 V 90 151 W Windows 95 Dial Up Networking 89 World Wide Web WWW 285 X X 75 152 ...
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