
Configuring Network Booting
114074 Rev. A 4-19
Creating the BOOTP Client Interface Table
The upstream router is a booting router’s next-hop router. By default, the booting
router’s synchronous interfaces automatically try to get IP addresses from the
upstream router. This is the EZ-Install process.
If the AN/ANH using EZ-Install gets its address from the upstream router, and the
upstream router’s interface to the AN/ANH is a Frame Relay group access PVC,
you must use Site Manager to connect to the upstream router and create a BOOTP
client interface table (in addition to a BOOTP relay agent forwarding table).
The BOOTP client interface table allows you to specify and pair the IP address of
the AN/ANH with the DLCI of the Frame Relay group access PVC.
For more information about the DLCI and Frame Relay, refer to Configuring
Frame Relay Services.
To create the BOOTP client interface table, begin at the BOOTP Relay Agent
Interface Table window (
refer to Figure 4-6) and proceed as follows:
1. Click on Client I/F.
The BOOTP Client Interface Table window appears
(Figure 4-9).
Note: You do not need to create a BOOTP client interface table if the Frame
Relay PVC is configured to operate in direct access mode, or if the circuit is
configured to operate with the Bay Networks Standard (HDLC encapsulation)
protocol.
Note: If you are using EZ-Install over Frame Relay to boot an AN, you can
have up to 20 PVCs for a single Frame Relay interface on the upstream router.
If you have more than 20 PVCs on the interface where EZ-Install is occurring,
the EZ-Install process may fail. To ensure that the process does not fail,
configure no more than 20 PVCs for a Frame Relay interface.
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