Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 7 - Wide Area Networks: Frame Relay

Frame relay is the connectionless version of X.25, and instead of using LCN it uses a Data
Link Connection Identifier (DLCI). The carrier company (or companies) provides Layer 1 and
2 services for your data. In other words, you have a frame relay connection into which you
pump data and extract the same. Frame relay’s speeds start out at (typically) 64 Kbps and
can go as high as you have the pocket money to afford. Though frame relay in theory
offers switched circuits (like X.25), currently most connections are not switched but are
rather permanent virtual circuits. These connections are point to point as far as the user is
concerned, but the actual routing and number of nodes varies and is unknown to the user.
The customer is given a Committed Information Rate (CIR), for which he or she pays a
tariff. Normally, the user chooses the CIR at the average data rate of his or her traffic. As
long as traffic is below the CIR, packets will not be discarded. As the data rate goes above
the CIR, a best effort will be made to deliver the packets. The user’s Layer 4 functions will
discover the discarded packets. At some predetermined rate above the CIR all of the user’s
packets are discarded if there is congestion on the network. Discarded packets are the
frame relay network’s way of saying it is becoming congested. Frame relay may very well be
used to connect corporate LANs, and the present-day cost per single channel is low enough
for industrial usage, particularly if the frame relay DDS is used. Frame relay DDS provides 56
Kbps with no CIR, using the Digital Dataphone-type tariffs (actually fractional T1 now), and
it provides this service typically at the monthly cost of a business telephone line.

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