User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- 1. Getting started
- 2. Introduction
- 3. Preparation
- 4. About the terminal
- 5. Mounting and installing the terminal
- 6. Connecting to the terminal
- 7. Managing the terminal
- 8. Configuring the terminal
- 9. Configuring the traffic interfaces
- 10. Cross Connections
- Embedded cross connect switch
- The Cross Connections application
- The Cross Connections system requirements
- Installing the Cross Connections application
- Opening the Cross Connections application
- The Cross Connections page
- Setting the terminal's address
- Management and user ethernet capacity
- Setting card types
- Getting cross connection configuration from the terminals
- Creating cross connections
- Sending cross connection configuration to the terminals
- Saving cross connection configurations
- Using existing cross connection configurations
- Printing the cross connection configuration
- Deleting cross connections
- Configuring the traffic cross connections
Cross Connections | 127
Creating cross connections
Point to point cross connections
Three examples of point to point cross connections are shown below:
Example 1
One 2 wire DFXO interface on the near end terminal slot E port 1 is cross connected via the radio link
to a 2 wire DFXS on the far end terminal slot E port 1. This cross connection includes the four bits of
signalling (ABCD bits) but as the DFXO / DFXS signalling is configured for 'multiplexed', the four bits
are multiplexed into one bit over the radio link. This cross connection uses 72 kbit/s of radio link
capacity, 64 kbit/s for the voice and 8 kbit/s for the signalling bit.
The port 2s of the same DFXO / DFXS cards are cross connected using the same method.