1 | Classical IP-Over-ATM (IPOA RFC 1577) |
2 | ATM is a connection-oriented protocol, which means that connection must be established between two communicating entities before data transfer can begin. IP is inherently connectionless. There are 2 ways to run transparently IP traffic over ATM: Classical IP and LAN emulation |
3 | The term "classical" indicates that the ATM network has the same properties as existing legacy LANs. |
4 | SVC management is performed via UNI specification, which defines signaling: Q.93B (UNI3.0), Q.2931 (UNI3.1). |
5 | Once a Classical IP connection has been established, IP datagrams are encapsulated using IEEE 802.2 LLC/SNAP and are segmented into ATM cells using AAL5. |
6 | There is no support for broadcast and multicast in a Classical IP environment. The Classical network is divided into LISs (Logical IP Subnets). |
7 | Each LIS must have only on ATM ARP server configured on a switch or a host ARP server is responsible for resolving an IP addresses into ATM addresses. |