Explain Dedicated Leased Line Connections in WAN?
AbramianDaniel 27-February-2009 08:07:15 PM

Comments


A leased line refers to a connection that is installed and provisioned for the exclusive use of the customer. Essentially, when you order a leased line, you get your very own piece of wire from your location to the service provider's network. This is good because no other customer can affect your line, as can be the case with other WAN services. You have a lot of control over this circuit to do things such as Quality of Service and other traffic management. The downside is that a leased line is expensive and gets a lot more expensive if you need to connect offices that are far apart. A leased line is typically a point-to-point connection from the head office to a branch office, so if you need to connect to multiple locations, you need multiple leased lines. Multiple leased lines get even more expensive. Leased-line circuits typically run the Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP), High-Level Data-Link Control Protocol (HDLC), or possibly Serial Line Internet Protocol (SLIP).
Posted by thomas


we r listaning two things while using net 1 broad band and leased line connections when u r directly connecting to an operator and getting data from operator it is called a leased line and when u r getting data from any other third party who already got the band width from operator they will publish the band width to all individual subscribers then it is called broad band connection. Once the connection is established, it remains available on a continuous basis whether or not network traffic exists between the two locations. Leased line connections have the required channel service unit/digital service unit (CSU/DSU) built in.
Posted by waqqas1


Yes i think mainly we r listaning two things while using net 1 broad band and leased line connections when u r directly connecting to an operator and getting data from operator it is called a leased line and when u r getting data from any other third party who already got the band width from operator they will publish the band width to all individual subscribers then it is called broad band connection
Posted by HamidAliKhan


Dedicated Leased line connections use leased or dedicated lines to establish a permanent connection between two routers. Once the connection is established, it remains available on a continuous basis whether or not network traffic exists between the two locations. Leased line connections have the required channel service unit/digital service unit (CSU/DSU) built in
Posted by sagitraz


http://faculty.weber.edu/kcuddeback/Classes/TBE2300/Slides/ch13_CE.ppt
Posted by Hash007


we r listaning two things while using net 1 broad band and leased line connections when u r directly connecting to an operator and getting data from operator it is called a leased line and when u r getting data from any other third party who already got the band width from operator they will publish the band width to all individual subscribers then it is called broad band connection
Posted by jahangir1983


mainly we r listaning two things while using net 1 broad band and leased line connections when u r directly connecting to an operator and getting data from operator it is called a leased line and when u r getting data from any other third party who already got the band width from operator they will publish the band width to all individual subscribers then it is called broad band connection
Posted by sree_kushi2000



Posted: 27-February-2009 11:40:18 PM By: sree_kushi2000

mainly we r listaning two things while using net 1 broad band and leased line connections when u r directly connecting to an operator and getting data from operator it is called a leased line and when u r getting data from any other third party who already got the band width from operator they will publish the band width to all individual subscribers then it is called broad band connection

Posted: 28-February-2009 12:54:21 AM By: jahangir1983

we r listaning two things while using net 1 broad band and leased line connections when u r directly connecting to an operator and getting data from operator it is called a leased line and when u r getting data from any other third party who already got the band width from operator they will publish the band width to all individual subscribers then it is called broad band connection

Posted: 28-February-2009 01:26:40 AM By: Hash007

http://faculty.weber.edu/kcuddeback/Classes/TBE2300/Slides/ch13_CE.ppt

Posted: 28-February-2009 05:28:40 AM By: sagitraz

Dedicated Leased line connections use leased or dedicated lines to establish a permanent connection between two routers. Once the connection is established, it remains available on a continuous basis whether or not network traffic exists between the two locations. Leased line connections have the required channel service unit/digital service unit (CSU/DSU) built in

Posted: 28-February-2009 06:07:10 AM By: HamidAliKhan

Yes i think mainly we r listaning two things while using net 1 broad band and leased line connections when u r directly connecting to an operator and getting data from operator it is called a leased line and when u r getting data from any other third party who already got the band width from operator they will publish the band width to all individual subscribers then it is called broad band connection

Posted: 28-February-2009 11:31:07 AM By: waqqas1

we r listaning two things while using net 1 broad band and leased line connections when u r directly connecting to an operator and getting data from operator it is called a leased line and when u r getting data from any other third party who already got the band width from operator they will publish the band width to all individual subscribers then it is called broad band connection. Once the connection is established, it remains available on a continuous basis whether or not network traffic exists between the two locations. Leased line connections have the required channel service unit/digital service unit (CSU/DSU) built in.

Posted: 02-March-2009 12:08:02 PM By: thomas

A leased line refers to a connection that is installed and provisioned for the exclusive use of the customer. Essentially, when you order a leased line, you get your very own piece of wire from your location to the service provider's network. This is good because no other customer can affect your line, as can be the case with other WAN services. You have a lot of control over this circuit to do things such as Quality of Service and other traffic management. The downside is that a leased line is expensive and gets a lot more expensive if you need to connect offices that are far apart. A leased line is typically a point-to-point connection from the head office to a branch office, so if you need to connect to multiple locations, you need multiple leased lines. Multiple leased lines get even more expensive. Leased-line circuits typically run the Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP), High-Level Data-Link Control Protocol (HDLC), or possibly Serial Line Internet Protocol (SLIP).