06-07-2011 05:07 PM - edited 03-03-2019 06:18 AM
Please forgive me if this is a dumb question!
I am trying to find a way to setup the following:
Router A's WIC-2T serial port S0/1 --> Switch RJ45 ethernet port Fa0/1
Switch RJ45 ethernet port Fa0/2 --> Router B's WIC-2T serial port S0/1
Is this even possible? I understand that with a serial connection one end is the DCE and the other DTE. If this setup is possible, how would I configure this? Are there adapters available for this?
Thank you very much in advance.
Kind regards,
Vim.
Solved! Go to Solution.
06-08-2011 05:14 AM
Router A's WIC-2T serial port S0/1 --> Switch RJ45 ethernet port Fa0/1
Switch RJ45 ethernet port Fa0/2 --> Router B's WIC-2T serial port S0/1
No, it is not possible.
You cannot connect serial ports to ethernet ports. That is the basic of networking.
To connect a router to a switch, ONLY use ethernet interface, without ANY adapter.
06-08-2011 02:56 AM
It's called "reverse" telnet and it's possible.
06-08-2011 05:14 AM
Router A's WIC-2T serial port S0/1 --> Switch RJ45 ethernet port Fa0/1
Switch RJ45 ethernet port Fa0/2 --> Router B's WIC-2T serial port S0/1
No, it is not possible.
You cannot connect serial ports to ethernet ports. That is the basic of networking.
To connect a router to a switch, ONLY use ethernet interface, without ANY adapter.
06-08-2011 05:19 AM
Whoopsie.
I misread the post. I thought it was from router AUX to the console port of the switch. Mea culpa.
06-08-2011 05:26 AM
Just go back and edit
06-12-2011 04:44 PM
Just go back and edit
Not fair to everyone Paolo. I'm happy to apologize for mistakes I've made.
06-14-2011 05:15 PM
Thank you to both of you.
I understand that you cannot physically connect a serial cable to an ethernet interface. I was wondering if anyone knew of any adapters that would interface between a serial and ethernet cable to facilitate this. By the look of things, technology is not quite there yet.
Thanks for your input.
06-15-2011 08:27 AM
That "technology" (connecting different media types together), is called a router.
06-15-2011 06:31 PM
Thanks Paolo, that's an interesting point of view.
06-17-2011 01:23 AM
It's a fact, not an opinion.
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide