Date: Sun, 27 Aug 1995 11:34:21 -0400 (EDT) From: Network Coordinator <nc@ai.net> To: hackers@freebsd.org Subject: Networking [not completely FreeBSD related] Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.3.91.950827113015.20165A-100000@aries.ai.net>
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This question isn't completely FreeBSD related, but I have been told its impossible, so I figure I could use FreeBSD to solve it. :-) A standard T-1 connection, long before the internet was popularized, was just a datapipe between two points. No packets, no IP addresses, no nothing. Particularly in the voice-multiplexing area. Nowadays, T-1 connections are used very differently. Can anyone think of a way, or know of an existing solution, that can somehow emulate an old T-1 style datapipe on an IP network. Most likely this would be ether. I would really prefer a solution that didn't involve any heavy digitization for a video or a voice stream, just something like connecting a TSU to a V.35 jack connected to a FreeBSD machine, run something on it, route it across the network, and have a similar machine reconstitute the original input. Its bizarre, I know. If you have any ideas, I would REALLY appreciate anything. Thanks, -Jerry.
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