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Frame Relay
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{{Short description|Wide area network technology}} {{Use American English|date = March 2019}} {{multiple issues| {{More citations needed|date=June 2008}} {{Globalize|section|USA|2name=the United States|date=January 2019}} }} [[Image:Frame relay.svg|right|thumb|350px|A basic Frame Relay network]] '''Frame Relay''' ('''FR''') is a standardized [[wide area network]] (WAN) technology that specifies the [[Physical layer|physical]] and [[data link layer]]s of digital telecommunications channels using a [[packet switching]] methodology. Frame Relay was originally developed as a simplified version of the [[X.25]] system designed to be carried over the emerging [[Integrated Services Digital Network]] (ISDN) networks. X.25 had been designed to operate over normal [[telephone]] lines that were subject to noise that would result in lost data, and the protocol featured extensive [[error correction]] to address this. ISDN offered dramatically lower error rates, in effect zero, and the extensive error correction overhead was no longer needed. The new protocol suite was essentially a cut-down X.25 with no error correction, leading to lower overhead, better [[channel efficiency]], and often significantly overall higher performance than X.25. Like X.25, Frame Relay is normally used in a [[circuit switched]] layout, where connections between two endpoints are long-term (in computer terms at least). This matches the normal use of the telephone network, which X.25 was designed to run on top of. This contrasts with protocols design to be short-term, like the [[internet protocol]], where every packet might go to a different endpoint. In practice, Frame Relay was often used as a bridging mechanism to link together [[local area network]] (LAN) systems or devices with dedicated links to back-end systems. Users are provided with a connection that [[Encapsulation (networking)|encapsulates]] their data (in some cases including voice in [[VoFR]]) and sends that to a Frame Relay [[Node (networking)|node]] which then forwards that to another endpoint where it is injected into the remote network, appearing as if it were local traffic. It is less expensive than using leased lines for this purpose and that is one reason for its popularity. The extreme simplicity of configuring user equipment in a Frame Relay network offers another reason for Frame Relay's popularity. With the advent of [[Ethernet]] over fiber optics, [[Multiprotocol Label Switching|MPLS]], [[Virtual private network|VPN]] and dedicated [[broadband]] services such as [[cable modem]] and [[Digital subscriber line|DSL]], Frame Relay has become less popular in recent years. The Frame Relay standards were promoted by the [[Frame Relay Forum]] (FRF).
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