From: Pylko, Eric (EPylko@xxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Jan 20 2000 - 15:22:29 GMT-3
I couldn't find the "appletalk local-routing" command either - it was in the
book Cisco Certification - Bridges, Routers and Switches for CCIEs by
Caslow, page 546 at the bottom.
In my diagram below, the appletalk local-routing command appears to let
apple traffic on my point-to-multipoint interface get routed in one dlci and
out another. I can do a "ping apple R2" from R3 and it works with appletalk
local-routing enabled. If I do "no appletalk local-routing" and try the
ping again, it fails.
-Eric
-----Original Message-----
From: Denton Bobeldyk [mailto:denny@kentwoodps.org]
Sent: Thursday, January 20, 2000 12:16 PM
To: Pylko, Eric
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: ipx, eigrp, and frame relay
What exactly does the 'appletalk local-routing' command do?
I can't seem to find it on the CD anywhere...
-Denny
"Pylko, Eric" wrote:
> Hi everyone-
>
> I have the following network setup:
>
> R5
> | (point to multipoint)
> Frame
> Relay
> / \
> R3 R2---R1
>
> R3 and R2 are connected on their physical interfaces.
>
> I have ipx eigrp enabled on all the routers. I can see all routes on all
> routers.
>
> Now, when I try to do an ipx ping from R3 to R2, R3 to R1, or R1/R2 to R3,
I
> do not get a reply. I can ipx ping from R3 to R5, R5 to R2 and R5 to R1.
>
> I have tried frame-relay map statements, default routes, frame-relay
inverse
> arp, ipx eigrp split-horizon, no ipx eigrp split horizon, and rebooting.
>
> Am I missing something that will allow R3 to ipx ping R2 or R1? When
doing
> something similar with Appletalk, I had to give the command "appletalk
> local-routing" on R5. I don't see a similar command for IPX.
>
> Any ideas? A tunnel between R3 and R2 would work, but is there any other
> ipx command that would help?
>
> Thanks
>
> -Eric
>
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