Re: PPP (dialer-group command)

From: Tony Olzak (aolzak@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sat Nov 04 2000 - 03:09:15 GMT-3


   
Right. All you'll want to do on the called side is use dialer-group and set
all traffic as interesting. This way it won't end calls. The calling side
will end the call and the called side won't be able to initiate a call
because it has no dialer map or string (leave these off).

Tony

----- Original Message -----
From: "Steve McNutt" <lpd@jacksonville.net>
To: "z z" <ccie_99@yahoo.com>; <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Saturday, November 04, 2000 12:28 AM
Subject: RE: PPP (dialer-group command)

> becuase r2 has no interesting traffic defined he will always hang up when
> his idle timer expires, regardless of wether desireable traffic is flowing
> across the link. proabably not a good thing.
>
> There seems to be one exception to this, and that is dialer watch.
somehow
> it is able to tell the remote router to reset it's idle timer if the
watched
> route has not come back up. wonder what protocol they use to do that.
CDP
> maybe? I didnt play with it enough to really figure it out. maybe I was
> smokin crack and actually had a dialer group on the other end.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of z
> z
> Sent: Friday, November 03, 2000 11:05 PM
> To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
> Subject: PPP (dialer-group command)
>
>
> Hi
> Got one question about PPP.
>
> If we configure that only R1 can dial R2, do we need
> to configure dialer-group/dialer-list on R2?
>
> If we configure so, R2 can disconnect the call.
> However, is it necessary? It should be R1 to control
> the connection. Am I right?
>
> thanks
>



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Thu Jun 13 2002 - 08:25:41 GMT-3