RE: OSPF-IGRP Redist.

From: Halaska, David (David.Halaska@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Mon Feb 12 2001 - 11:12:04 GMT-3


   
There are a few ways to skin this cat. You could summarize as has been
previously stated. Since your using IGRP, you can also use the global
command ip default-network on the ASBR. This should point to a route that
R3 can reach. So you will have to check R3's table first before putting the
command in on R4. Obviously, you can use static routes, but you can also
use a route-map on R3 to specify the next hop. I have configured all 4
methods with success.

Hope this helps,
David Halaska

-----Original Message-----
From: Sandy Thielamay [mailto:sthielamay@totality.com]
Sent: Saturday, February 10, 2001 7:15 AM
To: 'Scott King '; 'ccielab@groupstudy.com '
Subject: RE: OSPF-IGRP Redist.

subnetting...remember you are dealing with classful and classless protocol.
Remember FLSM and VLSM..If you are using any of the scenario above I would
summarize the OSPF routes on the ASBR and see what happen when it goes into
IGRP. Make sure when you are redistributing you are following the protocol's
metric..i.e igrp bandwith,delay etc.....

Hope this help

Cheers,

Sandy

-----Original Message-----
From: Scott King
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Sent: 2/9/2001 5:13 PM
Subject: OSPF-IGRP Redist.

Hey All,

Setup is this:

r5---fr---r4---hdlc---r1---token---r3

Between r5 and r4 is OSPF area 0. Between r4 and r3 (including r1) is
IGRP AS 10. Two-way redistribution on r4. Routes attached to r3 show
up in r5's table, but I can't ping them.

Suggestions?

--

R. Scott King Network Consulting Engineer Cisco Systems, Inc. Advanced Network Support - SP 9155 E. Nichols Avenue Suite 400 Englewood, CO 80112 USA 919.949.8425



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Thu Jun 13 2002 - 10:28:45 GMT-3