From: Ozgur Guler (Garanti Teknoloji) (OzgurG@garanti.com.tr)
Date: Mon Oct 06 2003 - 03:58:41 GMT-3
>One thing to keep in mind that when you "red conn subnets" that it generates
>a type-5 which is flooded across all areas.
this behavior has changed with 12.1.3
http://www.cisco.com/warp/customer/104/redist-conn.html
Ozgur
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Snow, Tim
Sent: Monday, October 06, 2003 7:41 AM
To: 'Richard L. Pickard'
Cc: 'ccielab@groupstudy.com'
Subject: RE: what determines the area the router ID falls into when
using redistribute connected subnets command ?
What you are seeing is a hello from the router that owns the ip of
145.7.100.x whereas 145.7.5.5 is the router-ID of that router. Is s0/0 area
1?
One thing to keep in mind that when you "red conn subnets" that it generates
a type-5 which is flooded across all areas.
Tim
#12042
-----Original Message-----
From: Richard L. Pickard [mailto:nettable_walker@comcast.net]
Sent: Monday, October 06, 2003 1:28 AM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: what determines the area the router ID falls into when using
redistribute connected subnets command ?
R_5 --- frame relay --- R_3
Router ID =
145.7.5.5
debug from R_3 = 00:27:12: OSPF: Rcv hello from 145.7.5.5 area 1 from
Serial0/0 145.7.100.2
partial config from R_5:
router ospf 10
router-id 145.7.5.5
log-adjacency-changes detail
redistribute connected subnets
network 145.7.25.0 0.0.0.255 area 0
network 145.7.100.0 0.0.0.7 area 1
so why is 145.7.5.5 in area 1 (as opposed to area 0)
Just wondering about this ---
clear ip ospf process on both routers made no difference -
Thanks,.
Richard
//
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