RE: NLSP area-address

From: Matthew Kinnear (matt.kinnear@xxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu May 18 2000 - 13:38:24 GMT-3


   
I beleive its like the wildcard mask in an access list , only inverted ie. 0
is wildcard..... F = 8 ones... means must match exactly.

Id guess one range is 1000 to 1FFF and the other is 2000 to 2FFF.

Maybe someone else knows better???

-----Original Message-----
From: Brian Jacklin [mailto:bmjackli@sprintparanet.com]
Sent: 18 May 2000 17:27
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: NLSP area-address

Can someone help me to understand the NLSP area-address command a little
better.
 I understand it's representing what IPX network's will participate but I'm
confussed on the mask.

 Example:

 int ethernet 0
 ipx network 1001
 ipx nlsp area1 enable

 int ethernet 1
 ipx network 2001
 ipx nlsp area2 enable

 ipx router nlsp area1
 area-address 1000 fffff000

 ipx router nlsp area2
 area-addresss 2000 fffff000

 Does this mean that area1 represents 00001000
 So the leading f's represent the 0's before the 1?

 So area 2 is 00002000 ?

 Thanks!
Brian



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Thu Jun 13 2002 - 08:23:30 GMT-3