From: Joe Martin (jmartin@xxxxxxx)
Date: Mon May 29 2000 - 18:03:06 GMT-3
I coulda swore that I heard that this command is a "bug" in how its showing
up in the IOS. Its suppose to be hidden and not modified in any way. Let
me know if I'm wrong.
JOE
CCIE #5917
----- Original Message -----
From: "Roger Wang" <rwang@genuity.net>
To: "Kevin M. Woods" <kev@nil.org>
Cc: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Monday, May 29, 2000 10:23 AM
Subject: RE: Virtual Link and Route-Map
> Well, I don't know what that line does, either. :) It comes up
automatically
> only with IOS 12.0. I usually make it go away by entering "defau ip ospf
> interface-retry" at the interface config mode.
>
> Anyway, I reconfigured the route-map with "match ip addr 101" instead, and
> put "permit ip any host x.x.x.x" in the ACL and that fixed the problem. I
> still can't figure out why the first method didn't work. It probably has
> something to do with the standard access-lists in which source IP
addresses
> are listed. And I tried to ask route-map to interpret them as "next-hop"
> and that confused the routing process. But it's probably just the user.
>
> Rog
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Kevin M. Woods [mailto:kev@nil.org]
> > Sent: Sunday, May 28, 2000 9:18 PM
> > To: Roger Wang
> > Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
> > Subject: Re: Virtual Link and Route-Map
> >
> >
> > Roger,
> >
> > I'm trying to figure out what `ip ospf interface-retry' is. Can you
share
> > your wisdom as to what this does and if/where it's documentated?
> >
> > Thanx
> >
> > Kevin
> >
> > // Hi, all,
> > //
> > // I have a policy applied on s1 of r3, like so:
> > //
> > // ======================================
> > // !
> > // interface Serial1
> > // ip address 10.34.1.1 255.255.0.0
> > // no ip directed-broadcast
> > // ip ospf interface-retry 0
> > // ip policy route-map lab1
> > // clockrate 2000000
> > // !
> > // ======================================
> >
>
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Thu Jun 13 2002 - 08:23:32 GMT-3