From: Derek Small (d.small@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Tue Jun 27 2000 - 11:59:50 GMT-3
You did not loose IP routing on either, but remember that when you have SRB
enabled on Token Ring you need to use the command multiring all (or at least
multiring IP) to source-route IP datagrams over the Token Ring. Without it
you would not be able to send IP beyond the local ring.
Derek Small
CCIE # 5832
dwsmall@fatkid.com
----- Original Message -----
From: Jeff Sapiro <jsapiro@wnmail.wndev.att.com>
To: Earl Aboytes <earl@linkline.com>
Cc: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Tuesday, June 27, 2000 11:57 AM
Subject: Re: IRB and DLSW+
> CRB more likely
> -Jeff
>
> Earl Aboytes wrote:
>
> > Here is a question that I thought I had resolved until I started
> > reading the doc CD
> >
> > Assumptions:
> >
> > When you turn on dlsw in a router you have to bridge from Ethernet to
> > dlsw.When you turn on dlsw on a router you have to source-route bridge
> > from token ring to dlsw.
> >
> > Question:
> >
> > Did you just ruin routing of IP over the Ethernet and Token if you put
> > it a bridge group or turn on source route bridging?
> >
> > Possible answer:
> >
> > My guess is no.It seems that dlsw turns on IRB automatically.I thought
> > this was the answer for both token and Ethernet until I read the
> > following passage on the Doc CD.
> >
> > "Integrated routing and bridging is supported for transparent
> > bridging, but not for source-route bridging (SRB)."
> >
> > So what is the real answer?Did I lose routing of IP on my token
> > interface when I turned on SRB?I would guess that dlsw takes care of
> > this.Any thoughts on this?
> >
> > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> >
> > Earl Aboytes
> >
> > Senior Technical Conultant
> >
> > GTE Managed Solutions
> >
> > 805-381-8817
> >
> > earl.aboytes@telops.gte.com
> >
> > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> >
>
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