From: Mark Lewis (markl11@xxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Aug 31 2000 - 05:58:25 GMT-3
Hi,
You can use the 'ip default-network' command with both IGRP and EIGRP. The
router on which you inject the default network has to have a route to that
network (directly connected/dynamic route/static route).
With EIGRP (NOT igrp) it is also possible to inject a 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0
default by using 'network 0.0.0.0' (assuming the existence of that route in
the routing table). You can't do this with IGRP because it doesn't
understand the 0.0.0.0 default.
Good luck with the lab!
Mark
>From: Simon Baxter <Simon.Baxter@au.logical.com>
>Reply-To: Simon Baxter <Simon.Baxter@au.logical.com>
>To: "CCIE Group Study (E-mail)" <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
>Subject: 2 Days to go...
>Date: Thu, 31 Aug 2000 19:03:14 +1100
>
>I'm sure this has been asked before...
>
>How and when do you inject a default route into an (E)IGRP network?
>
>Does the candidate default have to be a connected interface running IGRP?
>Do you have to use a static and select the network as candidate?
>
>
>cheers...
>
>Simon
>
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