From: Thounda Craig, Jr (hjcgroup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sun Sep 03 2000 - 12:01:34 GMT-3
Place "ip ospf demand-circuit" on one end of the link (possibly the
hub-side).
This command suppress the DNA bits.
* OSPF over demand circuits should not be implemented across a
broadcast medium.
Reason: the Hello packets cannot be suppressed; keeping the link UP.
Note: You should only use this command within stub, totally stubby, or
NSSA areas. Although, non-stub areas can support it, keeping it
within one area minimizes the number of changed LSAs received as the
result of topology changes in other areas and hence prevents excess
uptime of the demand circuit.
(ref: "Routing TCP/IP" by Jeff Doyle; p. 565-567)
brds,
Thounda Craig
----- Original Message -----
From: John Conzone
To: ccielab
Sent: Sunday, September 03, 2000 9:33 AM
Subject: OSPF------->BGP---------->OSPF---------->
ARGHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I am having trouble keeping my ISDN line quiet because of external
LSA being generated when I redistribute OSPF int BGP and then back
into OSPF.
No matter what type of list I try, I can't seem to stop the ISDN
line coming up. As soon as the ISDN link comes down, OSPF generates a
message which is redistributed into BGP which comes back into OSPF as
an external announcement and brings up the line. (at least I think
thats whats happening.)
I looked in the archives and have found some references to this
saying use passive interface or distribute list, but distribute list
won't work for me (probaly becsue I;m not applying properly), and I
need this link to operate normally so I can't use passive.
Besides not doing a redistribution loop (which is part of the lab
requirement so I have to) what am I doing wrong?
Thanks!
r6#
OSPF: Generate external LSA 137.20.224.5, mask 255.255.255.255,
type 5, age 0, m
etric 20, seq 0x80000009
%ISDN-6-CONNECT: Interface BRI0:1 is now connected to 4930624
r5
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