Re: OSPF virtual link question

From: Tony Olzak (aolzak@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sun Sep 24 2000 - 14:51:47 GMT-3


   
And just in case you didn't know how to figure out the router ID just type
in "show ip ospf <process ID>". The output will tell you the router's ID.

Tony

----- Original Message -----
From: "Atif Awan" <atifawan@hotmail.com>
To: <dachtler@cisco.com>; <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2000 12:31 PM
Subject: Re: OSPF virtual link question

>
> In the OSPF config mode of R2 write the statement :
>
> area 1 virtual-link router-id
>
> where router-id is the router id of R3. Similarly in the OSPF config mode
of
> R3 write the statement:
>
> area 1 virtual-link router-id
>
> Here router-id will be thr router id of R2.
>
> Regards
> Atif
>
> >From: Jason Dachtler <dachtler@cisco.com>
> >Reply-To: Jason Dachtler <dachtler@cisco.com>
> >To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
> >Subject: OSPF virtual link question
> >Date: Sun, 24 Sep 2000 07:37:26 -0700
> >
> >I'm having a problem figuring out the correct configuration for the
> >following OSPF scenario:
> >
> >
> > R1----area 0----R2-----area 1------R3-----area2-----R4
> >
> >I know that there needs to be a virtual link between R2 and R3 for area
> >0 to know about area 2 and vice-versa. What is the correct syntax to
> >enable the virtual link between R2 and R3?
> >
> >Thanks,
> >
> >-Jason
> >



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