RE: Policy routing

From: Chuck Larrieu (chuck@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sun Nov 05 2000 - 23:14:59 GMT-3


   
I suppose another way of looking at it is that route maps are used
extensively in BGP. And policy routing is one means of enforcing security,
including what traffic goes over an IPSec tunnel. One might consider that
route maps and policy routing are minor, but they are a component of other
items sure to be on the Lab, and therefore can be considered a source of
needed points.

Chuck

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Robert DeVito
Sent: Sunday, November 05, 2000 5:56 PM
To: Paul.McClarnon@sita.int; Ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: Policy routing

Study and know everything! Look for more QOS and policy routing to be on
the lab since alot of items have been removed from the lab.

----Original Message Follows----
From: Paul.McClarnon@sita.int
Reply-To: Paul.McClarnon@sita.int
To: Ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Policy routing
Date: Mon, 6 Nov 2000 12:37:22 +1000

Hi all,

I am new to this group, I passed my written in August and have just my A
into G
for study towards the Lab. One of my biggest problems is where to begin,
there
is so much to learn. I have been going over the basic protocols like Rip,
Rip2 ,
Igrp, Eigrp and Ospf to try and master a solid understanding before getting
into
the complex stuff.
I was reading about Policy routing and Qos on the weekend and was wondering
how
much time and effort I should be spending on these sorts of configurations.
Has anyone any idea of how deep they go into this on the Lab??
  I don't want to be wasting valuable time on issues that will have a slim
chance of showing in the lab where I could be spending time on the more
important protocols.

Thanks for your advise
Paul



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