From: Justin Menga (Justin.Menga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Feb 08 2001 - 08:18:51 GMT-3
Hi,
Various ways to do this:
1. Use Policy Routing at R4 to force traffic via R3 - alter metrics so that
R1 prefers via R2
2. Alter metrics on R4 (e.g. OSPF Cost, EIGRP Metric, RIP Offset List) and
on R1 to choose correct paths
3. If R1 - R2 - R4 and R1 - R3 - R4 are different routing domains, play
with administrative distances.
Regards,
Justin Menga CCIE #6640 MCSE+I CCSE
WAN Specialist
Computerland New Zealand
PO Box 3631, Auckland
DDI: (+64) 9 360 4864 Mobile: (+64) 25 349 599
mailto: justin.menga@computerland.co.nz
web: http://www.computerland.co.nz
-----Original Message-----
From: David FAHED [mailto:dfahed@outremer.com]
Sent: Thursday, 8 February 2001 11:18 p.m.
To: CCIE yong
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: Aymmetric routing
Do you use static route or dynamic protocol? If you use dynamic protocol
wich
one?
CCIE yong wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm looking for info of how to configure asymmetric routing but couldn't
> found.
>
> the scenario is as follow:
>
> R1
> | |
> | |
> | |
> R2 R3
> | |
> | |
> | |
> R4
>
> when R1 ping R4, the original path is thru R2 but the return path is thru
> R3.
>
> Need Help on this,
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> Regards
> Yonger
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