RE: Quick CCBootCamp Lab 1 Q

From: McCoy, Jeffery (jmccoy@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sun Feb 25 2001 - 00:02:54 GMT-3


   
If Im remembering the terms correctly:

IP Local Policy applies to packets that originate in that router. Without
IP local policy, packets originating from the router are not subject to
policy routing. (I think this is because policy routing is only applicatble
on inbound traffic, not outbound, and of course, all traffic originating
from the router is outbound.)

IP Policy routing is applied to interfaces and is applicable inbound only.
Meaning only incoming packets on an interface are subject to the policy
routing configured on that interface. Outbound packets are not subject to
policy routing.

-Jeff

-----Original Message-----
From: Rob Fielding
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Sent: 2/24/2001 8:04 PM
Subject: Re: Quick CCBootCamp Lab 1 Q

I did that lab some time ago, and as I recall, IP local policy applies
to
the entire router. That means that you have to assign the policy to the
ethernet interface, and you have to create map statements accordingly.
Since that's about all I know about IP local policy, can anyone else out
there point out any pitfalls and suggestions for using it? How is it
different from normal policy routing?

-Rob

----- Original Message -----
From: "Tariq Sharif" <tariq_sharif@btinternet.com>
To: "Ccielab@Groupstudy. Com" <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Saturday, February 24, 2001 1:35 PM
Subject: Quick CCBootCamp Lab 1 Q

> I've read many recent interesting achieves on this. Can someone answer
> please:
>
> Got Frame ready. I'm about to apply Policy routing, but R1 does not
see
R5's
> ethernet segment (11.1.0.0/16). i.e. can't see hub to spoke.
>
> Many thanks & regards.
>
> Tariq Sharif
>
>



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