From: Erick B. (erickbe@xxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sun Mar 04 2001 - 02:41:35 GMT-3
With ip routing enabled (default) if you place a IP
address on an interface it will route IP and bridge
all other traffic on that interface.
You should be able to ping end-to-end if you disable
IP routing.
--- fwells12 <fwells12@hotmail.com> wrote:
> How can I test end to end connectivity when bridging
> over frame relay? =
> The serial interfaces have no IP addresses on them
> and the ethernet =
> networks on each router are addresses on the same
> subnet. I have tried =
> pinging both regularly and using extended pings but
> neither works. Do =
> pings work for testing this scenario ?
> Theoretically I should be able =
> to disable routing on both routers and still have
> bridged connectivity =
> right?
>
> Cheers
>
> Configs if your interested:
>
> Router3:
> interface Ethernet0
> ip address 10.1.1.3
> no ip mroute-cache
> no keepalive
> no cdp enable
> bridge-group 1
> !
> interface Serial0
> no ip address=20
> encapsulation frame-relay
> no ip mroute-cache
> no fair-queue
> frame-relay map bridge 304 broadcast
> frame-relay lmi-type ansi
> bridge-group 1 =20
> !
> bridge 1 protocol ieee
>
> Router4:
> interface Ethernet0
> ip address 10.1.1.4
> no ip mroute-cache
> no keepalive
> no cdp enable
> bridge-group 1
> !
> interface Serial0
> no ip address=20
> encapsulation frame-relay
> no ip mroute-cache
> no fair-queue
> frame-relay map bridge 403 broadcast
> frame-relay lmi-type ansi
> bridge-group 1 =20
> !
> bridge 1 protocol ieee
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