From: Ron Royston (ccie6824@xxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Mon Nov 05 2001 - 18:07:59 GMT-3
With policy-routing (a route-map), you can set the next-hop that you want
packets to take on their way to their destination IP address if that next
hop is adjacent (use a tunnel to make an adjacency if necessary). If you
wish to change the actual destination IP in the packets, you'll have to use
NAT. NAT, and perhaps some special hacker-type spoofing software, is the
only way that I can think of right now to actually change the source or
destination IP in an IP packet.
<><><><><><><><><><><><><>
Ron Royston
Avnet Enterprise Solutions
http://www.nsd.avnet.com/
>From: "Gore, Peter" <gorep@netsolve.net>
>Reply-To: "Gore, Peter" <gorep@netsolve.net>
>To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
>Subject: Traffic Redirect
>Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2001 13:46:55 -0600
>
>OK, Not sure if this is possible - should be but here goes.
>
>A customer has requested that I take all traffic from a specific subnet
>(10.24.0.0) destined for a specific IP address and redirect it to a
>different destination within the same network. I'm thinking this is posible
>with an access-list or some kind of policy route but would appreciate some
>input.
>
>Thxs
>
>Pete
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