From: cdmurray@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Date: Thu Jan 03 2002 - 22:58:56 GMT-3
Rob,
The "dialer remote-name" is most relevant to the CALLED router.
In it's simplest form, if your router receives calls, it will receive them
from the router you have defined
in your "dialer remote-name" statement .
If the CALLING router has used the "ppp chap hostname" statement, then the
receiving
routers "dialer remote-name" must reflect the "ppp chap hostname".
As you can see you need to just give some thought to a scenario with
multiple routers
and interfaces and play around with this in your Lab and you will see how
the peering works that was
mentioned by Tom Cheung .
Chrissy
"Rob Rummel"
<Rummel@Hawaii To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
.rr.com> cc:
Sent by: Subject: ISDN Dialer remote-name
nobody@groupst
udy.com
01/04/2002
07:44 AM
Please respond
to "Rob
Rummel"
Spent all morning on this and I'm not quite sure of the use for Dialer
remote-name
Ppp chap hostname lets you use alternate hostname and the other side
must have
That username and password configured for that alternate
So how does remote-name fall into the ppp authentication.
I have looked over Caslow and the CCO and still don't get it.
6 days to go and I'm starting to loose my mind.....
Rob Rummel
-The faulty interface lies between the chair and the keyboard-
[GroupStudy.com removed an attachment of type image/gif which had a name of
image001.gif]
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Thu Jun 13 2002 - 10:56:15 GMT-3