From: Atif Awan (atifawan@xxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Fri Jan 04 2002 - 15:23:23 GMT-3
If you can telnet to the HP server this does not mean that the router is
using the secondary address as the source ip address for the telnet session.
The router uses the primary ip address of the outgoing interface to the
destination when you telnet to it unless you tell the router otherwise by
using the ip telnet source-interface command.
Your HP server must have a route to the router's primary address's subnet or
it must be using the router as a default gateway.
Atif
P.S: something like an extended telnet would have been nice ...
>From: Phil <ciscostudent1@yahoo.com.br>
>Reply-To: Phil <ciscostudent1@yahoo.com.br>
>To: "Spoerr, Mathias" <Mathias.Spoerr@getronics.com>,
>ccielab@groupstudy.com
>Subject: Re: Telnet Question again
>Date: Fri, 4 Jan 2002 12:09:28 -0300 (ART)
>
>Mathias,
>I have a 4000 as a frame switch with 4MB flash. It has a TR connected to an
>HP server to boot an 8MB image. The TR has a secondary address to do it and
>I can also telnet to the HP server from the router.
>HTH,
>Phil.
>
> "Spoerr, Mathias" <Mathias.Spoerr@getronics.com> escreveu: > Hello!
> >
> > Is it possible to telnet from a router to something else using the
> > secondary IP-address of a routerinterface as Source address?
> >
> > Mathias Spoerr
>---------------------------------
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Thu Jun 13 2002 - 10:56:16 GMT-3