Re: For smart CCIE Candidates

From: Shadi (ccie@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sun Mar 10 2002 - 04:34:01 GMT-3


   
How is that Paul?

I tried to do it like policy routing but it didn't work, I want to make the
router inteliginet enough so it can send a ping with source address network
to be the same as the destination address network. May be I did something
wrong, I will see it again, if you have any ideas why not to shoot them ;-)

Shadi

----- Original Message -----
From: "Paul Borghese" <pborghese@groupstudy.com>
To: "Shadi" <ccie@investorsgrp.com>; "ccielab" <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Saturday, March 09, 2002 4:36 PM
Subject: Re: For smart CCIE Candidates

> Have you tried IP policy routing?
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Shadi" <ccie@investorsgrp.com>
> To: "ccielab" <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
> Sent: Saturday, March 09, 2002 4:05 AM
> Subject: For smart CCIE Candidates
>
>
> > Hi,
> >
> >
> > If you have two IP addresses on the same interface (one primary and the
> other
> > secondary), how can you make the router for each network it tries to
reach
> it
> > should use one of the ip addresses as the source ip for that network?
> >
> >
> > R1 wants to ping R2 it should use 10.1.1.1 (which is by default works)?
> >
> > R1 wants to ping R3 is should use 204.100.100.1 as the source IP address
> not
> > 10.1.1.1,
> >
> > I tried it with Nating but it didn't work with me!!!
> >
> > So anybody have any ideas?
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
R1(10.1.1.1)----------------------------------------------------------------
> R
> > 2(10.1.1.1)
> > (204.100.100.1 Secondary)
> > |
> > |
> > |
> > |
> > |
> > R3
> > (204.100.100.2)



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