RE: Question on OSPF, BGP RID's on the lab

From: Charles Carley (ccarley@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sun Mar 17 2002 - 18:12:08 GMT-3


   
#router bgp 200
#bgp router-id x.x.x.x

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of Sean
C.
Sent: Sunday, March 17, 2002 6:49 PM
To: jonatale@earthlink.net; Bryan Ginman
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: Question on OSPF, BGP RID's on the lab

Hello,

Sure you can statically assign the OSPF RID. Per Solie - p748.

"The networks - or, more specifically, the IP host addresses used for router
IDs- do not need to be reachable or "ping-able" addresses. In Cisco IOS
12.0 and above, the OSPF router ID can be hard-coded with the OSPF router
command:

Router(config-router)#router-id <ip address>

HTH,
Sean
----- Original Message -----
From: <jonatale@earthlink.net>
To: "Bryan Ginman" <ginmanb@westnet.com>
Cc: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 17, 2002 3:09 PM
Subject: Re: Question on OSPF, BGP RID's on the lab

correct me if i am wrong please, but there is no way to explicatly set the
ospf
RID (did they add it???)

the rtr ids should be the same (in my book), but cisco determines them
slightly
differently in bgp and ospf (forget the details) i have seen in this list
that
if they are not the same then probs can happen (don't know the details)

Bryan Ginman wrote:

> question here and I don't think this is considered NDA, but I prefer
> hardcoding my OSPF and BGP RID's to head off any problems that might
result
> from reloading , differing RID's OSPF-BGP etc.. On the lab is it
considered
> "extraneous configuration" to have these entered if it is not explicitly
> asked for?
>
> Cheers,
>
> Bryan



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