RE: OSPF to IGRP redistribution (I know this has been killed, thi s is short I promise)

From: Ram Thunai Selvam-Consultancy-Chennai (thunai@xxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Apr 04 2002 - 06:23:52 GMT-3


   
 What IOS u are using If u are using 12.1 and above then just say summary
address at r1 and say redistribute connected u will get it on r2

-----Original Message-----
From: Lupi, Guy [mailto:Guy.Lupi@eurekaggn.com]
Sent: Thursday, April 04, 2002 3:10 AM
To: 'Mas Kato'
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: OSPF to IGRP redistribution (I know this has been killed, thi s
is short I promise)

Right, that is what I did, R1 is a member of 2 areas, area 1 and area 0.
Here is a partial output of "show ip ospf". This is why I don't understand
why it isn't working. I thought that as long as the router was an ABR, you
could use area range to summarize and inject into IGRP.

r1#sh ip os
 Routing Process "ospf 100" with ID 141.63.10.1 and Domain ID 0.0.0.100
 Supports only single TOS(TOS0) routes
 Supports opaque LSA
 It is an area border and autonomous system boundary router

-----Original Message-----
From: Mas Kato [mailto:loomis_towcar@speedracer.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 03, 2002 4:30 PM
To: Lupi, Guy
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: OSPF to IGRP redistribution (I know this has been killed,
this is short I promise)

Guy,

Although router1 is certainly an ASBR, it really doesn't become an ABR until
it becomes a member of two or more OSPF areas. If you hung another
OSPF-speaking router off of router1 and placed it in an area different from
router5, you would then see the results of your 'area range' command on that
new router, because that new router would know how to read the type 3
summary LSAs being originated by router1.

Regards,

Mas Kato
https://ecardfile.com/id/mkato

> "Lupi, Guy" <Guy.Lupi@eurekaggn.com> "'ccielab@groupstudy.com'"
<ccielab@groupstudy.com>Date: Wed, 3 Apr 2002 14:44:12 -0500
>Reply-To: "Lupi, Guy" <Guy.Lupi@eurekaggn.com>
>
>I know this has been covered in detail before, I just want to verify
>something. I have the following:
>
>router2---------router1--------router5
>
>Router 5 and router 1 are OSPF, router 2 and router 1 is igrp only. I know
>how to use the secondary address, tunnel, and route-map methods. I know
how
>to use summary address on router 1 to get connected routes that are not in
>OSPF onto router 2. I cannot get routes from router 5 to router 2 using
>area range on router 1. Router 1 is an ASBR, and an ABR. I cannot use the
>area range command to get the route from r5 to r2, and summary address
would
>never work, but tunnels, route-maps, and secondary addresses work. I
>thought that if the router was an ABR, you could do "area-range [area route
>is from] x.x.x.x x.x.x.x". Thanks.



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