RE: ipx nlsp rip off vs. no network xx

From: StudyCCIE (StudyCCIE@xxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sun Apr 07 2002 - 17:03:03 GMT-3


   
Glenn,

        NLSP runs with RIP & SAP compatibility mode by default. It does
this to support servers running older versions of Netware that don't
support NLSP. If you say "IPX NLSP RIP OFF" and "IPX NLSP SAP OFF" on
your interface, this means that you have newer Netware servers that *do*
support NLSP, therefore you don't need the RIP SAP compatibility mode.

        "NO NETWORK XXX" under the RIP process stops RIP from
advertising a network. As soon as you enable IPX routing, all networks
are advertised by RIP. Use the "NO NETWORK XXX" or "NO NETWORK ALL"
command under the IPX RIP process to stop this behavior.

HTH

Brian McGahan
CCIE #8593
brian@cyscoexpert.com

CyscoExpert Corporation
Internetwork Consulting & Training
http://www.cyscoexpert.com
Voice: 847.674.3392
Fax: 847.674.2625

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Williams, Glenn
Sent: Sunday, April 07, 2002 11:30 AM
To: 'ccielab@groupstudy.com'
Subject: ipx nlsp rip off vs. no network xx

Hi all,

Can someone explain the difference between using the command "ipx nlsp
rip
off" in the interface mode vs. "no network xxxx" in the rip routing
mode.
In the example below I have used both. My intial reaction is they both
do
the same thing but perhpas one is simply more specific to a single
interface
verses the whole routing process. But then again maybe I'm way off

see below:

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
ipx routing 0007.0007.0007
ipx internal-network 77

ipx router nlsp
 area-address 0 0
!
ipx router rip
 no network 64
!
interface s0
 ipx network 64
 ipx nlsp enable
 ipx nlsp rip off
 ipx nlsp sap off
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

TIA
GW



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Thu Jun 13 2002 - 10:57:58 GMT-3