From: steven.j.nelson@xxxxxx
Date: Sun May 12 2002 - 12:39:02 GMT-3
Curtis,
Sorry but you are wrong, I have dialer watch running an isdn backup scenario
for a frame link where the frame link and the backed up isdn link are in
area 0, no ospf demand circuit and it works fine.
I do have an access list to deny ospf as I don't want it to be interesting
to bring the line up, I use dialer watch to initiate the call as it is meant
to do.
If you want to see the configs I can let you have them, but believe me the
two technologies are definatley separate.
Thanks
Steve
-----Original Message-----
From: Curtis Phillips [mailto:cphillips@suscom.net]
Sent: 11 May 2002 20:42
To: Nelson,SJ,Steven,IVNH25 C; ccielab
Subject: Re: Justification for use of Dialer-watch in OSPF
Steve,
I think you will find that demand-circuit is still required if dialer-watch
is used with OSPF.
Set it up and you will see that the OSPF will keep the ISDN up.
Curtis
----- Original Message -----
From: <steven.j.nelson@bt.com>
To: <cphillips@suscom.net>; <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Saturday, May 11, 2002 11:53 AM
Subject: RE: Justification for use of Dialer-watch in OSPF
> Curtis
>
> Think you may have answered your own question here except for one small
> point.
>
> Dialer Watch and OSPF Demand circuit are not and were never meant to work
in
> conjunction with each other, they are two separate technologies that allow
> demand (Dialer, X.25, atm and frame svc etc etc) circuits to keep quiet
> unless a specific condition is met.
>
> In the case of ospf demand circuit the trigger is a change in topology etc
> etc
>
> In the case of Dialer Watch when a watched route dissapears from the
routing
> table
>
> Don't confuse the two and use them as they are meant separately...
>
> HTH, ant more questions mail me off line...
>
> All the best
>
> Steve
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Curtis Phillips [mailto:cphillips@suscom.net]
> Sent: 11 May 2002 16:29
> To: ccielab
> Subject: Justification for use of Dialer-watch in OSPF
>
>
> Hello All,
>
> I was thinking about the use of Dialer-watch with OSPF over ISDN. I know
> that
> demand-circuits are used in conjunction with dialer-watch in the same
manner
> as protocol packets are filtered by dialer-lists fro EIGRP or IGRP.
>
> Demand interfaces allow the dialer to bypass keep-alives and to dial only
> when there is a change (addition or deletion) of LSA in the OSPF database.
>
> It seems to me that demand circuits would adequately cover the suppression
> of
> dial related to anything other than a change in database LSAs. So, I
wonder
> what the perceived benefit is of using dialer-watch with OSPF. Unless it
is
> to
> track routes that are not in the OSPF process.
>
> Any thoughts?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Curtis
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