From: Sasa Milic (smilic@xxxxxxxx)
Date: Tue May 21 2002 - 15:01:39 GMT-3
1. It is more a concept then function. For example:
A ----- B (border) ------- C (border) ------ D
A and B are group 1.
C and D are group 2.
Imagine that router A is looking for resource that is connected
to router D. It would ask router B for it, B would ask C, C would
find that resource is connected at D. That information would be
returned to router A. Now, router A connects to router D, which is
in this case "Peer On Demand" for router A. Don't forget
"dlsw local ... prom" on D. You don't have to specify any defaults
for PoD; it would use TCP encapsulation by default.
2. You must have promiscuous mode configured on D. If you have
any resources connected to "A", than it needs "prom" too.
Regards,
Sasa, CCIE No 8635
"Christopher E. Miller" wrote:
>
> These questions are about peer-on-demand.
> 1. peer-on-demand is a function of border peers and peer groups. There is no
> command to enable this, it just works that way. If you then want to change
> the peer-on-demand defaults, use the dlsw peer-on-demand-defaults command.
> Otherwise they just work. RIGHT????
> 2.In order for peer-on-demand to work, must you have promiscuous mode
> configured or can you still statically define every peer?
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