From: Omar Masood (omarmasood360@xxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sat Jul 31 1999 - 06:44:12 GMT-3
If you want to configure frame-relay network set-up, then you will have to
configure a another router as the switch.
If anyone knows how to get frame-relay working without a switch...please let
me know as I could give my router back to my client.
C U
**Omar Masood 360**
e/m: omarmasood360@hotmail.com
or: omarmasood@aol.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Hunt Lee" <huntl@webcentral.com.au>
To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Wednesday, July 31, 2002 9:56 AM
Subject: BGP Hub router /w point-to-multipoint
> Hi Group,
>
> Reading the Groupstudy archives, I have came across a number of references
> talking about a hub & spoke configuration for BGP e.g. RTA is a hub router
> (with point-to-multipoint), while RTB & RTC are spoke routers. All 3
> routers are in the same AS. And there is a PVC connected between RTA to
> RTB, as well as another one from RTB to RTC, but there is no PVC between
RTB
> & RTC, as a result... there might be a need to configure a RTA as a Route
> Reflector etc.
>
> My query is this ;-) Based on the above e.g., do I need to setup an
> additional router in the middle of the 3 routers as a Frame-Relay Switch??
> Or can the hub router (RTA) be configured with both with BGP configs (e.g.
> BGP neighbors statements, route-reflector-client statements etc) together
> with the point-to-multipoint config (for PVCs connectivity etc)??
>
> N.B: I also found a diagram at BGP Command & Reference (by Parkhurst)...
but
> it only had a diagram without any configs.
>
> Hope that I am making sense here ;-)
>
> Best Regards,
> Hunt Lee
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Sat Sep 07 2002 - 19:36:50 GMT-3