From: Peter van Oene (pvo@xxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Wed Aug 14 2002 - 16:29:25 GMT-3
I don't see the example you are referring to, but a stub network is an
interface upon which there is no adjacency established. Interfaces are
listed one by one in each router's type 1 LSA along with the type being
transit or stub. For details like this, you should really consult the RFC.
Pete
At 05:37 PM 8/14/2002 +1000, Hunt Lee wrote:
>Hi All,
>
>Reading OSPF this afternoon, there is a paragraph on CCO as follows:-
>
>http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/104/ospfdb7.html
>
>"If they're on a common subnet, the routers install routes for any
>stub networks listed in their neighbor's router LSA. In our example,
>6.0.0.0/8 is the only stub network listed in Router 3.3.3.3's LSA in
>Area 1, to which Router 2.2.2.2 is already directly connected."
>
>What qualifies as a Stub Network??? What does it mean by "any stub
>networks listed in their neighbor's Router LSA"? I would have thought
>the 5.0.0.0/8 would be included also?
>
>Am I clearly missing something?
>
>Cheers
>
>http://digital.yahoo.com.au - Yahoo! Digital How To
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