RE: set ip next-hop

From: Tom Fortier (tom@xxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Wed Aug 28 2002 - 05:41:18 GMT-3


   
My hat's off to Hansang. That was a great answer to the question, which
was also great. I just can't believe the quality of this group. Except
in the Army, and, perhaps AA, I don't think you'll find more people
working so hard individually, while helping others whenever they have a
chance, and even bonding. It's nice to see people growing through the
list...asking dump questions...to giving quality answers. Wow! I'm
glad I'm not the only one still awake.

Tom Fortier
Lab Sept 6th

-----Original Message-----
From: Hansang Bae [mailto:hbae@nyc.rr.com]
Sent: Tuesday, August 27, 2002 11:52 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: set ip next-hop

At 11:12 AM 8/25/2002 -0700, ccie candidate wrote:
>i wonder if someone explain what is the function of set ip next-hop
used in route maps , what is it mean ?
>assume i have a router where im redistributing two protocols
(eigrp/ospf ) for example where i used route map to select certain
networks from the eigrp domain to be redistributed into the ospf domain
.
>what will happen if i set the ip next hop of those routes also to
another ip address ?? will they propagate inside the ospf domain carring
this new next hop ..or what will happen

Remember that route-maps can be used for a lot of things in IOS. Just
because the command is there does not mean that you should use it or
that it's even pertinent to what your trying to do!

"set ip next-hop" tells the router to ignore the routing/forwarding
table for a given destination. So for example, assume your router has a
routing table which states that all traffic destined for 192.168.1.0 /24
should be forwarded to 172.16.1.1 (on Fa0/1).

But you decide that for users *coming* from 10.1.0.0 /16 to destination
192.168.1.0, you want it to go out Fa 1/1 interface. You can use a
route-map along with set next hop command to accomplish this.

hsb



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