RE: policy routing.

From: Sam.MicroGate@usa.telekom.de
Date: Tue Oct 29 2002 - 18:01:58 GMT-3


Locally originated traffic is the traffic that has a source IP address from
one of the physical or logical interfaces of the local router. For example,
if you telnet to an internet host from your router, all the keystrokes you
type is a locally generated traffic. A configured ip local policy would
apply to this traffic. Hope this helps.

Sam

-----Original Message-----
From: enginedrive2002 [mailto:enginedrive2002@yahoo.ca]
Sent: Tuesday, October 29, 2002 3:38 PM
To: Sam.MicroGate@usa.telekom.de; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: policy routing.

Thanks, Sam!

1. Will there has a grey area, that could use either one of them? 2. I know
the policy will affect incoming packets, could you give me a example of how
to apply the policy on outgoing packets? 3. Issue "ping" command on route,
the resulted traffic should be considered traffic originated by router or
traffic pass through the router?

Thanks!

E.D.

----- Original Message -----
From: <Sam.MicroGate@usa.telekom.de>
To: <enginedrive2002@yahoo.ca>; <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: October 29, 2002 3:12 PM
Subject: RE: policy routing.

> The ip local policy route-map will apply the policy to the local
> traffic that is originated by router. While ip policy route-map is
> applied to the traffic leaving or entering the interface, depends on
> the configuration.
>
> Sam
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: enginedrive2002 [mailto:enginedrive2002@yahoo.ca]
> Sent: Tuesday, October 29, 2002 3:02 PM
> To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
> Subject: policy routing.
>
>
> "ip local policy route-map <map_tag>" is a global configuration
> command, while "ip policy route-map <map_tag>" is a interface
> configuration
command.
> What's the difference between these two commands?
>
> Thanks!
>
>
> E.D.



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Tue Nov 05 2002 - 08:35:59 GMT-3