From: P729 (p729@cox.net)
Date: Mon Mar 03 2003 - 12:58:02 GMT-3
The 'ppp authentication' commands instruct the router as to where and when
to challenge the REMOTE end. If a router is challenged, it has no choice but
to attempt to authenticate. So in your scenario, it's not up to r1 (not
configurable on r1). It's up to r2. r2 must be instructed not to challenge
(authenticate) r1.
With this in mind, 'ppp authentication chap callin' configured in r1
instucts r1 to challenge the calling party when r1 is the called party (r2
calls r1). Whether or not r1 itself is challenged during this call depends
on how r2 is configured. In the same scenario, if r1 were to call r2, r1
would not challenge r2 ("r2 would not have to authenticate") because its a
"callout" from r1's perspective. Whether r1 is challenged during this
callout still depends on how r2 is configured.
Regards,
Mas Kato
https://ecardfile.com/id/mkato
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jung, Jin" <jin.jung@lmco.com>
To: "Ccielab@Groupstudy.Com" <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Monday, March 03, 2003 4:56 AM
Subject: Simple ISDN question -
I have seen this question asked before, but I am still not sure,
If scenario asks, " r1 should not authenticate", only r2 should
authenticate.
I am thinking I have to setup ppp authenticate chap callin on r1,
Is this correct?
Jin Jung
Enterprise Information Services
Network Infrastructure engineer
Office: 301-640-3247
Have a great day
l
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