RE: Frame map ip

From: Brian Dennis (brian@labforge.com)
Date: Sat Apr 05 2003 - 17:36:10 GMT-3


Maybe there was a requirement to enable the router to ping itself.

As a side note the broadcast keyword isn't needed and is actually
causing duplicate broadcast packets to be sent to "120.20.234.3". When
spokes map to other spokes the broadcast keyword is useless because to
hub will absorb the broadcast.

Brian Dennis, CCIE #2210 (R&S/ISP-Dial/Security)
Director of CCIE Training and Development - IPexpert, Inc.
Mailto: brian@ipexpert.net
Toll Free: 866.225.8064
Outside U.S. & Canada: 312.321.6924

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Jeongwoo Park
Sent: Saturday, April 05, 2003 11:48 AM
To: 'ccielab@groupstudy.com'
Subject: Frame map ip

Hi all.
I am doing ccie practice lab scinerio. I found a interesting answer
about
frame relay map.
 
its answer;
interface Serial0/0.234 multipoint
ip address 120.20.234.2 255.255.255.224
ip ospf network point-to-multipoint
frame-relay map ip 120.20.234.2 203 broadcast
frame-relay map ip 120.20.234.3 203 broadcast
frame-relay map ip 120.20.234.4 204 broadcast
 
As you can see, why would you want to have map frame to your own
interface
ip address?
Can anyone of you explain this?
 
Thanks a lot,
 
JP



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