From: Jonathan V Hays (jhays@jtan.com)
Date: Wed Jun 25 2003 - 01:07:58 GMT-3
The "dlsw icanreach" command specifies a resource locally reachable by
the DLSW peer. The resource might also be a SAP or a NetBIOS name, in
addition to a MAC address. When you use the "exclusive" keyword this
means the specified resource (MAC address in your example) is the ONLY
one locally reachable by that peer, and in that case everything else is
remote.
HTH
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On
> Behalf Of Jason Cash
> Sent: Tuesday, June 24, 2003 6:36 PM
> To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
> Subject: DLSW - icanreach mac-exclusive *explanation please*
>
>
> I am trying to understand what this variable does on the
> 'dlsw icanreach'
> command
>
>
>
> The CCO lists:
>
>
>
> dlsw icanreach
>
> To configure a resource that is locally reachable by this
> router, use the
> dlsw icanreach global configuration command. Use the no form
> of this command
> to remove the resource.
>
>
>
> mac-exclusive
>
> Router can reach only the MAC addresses that are user configured.
>
>
>
>
>
> What exactly does "Router can reach only the MAC addresses
> that are user
> configured" mean? As opposed to what? Meaning without that
> command, what
> could the user/router get to?
>
>
>
> I guess it sounds like a dumb question, but I haven't dealt
> with DLSW enough
> to ask this any other way. Is there a way for a user to get to DLSW
> destinations without a specific MAC and is that where this
> command becomes
> useful?
>
>
>
> Could someone please provide me with an example?
>
>
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