From: Richard Dumoulin (richard.dumoulin@vanco.es)
Date: Sun Feb 29 2004 - 15:55:41 GMT-3
Alsontra, I also saw this on lab 4 of IExpert but did not take the time to
research --Richard
-----Mensaje original-----
De: Scott, Tyson C [mailto:tyson.scott@hp.com]
Enviado el: domingo, 29 de febrero de 2004 5:55
Para: alsontra@hotmail.com; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Asunto: RE: OSPF hello question?
If it was 224.0.0.6 it would match OSPF designated router advertisement?
Could it be a bug in the output?
Regards,
Tyson Scott
Agilent Problem Management Team
Managed Network Services
Phone: 313-583-5812
Pager: 877-997-0811
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
alsontra@hotmail.com
Sent: Saturday, February 28, 2004 6:13 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: OSPF hello question?
Group,
Topology is simply, R2 is the hub, R1 and R3 are spokes. The spoke
routers are
configured on p2p subifs with ip ospf network type broadcast specified.
Network type is non_broadcast on R2's multi-point physical interface. R2
has
neighbor statements pointing toward the hubs, so R1and R3 become
adjacent with
R2. My question is this is a follows: When I do a debug ip ospf hello
on the
hubs, why is the destination of the hello packets 0.0.0.6? I understand
that
the network type is non_broadcast and hello packets are replicated as
unicasts
to the Hub router, but what is this 0.0.0.6 address? Is it irrelevant?
debug ip ospf hello
<output on R3, makes no since to me>
*Mar 1 01:12:31.907: OSPF: Send hello to 0.0.0.6 area 0 on Serial1/0.1
from
141.1.123.3
Alsontra
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