From: Scott, Tyson C (tyson.scott@hp.com)
Date: Wed Mar 31 2004 - 01:15:29 GMT-3
It will use both gateways with DHCP. We had a scope messed up and some
switches in a warehouse were listed as routers. But it would not be
after the first fails. Windows 2000 will start forwarding traffic to
the second gateway after a given period of time. So I don't know if
that would meet the requirements either. Unless this is just a lab it
up scenario not based on real world work.
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Wes Smith
Sent: Tuesday, March 30, 2004 1:34 PM
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: IRDP ???
I think the clue here is that you've been told to config a DHCP server.
This way you can provide two default gateways from your dhcp server..
W2K will use the first unless it's down.
micsoniu@telus.net wrote:
>Default gateway problem:
>
>Two routers R1 and R2 are attached to the same LAN. R1 provides dynamic
IP
>addressing to workstations locatde on this LAN. R2 will be the default
gateway
>but if R2 is not reachable, R1 will become the gateway for the machines
that
>already acquired IP addresses. NO HSRP IS ALLOWED !
>
>1. Is IRDP the appropriate solution ? - Configure R1 and R2 to
advertise R2's
>IP address using different IRDP piorities ? ( let's say 100 for R2 and
50 for
>R1)...
>
>2. If IRDP is the right solution, how do we know that IRDP is enabled
on
>workstations ?
>
>3. If this is not the right solution, any suggestions would be
appreciated ...
>
>Thank you
>
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