From: MMoniz (ccie2002@tampabay.rr.com)
Date: Thu Apr 29 2004 - 23:51:28 GMT-3
Well for one you can't. The router won't accept it. It is a simple solution
to provide IP connectivity
to 2 int's on the same router to 2 seperate layer 2 LAN segments.
Bridge them and route with the same IP..
Hence Bridge IRB...int BVI
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Chris Larson
Sent: Thursday, April 29, 2004 9:47 PM
To: RExpert; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: Same IP on E0/0 and E0/1
If you could put the same IP or even the same subnet on 2 different
interfaces in the same router, how would the router ever know which one to
forward packets out of?
What are you trying to accomplish beyond putting the same ip on 2
interfaces?
----- Original Message -----
From: "RExpert" <routerexpert@yahoo.com>
To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 29, 2004 3:47 PM
Subject: Same IP on E0/0 and E0/1
> I need help like right now - BIG Thanks to everyone that responds.
>
> I am trying to put the exact same IP Address on 2 different ethernet
interfaces. The only thing that I could think of is - interface multilink
1, but it is not working, here is my config:
>
> interface Multilink1
> ip address 66.106.47.230 255.255.255.252
> ppp multilink
> multilink-group 1
>
> Ethernet 0/0
>
> no ip address
> ip load-sharing per-packet
> no ip mroute-cache
> ppp multilink
> multilink-group 1
>
> Ethernet 0/1
>
> no ip address
> ip load-sharing per-packet
> no ip mroute-cache
> ppp multilink
> multilink-group 1
>
>
>
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