From: Kenneth Wygand (KWygand@customonline.com)
Date: Sat Jul 10 2004 - 16:47:52 GMT-3
Hi Adel,
I'm sorry but I don't understand completely. Can you illustrate with an example?
Thanks very much in advance! :)
Ken
________________________________
From: Adel Abouchaev [mailto:adel@netmasterclass.net]
Sent: Sat 7/10/2004 3:44 PM
To: Kenneth Wygand
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: distribute-list out (at the process-level)
It's better thought (when it's a redistribution distribute-list, not a
filtering distribute list) as "in" and "out" of FIB. Redistribution
takes prefixes from FIB for the source protocol and brings them into the
destination protocol. When doing just "in", for example, you will filter
prefixes from being installed into FIB.
Cheers,
Adel Abouchaev
CCIE# 12037
www.netmasterclass.net
Kenneth Wygand wrote:
>Hello everyone!
>
>I have a question regarding redistribution at the process level.
>
>Lets say we have the following situation:
>
><SNIP>
>router ospf 1
> distribute-list 1 out eigrp
>!
>router eigrp 1
> network x.x.x.x y.y.y.y
></SNIP>
>
>The way I remember what this command does is that it applies distribute-list 1 for routes redistribute "out -OF- EIGRP", so this would affect routes that are moving from the EIGRP routing process into the OSPF routing process.
>
>Now for my question: Does the "distribute-list" command work the same way within all routing processes? Are there any other type of "unintuitive" distribute-list process-level commands that might not work the way as expected?
>
>Thanks!
>Ken
>
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