From: high spirit (high_spirit007@yahoo.com)
Date: Wed Oct 20 2004 - 11:32:07 GMT-3
hi chris ,
That means if a router is connecting any 2 routing
domains .. then we dont need redistribute connected ,
but if one of the routing domain is ISIS when we need
to put redistribute connected in the other routing
protocol .. to carry that network ...
am i right ??
thanx ,
imran .
--- "Lord, Chris" <chris.lord@lorien.co.uk> wrote:
> hi imran,
>
> With most protocols (IGRP, EIGRP, RIP and OSPF) if
> they are running on an interface, they will carry
> the connected subnets into another protocol
> automatically through redistribution. The exception
> is ISIS which does not do this so you need to do it
> yourself using redist conn.
>
> hth,
>
> chris
>
> CCIE #13925
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: high spirit [mailto:high_spirit007@yahoo.com]
> Sent: 20 October 2004 14:36
> To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
> Subject: About ' redistribute connected '
>
>
> hi group ,
>
> wish to clear my doubt about the use of '
> redistribute connected route-map CONN ' used in the
> routing protocol , though another routing protocol
> is
> running on that network/interface . When i check the
> solutions in some instances i see the use of
> redistributed connected on the boundry router
> (router
> connecting 2 routing domains ) ... but on some
> instances i dont see use of ' redistribute connected
>
> route-map CONN ' on the boundry router. why do we
> have
> to use redistribute connected though routing
> protocol
> is running on that interface ??? Is there any logic
> about when to use redistribute connected and when
> not
> too ??? Is it something to do with depending on the
> routing protocol running on the interface ????
>
> Hope i dont sound weird and silly ... any
> help/comments on the queries will be appreciated
> .....
>
>
> thanx ,
> imran .
>
>
>
>
>
>
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