From: ccie2be (ccie2be@nyc.rr.com)
Date: Thu May 26 2005 - 09:11:28 GMT-3
Ray,
I think this command falls into the "Stupid Router Tricks" category.
However, nothing in the lab blueprints excludes such things so it could be
there.
That said, here are my notes on it.
Its possible to have a router accept telnet requests to an ip host address
that doesn't exist on any of the router's interfaces. For example, assume
that the dns entry for a router is entered with the wrong ip address. If
you configure ip alias <wrong ip> 23, the router will accept that. (See IE
lab 4) The wrong ip address should only be wrong in the host portion of the
address- the subnet should exist on the router. Another possible way to
achieve the same effect is to use 2ndary addressing on an interface. (See
IE lab 7)
Bob,
Any chance you could post an example of how to use this command to collect
addresses for a TCL script? Am I missing something obvious cause I don't
see how this command would help?
TIA, Tim
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of Bob
Sinclair
Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2005 9:25 PM
To: 22Cent@gmail.com; Group Study
Subject: Re: ip alias
Not sure of its intended use. I use it to collect IP addresses for my TCL
scripts. Seems to minimize unnecessary characters. It also displays
dynamic
addresses, those configured via static NAT or DHCP.
Bob Sinclair
CCIE #10427, CCSI 30427, CISSP
www.netmasterclass.net
----- Original Message -----
From: 22Cent@gmail.com
To: Group Study
Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2005 9:15 PM
Subject: ip alias
Hi group,
What is the correct usage of the ip alias command. I was once told it
can be useful in the lab. Any thoughts?
TIA
Ray
R1(config)#ip alias ?
A.B.C.D IP address to alias to a port
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