From: Brian Dennis (bdennis@internetworkexpert.com)
Date: Tue Aug 09 2005 - 18:20:53 GMT-3
Here is part of an earlier e-mail I sent about this subject:
<quote>
The "peer neighbor-route" command is normally used for unnumbered links
or when the two ends of the PPP link are not on the same IP network
(i.e. large scale dial). If a link is unnumbered a route will be needed
to the remote side's IP address. This "peer neighbor-route" command is
how a route to the remote end is created. If you disable the "peer
neighbor-route" command on an unnumbered link, a static route will
normally be needed to reach the remote end.
For someone to get an understanding of the "peer neighbor-route" command
and
how it's used in the real world I recommend enabling PPP on a serial
link
between two routers. Use IP unnumbered for the serial addressing based
off
of each respective router's loopback interface. Then ping the remote
end's
loopback. This should be successful. Now do the "no peer
neighbor-route" command on each side of the link and 'bounce' (shut/no
shut) the interface. Try to ping the remote end's loopback to see the
benefit of having the "peer neighbor-route" command enabled.
</quote>
HTH,
Brian Dennis, CCIE #2210 (R&S/ISP-Dial/Security)
bdennis@internetworkexpert.com
Internetwork Expert, Inc.
http://www.InternetworkExpert.com
Toll Free: 877-224-8987
Direct: 775-745-6404 (Outside the US and Canada)
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Stefan Grey
Sent: Tuesday, August 09, 2005 1:24 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: no peer neighbor-route command
Could you please explain me what really this command does or where could
I
read about it.
As I read in the documentaion it is used in ISDN to remove some default
behaviour (some neighbor generated routes). I can't get which neighbor
routes does ISDN generate by default. I always use ISDN configuration
without this command and don't know what neighbor routes this are.
Thanks
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