From: Chris Lewis (chrlewiscsco@yahoo.com)
Date: Tue Nov 01 2005 - 22:35:51 GMT-3
I don't have a link offhand, some time using google will probably find one somewhere, but I think the concept is straightforward enough to lab up and get some experience with. Consider this.
R1---R2
|
|
R3
In this setup R1 is the hub, using a multipoint frame interface and all the directly connected interfaces are on the same subnet.
Multicast will not normally be sent out the interface it was received on, so that is a challenge for R2 to R3 communication. So create a tunnel between R2 and R3 and enable ip pim dense mode on both ends. As long as you have IP conectivity between the addresses used to create the tunnel by the IGP, you should be able to get it to work.
Chris
Niche <jackyliu419@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Chris,
Would you mind to provide any link to talk about this with examples?
Cheers~
Jacky
On 11/2/05, Chris Lewis <chrlewiscsco@yahoo.com> wrote:A tunnel comes to mind
CCIEin2006 CCIEin2006 <cciein2006@yahoo.com> wrote:Great, but how do you get dense mode (or sparse-dense mode) to work between a sender on one frame relay spoke and a receiver on another frame relay spoke in the same subnet?
Chris Lewis <chrlewiscsco@yahoo.com> wrote: nbma-mode only makes sense for sparse mode, there are no joins in dense.
The command reference is great at explaining things like this
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios123/123tcr/123tip3r/ip3_i2gt.htm#wp1069388
Chris
cciein2006@yahoo.com wrote:
Does PIM dense mode or sparse-dense mode work over frame relay? I tried the ip pim nbma-mode command on a multipoint frame-relay interface but it generates an error message saying that PIM nbma-mode is not recommended for dense mode or sparse-dense mode?
Why is this?
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