From: Schulz, Dave (DSchulz@dpsciences.com)
Date: Fri Dec 02 2005 - 00:30:17 GMT-3
I thought that you needed to have multicast hellos present in order for the
neighbor relationship to form...even if you configure unicast via the neighbor
command. Is this not the case? Do I have this wrong?
Dave
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com
To: Anthony Sequeira; Eddie Parra
Cc: Chris Lewis; Paul Borghese; Mike Ollington; Ed Lui;
ccielab@groupstudy.com
Sent: 12/1/2005 8:47 PM
Subject: Re: Preventing an EIGRP/OSPF Neighbor Forming
Basically if you do not use passive-interface, two routers can form a
relationship if they are BOTH configured with neighbor statements.
The behavior is EIGRP is different to things like RIP. EIGRP cannot
(currently in released versions) form a neighbor relationship if one
neighbor sends multicast and the other sends unicast.
When you configure a neighbor addresses, the interface that the
unicast hellos go through stop sending multicast hellos.
This can be fixed in newer releases and you may see one eigrp speaker
sending multicast neighbor up to an eigrp speaker sending unicast in the
future.
Chris
Anthony Sequeira <terry.francona@gmail.com> wrote:
Apparently at one point in IOS with EIGRP - you could use
passive-interface in conjunction with the neighbor command in order to
only establish adjacencies with a certain system. Here is the
documentation excerpt from 12.0 on the subject:
<<<This command permits the point-to-point (nonbroadcast) exchange of
routing information. When used in combination with the passive-interface
router configuration command, routing information can be exchanged
between a subset of routers and access servers on a LAN.
router eigrp 109
network 192.168.0.0
passive-interface ethernet 1
neighbor 192.168.20.4 >>>>>
As of 12.2.16 IOS this changed dramatically! Here is the new
documentation (12.3) and configuration example:
<<<<<Multiple neighbor commands can be used to specify additional
neighbors or peers. With most routing protocols, the passive-interface
command restricts outgoing advertisements only. However, when used with
the Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (EIGRP), the use of the
passive-interface command suppresses the exchange of hello messages
between two routers, which results in the loss of their neighbor
relationship. This behavior stops not only routing updates from being
advertised, but it also suppresses incoming routing updates.
In the following example, EIGRP permits the sending of routing updates
to specific neighbors. One copy of the routing update is generated per
neighbor.
router eigrp 109
network 192.168.0.0
neighbor 192.168.20.4>>>>>>>
So Eddie - looks like you have a great point - we can still use the
neighbor command - it just cannot be combined with passive-interface any
more. Can someone lab this up and ensure it works? I do not have access
to a broadcast topology right now where I could try the neighbor command
alone without passive-interface.
I am assumming this feature causes EIGRP to unicast hellos only to a
certain neighbor and RESTRICTS the neighboring with anyone else.....I
would sure love to try it.......
On 12/1/05, Eddie Parra <eddie.parra@gmail.com> wrote: Anthony,
Is the neighbor command useless in this scenario? If you have 4
routers on an Ethernet segment and you only want to form a neighbor
relationship with one, unicast neighbors is a viable option since
multicast hellos will then be ignored from other neighbors. Depending
on how the objective in the lab is worded, this might be a viable
option.
-Eddie
On 11/30/05, Anthony Sequeira <terry.francona@gmail.com> wrote:
> Chris - you are correct - I was sloppy in my post - SO SORRY - the
> distribute-list with the gateway option would prevent the reception of
> routes and does not effect the adjacency.
>
> BUT - I want to reiterate that as of 12.2.16 - the NEIGHBOR command
appears
> totally useless with EIGRP, I have confirmed this on equipment.
>
>
> On 11/30/05, Chris Lewis <chrlewiscsco@yahoo.com> wrote:
> >
> > Dear All:
> >
> > This has been an interesting thread, however I've seen quite a few
> > responses that I cannot replicate on routers.
> >
> > For example in eigrp the distribute-list gateway configuration only
> > affects routes received, not the forming of neighbors. Also I have
just
> > labbed up an ethernet segment with 5 routers on it, left the OSPF
network
> > type as broadcast and the interface level command ip ospf
database-filter
> > all out worked fine on the router I applied it on, all other routers
formed
> > an adjacency on it, however after this command was applied, the
other
> > routers no longer had routes in their routing table to the loopbacks
the
> > router was originally advertising.
> >
> > If the original question was to exclude just one neighbor from
forming
> > adjacency on a multi access network for either OSPF or EIGRP and not
using
> > interface ACLs, the best suggestion I've seen is to use a service
policy on
> > the interface that relates to a class map identifying the neighbor
and the
> > action in the policy-map is drop.
> >
> > If you want to stop routes from the specific neighbor, the
distribute list
> > option makes sense.
> >
> > Chris
> >
> >
> > Paul Borghese <pborghese@groupstudy.com> wrote:
> > Mike,
> >
> > If the requirement is to prevent the neighbor relationship, the
command
> > "neighbor database-filter all out" does not meet that requirement.
The
> > routers will still form a neighbor relationship. Plus it only works
on
> > ospf
> > network type Point-to-Multipoint.
> >
> > Take care,
> >
> > Paul Borghese
> >
> >
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf
Of
> > Mike
> > Ollington
> > Sent: Wednesday, November 30, 2005 10:57 AM
> > To: Ed Lui
> > Cc: Paul Borghese; ccielab@groupstudy.com
> > Subject: RE: Preventing an EIGRP/OSPF Neighbor Forming
> >
> > Ed,
> >
> > That would be changing for it the whole area thus affecting all the
> > neighbors.
> >
> > Ronald's `neighbor ip-address database-filter all out' command would
> > work fine for OSPF. Thanks Ronald.
> >
> > Cheers,
> > Mike
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Ed Lui [mailto:edwlui@gmail.com]
> > Sent: 30 November 2005 15:52
> > To: Mike Ollington
> > Cc: Paul Borghese; ccielab@groupstudy.com
> > Subject: Re: Preventing an EIGRP/OSPF Neighbor Forming
> >
> > Mike,
> >
> > Are you allowed to use OSPF authentication ?
> >
> > Ed Lui
> >
> >
> >
> > On 11/30/05, Mike Ollington wrote:
> > > Paul,
> > >
> > > Changing those values would break all neighbours on an interface,
> > > anything to kill just the one?
> > >
> > > For example:
> > >
> > > 172.16.1.1
> > > 172.16.1.2
> > > 172.16.1.3 <- I temporarily want to prevent this neighbour.
> > > 172.16.1.4
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> > > Mike
> > >
> > > -----Original Message-----
> > > From: Paul Borghese [mailto: pborghese@groupstudy.com]
> > > Sent: 30 November 2005 15:10
> > > To: Mike Ollington
> > > Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
> > > Subject: Re: Preventing an EIGRP/OSPF Neighbor Forming
> > >
> > > In OSPF a neighbor relationship will not be formed if any of the
> > > following
> > > mismatch:
> > >
> > > hello/dead interval
> > > area id
> > > stub flag
> > > authentication
> > > subnet mask
> > > mtu
> > >
> > > So for example, if you change the hello interval on one side, the
> > > neighbor
> > > will not form. You can see this by doing a "debug ip ospf adj".
> > >
> > > For EIGRP, you can try changing the K values or Autonomous System
> > > number.
> > > EIGRP will for a relationship even if the hello values do not
match.
> > >
> > > Take care,
> > >
> > > Paul Borghese
> > >
> > > > Hello,
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > Hypothetical - you have an interface with many EIGRP/OSPF
> > neighbours.
> > > > You want to prevent one; you don't want to use an interface
access
> > > list.
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > In BGP there is the neighbour shutdown command, PIM has a
neighbour
> > > > list. Any thing similar for OSPF or EIGRP?
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > Thanks,
> > > >
> > > > Mike
> > > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
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