From: Ahsan Mohiuddin (ahsan.mohiuddin@yahoo.com)
Date: Mon Nov 05 2007 - 23:26:18 ART
if you are setting spokes to priority 0, no need to worry about router boot speeds because 0 priority makes them ineligible of becoming DRs.
M_A_Jones@Dell.com wrote: Im thinking in theory, that is what they'd be looking for (Setting
others to 0 and setting a high priority for DR). Most people arent aware
how important the speed of the routers boot up phase is during election.
So I doubt you'd see something like that. I to, did a lot of digging for
that very instance.
Michael Jones
Network Engineer
Global Network Operations
Dell Inc.
512.723.3268
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Eric Phillips
Sent: Monday, November 05, 2007 11:05 AM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Any way to force OSPF DR other than "priority 0"?
Hey all,
I have done quite a bit of Googling and DOC-CD reading, and have not
found anyone offering any clever ways to force the election of a certain
router as the DR besides setting the priority to 0 on all other routers.
For example, if I had a question that asked me to ensure Router1 was
always the DR on a certain segment without touching the configuration of
Router2 and Router3 I can set the priority very high on Router1, but if
Router1 boots a few seconds later than Router2, Router2 will be the DR
even if it has it's default priority of 1. The only way I can think to
completely guarantee Router1 is always the DR is to make the priority 0
on all other routers.
Am I missing something obvious, or am I over thinking this too much? I
have not seen this asked in any practice labs, just theorizing what
could happen.
-Eric
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