From: Gregory Gombas (ggombas@gmail.com)
Date: Tue Nov 06 2007 - 12:12:34 ART
Correct, the redundancy points to HSRP group name...but what does it do
exactly?
Why does it need to point to the HSRP group name?
On 11/6/07, kang lee <kanghlee@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I hope this is what you looking for.
>
> http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios122/122newft/122t/122t4/ftnthsrp.htm
>
>
> Syntax Description
>
> *list **access-list-number*
>
> Standard IP access list number. Packets with source addresses that pass
> the access list are dynamically translated using global addresses from the
> named pool.
>
> *list **access-list-name*
>
> Name of a standard IP access list. Packets with source addresses that pass
> the access list are dynamically translated using global addresses from the
> named pool.
>
> *pool **pool-name*
>
> Name of the pool from which global IP addresses are allocated dynamically.
>
> *overload*
>
> (Optional) Enables the router to use one global address for many local
> addresses. When overloading is configured, the TCP or User Datagram Protocol
> (UDP) port number of each inside host distinguishes between the multiple
> conversations using the same local IP address.
>
> *static **local-ip*
>
> Sets up a single static translation. The *local-ip *argument establishes
> the local IP address assigned to a host on the inside network. The address
> could be randomly chosen, allocated from RFC 1918, or obsolete.
>
> *global-ip*
>
> Sets up a single static translation. The global-ip argument establishes
> the globally unique IP address of an inside host as it appears to the
> outside world.
>
> *redundancy **group-name*
>
> Name of the group configured on the NAT inside interface in a Hot Standby
> Routing Protocol (HSRP) environment.
> - Show quoted text -
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