From: Tarun Pahuja (pahujat@gmail.com)
Date: Wed Nov 14 2007 - 13:21:24 ART
The Best way to test this would be to set the priority on the neighboring
routers to he higher than the one you set at the hub router for neighbors
using neighbor x.x.x.x priority command in a NBMA network and see what
happens after you clear the ospf process.
HTH,
Tarun
On Nov 14, 2007 1:08 AM, Chan Hong <chan_hong33@yahoo.com> wrote:
> Hi GS,
>
> I don't understand the function of the command "neighbor x.x.x.x
> priority". Below message is the explaination from Cisco.
>
> (Optional) 8-bit
> number indicating the router priority value of the nonbroadcast neighbor
> associated with the IP address specified. The default is 0. This keyword
> does
> not apply to point-to-multipoint interfaces
>
> I tried to blindly test this
> command in routers and found that if neighbor router's interface ospf
> priority
> is 2.
> I tried to debug ip ospf packet, hello,event but still can't find out
> the operation of this command..........
>
> Regards,
> Howard
>
>
> Yahoo!
> g62d8
> e. e (f ;g %o< f d= e& d= i 2g/ i; e."! h+ e
> e>
> http://hk.promo.yahoo.com/security/index.htmld: h'#f 4e$ !
>
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