From: Greg Wendel (gwendel@gmail.com)
Date: Tue Feb 05 2008 - 15:27:03 ARST
Adding to what Joe said, If you manually change the admin distance which
causes a tie, the router will choose the winner based on the default admin
distances per protocol. I would guess that the static route would win due
to its lower default admin distance. I don't have a chance to lab this at
the moment, but I would be curious to see the results.
On Feb 5, 2008 1:50 AM, Joseph Brunner <joe@affirmedsystems.com> wrote:
> Both would be in the routing table. But there will no load balancing
> unless
> cef is disabled (no ip cef). With cef the OLDEST or first learned route is
> USED only... so if you want true load balancing using the routing table,
> disable cef.
>
> josCEF
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
> Robert CCIE
> Sent: Monday, February 04, 2008 8:07 PM
> To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
> Subject: Route preference
>
> Hello Everyone,
> I was just wondering how a router behaves in these situations. If a
> router learns a route through a routing protocol but there is a static
> route with the same admin distance configured. Which route would be
> installed in the routing table? Or would both be installed? Also, I'm
> guessing metrics only matter for that routing protocols process as far
> as calculation since a static route has a metric of 0.
>
> So, if a router is learning 192.168.1.0/24 through ospf and there is a
> static route for 192.168.1.0/24 with AD of 110. Thank you in advance.
>
> -Robert
>
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-- Gregory Wendel Springfield VA, 22153
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