From: Hobbs (deadheadblues@gmail.com)
Date: Mon Sep 22 2008 - 01:18:45 ART
When you are receiving multicast traffic on a different interface than you
would normally send unicast traffic to reach the source of that multicast,
then you need a static mroute pointing towards the interface you receive the
multicast traffic.
If you would use s0/0 to send traffic towards 10.1.1.1 but are receiving
multicast traffic from 10.1.1.1 on f0/0, you would need static mroute
pointing out f0/0 (to the next hop on that interface).
On Sun, Sep 21, 2008 at 8:49 PM, CCIE Hunter <cisco.ccie.guru@gmail.com>wrote:
> Hi all expert.
> I am confusing when/what kind of situation we need to use static ip
> route(eg.ip mroute 10.1.1.1 255.255.255.255 10.2.2.2)
>
> I already search inside cisco and google but still can't understandable.
>
> Please :)
>
> Regards
>
>
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