From: Wes Stevens (wrsteve33-gsccie@yahoo.com)
Date: Thu Jan 15 2009 - 00:04:00 ARST
When you allow the direct spoke to spoke connections to come it does not rewrite the qos headers so basically you have no qos. Not good for voice. At least it was that way the last time we looked into this, not sure if they have 'fixed' this.
----- Original Message ----
From: Dale Shaw <dale.shaw@gmail.com>
To: Wes Stevens <wrsteve33-gsccie@yahoo.com>
Cc: Roman Rodichev <roman@iementor.com>; Fake Name <fname84@gmail.com>; Cisco certification <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Wednesday, January 14, 2009 7:26:52 PM
Subject: Re: DMVPN question
Hi Wes,
On Thu, Jan 15, 2009 at 12:12 PM, Wes Stevens
<wrsteve33-gsccie@yahoo.com> wrote:
> If you are going to do voice this is very useful for CAC. If you overlay the dmvpn you are back to hub and spoke and CAC gets real tricky.
Huh?
Direct spoke-to-spoke communication is possible with DMVPN. I realise
the spokes initially learn about other spokes via the hub(s), but can
you clarify what you meant by your statement above?
cheers,
Dale
Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
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