Hi Jit,
I was going for the "teach a man to fish" rather than give him a fish
approach.
So yes, I was trying to help more than simply typing out an answer. I like
to think that CCIE's or people who aspire to be would or should be
interested in the how and why things work as they do rather than just the
answer.
Glad you got what you were after.
Martin
On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 7:11 PM, Jitendra Anbu <Jitendra.Anbu_at_optus.com.au>wrote:
> Martin, I am not sure whether you're trying to help or just making us
> guess what you know????
>
> My understanding was that GRE would be automatically permitted if I permit
> IP - that's it.
>
> If that's not the case I was expecting someone to tell me.
> ------------------------------
> *From:* Martin Hogan [martin.john.hogan_at_gmail.com]
> *Sent:* Monday, 1 March 2010 2:06 PM
> *To:* Jitendra Anbu
> *Cc:* CCIE R/S, Groupstudy
> *Subject:* Re: Extended ACL to permit GRE traffic..
>
> Think back to basics;
>
> What is IP?
> What is GRE?
>
> How do they work (together?)?
>
>
>
> On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 1:49 PM, Jitendra Anbu <Jitendra.Anbu_at_optus.com.au>wrote:
>
>> Hi All,
>>
>> If you create a Extended ACL as;
>>
>> ip access-list extended TUNNEL
>> permit ip host 203.208.174.93 host 85.115.65.7
>>
>> Would this permit GRE traffic - for example?
>>
>> OR
>>
>> do I need this to permit GRE;
>>
>> ip access-list extended TUNNEL
>> permit gre host 203.208.174.93 host 85.115.65.7
>>
>> Thank you.
>>
>>
>> Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>>
>> _______________________________________________________________________
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Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
Received on Mon Mar 01 2010 - 19:24:19 ART
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