It's actually driving me a bit mad right now.... I came to the same
conclusion...hold down timer has nothing to do with it, I had just jumped
the gun and was confused for a minute.
I am still not sure why on the spoke I don't see the route at least in the
RIP database or in the debug ip rip output. I keep thinking it must be
something silly and simple I just can't put my finger on it right now
On Wed, Jul 13, 2011 at 8:59 PM, Aaron Riemer <ariemer_at_amnet.net.au> wrote:
> Hi Joe,
>
> Wouldn't the routes in question have to be in hold down first?
>
> I labbed this up as well. You can definitely see the routes being
> advertised
> from the spoke to the hub and back to the spoke again (wireshark). I would
> say that IOS is silently binning the route has it has a higher metric
> before
> the debugging process is invoked.
>
> Would be good to know for sure though :)
>
> Cheers,
>
> -Aaron.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nobody_at_groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody_at_groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
> Joe
> Astorino
> Sent: Thursday, 14 July 2011 8:24 AM
> To: Cisco certification
> Subject: Re: Frame-Relay, RIP & Split-Horizon
>
> OK so I think I figured it out. Simple -- RIP hold timer. If a RIP router
> sees a route with a HIGHER metric hop-count than the one it currently has,
> the hold timer has to expire first to prevent what I'm trying to do from
> happening : ) So ...not nearly as dramatic as I had thought and has
> NOTHING
> to do with frame-relay and DLCIs, just a general function of RIP
>
> I'm pretty sure it is just a hold timer thing.
>
> This is what happens when I don't get enough sleep or as Scott would say
> "not nearly enough caffeine". Still, thanks for reading and I welcome any
> comments
>
>
> --
> Regards,
>
> Joe Astorino
> CCIE #24347
> Blog: http://astorinonetworks.com
>
> "He not busy being born is busy dying" - Dylan
>
>
> Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>
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>
-- Regards, Joe Astorino CCIE #24347 Blog: http://astorinonetworks.com "He not busy being born is busy dying" - Dylan Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.netReceived on Wed Jul 13 2011 - 21:03:35 ART
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