Correct. A is distributing default route. Directly to C (in theory but not 
happening) and to B which is distributing to C currently. 

This is edgeOS. 

I’m actually not sure. I’ll have to check on E1 vs E2. 

> On May 13, 2018, at 17:26, George Skorup <george.sko...@cbcast.com> wrote:
> 
> OK, so only A is distributing the default route. as-type-1 or as-type-2? E1 
> takes path costs into account. E2 does not.
> 
> Bounce a neighbor and see if it fixes itself. I assume RouterOS. I've seen 
> weird stuff like this happen before.
> 
>> On 5/13/2018 4:15 PM, Matt Hoppes wrote:
>> Only one - the Long one. 
>> 
>> The things connected to A take the direct path but the default is not coming 
>> through for some reason. 
>> 
>> On May 13, 2018, at 17:12, George Skorup <george.sko...@cbcast.com> wrote:
>> 
>>> How many default routes show up in the LSA table?
>>> 
>>>> On 5/13/2018 3:51 PM, Matt Hoppes wrote:
>>>> OSPF question:
>>>> 
>>>> A—-B—-C
>>>> And
>>>> A——C
>>>> 
>>>> A is the Internet peering router. 
>>>> 
>>>> C should end up with two default routes in it correct?
>>>> 
>>>> One through B and one directly to C?
>>>> 
>>>> What’s odd is everything on A populated on Cs route table as direct routes 
>>>> - except for the default route.
>>> 
> 

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