If you are talking about testing redundancy I'll do the same thing on the
gateway I want to simulate as being down. For example when doing TEHO where
if the remote gateway is down we want to fail to the local gateway, I'll go
to the remote gateway and put in the static routes.


On Thu, Oct 17, 2013 at 11:46 AM, Alex Mendoza <aa.mend...@icloud.com>wrote:

> Hi Bill
>
> I use your way to test SRST, I'm wondering what are you using for test
> Route List when they have 2 route groups.
>
> best regards.
> Alex
>
> On Oct 17, 2013, at 09:23 AM, Bill Hatcher <wchatc...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I have been looking for quick and easy ways to test SRST, and I've found
> many different waqys of doing this.  With the exception of pulling the WAN
> interface, they all seem to take a lot of time and effort to accomplish.
> Anything from creating access-lists to block the traffic to creating new
> call manager groups and shutting down one of the CallManager services.
>
> I have found that a couple of simple static routes to the null 0 interface
> works very well.
> ip route 10.10.210.10 255.255.255.255 null 0
> ip route 10.10.210.11 255.255.255.255 null 0
>
> no ip route 10.10.210.10 255.255.255.255 null 0
> no ip route 10.10.210.11 255.255.255.255 null 0
>
> Add them to a notepad and the no statements as well and you can quickly
> send your devices into srst mode. Now if you have any VoIP dial-peers that
> point to other addresses across your WAN you may have to add those as well.
>
> What do you guys use?
>
> HTH
>
> Bill.
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