Because you have both interfaces in the same network. One of them has to be
in a different network to route between them.

-----Original Message-----
From: Howard C. Berkowitz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, August 08, 2000 12:59 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Strange one (for me at least)


>Greetings,
>
>I've have a 2500 router, I was giving the Ethernet interface ip
>xxx.xxx.xxx.1, and the serial interface xxx.xxx.xxx.2.  The router came
back
>with an error message the ip addresses are overlapping.  Any idea why this
>happens and can I force the router to accept it.
>
>Thank you,
>
>Nabil


What is your subnetting plan? The answer to the problem lies in subnetting.

Why do you want to force the router to accept it?

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