ME thinks Russ wants to bridge and route the same protocol in which
case that won't work.  Check IRB, integrated routing and bridging.  I
have used IRB to bridge IP/IPX from one interface to another in the same
router but never in the scenerio you describe.

  Dave

Jim Brown wrote:
> 
> int e0
> ip address X.X.X.X Y.Y.Y.Y
> 
> int e1
> bridge-group 1
> 
> int s0
> ip address X.X.X.X Y.Y.Y.Y
> 
> int s1
> bridge-group 1
> 
> bridge 1 protocol ieee (or dec)
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Russ Kreigh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, September 11, 2001 2:24 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Routing and Bridging [7:19472]
> 
> Hello all -
> 
> I need to bridge E1 to S1 on a router, and route E0 to S0, how can I do
> this? This router config is the same on each end.
> 
> END A      END B
> 
> E0-S0  --  S0-E0
> E1-S1  --  S1-E1 (Bridge)
> 
> Thanks
> 
> -Russ
-- 
David Madland
Sr. Network Engineer
CCIE# 2016
Qwest Communications Int. Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
612-664-3367

"Emotion should reflect reason not guide it"




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