Howard,
If you actually worked on a router in the real world
rather than just tell people you do, you would know
that Cisco has supported access-list remarks for some
time now.

Oh I'm sure you're going to reply to this e-mail with
some stupid story like, "This reminds me when I was
talking to a developer at Apple about Mac OS 1.0 but I
had never really worked on an Apple" or some worthless
story like that.

Also do us all a favor and quit cross posting from
other mailing list. We don't want to see your replies
to the juniper and ccie mailing list posts. Cross
posting can be dangerous when you're on some of the
list the you are on.... wink, wink ;-)


""Howard C. Berkowitz""  wrote:

> >Yes, it does make simple tasks a little more
complicated. However, using
> >inverse masking can make complex tasks much easier.
> >
> >Take this issue. Say you are asked to filter access
to all odd 192.168.x.0
> >/24 routes.
> >
> >
> >Your method.
> >
> >192.168.1.0 255.255.255.0
> >192.168.3.0 255.255.255.0
> >192.168.5.0 255.255.255.0
> >FAQ, list archives, and subscription info:
> 
> 
> I see your approach, Marc, and I have even
encountered real-world 
> situations where such filtering might be
appropriate. It happened 
> when an enterprise wanted to "leave room for
expansion", but didn't 
> understand summarization.  They assigned
odd-numbered subnets to 
> different sites/areas, thinking the even ones would
be for future use.
> 
> My approach, incidentally, is to figure out the
number of potential 
> areas or sites, then divide by a power of 2, at
least 4, to be 
> summarization-friendly.
> 
> There's no question that your approach takes fewer
lines of code. 
> Personally, I wouldn't use it except in a huge
network where there 
> was no other way to fit that many lines into NVRAM.
> 
> My motivation for not doing so is maintainability.
The more complex 
> the mask, the more difficult it will be for some
subsequent 
> administrator to figure out what was being done.  I
might be more 
> open to the idea if Cisco saved comments with the
configuration, but, 
> of course, it doesn't.
> 
> 
> 


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