Hi,

Regarding the command "default-information originate", I understand that it
will cause the router to advertise the default route into OSPF / IS-IS
domain.  Without this, by default, OSPF / IS-IS will not advertise the
default route to the other routers.

As for the [always] keyword for the "default-information originate" command,
I know that it only works for OSPF, but not IS-IS.  Is this the only
difference? Is there anything else that I may be missing?

I read up in Jeff Doyle (TCP/IP Vol 1), but it confuses me even more...

Jeff states that "if there's more than one default router, you definitely
don't want the [always] keyword..... but why?

Best Regards,
Hunt Lee
System Engineer
WebCentral




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