It's probably worth distinguishing between IGRP & the rest of the set of
proprietary cisco technologies, since they are more than eager to distance
themselves from any of the features of IGRP that were overridden by EIGRP.
As for impossibility, that's probably a question of the skill set possessed
by the technical folk charged with reverse engineering the IOS code. Few
vendors are bold enough to claim such interoperability without a formal
exchange between their legal representation & whomever performs that role
for cisco.


----- Original Message -----
From: "nrf" 
To: 
Sent: Monday, May 13, 2002 4:02 AM
Subject: Re: Is IGRP actually supported by other vendors? [7:43994]


> In-line
>  wrote in message
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > Nokia might support it, but I have been (fairly reliably) told that
Cisco
> > will *not* be supporting IGRP as of one of the newest IOS releases.  I
> > can't find the announcement on CCO (if there is one), so take with a
grain
> > of salt, but a Cisco instructor was quite adamant about this last week.
>
> That makes sense, considering it's literally been years since I've
actually
> seen a bonafide production network running IGRP.   So it makes sense that
> Cisco is finally ditching this dead wood.
>
> But I'm not asking this question because I'm champing at the bit to
install
> a mixed Cisco/Nokia  IGRP network.  No, I'm asking because if it's true
that
> Nokia really does support IGRP, then that begs the question - what other
> supposedly Cisco-proprietary technologies are like this too?  I'm not
> talking about situations like what Howard stated where Cisco actually has
an
> agreement to provide its technology to other vendors (somehow I doubt that
> Cisco and Nokia have such an agreement),  but I'm talking about full-blown
> vendor compatibility between some other vendor and Cisco.  For example,
does
> anybody know of another vendor that supports, say, EIGRP?  Or CDP?   Now
you
> might say that it would be impossible for another vendor to support these
> technologies, but, hey, Nokia apparently somehow managed to support IGRP,
so
> why exactly couldn't somebody else support, say, EIGRP?
>
> >
> > JMcL
> > ----- Forwarded by Jenny Mcleod/NSO/CSDA on 13/05/2002 04:44 pm -----
> >
> >
> > "nrf"
> > Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > 13/05/2002 01:42 pm
> > Please respond to "nrf"
> >
> >
> >         To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >         cc:
> >         Subject:        Is IGRP actually supported by other vendors?
> > [7:43994]
> > Is this part of a business decision process?:
> >
> >
> > Just found this while surfing around.
> >
> > "As a network device, the Nokia IP330 supports a comprehensive suite of
> > IP-routing functions and protocols, including RIPv1/RIPv2, IGRP, OSPF
and
> > BGP4 for unicast traffic..."
> > http://www.nokia.com/securitysolutions/platforms/330.html
> >
> > Every piece of literature I've ever read has stated without fail that
IGRP
> > is proprietary to Cisco.  Yet here's Nokia brazenly claiming that they
in
> > fact support IGRP.  What's up with that?  Unfortunately I don't have an
> > Ipso
> > box lying around that I can actually experiment with.  Can anyone
confirm
> > whether this is true and whether it provides complete interoperability
> > with
> > Cisco?




Message Posted at:
http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=44015&t=43994
--------------------------------------------------
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to