Cisco Nuts sent me this one off line.

R3---------------R4---------------R5
            OSPF           RIP

R4 redistributes RIP to OSPF and visa versa


each router has a loopback with an address of 200.0.0.X / 32, where X is the
router number

RIP version 1 on R4 and R5. The loopback on R4 is in the OSPF domain, and
the loopback on R5 is in the RIP domain.

CN apparently did not see the same phenomenon that I did. In his setup, he
saw the summary-address of 200.0.0.0/24 propagated onto R4.

In my setup I saw that so long as I had the 200.0.0.4 address on the R4
loopback that the 200.0.0.0/24 refused to propagate. it did not show up in
the R4 table.

damn, I forgot to ask his IOS version. I'm running 12.1.5T10

solution? has to do with the various ways one can trick RIP into behaving as
VLSM capable.


--
TANSTAAFL
"there ain't no such thing as a free lunch"




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