In einer eMail vom 16.04.2008 00:10:50 Westeuropäische Normalzeit schreibt  
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:

On  2008-04-16 07:16, Christian Vogt wrote:
>>> Doesn't the issue  persist independent of the characteristics based on
>>> which a  path gets selected?  Independent of *how* a path gets  selected,
>>> you need to decide *who* selects it (or who selects  which part of it).
>>
>> Well, that's true of course. But  nothing can change the fact
>> that the originating host chooses the  source address and destination
>> address that the packet starts out  with, and all subsequent choices
>> depend on that.
> 
>  Brian,



I agree with Brian: the orginating host chooses (the source address and)  the 
destination address and the respective first best hop. All subsequent  
routers are supposed to comply with.
How does the ingress router make this choice, how does it select the right  
ETR? 
I take for granted that the destination user is not supposed at all to  
influence this choice.
So I can imagine,a good choice for the ingress router  might be that  
particular ETR, which is closest.
(note : for some other ingress router, some other particular ETR will be  
closest)
But does the ingress router know which ETR is closest ? Does it even  know 
which one it should compare in order to find out the closest? If yes, isn't  it 
a big burden to do so? Or are these potential ETRs mutually like ships  in the 
night?
 
Heiner
 
 
 
 
 
 



   

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