Supported in IOS-XE. VASI on the GSR has been long gone. IOS-XR had it at one
point as well.
David
--
http://dcp.dcptech.com
On 9/3/19, 4:32 AM, "James Bensley" wrote:
On Tue, 3 Sep 2019 at 00:39, David Prall wrote:
>
> Have you looked at VASI configuration.
On Tue, 3 Sep 2019 at 00:39, David Prall wrote:
>
> Have you looked at VASI configuration.
> https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/ip/network-address-translation-nat/200255-Configure-VRF-Aware-Software-Infrastruct.html
>
> David
> --
> http://dcp.dcptech.com
I'm happy to be wrong here, but
nether.net
Subject: Re: [c-nsp] Inter-VRF with NAT
> Hi Mike,
>
> I'm not sure I've understood your network topology to be honest. Are you
saying that you have Cisco devices with a single WAN link that doesn't support
logical separation such as VLANs, e.g. ADSL [1] t
-nsp] Inter-VRF with NAT
> Hi Mike,
>
> I'm not sure I've understood your network topology to be honest. Are you
> saying that you have Cisco devices with a single WAN link that doesn't
> support logical separation such as VLANs, e.g. ADSL [1] to run multiple VRFs
> over di
Does your CPE allows to have static routes in addition to default route?
The situation you are describing is typical for all Juniper routers
where management ethernet port can't be isolated in VRF so has to use
GRT, although routing between this fxp interface and normal ports isn't
possible.
> Hi Mike,
>
> I'm not sure I've understood your network topology to be honest. Are you
> saying that you have Cisco devices with a single WAN link that doesn't
> support logical separation such as VLANs, e.g. ADSL [1] to run multiple VRFs
> over different VLANs, e.g. internet in global
On 17 August 2019 20:47:28 CEST, Mike
wrote:
>Hello,
>
> I have a group of devices on my network (customer cpe - dsl modems
>mostly) which don't have the intelligence necessary to route their
>management traffic seperate from the user internet traffic. This means
>that packets inbound to
Hello,
I have a group of devices on my network (customer cpe - dsl modems
mostly) which don't have the intelligence necessary to route their
management traffic seperate from the user internet traffic. This means
that packets inbound to management, will go outbound to the default
gateway in