e the way you want them to. This will provide your
> inbound redundancy.
>
> HTH
>
> Colin Fowlie
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Curtis Maurand [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Monday, February 23, 2004 11:49 AM
> To: Ing. Hans L. Reyes
> Cc: [EMA
m: Curtis Maurand [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, February 23, 2004 11:49 AM
To: Ing. Hans L. Reyes
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: eBGP, iBGP, injecting networks
He might try:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/tech/tk365/tk80/technologies_configuration_example09186a0
He might try:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/tech/tk365/tk80/technologies_configuration_example09186a0080093f2c.shtml
This one shows how to setup HSRP on the inside for the automatic failover
that he's looking for.
Curtis
On Fri, 20 Feb 2004, Ing. Hans L. Reyes wrote:
>
>
> Hi
>
> Your pro
You could always run HSRP or something similar between the two routers. That
would give you physical redundancy on your end.
Setup the same single ASN on each router.
In a simple form, you could create the same access-list on each of your routers
containing all the blocks you want to advertise.
greetings,
from what you are saying, it appears you just got two routers
in the equation..
i say it's just easier for you to merge both routers into single
asn and run an igp in between. announce your aggregate(s) at both
routers afterwards, now th
Hi
Your problem may be is similar when one ISP buy to another ISP, sometimes
is easy to modify the IGP like in this case (OSPF) because it is something
inside of your company and you have the control over all the devices but
you still have the problem outside of the company; client, others ISP,
Well, you sort of can with confederations (internally) but the external
view is still the single advertised ASN.
At 07:10 PM 2/20/2004, william(at)elan.net wrote:
Note - I got confused by the subject and everything myself. The routes you
have locally would not be from IBGP but just directly thr
Note - I got confused by the subject and everything myself. The routes you
have locally would not be from IBGP but just directly through IGP (i.e.
OSPF or EIGRP etc). I don't think you can really do IBGP if routers are
not configured with the same ASN.
On Fri, 20 Feb 2004, william(at)elan.net
Ok. The way I read this is that you're redundant as far as one of your
upstream links going down - it'd not cause complete meltdown as that
router that had that link would still be announcing that space to the
other router (over EBGP) and then to the net.
What you're worrying then is what ha
greetings list,
hoping someone can hook me up on the right way to do this.
---
we have two ASN's we control.
we have two border/edge routers (1 in each ASN) that talks to a
different backbone provider.
the two border routers peer with eachother over eBGP and also are in
the same OSPF proc
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