Hmmm..

I havent seen the ticket (nor have I seen any at all as I did my lab
prior to the troubleshooting section) however here is my theory.

If you think its an ACL causing the drama, then I think you should
modify the ACL as opposed to removing it.  The ACL will be there doing
something else (ie some security function) and I would suggest the
rest of the network and/or topology should be functioning as designed
in order to pass.  If you remove the ACL then this will not happen.

Cheers,
Matt

CCIE #22386
CCSI #31207

On 27 August 2010 10:42, Samir Idris <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Experts,
>
> I am a bit confused about the TS section.  The answer to this question will
> make me understand how to approach the ticket:
>
> Lets say two ospf neighbors can't form an adjacency and I can see an
> acess-list is the culprit.  Now I can remove the acl OR add a permit
> statement for OSPF protocol both for multicast and unicast.
>
> The ticket doesn't say anything about removing an ACL or not.  Can I simply
> remove the ACL or add the permit statements before deny ip any any?
>
> Can one of the expert please answer?  Thanks.
>
> --
> Samir Idris
>
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