OSPF Adjancencies are only formed between directly connected routers.

In your example Router A and Router B would form an adjacency, then Router
B and Router C will form a second adjacency.

Darren

On Fri, 9 Jun 2000, Daniel Ma wrote:

> We all know that in an area (multi-access media), all routers must form
> adjacency with DR and BDR. But how it is done if the router is not directly
> linked to DR?
> For example, Router A is the DR. Router B is between the Router A and Router
> C. Now Router C must form adjacency with Router A. Am I right to say that
> Router C multicast to 224.0.0.6, then Router B will forward this packet to
> Router A? So actually it's a virtual adjacency between Router A and Router
> C, they are not neighbor.
> I really hope you would clear the concept for me, as I could not find the
> answer in books, even in "Routing TCP/IP".
> 
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Daniel
> 
> 
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