ther shoudl not be collision on a swiched port .by nature each port on a
switch becomes a collison domain.Only one thing That came on to my mind as
I read you statement .

check the connection speed on the switched ports and force them to be the
same on the connection port to r1 to the switch an r2 to the switch.



Kuncoro Wijaya wrote:

> Dear all,
>
> I have also one problem regarding the a.m matters.
>
> We have a network conf. as follows :
>
> (((( INTERNET ))))
>         |
>         |
>        (X) Router from ISP (R1)
>         |E0 : 192.168.1.1 255.255.255.0
>         |     (a Class C, just for example)
>         |
>      |Switch|
>         |
>         |
>         |E0 : 192.168.1.2 255.255.255.0
>        (X) Our Router (R2)
>         |E1
>         |
>   --------------------
>   |     |     |     |
>      Our Network
>
> In our router, R2, we have a command line like this:
> ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 192.168.1.1
>
> The static route (default route) is working, however,
> when we look at the interface E0 of R2 (sh int e0), we
> see a lot of collisions.
>
> Could the problem be arisen due to the nature of
> ethernet connection (CSMA/CD), although we have used a
> switch to connect to E0 of R1? And how to overcome
> this problem as it is the service given by the ISP ?
>
> I need your analysis on this.
>
> Thanks in adv
>
> Kuncoro
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
> Priscilla Oppenheimer
> Sent: Monday, September 11, 2000 11:23 PM
> To: jeongwoo park; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: static route question ??
>
> That's correct, and having a lower administrative
> distance means that a
> static route is "preferred" over a dynamic route, but
> not "faster." If the
> router has more than one way to get to a network in
> its routing table, it
> selects the path with the lowest administrative
> distance, which would be a
> static route by default.
>
> Sorry, if it seems like I'm being picky, but it
> sounded like maybe someone
> had told you the static route would be faster. It's
> probably just a
> language thing. We Americans expect everyone to
> understand our strange
> wordings! &;-)
>
> Priscilla
>
> At 03:09 PM 9/11/00, jeongwoo park wrote:
> >Thanks for your reply
> >Just want to clarify what I meant.
> >When I said that static route gives us faster traffic
> >transmission, it meant that static route's
> >administrative distance is 1, which is lower than
> >other dynamic routing protocols' administrative
> >distance.
> >Can I say this?
> >Please correct me if I am wrong.
> >
> >Thanks in adv.
> >
> >jeongwoo
>
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