Jeff,

OSPF uses areas.  They are defined under the router config mode under ospf
using the network command.  All OSPF areas together is one AS.  The process
id # actually is meaningless.  The # can be used so that you can have more
than 1 instance of OSPF running on the same router.  This is not even
recommended to do and there are no really good reasons to do it.

HTH

Cory

-----Original Message-----
From: Jeff McCoy [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, November 07, 2000 8:26 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: ospf process id / AS??


If the process id is defined as 200 in the command:

router ospf 200

and this is not the AS, then where is the AS defined?

-jm


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