Hi,
My guess is that this is only an example. It does not specifically say it will ony go
to "cisco-b" but that it will limit what is interesting traffic. I think (and I
thought when I first read it) that the purpose of the exercise was to demonstrate
interesting traffic. What would rule if "cisco-b" or "cisco-c" would be called is the
destination address being either 192.168.1.1 for cisco-b or 192.168.3.1 for cisco-c.
Just my thoughts,
Teunis,
Hobart, Tasmania
Australia
On Monday, February 05, 2001 at 02:06:14 PM, Bradley J. Wilson wrote:
> One thing I'm confused about in Paquet's BCRAN book (1578700914):
>
> On p. 194/195, it shows a config which allegedly will cause Cisco-a to dial
> Cisco-b whenever any non-FTP or non-Telnet IP traffic comes through. My
> question is: given the two dialer map statements, why will Cisco-a call
> Cisco-b, and not Cisco-c? Will Cisco-a attempt to call Cisco-b first, and
> if that fails, then try Cisco-c?
>
> Thanks in advance -
>
> BJ
>
>
>
>
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