According to Caslow, the active time is set on the server using the command
"snapshot server <time> dialer." The configuration line I mentioned was
"dialer map snapshot 60 2002," which was taken from the client
configuration. The "2002" is the dialer string - the phone number that the
client calls.
I've actually found the explanation on CCO (wow, who'da thought to look
there? ;-). The "60" is a sequence number. In some situations where you
would want to configure multiple dialer maps with snapshot routing, the
sequence number tells the router in which order to execute the dialer map
statements.
Anyone else have any concurring or dissenting opinions or experiences? :-)
----- Original Message -----
From: Vincent
Newsgroups: groupstudy.cisco
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, April 01, 2001 12:17 PM
Subject: Re: Snapshot Routing Question
60 is active time, for the rouer end to end to exchange routing update
between server and client.
2002 is quiet time, router freeze, until next active period.
""Bradley J. Wilson"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ?????
00cd01c0bac3$16b00f80$fd02f7a5@bwilson">news:00cd01c0bac3$16b00f80$fd02f7a5@bwilson...
> Page 192 of Caslow: there's a config there that shows the line "dialer map
> snapshot 60 2002." My question is, what is this "60" and where did it
come
> from? The next page shows the output from "show snapshot," and it says
"For
> dialer address 60," but that doesn't really explain a whole lot. I tried
> entering the command in IOS - I typed in "dialer map snapshot ?" and it
came
> back with "N protocol specific address." Okay, great, so address "60."
> Is this IPX or AppleTalk or what?
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