-----Original Message-----
From:   Wright, Jeremy 
Sent:   Wednesday, August 22, 2001 10:20 AM
To:     'Peter Slow'
Subject:        RE: Quick CCIE Written Question [7:16797]

I may be wrong on this but this is what I am guessing: It will choose the
route with the lowest AD and put it into the routing table...if we have 2
routes to a network in the routing table, then the longest match applies.
Please let me know what you all think. Thanks again.

                -----Original Message-----
                From:   Peter Slow [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 
                Sent:   Wednesday, August 22, 2001 10:17 AM
                To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
                Subject:        RE: Quick CCIE Written Question [7:16797]

                you're wrong.
                the /28 will be chosen.
                -humboldt

                -----Original Message-----
                From: Ednilson Rosa [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 
                Sent: Wednesday, August 22, 2001 10:51 AM
                To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
                Subject: Re: Quick CCIE Written Question [7:16797]


                In this case, if you want to communicate with the host
10.1.1.1, for
                instance, the route chosen will be the static...

                Regards,

                Ednilson Rosa

                ----- Original Message -----
                From: "Wright, Jeremy" 
                To: 
                Sent: Wednesday, August 22, 2001 11:17 AM
                Subject: RE: Quick CCIE Written Question [7:16797]


                So for example, if you have the following   10.1.1.0/28
OSPF
                   10.1.0.0/24   EIGRP
                   10.1.1.0/26   Static
                Which route will be chosen?  Thanks for the help.

                -----Original Message-----
                From: McCallum, Robert
                [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 
                Sent: Wednesday, August 22, 2001 8:32 AM
                To: 'Wright, Jeremy'; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
                Subject: RE: Quick CCIE Written Question [7:16797]

                In a nut shell yes and no.  i.e.

                Admin distance is the winner by means that the lower the
                admin distance the better, so a route learned from EIGRP
will get into the
                routing table despite having a longer match route which was
learned from say
                OSPF.  BUT if you have two routes learned from the same
admin distance then
                the longest
                match ALWAYS wins.

                Basically once the route is in the routing table then the
                longest match is the outmost winner.

                -----Original Message-----
                From: Wright, Jeremy [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 
                Sent: 22 August 2001 14:19
                To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
                Subject: Quick CCIE Written Question [7:16797]


                Does the longest match rule always override administrative
                distance??
                [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 




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