How do you plan on making R1 talk to R2 ?
Typically you need both routers on the same network,
unless you are going to use ip un-numbered ona serial link...


Larry Letterman
Cisco Systems
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Kent Browning
Sent: Sunday, April 07, 2002 2:17 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Routing Question [7:40766]


Scenario 1
==========

---int0-(R1)-int1 --------int0-(R2)-int1 ---

Router 1
Int 0: 192.168.1.1
Int 1: 192.168.2.1

Router 2
Int 0: 192.168.2.2
Int 1: 192.168.3.1


Scenario 2
==========

---int0-(R1)-int1 --------int0-(R2)-int1 ---

Router 1
Int 0: 192.168.1.1
Int 1: 192.168.2.1

Router 2
Int 0: 192.168.3.1
Int 1: 192.168.4.1


Question:
=========
In Scenario 1, there are 3 segments:
Segment1: 192.168.1.0
Segment2: 192.168.2.0
Segment3: 192.168.3.0
I know this is correct.

In Scenario 2, how many segments are there?
Is there anything wrong with routing router 1 to router 2 and not using a
common segment?




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