I am still lost how can a router with a 10Mb interface act as a Router on a
stick? I may be missing something. Could you show us a diagram this is very
interesting?  How does the router know that there are two different subnets
connected if you don't tell it? I think it has something to do with the
router looking at the 192 subnets as one network. I bet that wouldn't act as
a ROAS if you changed one of the networks to say a 10 subnet.
Basically what you are saying in that if you want to route all you have to
do is connect different networks to a hub, connect the hub to a single
router port and then it will just start routing. I would love to see the
output of that one.
Are you sure that the router is doing the routing or is another device on
the physical segment providing that service.
I know that a host configured with the address of 10.10.0.1/16 will be able
to ping a host configured as 10.10.0.100/24. I believe that something
similar is going on here. Some debugs and configs would be great cause you
learn something new everyday.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank H" 
To: 
Sent: Wednesday, July 24, 2002 4:43 PM
Subject: Re: Proper network design? [7:49536]


> Yes, I am using a 2514. It does have 2 10BaseT interfaces (through AUI
> adapters). I am not using subinterfaces. Both ports are used - one port
goes
> to the Internet (for hosts that require Internet access) and the other
> connects directly to the 24 port hub which resides within the internal
LAN.
> This internal LAN (network 192.168.0.0/24) can also communicate with
network
> 192.168.2.0/24 (also connected on the hub) because the 2514 routes
> 192.168.2.0/24 traffic back to a cellular network host controller
> (192.168.0.100/24). The 2514 is acting as a regular router for Internet
> traffic and a "router on a stick" for 192.168.2.0/24 traffic. It was
strange
> for me at first, but now I get the picture.
>
> Frank




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