I disagree - how does router B know to route traffic back to router A? 
Router
B will need some static route back to Router A, or some other IGP needs to
run
between A and B.  As it is now, traffic *can* get from router A to the OSPF
cloud, but not back.

BJ



On Wed, 25 Sep 2002 13:36:02 GMT Robert Edmonds
 wrote:

> Anthony,
> If I understand you correctly, it shouldn't be
> a problem.  All you're doing
> is mixing dynamic with static routing.  It's
> done every day, all over the
> world.  By the way, how do you like your
> Extreme equipment.  Where I used to
> work did a migration to Extreme (or rather has
> been doing a migration to
> Extreme for over a year now, DOH!).  Just
> wondering if you've had better
> luck than them.  :)
> ""evans Anthony""  wrote in message
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > Hi all,
> >
> > Just a quick question:
> >
> > I have the following setup: (a)----(b)---OSPF
> network
> >
> > Router A (extreme L3 switch) is connected to
> router B, and router B is
> > running ospf to other cisco boxes. I have
> setup a static route that points
> > from A to B so machines can get to pc's in
> the ospf area. The static that
> > ive configured is a /13 next-hop.
> >
> > Router a is not running ospf, and b only has
> ospf configured on the
> > interfaces connected to the ospf network. Do
> I need to configure anything
> on
> > router b to allow packets from router A's
> network into router B ?? Since
> ive
> > got a static route pointing to b, i guess
> that B will do a lookup on the
> > destination and route as persay. Is this
> correct or am I talking waffle.
> >
> > regards,
> >
> > A.
> to [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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