Howard,

Is there an audio tape that goes with the slides.  If so, I'd being
willing to
pay so I could show this presentation to my CCNP students, including
the "shameless plug."  BTW, liked your concise explanation of CIDR
vs VLSM.

Prof. Tom Lisa, CCAI
Community College of Southern Nevada
Cisco ATC/Regional Networking Academy
 
 

"Howard C. Berkowitz" wrote:

  At 2:58 PM +0000 9/30/02, Don wrote:
  >Rather than run OSPF to customers, it is generally much better to
  have
  >them use a default route to the ISP and for the ISP to run static
  routes to
  >the customer.  OSPF to the customer is a huge land mine for the ISP
  and
  >should be avoided in almost every case.
  >     Don

  I agree completely with Don that an ISP _never_ should link its IGP
  to that of the customer.  Don't fall into the trap of assuming that
  BGP needs a full routing table or will consume excessive resources.

  I remain confused why a default route wouldn't serve, unless there
  are multiple connections between the ISP and customer. By "send the
  block to the customer," do you mean the block is in the customer's
  space?  You could certainly use a second static route, which can be
  generated automatically as part of your address assignment (see my
  NANOG presentation,
  http://www.nanog.org/mtg-9811/ppt/berk/index.htm).

  If that's not appropriate, have the customer announce his two blocks
  to you with BGP and receive default from your BGP.

  >
  >
  >""Chris Headings""  wrote in message
  >[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  >>  Good morning all.  I was wondering if someone could lend me a
  little help
  >>  about engineering OSPF in the backbone for an ISP network.  I
  just had a
  >>  couple of questions and hopefully someone can give me some
  guidance.or
  >even
  >>  some CCO links with some specific examples or better yet any
  material
  >>  anywhere.
  >>
  >>  Say, for example, that a customer has a small block of IP's and a
  >>  distribution router knows where that block is, via a connected
  route,
  like
  >a
  >>  /30 on a serial link.  But later down the line the customer
  requests an
  >>  additional block of 64 IP addresses, what is the best way to send
  this
  >block
  >>  to the customer?  Do I need to run OSPF on the customer
  equipment?  If
  the
  >>  customer router is not running OSPF, how do the routers know how
  to get
  to
  >>  this destination?  I assume via static routing???
  >>
  >>  Thanks as always.
  >>
  >  > Chris
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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