Re: [7:11709]

2001-07-11 Thread Donald B Johnson jr
Message - From: Chuck Larrieu To: Donald B Johnson jr ; Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 4:39 PM Subject: RE: [7:11709] Missed the beginning of this thread, but from what I have seen it walks the edge of something central to what we all do or hope to do for a living. To whit, what does

Re: [7:11709]

2001-07-11 Thread Donald B Johnson jr
Have you ever used a list to block 520 udp applied say, inbound, on an interface and see if RIP will populate that table. - Original Message - From: Chuck Larrieu To: Donald B Johnson jr Sent: Wednesday, July 11, 2001 1:15 PM Subject: RE: [7:11709] that one is riddled

RE: [7:11709]

2001-07-11 Thread Howard C. Berkowitz
Subject: RE: [7:11709] that one is riddled with technicalities. all routing protocols use network layer packets to carry their information. personally, I believe they are distinct in that routing protocols carry routing information only. Chuck Well, ISIS does not use network layer packets

Re: [7:11709]

2001-07-10 Thread Donald B Johnson jr
Couple issues there wilson. First the csu-dsu issue, someone is spoofing my e-mail address check the header it says SR not JR. Second my response was to mohamed not parky, I thought his definition was a little off. Also I thought the response should have made the person (Mohamed) think, not just

Re: [7:11709]

2001-07-10 Thread Lowell Sharrah
this is a common misconception. A routing protocol is a protocol like eigrp, igrp, is-is,ospf, etc. A routed protocol is like ipx/spx, tcp/ip, vines, decnet, etc. A routed protocol must have a layer 3 address so netbios or cdp cannot be routed by themselves. Donald B Johnson jr 07/10/01

Re: [7:11709]

2001-07-10 Thread Donald B Johnson jr
Can you use rip to route cdp. Why? - Original Message - From: Lowell Sharrah To: ; Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 7:09 AM Subject: Re: [7:11709] this is a common misconception. A routing protocol is a protocol like eigrp, igrp, is-is,ospf, etc. A routed protocol is like ipx/spx

RE: [7:11709]

2001-07-10 Thread Charles Manafa
Are you having a laugh... -Original Message- From: Donald B Johnson jr [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: 10 July 2001 15:28 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [7:11709] Can you use rip to route cdp. Why? - Original Message - From: Lowell Sharrah To: ; Sent

Re: [7:11709]

2001-07-10 Thread Lowell Sharrah
Message - From: Lowell Sharrah To: ; Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 7:09 AM Subject: Re: [7:11709] this is a common misconception. A routing protocol is a protocol like eigrp, igrp, is-is,ospf, etc. A routed protocol is like ipx/spx, tcp/ip, vines, decnet, etc. A routed protocol must have

RE: [7:11709]

2001-07-10 Thread Hire, Ejay
: Re: [7:11709] Can you use rip to route cdp. Why? - Original Message - From: Lowell Sharrah To: ; Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 7:09 AM Subject: Re: [7:11709] this is a common misconception. A routing protocol is a protocol like eigrp, igrp, is-is,ospf, etc. A routed protocol is like

Re: [7:11709]

2001-07-10 Thread Donald B Johnson jr
yes I can? - Original Message - From: Lowell Sharrah To: Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 10:02 AM Subject: Re: [7:11709] hey can i use rip to route discontiguous subnets?? How about that? Donald B Johnson jr 07/10/01 10:28AM Can you use rip to route cdp. Why? - Original

Re: [7:11709]

2001-07-10 Thread Donald B Johnson jr
Actually it is a yes or no question. - Original Message - From: Jim Dixon To: Donald B Johnson jr Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 10:07 AM Subject: RE: [7:11709] cdp is a broadast and a proprietary protocol used by Cisco devices to discover other Cisco devices. Thus Cisco

RE: [7:11709]

2001-07-10 Thread Michael Cohen
Not all routing protocols are associated with layer 3 of the OSI model... -Michael -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Hire, Ejay Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 10:41 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: [7:11709] No. CDP is a Layer two

RE: [7:11709]

2001-07-10 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer
A routing protocol is a protocol like eigrp, igrp, is-is,ospf, etc. A routed protocol is like ipx/spx, tcp/ip, vines, decnet, etc. A routed protocol must have a layer 3 address so netbios or cdp cannot be routed by themselves. A routed protocol is the payload that is forwarded by routers, for

RE: [7:11709]

2001-07-10 Thread Chuck Larrieu
] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Donald B Johnson jr Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 11:57 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [7:11709] Actually it is a yes or no question. - Original Message - From: Jim Dixon To: Donald B Johnson jr Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 10:07 AM Subject: RE

RE: [7:11709]

2001-07-10 Thread Howard C. Berkowitz
-Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Donald B Johnson jr Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 11:57 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [7:11709] Actually it is a yes or no question. - Original Message - From: Jim Dixon To: Donald B Johnson