Thanks for the responses everyone. I found out what the problem was. I was
missing a route on the end router (which I had to add later in place of our
firewall). My 'little' network is working fine.
Thanks everyone,
fartcatcher.
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ("Erick B.") w
Well, since these are directly connected networks
EIGRP isn't used. Check the default gateways of the
PCs you are pinging and make sure it is set to either
e0 or e1, or they have a route back to the other
network with e0 or e1 as the next hop.
If there is another router off e0 or e1 speaking EIG
Fartcatcher (great name!), the previous 2 posts have good info in them, so
check that stuff out. If everything is kosher (no offense to those members
of the Jewish faith!), then you might check that the router is setup to for
classless addressing. I can't remember if that version of IOS has "ip
2001 10:42 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Feeling a bit dumb today, need help with routing problem.
>
>
> Hello everyone, I have a problem and no it's not personal
> (hah!).I am having
> trouble getting a router to route between two networks
> (10.166.x.x
If both of those networks are directly attached, your choice of routing
protocol is irrelevant. I would check the usual: host configurations,
IP addresses, subnet masks, etc.
If this isn't a production router, turn on debugging and see if that
gives you any clues. debug ip packet will show you
Hello everyone, I have a problem and no it's not personal (hah!).I am having
trouble getting a router to route between two networks (10.166.x.x /24 and
10.20.30.x /24). I have a cisco 1605 (running 11.2) that has two ethernet
interfaces. On eth0 I have the 10.166.x.x network, on the other
10.2
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