"standby timers hellotime holdtime" 3 10 is the defualt
BC wrote:
>
> You could modify your "Hello" and "hold" times and that may increase the
> time it takes before a standby will assume the active role.
>
> ""Jim Bond"" wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > Hello,
> >
> > We've g
You could modify your "Hello" and "hold" times and that may increase the
time it takes before a standby will assume the active role.
""Jim Bond"" wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hello,
>
> We've got a 2501 frame router and a 1603 ISDN backup
> router at a branch office, configured a
layer 8 politics
layer 9 finance
>From: Priscilla Oppenheimer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: Priscilla Oppenheimer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Re: Question on HSRP
>Date: Wed, 07 Mar 2001 10:15:46 -0800
>Received: from [63.104.50.75] b
I've done this configuration before. It's relatively painless.
If you're using Cisco-to-Cisco equipment, you can create GRE tunnels at the
endpoints and encrypt them. On the far-end, you'll have 2 tunnel
interfaces, one to each central site router.
If you run an IGP over the tunnels, then your
Can't this be treated as two separate issues - the HSRP and the routing.
If BGP peers are set up effectively in a triangle between remote office and
central site over the two links, they should be able to run independantly of
HSRP.
If the active router receives a packet but BGP tells it that the o
Now, this is the kind of situation the various design certs should test on!
&;-)
Regarding your actual question, have you considered a Layer-8 solution?
Depending on who you talk to, Layer 8 deals with money, politics, planning,
etc. My thinking is that you should select a provider that gives
One more comment, though. Tracking an additional interface may not meet his
needs since he said he was hoping for a router failover in the event "a
link goes down somewhere down the line." For that kind of behavior, you
would need a routing protocol. Routing protocols track failures in routes,
Thanks to everyone for the help. My questions have been answered (for now).
What I'm trying to do is; I have multiple remote offices where I want to
create a VPN tunnel across one provider to the corporate office. In case
that the provider goes down, I need to have the second provider take over
(w
>At 06:07 PM 3/6/01, NetEng wrote:
>>Does HSRP work at the interface level or is the entire router on
>>acvtive/stand-by? In other words, if I have two routers working in HSRP and
>>a link goes down somewhere down the line, will the first router know to
>>fail-over to the second router (with a goo
Priscilla Oppenheimer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> At 06:07 PM 3/6/01, NetEng wrote:
> >Does HSRP work at the interface level or is the entire router on
> >acvtive/stand-by? In other words, if I have two routers working in HSRP
and
> >a link goes down somewhere down the line, will the first router
I can see what you are trying to accomplish on this.
You want it, so that if and when one link (WAN
interface) on the router that connects to the ISP goes
down for the other router to pick up HSRP tasks. Look
into the track command. HSRP has an associated
priority to it, the router with the hi
Subject: Question on HSRP
> Does HSRP work at the interface level or is the entire router on
> acvtive/stand-by?
HSRP operates at the interface level.
The benefit HSRP provides is this: Let's say you have a number of Workstations
or Servers on a LAN segment where more than one r
Cool. I didn't know about this interface tracking feature. It sounds like
it could meet his needs. Thanks,
Priscilla
At 06:59 PM 3/6/01, Clayton Price wrote:
>The first router would not necassarily have to lose connectivity to the
>second router in order to fail over. HSRP can be configured to
You can have both of these routers running in HSRP. However, you have to
enable "HSRP Interface Tracking" so that the line will fail-over to the
second router. The command is in this format:
Router(config-if)# standby group-number track type number interface-priority
""NetEng"" <[EMAIL PROT
The first router would not necassarily have to lose connectivity to the
second router in order to fail over. HSRP can be configured to track an
additional interface. For example you could track the link to the ISP. If
that link goes down the router decrements its priority (default decrease is
10
At 06:07 PM 3/6/01, NetEng wrote:
>Does HSRP work at the interface level or is the entire router on
>acvtive/stand-by? In other words, if I have two routers working in HSRP and
>a link goes down somewhere down the line, will the first router know to
>fail-over to the second router (with a good lin
HSRP works at the LAN interface (or sub-interface) level.
The purpose of HSRP is to provide default gateway in the event of router
failure.
Each router has an IP address on an interface and there is a virtual router
(IP address) created between
the two routers, where one is active, the other is st
Does HSRP work at the interface level or is the entire router on
acvtive/stand-by? In other words, if I have two routers working in HSRP and
a link goes down somewhere down the line, will the first router know to
fail-over to the second router (with a good link)? I have one router
connected to one
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