RE: GRE and routing protocols [7:14432]

2001-08-01 Thread Jim Dixon
is there a way you can use poison reverse? -Original Message- From: Mike [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, July 31, 2001 9:03 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: GRE and routing protocols [7:14432] I've configured a point-to-point GRE tunnel between two routers. Works fine with

Re: GRE and routing protocols [7:14432]

2001-08-01 Thread Sasa Milic
What is happeninng is that router is receiving (via RIP) tunnel destination ip address route. That's what recursive routing means. You shuold fix redistribution into RIP. Tunnel end points must be known by some other way. Obviously, since your tunnel is up, you do have static routes pointing to

RE: GRE and routing protocols [7:14432]

2001-07-31 Thread Baker, Jason
hi mike, if you posted some configs i could plug it into lab and check it out. Jason -Original Message- From: Mike [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, 1 August 2001 12:03 pm To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: GRE and routing protocols [7:14432] I've configured a

RE: GRE and routing protocols [7:14432]

2001-07-31 Thread Glenn Johnson
and routing protocols [7:14432] hi mike, if you posted some configs i could plug it into lab and check it out. Jason -Original Message- From: Mike [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, 1 August 2001 12:03 pm To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: GRE and routing protocols [7

RE: GRE and routing protocols [7:14432]

2001-07-31 Thread Chuck Larrieu
post your configs. in the abstract what is happening is that the tunnel endpoints are referencing an address that can only be known via the dynamic routing protocol. works fine with statics because the static destination is always there if you do a debug ip routing you will see the reports of