RE: Gateway of last resort vs. default Gateways

2001-03-27 Thread Chris Lemagie
The "Default Gateway" pertains to the routers ip stack. This will be the default gateway when using ping, telnet etc... The "Gateway Of Last Resort" is the ip address to which the router will "route" all packets that are not on a learned (known) network. Chris Lemagie -Original Message

RE: Gateway of last resort vs. default Gateways

2001-03-27 Thread Wang, Roger
Default gateway is configured on devices that do not route, so, it must be an IP address that belongs to one of the connected routes of the local interfaces. If you turn off routing on a cisco box, you would have to configure a default gateway for traffic destined for other networks besides the c

RE: Gateway of last resort vs. default Gateways

2001-03-27 Thread Howard C. Berkowitz
> >-Original Message- >From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of >Rizzo Damian >Sent: Tuesday, March 27, 2001 2:16 PM >To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' >Subject: Gateway of last resort vs. default Gateways > > > > Can someone please give me a non-Cisco explanation between

Re: Gateway of last resort vs. default Gateways

2001-03-27 Thread Roger Sohn
name from the mailing list send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the body containing "UNSUBSCRIBE CISCO" - Original Message - From: "Wang, Roger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "'Rizzo Damian'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent:

RE: Gateway of last resort vs. default Gateways

2001-03-27 Thread Muhammed Khalilullah
Defaul-Gateway is usually used if you have disabled 'IP routing' on a router, i.e (If the router is not performing the routing decisions) whereas the 'Gateway of Last Resort' is the router to which all unknown destinations will be routed. Muhammed Khalilullah CCNP, MCSE --- Chris Lemagie <[EMAIL