RE: no ip classless [7:7100]

2001-06-04 Thread Doug Lockwood
If you were running RIP V1 on your network, correct design would dictate that all the local networks must appear in the routing table of your routers. If one of your users accesses a network not in the table, the router would send an icmp network unreachable with no IP classless and an icmp

Re: no ip classless [7:7100]

2001-06-04 Thread Tom Pruneau
Cisco routers by default are still classfull, even though the internet has long since gone classless. For a router to effective understand CIDR routes that don't fall on classfull boundrys it is necessary to turn off the default by executing the command ip classless If for some reason you live

Re: no ip classless [7:7100]

2001-06-04 Thread Doug Lockwood
Tom; I think a discussion on this will be interesting. My perseption is that a classful/classless router has nothing to do with VLSM or CIDR. The only issue is how it handles the default route on networks that are attached to the router with at least one interface. Classless - attached net,

Re: no ip classless [7:7100]

2001-06-04 Thread Peter Van Oene
Search the archives for 2-3 iterations of the discussion culminating with Chuck doing some heavy lab work. Peter *** REPLY SEPARATOR *** On 6/4/2001 at 5:15 PM Doug Lockwood wrote: Tom; I think a discussion on this will be interesting. My perseption is that a