Re: about connect the ISP

2001-01-02 Thread Mr.K.RAMESH BABU
Having static route for ur network in their(mother isp) router and redistributing static in to their dynamic routing protocol(like ospf) is one option ... Rameshbabu On Sat, 30 Dec 2000, gary gary wrote: > Hi guys: > We are a small ISP, just using static routing connect > the mother ISP, the

Re: about connect the ISP

2001-01-02 Thread Mason Eike
The address space you were assigned from the Mother ISP is more than likely going to be out of a larger block the Mother ISP was assigned from ARIN. Say your /24 prefix (Class C) is part of a /16 (Class B) that they own.. They only announce the /16 to their peers unless a specific situation a

Re: about connect the ISP

2000-12-31 Thread Tony van Ree
Hi, We provide a service to thousands of clients with anything from full class "B" to 4 addresses out of a class "C". In a nutshell you place a default static back to the supplier. The supplier has a static pointing your class "C" down your link. In a number of places this is managed by auto

about connect the ISP

2000-12-30 Thread gary gary
Hi guys: We are a small ISP, just using static routing connect the mother ISP, the mother ISP assign a class C address to us, I want to know how the mother ISP locate the Class c networking , just using static routing? Need they redistribute the static to their dynamic routing (for example OSPF) i

about connect the ISP

2000-12-30 Thread gary gary
Hi guys: We are a small ISP, just using static routing connect the mother ISP, the mother ISP assign a class C address to us, I want to know how the mother ISP locate the Class c networking , just using static routing? Need they redistribute the static to their dynamic routing (for example OSPF) i