Richard, it refers to the source IP address of the neighbor. Do a "show ip eigrp neighbor" and use that address. Does that work?
On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 5:16 PM, Meraz, Richard <[email protected]>wrote: > In Vol3 Lab3 Task 3.7 we are asked to create a tunnel between R6 and R1. > As expected, this created a recursive lookup. This task therefore brought > up a question I have had with resolving recursive lookups over tunnels. My > configuration was as follows on R6 and R1 (the distance 90 90, and adding > the Loopbacks was a lab requirement): > > > > *R1* > > int tun 1 > > ip add 143.43.16.1 255.255.255.0 > > tunnel source 1.1.1.1 > > tunnel destination 6.6.6.6 > > router eigrp 16 > > net 1.1.1.1 0.0.0.0 > > net 143.43.16.1 0.0.0.0 > > distance eigrp 90 90 > > > > *R6* > > int tun 1 > > ip add 143.43.16.6 255.255.255.0 > > tunnel destin 1.1.1.1 > > tunnel source 6.6.6.6 > > router eigrp 16 > > no auto > > net 143.43.16.6 > > net 6.6.6.6 0.0.0.0 > > distance eigrp 90 90 > > > > To try and fix the problem, which was wrong, I configured: > > *R6* > > router eigrp 16 > > distance 180 1.1.1.1 0.0.0.0 16 > > *R1* > > router eigrp 16 > > distance 180 6.6.6.6 0.0.0.0 16 > > > > Then I tried > > *R6* > > distance 180 143.43.16.1 0.0.0.0 > > *R1* > > distance 180 143.43.16.6 0.0.0.0 > > > > My question then is when using the distance command what does the “*A.B.C.D > IP Source Address*” refer to? I would have thought that to R6 1.1.1.1 > would be the “source” announcing the 143.43.16.0 networks. > > > > Thanks for the clarification, > > Rich > > > > > -- Bryan Bartik CCIE #23707 (R&S), CCNP Sr. Support Engineer - IPexpert, Inc. URL: http://www.IPexpert.com
