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Routing Table as seen from APNIC's router in Japan.
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Routing
On 22/08/2009 06:26, Andrew Parnell wrote:
The 67xx series cards aren't supported by the sup32, though. Would 65xx
line cards do the trick?
unfortunately not:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/switches/lan/catalyst6500/ios/12.2SXF/native/configuration/guide/storm.html
• The following LAN sw
Another option could be to announce one /17 to each upstream provider
and use conditional BGP to announce the other /17 to the provider that's
still active in the event that one provider goes down.
On 8/21/2009 4:08 PM, Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:
On Aug 21, 2009, at 3:47 PM, Brian Dickson wrot
Sent from my iPhone, please excuse any errors.
On Aug 22, 2009, at 9:52, Adam Greene wrote:
Another option could be to announce one /17 to each upstream
provider and use conditional BGP to announce the other /17 to the
provider that's still active in the event that one provider goes down
On Sat, Aug 22, 2009 at 6:52 AM, Adam Greene wrote:
> Another option could be to announce one /17 to each upstream provider and
> use conditional BGP to announce the other /17 to the provider that's still
> active in the event that one provider goes down.
>
Maybe I'm wrong, but I think this method
On Fri, 21 Aug 2009, Roland Dobbins wrote:
there are two things you care about: storm control and port security (mac
address counting).
Chopping up the layer-2 broadcast domain for a given VLAN into smaller pieces
via pVLANs can't hurt, either, as long as the hosts have no need to talk to
one
On Sat, 22 Aug 2009, Sean Donelan wrote:
But in a service provider network (or any managed network), is there any
reason why a customer needs to hear other customer's broadcasts? In
practice, are there any useful broadcast messages in a multi-customer
environment that can't/shouldn't be proxie
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