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Bridging and Routing IP

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awei...@vnet.ibm.com

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May 25, 1995, 3:00:00 AM5/25/95
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My experience and the documentation tell me one thing, a customer has
told me I'm behind the times...

If I have a router with 3 interfaces (2TR, 1Serial), can I bridge IP
between the 2TRs and route them to/from the Serial? Experience tells
me that if I enable a routing protocol in the box and put an IP address
on an interface, I must route. True?

Alan
awei...@vnet.ibm.com


Tony Li

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May 25, 1995, 3:00:00 AM5/25/95
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If I have a router with 3 interfaces (2TR, 1Serial), can I bridge IP
between the 2TRs and route them to/from the Serial?

Nope, sorry.

Experience tells
me that if I enable a routing protocol in the box and put an IP address
on an interface, I must route. True?

No, you can still bridge IP and have an IP address on the interface.
What you can't do is bridge and route at the same time.

Tony


Imran Qureshi

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May 25, 1995, 3:00:00 AM5/25/95
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Bridging and routing of the same protocol is not allowed.

Imran.

> From list-owner...@cisco.com Thu May 25 11:30:28 1995
> From: awei...@VNET.IBM.COM
> Date: Thu, 25 May 95 12:53:55 EDT
> To: ci...@spot.colorado.edu
> Subject: Bridging and Routing IP
> Content-Length: 383


>
> My experience and the documentation tell me one thing, a customer has
> told me I'm behind the times...
>

> If I have a router with 3 interfaces (2TR, 1Serial), can I bridge IP

> between the 2TRs and route them to/from the Serial? Experience tells


> me that if I enable a routing protocol in the box and put an IP address
> on an interface, I must route. True?
>

> Alan
> awei...@vnet.ibm.com
>
>
>


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