Routing TCP[s]IP (Vol. 11998)

 
1:

Configure policy routes for router A in Figure 14.23 that forward packets from subnets 172.16.1.0/28 through 172.16.1.112/28 to router D and forward packets from subnets 172.16.1.128/28 through 172.16.1.240/28 to router E.

Figure 14.23. The internetwork for Configuration Exercises 1 through 3.

2:

Configure policy routes for router A in Figure 14.23 so that packets from subnets 172.16.1.64/28 through 172.16.1.112 are forwarded to router D if they are received from router C. If packets from the same subnets are received from router B, forward them to router E. All other packets should be forwarded normally.

3:

Configure policy routes for router A in Figure 14.23 that will forward any packets destined for subnets 172.16.1.0/28 through 172.16.1.240/28, sourced from an SMTP port, to router C. Route any other UDP packets destined for the same subnets to router B. No other packets should be forwarded to routers C or B by either the policy routes or the normal routing protocol.

4:

The OSPF and EIGRP configurations for the router in Figure 14.24 is:

routereigrp1 network192.168.100.0 ! routerospf1 network192.168.1.00.0.0.255area16

Configure the router to redistribute internal EIGRP routes into OSPF as E1 routes with a metric of 10 and to redistribute external EIGRP routes into OSPF as E2 routes with a metric of 50. Of the networks and subnets shown in the EIGRP domain, all should be redistributed except 10.201.100.0/24.

Figure 14.24. The router for Configuration Exercises 4 and 5.

5:

Configure the router in Figure 14.24 to redistribute internal OSPF routes into EIGRP with a lower delay than external OSPF routes. Allow only the three class C networks shown in the OSPF domain to be redistributed.

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