terrificlistings.com terrificlistings.com
Site Home :> About Us :> Add Your Link :> Privacy of Info :> Terms of Service :> Add Article
Search:   
Get Multiple Links
 

Health & Hygiene

Sports

Education & Reference

Software & Networking

Home & Garden

Travel & Accommodation

Property & Agents

Research & Science

Careers & Employment

Healthcare & Treatment

Vehicles & Automotive

Children & Teens

Self Healing

Fashion & Relationships

Food & Recipe

Shopping Online

Companies & Business

Finance & Investment

Government & Politics

People & Communities

News & Media

Indoor Games

Creative Arts

Recreation

 

Site Home –› Software & Networking –› Computer Professional Certification
 

CCNP / BSCI Exam Tutorial: Route Summarization And The OSPF Null Interface

 

CCNP exam success, particularly on the BSCI exam, demands you understand the details of route summarization. This skill not only requires that you have a comfort level with binary conversions, but you have to know how and where to apply route summarization with each individual protocol.

You also have to know the "side effects" of route summarization. With OSPF, there will actually be an extra interface created at the point of summarization, and this catches a lot of CCNP candidates by surprise. Let's take a look at the null0 interface and how it relates to OSPF summarization.

On R1, the following networks are redistributed into OSPF, and then summarized.

interface Loopback16

ip address 16.16.16.16 255.0.0.0

interface Loopback17

ip address 17.17.17.17 255.0.0.0

interface Loopback18

ip address 18.18.18.18 255.0.0.0

interface Loopback19

ip address 19.19.19.19 255.0.0.0

R1(config)#router ospf 1

R1(config-router)#redistribute connected subnets

R1(config-router)#summary-address 16.0.0.0 252.0.0.0

The summary address appears on R2, a downstream router.

R2#show ip route ospf

O E2 16.0.0.0/6 [110/20] via 172.12.123.1, 00:00:05, Serial0

Let's go back to R1 and look at its OSPF table.

R1#show ip route ospf

O 16.0.0.0/6 is a summary, 00:01:51, Null0

Where did the null0 interface come from, and why is it there? Packets sent to the null interface are dropped, and in this case, that's a good thing.

When you configure summary routes in OSPF, a route to null0 will be installed into the OSPF routing table. This helps to prevent routing loops. Any packets destined for the routes that have been summarized will have a longer match in the routing table, as shown below...

C 17.0.0.0/8 is directly connected, Loopback17

C 16.0.0.0/8 is directly connected, Loopback16

C 19.0.0.0/8 is directly connected, Loopback19

C 18.0.0.0/8 is directly connected, Loopback18

O 16.0.0.0/6 is a summary, 00:01:51, Null0

.. and packets that do not match one of the summarized routes but do match the summary route will be dropped.

Preventing routing loops when performing route redistribution and summarization is vital. OSPF gives us a little help in that regard in this situation, and as you study more complex redistribution scenarios on your way to the CCNP and CCIE, you'll realize that we'll take all the help we can get!

Author: Chris Bryant
 
Author Bio:
Chris Bryant is a famous writer. Chris likes to scribble articles about this topic.
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Macromedia Flash For Newbies
 
Pay Per Click VS. SEO
 
Write an eBook Today
 
Make Your Site Work For You
 
Commonly SEO terms and Jargon used by Search Engine Gurus
 
How To Build Traffic To Your Blog
 
Surplus and Discount Computers
 
How To Start An Opt-In Fireworks That Sucks Subscribers Like A Vacuum Cleaner!
 
Why Google Blog Search Matters to Your Business
 
Pay Per Click Web Advertising Power Word Secrets Revealed
 
 
 
   Site Home :> Privacy of Info :> Terms of Service
Copyright © www.terrificlistings.com - All Rights Reserved Worldwide.