This is the second time in just a couple of weeks I've seen mail from people apparently believing that unregistered addresses are supposed to work in the Net. Has the Net come so far that ignorance and cluelessness is so widespread among people trying to manage boxes that they think officially allocated addresses is a refinement? A kind of dotting of i's and crossing of t's, not really necessary? Like cars drive just fine without licence plates? Heaven knows there's enough people who think the whole thing works by some strange magic, but the current apparent trend is verging on the absurd.
I am working at a site that has a Cisco 7010? Router running V 10.0 The router uses a frame relay connection to an Internet Provider to connect to the outside World.
Most of the subnets here are "legal" (i.e. registered w/Internic). However, we have several that aren't.
Everything works great of the legal subnets. However, the 'illegal' ones cannot connect or even ping anything on the Frame Relay side of the router. There are technical reasons why we are not able to get the bogus subnets changed right now.
I'm wondering if I need to have a map frame relay directive in the interface description to handle traffic to & from the subnet that's giving me problems.
The access-list filters look OK and the interface in question has no filtering at all.
Ideas would be greatly appreciated!
-- ------ ___ --- Per G. Bilse, Mgr Network Operations Ctr ----- / / / __ ___ _/_ ---- EUnet Communications Services B.V. ---- /--- / / / / /__/ / ----- Singel 540, 1017 AZ Amsterdam, NL --- /___ /__/ / / /__ / ------ tel: +31 20 6233803, fax: +31 20 6224657 --- ------- 24hr emergency number: +31 20 421 0865 --- Connecting Europe since 1982 --- http://www.EU.net e-mail: bilse@EU.net