KISS - keep things as simple as possible... OSPF is an open protocol, and it's very simple in case if you have not 500 routers and 1000 flapping routes in the network - what do you searching the headache for? Multicast routing depends more from the options you have from the hardware vendor - choose the simplest and more standard method and turn it on... PS. From my lectures to the students, quote: --- The most complex routing method is STATIC - it's easy to implement (for the HW vendor) but most difficult to configure. The simplest routing is just dynamic routing in the plain schema (for example, 'router ospf 1/network 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 - just 2 lines for the CISCO, compare to the static' - may be it can argue someone do not use the static at all -:) --- On Mon, 13 Sep 1999, Jack Crowder wrote:
Date: Mon, 13 Sep 1999 11:29:58 -0700 From: Jack Crowder <monterey@spies.com> To: nanog@merit.edu Subject: IS-IS reference
I was wondering if I could talk with someone who has recently implemented IS-IS. I'm attempting to move a small NSP away from static routing and based on their topology - OSPF would have to be configured all in Area 0.
Since the technology provided by this NSP to their customers will include multicast services (video specifically), I thought that I should consider IS-IS while the slate is relatively clean.
If there is someone who has implemented this routing on their network that I could ask a few questions of (practical experience), I would appreciate it.
Jack Crowder monterey@spies.com
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