Those are reasons against.
We in the technical community need to develop or modify our tools to make those tasks easier.
My point, exactly.
Hire a lazy but smart admin! :)
On Tue, Oct 08, 2002 at 02:45:22PM -0400, Jason Lixfeld wrote:
On Tue, 8 Oct 2002, Jason Lixfeld wrote:
In more cases than not, especially now adays with lots
peering all over gods creation, RPF can have some
of networks pretty detrimental
effects if your routing is somewhat asymmetrical.
actually RPF is extremely effective especially where its highly asymmetrical, eg at the edge. theres virtually no reason not to RPF dialup/isdn/cable/dsl/etc customers for example.
Sure, but to RPF so many customer facing edge ports in comparison to the far fewer number of egress ports makes the implementation procedure quite extensive. The more configuration, the more room for errors or "oops, forgot to configure that there", not to mention change management.