On Sun, May 26, 2002 at 08:33:11AM +0200, M?ns Nilsson wrote:
(this is actually my first NANOG post ever...)
At the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden, we have a series of courses that focus on networking. The starting one can be seen as "getting the programmer to know IP's quirks", but as we progress, we teach deeper and deeper into the technicalities of routing, including theory of routing (discussion of Dijkstra, and similar) and practice; we have a routing lab where we first make them understand that static routes don't work and then progress into understanding first OSPF, then BGP.
Nothing is more stable and cuases less pain than static routing. And it always works. Ofc ourse it doesn't scale very and also doesn't support alternate paths very well ;-)) -- Arnold Nipper / nIPper consulting mailto:arnold@nipper.de