EIGRP timers over WAN media default to 60 seconds. Neighborship will not expire for up to 180 seconds. To verify your EIGRP neighborship do a "show ip eigrp neighbor" Message: 6 Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2008 09:25:34 -0700 (PDT) From: Philip Lavine <source_route@yahoo.com> Subject: Re: eigrp and managed ethernet To: nanog <nanog@merit.edu> Message-ID: <542140.85408.qm@web30802.mail.mud.yahoo.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii What is really bizarre is that I am down for minutes not seconds and the timers never fire. If I don't manually passive the connection eigrp will for some reason think there is a neighbor even though I am unable to source ping across the WAN.
On Tuesday 23 September 2008 13:46:02 Joseph Doran wrote:
EIGRP timers over WAN media default to 60 seconds. Neighborship will not expire for up to 180 seconds. To verify your EIGRP neighborship do a "show ip eigrp neighbor"
Message: 6 Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2008 09:25:34 -0700 (PDT) From: Philip Lavine <source_route@yahoo.com> Subject: Re: eigrp and managed ethernet To: nanog <nanog@merit.edu> Message-ID: <542140.85408.qm@web30802.mail.mud.yahoo.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
What is really bizarre is that I am down for minutes not seconds and the timers never fire. If I don't manually passive the connection eigrp will for some reason think there is a neighbor even though I am unable to source ping across the WAN.
With regard to EIGRP, link type is dictated by the medium and speed. In this case, Ethernet will be considered a high-speed, broadcast link regardless of its use for LAN or WAN, so the hello/dead intervals should, by default, be 5/15 seconds.
participants (2)
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Joseph Doran
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Stephen Kratzer