11-29-2001 12:55 PM - edited 03-01-2019 07:33 PM
I only have two subnets form isp. I want to use some ips on our dadicated router outside the firewall. Is it ok to use same subnet on different router?
11-29-2001 02:34 PM
If you subnet your subnet accordingly you can probably do it. You need a routing protocol with VLSM support (eigrp would be one choice for a small network). You might want to check out VLSM on CCO so you understand how to properly implement it for your given network. There is a hierarchy requirement that must be adhered to so it is impossible to say from your description whether you can do exactly what you are thinking of.
11-30-2001 08:07 AM
Jen:
If you are referencing connecting more than one router to the same physical segment and assigning an IP address on the same network, then the answer is yes; you can connect single interfaces from multiple routers to the same subnet. If you mean using the same network address space behind two different routers, then the answer is no; you must use different subnets for each network. Someone else responded to your question with a reference to vlsm and eigrp. vlsm will allow you take the address space from your ISP and break it down further into multiple, smaller networks.
Although, I seem to remember a white paper from Cisco from several years ago that said that they supported discontiguous address space across a routed boundary... A vpn tunnel would also allow you to extend address space to multiple segments, but this would over complicate things and is beyond what you're trying to accomplish.
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