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Changing route from one location to another

scotlaclair
Level 1
Level 1

I have two sites A and B connected by T1 line. Site A has another T1 line connecting A-C and Site B has another T1 line connecting B-C. I want to eliminate one of the T1 lines B-C so I need to route the B-C connection from B-A-C instead using the T1 line that connects B-A and then A-C. I cannot make it work. From site B I can ping all the addresses at A that I need to access and at site A I can ping all the addresses at sites B and C, but from B to C I can't connect.

7 Replies 7

mhussein
Level 4
Level 4

Unless I am missing something, it should be straightforward. Check the routing tables on all sites. Remove stale routes, and add static routes if you have to:

RouterB:

ip route

RouterC:

ip route

Regards,

Mustafa

hi, have you done it or it is still pending. As I was doing the same changes so that we could easily manage www.techtheeta.com/best-tablets-with-stylus-for-note-taking/ without facing any issues. As I tried my best and applied all the knowledge which I have but all in vain. Then one of my friend suggest me to hire an expert related to this job from any freelancing market place. When I hired a person from fiverr he did it in just a few minutes.

it depend one what routing protocol you run between sites.
what is routing protocol you run ?

Garry Cross
Level 1
Level 1

If static routing is in use.

On B

You would have a route like this.

ip route networksC maskC nexthopC

You would need to delete this route.Then add this.

ip route networkC maskC nexthopA

On C you would do similar for NetworkB

Remove route

ip route NetworkB MaskB nexthopC

Add route

ip route NetworkB maskB nexthopA

 

 

 

Hello
Post a topology diagram so we can better understand your requiement


Please rate and mark as an accepted solution if you have found any of the information provided useful.
This then could assist others on these forums to find a valuable answer and broadens the community’s global network.

Kind Regards
Paul

The original post was from 2005. I do not know why it was resurrected but the person who did so explains that the problem has been solved (after giving what appears to be a plug for some product whose relationship to network is not clear to me). I suggest that this is not worth more of our time - let it go.

HTH

Rick

Hello Richard
Thanks for that, I didnt realise the timestamp (17 years ago!)


Please rate and mark as an accepted solution if you have found any of the information provided useful.
This then could assist others on these forums to find a valuable answer and broadens the community’s global network.

Kind Regards
Paul
Review Cisco Networking for a $25 gift card