11-20-2018 01:35 PM - edited 03-05-2019 11:04 AM
Hello experts,
I crossed this question mentioning that in large entreprises , a stub router should be configured with a default route if routing is needed. as am still an academic student I don't really get the thing behind configuring default routes in a existing network.
thank you so much for answering !
11-20-2018 02:03 PM
i can give you the command for you straight away to configure.
Since you learning academic, i suggest to read some good document how the routing injects:
https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/ip/open-shortest-path-first-ospf/47869-ospfdb10.html
11-20-2018 02:10 PM
11-20-2018 03:21 PM - edited 11-20-2018 03:22 PM
The original question was not clear. But your follow up is quite clear:
WHY we do configure a default route
I would suggest that the answer might begin by understanding that the IP routing table of a device (perhaps a router, perhaps a layer 3 switch, perhaps some other device) has entries that provide information about how to reach remote destinations. It may have multiple entries for various networks and subnets that it knows how to access. But what would happen if a packet arrives at the router/switch/etc and the destination is a network/subnet for which we do not have an entry? If the router/switch/etc does not know how to access the destination it would drop the packet. The default route is the answer to that issue. The default route says that if there is a destination for which we do not have specific routing information here is where to go to get there.
If our router/switch/etc is running a dynamic routing protocol it might learn a default route via that routing protocol. But if the routing protocol does not dynamically learn a default route then we have an option to manually configure the default route as a static route.
HTH
Rick
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