12-30-2022 01:45 PM
Hi.
I've discovered that my company is using a router when only a L2 switch is needed. The EIGRP routing table has MANY /32 routes to hundreds of local workstations. How bad is this for the router hardware?
Is there a practical reason this should be changed?
Thank you.
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12-30-2022 01:58 PM
Good and Bad. depends on the network and device model and deployment
we are still not have information to asses what your statement is correct.
Device : Model
IOS - what version code running
what is the CPU process histtor
can you post same config to look
as long as the CPU level and memory not go high, you ok to use how ever you like.
All can not be deployed 100% CVD ( that is impossible) do sure there is a deviation all time.
12-30-2022 01:58 PM
Good and Bad. depends on the network and device model and deployment
we are still not have information to asses what your statement is correct.
Device : Model
IOS - what version code running
what is the CPU process histtor
can you post same config to look
as long as the CPU level and memory not go high, you ok to use how ever you like.
All can not be deployed 100% CVD ( that is impossible) do sure there is a deviation all time.
12-30-2022 02:20 PM
To find out if there is a reason to change this is to find out why it was implemented in this very special way.
12-30-2022 02:23 PM
You can not change it, this Local Host is either PPP or other remote access that get IP from Pool and router add this IP as Local IP.
the SW can not do that.
12-30-2022 02:26 PM
Good point. Maybe the router now has important connection-specific information. Though I expect this was configured this way because of poor network design.
12-30-2022 02:33 PM
No this local /32 connection represent host.
12-30-2022 02:39 PM
"How bad is this for the router hardware?"
I cannot see how it would be bad for the hardware.
"Is there a practical reason this should be changed?"
Well, often small routers don't have the forwarding capacity of a small switch. I.e. the network might be running slower than it would with a switch.
That said, there might be something very "special" about what appears to be an unusual setup.
Further, you mention hundreds of local workstations? When you get into hundreds, you often start to run into L2 scalability issues.
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