12-22-2017 08:47 AM - edited 03-05-2019 09:41 AM
Hello Everyone,
PFA, I have recently made a change in our environment where our DC devices connected to our remote sites A & B are on Area 0 and all the remote site devices are in area 200.
I have a opsf cost of 1 in my router A to prefer the path to ISP 1 and Ospf cost of 15000 as back up from router to ISP2(These are backup VPN Tunnels).
Since the router 2 has presence in Area 0, this router alone is taking the tunnels to ISP 2 and the traffics from router 2 is not hitting the Router-1. Is there any manipulation to fix this issue?
I need the router 2 to consider the ISP-1 as the primary route, all the other devices are going through R1 and taking ISP1 as primary path except R2.
Thanks,
Sam
12-23-2017 03:43 AM
Hi
Just some questions, The switch is working in L3 mode? or have you verified if Router B has adjacency with Router A and it is learning routes from Router A?
:-)
12-23-2017 07:22 AM
As I look at the drawing it appears that the connection between the routers is in area 200. It mentions that both routers are in area 0 but does not show how that is. Can you clarify the connection to area 0 for both routers and how they would communicate with each other in area 0? Perhaps the output of show ip ospf from each router would be helpful.
HTH
Rick
12-26-2017 01:08 PM
The router B is a secondary router for our Internet links over Site to Site & GRE tunnels using one of our ISP(ISP2). this is our backup link connected to a different DC(lets call this DC2) using Area 0.
Router A is connected to a different DC(lets call it DC1) using VPLS and this is our primary connection. As I mentioned the switch tarffic goes through router A but router B doesn't go through Router A because the Router B has area 0 presebce with DC2 and its preferring DC2 path even if the OSPF cost is higher.
My target is get the traffic on router B pass thorugh Router A and use the DC1.
For your information, DC1 and DC2 are connected over 10G links with OSPF Area 0.
Hope this helps, Thanks for your time.
12-26-2017 01:12 PM
Switch works as L3 mode and Router B doesn't form adjacency with Router A.
12-26-2017 01:15 PM
Switch works as L3 mode and Router B doesn't form adjacency with Router A.
it doesn't have to learn the routes from Router A. Router B is connected to Switch using two OSPF routed links & connected to a DC using two tunnels and its forming neighbor ship with all the devices its connected to.
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