02-18-2010 08:34 AM - edited 03-06-2019 09:46 AM
CCNA tought us OSPF DR/BDR using an example with three routers connected to a switch. Also, the curriculum insinuates that there might be dozens of routers on a broadcast multiaccess segment.
Why would we want to connect all those routers to a switch?
Are there any real-world examples of such topologies?
Thanks
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02-18-2010 10:03 AM
Hello John,
some service provider designs of POP use two backbone vlans where they connect multiple devices, some are the inner core other can be used for specific services.
The result can be an high count of routers in each Vlan
I don't want to say it is a recommended design but it has been used.
The limits of this design came out when on the same broacast domain there were devices with very different speeds from 100 Mbps to 10GE.
controlling multicast traffic on this was a real challenge.
Hope to help
Giuseppe
02-18-2010 08:59 AM
Hello John,
>>yes there are examples of LANs with 30/40 OSPF routers on it
the most dramatic fact is that usually OSPF DR is the device with the greatest uptime that may be different from the desired one
Hope to help
Giuseppe
02-18-2010 09:16 AM
Hi Giuseppe,
you say that there are LANs with 30/40 routers on it. I believe you, but I would like to know why would we use such topologies? What is the application? What are those routers used for?
Thanks a lot
02-18-2010 10:03 AM
Hello John,
some service provider designs of POP use two backbone vlans where they connect multiple devices, some are the inner core other can be used for specific services.
The result can be an high count of routers in each Vlan
I don't want to say it is a recommended design but it has been used.
The limits of this design came out when on the same broacast domain there were devices with very different speeds from 100 Mbps to 10GE.
controlling multicast traffic on this was a real challenge.
Hope to help
Giuseppe
02-19-2010 01:47 AM
Thanks Giuseppe, that was the info I needed.
I knew the DR/BDR thing in theory, but I couldn't have imagined any meaningful application.
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