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I'm confused about something and I'd like your help in understanding. Where I work, we have a router that's connected to 2 ISPs via BGP. Weight is set to 100 to ISP-A and 50 to ISP-B so outbound traffic is going through ISP-A and AS-Path prepend is m...
This is a design that one of our customers has and everything is supposedly working fine but I'm not sure exactly how the routing works.The gateway for VLAN 5 (172.16.200.0/24) s created on the fortigate and the port connected to it is configured as ...
I am having a problem in my OSPF network. I have a connectivity with my ISP via OSPF that connects us to a remote site but the neighborship keeps flapping. The neighborship is via a sub-interface, there are 3 other subinterfaces on the same physical ...
Below is a summary of a scenario that's happening with me in real life. There are two Internet links, the one connected to ISP A has a 100 Mb/s speed and the one connected to ISP B has a 50 MB/s speed. Router 2 has an OSPF neighborship with Router 0 ...
Is there anyway I can get email alerts for BGP events especially when an adjacency goes down? I need help configuring it using either EEM or Cisco Prime.
So if I understand correctly, based on what you've said, then if a client is uploading a file, it will be sent via the link to ISP-A which is 100 Mbps (upload speed could be less) and if a client is downloading/browsing then that will go through the ...
Thanks for replying, but I'm still confused. What kind of traffic is considered "up" and what kind is considered "down"? If ISP-A bandwidth is 100 Mbps and ISP-B is 50 Mbps, which bandwidth is being utilized when downloading, uploading, browsing? Sor...
If a client is downloading a file from a website, does the traffic go through ISP-A or B? Similarly, if a client is uploading a file or browsing a website or like doing a speed test.