Case Surf.com
Index -> About Us -> Add Your Link -> Privacy of Info -> Terms & Conditions -> Submit Article
Search:   
 

The Most Important Aspect Of Internet Marketing Ever

The secret to creating a massive opt in subscriber list & why its so important. - Mark Flavin
 

Maximize Your "Froogling" for Increased Website Profits

If you own or operate an e-commerce business you must utilize the "free" traffic opportunities avail ... - Kevin Gold
 

How Autoresponders Boost Business

So you know what an autoresponder is, but aren?t quite sure what all the fuss is about? In short it? ... - Vince Lewis
 
 

Gmail is the Way to Go

Gmail is quickly becoming the email provider of choice. It has plenty of great features that put it ... - Matt Christensen
 

Create a High-Quality Website ?C Quickly!

For any business, big or small, a high-quality website is the key to success. But what if you are st ... - Katerina Mitrou
 

How To Get Free Advertising By Giving Away Online Content

Giving away content is a powerful way to get free advertising. For example, give other people permis ... - Rojo Sunsen
 

Top Ten Online Shopping Security Tips.

Protect yourself with these safety shopping guidelines - TJ Tierney
 

E-mail Whitelist Etiquette

A big-time dilemma is brewing online. In an understandable attempt to bypass all that annoying spam, ... - Judith Kallos
 
 

Index » Computers & Software » IT Certification
 

Cisco CCNA Certification Exam Tutorial: Variance And Unequal Cost Load Balancing

 
Author: Chris Bryant
 

To pass the CCNA exam, you've got to know how to work with IGRP and EIGRP unequal-cost load balancing. You may not see much IGRP in production networks anymore, but you'll see a lot of EIGRP, and part of fine-tuning your EIGRP network is making sure that all paths are in use while allowing for varying bandwidth rates.

Using the variance command is the easy part - it's getting the metric that's the hard part with IGRP. With EIGRP, you just look in the topology table and that's it. With IGRP, you've got to run a debug to get the right metric.

The variance command is a multiplier when the value supplied with the variance command is multiplied by the lowest-cost metric, it must exceed the higher-cost metric in order for the higher-cost route to be added.

If that sounds complicated, it's not. It's one of those things that sounds difficult, but isn't. Trust me!

In this example, R1 has two paths to 172.23.0.0, but is currently using only one. By looking in the IP routing table, we've seen that the lowest-cost metric for network 172.23.0.0 on R1 is 8576. This path goes through the 172.12.123.0 network. There is another valid path that uses the 172.12.13.0 network, but is not currently in use.

I 172.23.0.0/16 [100/8576] via 172.12.123.2, 00:00:53, Serial0

IGRP does not have a show" command that displays all valid routes to a destination, as does EIGRP. The command debug ip igrp transactions will show the current metric of the routes using the 512 KBPS route.

R1#debug ip igrp transactions

IGRP protocol debugging is on

19:17:51: IGRP: broadcasting request on Loopback0

19:17:51: IGRP: broadcasting request on Serial0

19:17:51: IGRP: broadcasting request on Serial1

19:17:51: IGRP: received update from 172.12.13.3 on Serial1

19:17:51: subnet 172.12.13.0, metric 23531 (neighbor 21531)

19:17:51: subnet 172.12.123.0, metric 23531 (neighbor 8476)

19:17:51: network 1.0.0.0, metric 24031 (neighbor 8976)

19:17:51: network 2.0.0.0, metric 22131 (neighbor 1600)

19:17:51: network 3.0.0.0, metric 22031 (neighbor 501)

19:17:51: network 172.23.0.0, metric 21631 (neighbor 1100)

R1(config)#router igrp 1
R1(config-router)#variance 3
R1#show ip route 172.23.0.0
Routing entry for 172.23.0.0/16
Known via "igrp 1", distance 100, metric 8576
Redistributing via igrp 1
Advertised by igrp 1 (self originated)
Last update from 172.12.123.2 on Serial0, 00:00:01 ago
Routing Descriptor Blocks:
* 172.12.13.3, from 172.12.13.3, 00:00:20 ago, via Serial1
Route metric is 21631, traffic share count is 1
Total delay is 21000 microseconds, minimum bandwidth is 512 Kbit
Reliability 255/255, minimum MTU 1500 bytes
Loading 1/255, Hops 0
172.12.123.3, from 172.12.123.3, 00:00:20 ago, via Serial0
Route metric is 8576, traffic share count is 3
Total delay is 21000 microseconds, minimum bandwidth is 1544 Kbit
Reliability 255/255, minimum MTU 1500 bytes
Loading 1/255, Hops 0
172.12.123.2, from 172.12.123.2, 00:00:01 ago, via Serial0
Route metric is 8576, traffic share count is 3
Total delay is 21000 microseconds, minimum bandwidth is 1544 Kbit
Reliability 255/255, minimum MTU 1500 bytes
Loading 1/255, Hops 0

The metric for 172.23.0.0 through the direct connection is 21631. A variance of 3 means that any route with a metric less than the best metric multiplied by the variance (in this case, 8576 x 3 = 25728) will be entered into the routing table. R1 now has three unequal-cost paths to 172.23.0.0 in its routing table, and load balancing will take place.

IGRP unequal-cost load balancing takes some practice, but as you can see, once you get the metric it's easy to work with. Just make sure you know how to get that metric!

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Pros and Cons of Internet Shopping
 
Your Domain -- Just the Facts!
 
Choosing an Intimate Conference Venue
 
Ten Unobvious Ideas To Pull Visitors to Your Real Estate Agent Web Site
 
8 Tips On Buying The Mobile Phone That??s Right For You!
 
Blogging Part 1: Setting Up Your Blog
 
Setting Up Yor E-Bay Business
 
It??s Great to Have a Gorgeous Gadget Like Nokia N80 Within your Grip
 
Video Games Are Good - Are They?
 
Domain Names: Still Paying Too Much?
 
 
 
Add Url
 

Computers & Software

News & Media

Sports & Adventure

Jobs & Careers

Academics & Education

Science & Space

Creative Arts

Self Help

Indoor Games

Hygiene & Health

Fashion & Relationships

Companies & Business

Estate & Realty

Society & Communities

Food & Recipe

Travel & Accommodation

Government & Politics

Children & Teens

Home Family & Garden

Medicine & Treatment

Online Shopping

Finance & Banking

Recreation

Automotive

 
Index -> Privacy of Info -> Terms & Conditions  
Copyright © 2008 www.casesurf.com All Rights Reserved.