RE: [nsp] Configuring VPN Routing/Forwarding

From: Marcus Keane (mkeane@microsoft.com)
Date: Mon Feb 11 2002 - 05:23:27 EST


Cheeyong, this is probably not very helpful, but you could either a) not
use vrfs b) put all four interfaces in the same vrf or c) connect the
two ethernets directly or with a firewall(s). (considering that the two
networks seem to be joined anyway at the other end of the serial links)
Marcus.
-----Original Message-----
From: Tay Chee Yong [mailto:tcy@pacific.net.sg]
Sent: 11 February 2002 19:03
To: cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net
Subject: [nsp] Configuring VPN Routing/Forwarding

Hi there,

Have anyone out there configured the above with any of your customers or

clients??

I have this scenario over here, and need some advise.

        vrf1 | | vrf2
        S1/0 | | S1/1
        ---------------------------
        | Cisco 7206 |
        ---------------------------
        F1/0 | | F2/0
        vrf1 | | vrf 2

I had configured 2 vrf on the router, as shown above. It seems that
whenever I want to reach F2/0 from F1/0, it will always go out by S1/0,
and
returned by S1/1 before reaching F2/0. This is bad, as it would consume
the
WAN Link's bandwidth. I would like to have the inter-vrf traffic to be
within the router. Any advise from you guys out there??

Really appreciate it.

Regards,
Cheeyong



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