8 secondary addressing – 29 bit, 9 pros and cons of different ip addressing schemes, 10 routing considerations for ip multiplexing – Black Box LR1102A-T1/E1 User Manual

Page 53: Secondary addressing – 29 bit, Pros and cons of different ip addressing schemes, Routing considerations for ip multiplexing

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IP Multiplexing

55

6.1.8 Secondary Addressing – 29 Bit

This approach utilizes a 29-bit subnet for each remote connection. Within each 29-bit subnet is the POP router secondary, the Black
Box WAN addressing, and the remote router secondary.

6.1.9 Pros and Cons of Different IP Addressing Schemes

The following table provides information about addressing scheme pros and cons.

Table 10 Addressing Schemes: Pros and Cons

6.1.10 Routing Considerations for IP Multiplexing

„

RIP / RIP2 / IGRP –Turn off split horizons to enable routing updates through secondary addresses, if used.

„

EIGRP – Updates are sourced only from primary addresses, although routers will listen to updates arriving on primary and
secondary.

„

OSPF – For Cisco and other routers, routing updates are sourced and detected only on primary addresses, therefore
secondary addressing schemes are not usable.

„

BGP4 – Routing updates are fully functional over primary and secondary addresses.

POP Router

e0:

200.1.1.1/30 primary
199.1.1.1/29 secondary
199.1.1.9/29 secondary
199.1.1.17/29 secondary

POP Black Box

e0:
wan1:
wan2:
wan3:

200.1.1.2/30
199.1.1.2/29
199.1.1.10/29
199.1.1.18/29

Black Box 1

e0:
wan

201.1.1.2/30
199.1.1.3/29

Router 1

e0:

201.1.1.1/30 primary
199.1.1.4/29 secondary

Black Box 2

e0:
wan1:

202.1.1.2/30
199.1.1.11/29

Router 2

e0:

202.1.1.1/30 primary
199.1.1.12/29 secondary

Router/DSU

s0:

199.1.1.19/29

Approach

Pros

Cons

Single Subnet

Minimizes consumption of IP
address space

POP Black Box requires two route statements
per remote connection.

Split Subnet

Less routes required in Black
Box

Consumes 29-bit subnet per remote site.

Secondary Addressing

Easily Scalable

Consumes 29-or 30-bit subnet per remote. Not
transparent to certain routing protocols.

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