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re: (ASCEND) Static IP for a p50/75



Are you using OSPF on your network?  Use a connection profile for the P75 
connections and let OSPF manage the routing.

I do this with a TNT and have over 24 remote LANs configured in this way 
and it works great!  I set aside some network addresses that have been 
subnetted into multiple 28 and 30 bit subnets which were reserved for my 
Pipes.  The 28 bit subnets are assigned to LANs of less than 8 staff and 
the 30 bit subnets are assigned to LANs that are actually home offices that 
have only one computer attached.

Mitch
-------------
Original Text
From: "David Routh" <ascend@davlin.net>, on 9/16/98 8:13 AM:
To: SMTP@DC2@OCC[<ascend-users@bungi.com>]

Hey,

We're running multiple boxes (LRAS's) and I'm trying to route a subnet to a
dialup customer connecting with a p75.

The quickest/easiest way I see is to give them an IP off the same network
the LRAS's are on and then route the subnet to it.

I did that last night from the house and found I needed to put the static
IP in the "IF Adrs" under "IP Options" in the "Connection Profile".  Is
this the place to do it?  Everything seemed to work OK doing it that way.

Additionally, what's the best/smartest way to have route subnets when
there's multiple boxes of any type on the network, especially when one
class c is pretty much used up?

Thanks, David
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