| 1 | % Advanced Routing Workshop |
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| 2 | % Basic Routing Lab |
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| 3 | |
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| 4 | \pagebreak |
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| 5 | |
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| 6 | # Introduction |
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| 7 | |
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| 8 | The purpose of this exercise is to: |
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| 9 | |
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| 10 | * Configure the basics of a Cisco router |
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| 11 | * Enable OSPF to exchange internal routing information |
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| 12 | * Configure static routing towards a service provider |
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| 13 | |
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| 14 |  |
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| 15 | |
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| 16 |  |
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| 17 | |
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| 18 | |
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| 19 | The network configuration is designed to be modular to |
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| 20 | allow the lab to grow as needed depending on the number |
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| 21 | of partipants. Each module will contain 1 ISP and 3 customer |
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| 22 | networks (universities, etc). Modules will be interconnected |
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| 23 | (see Fig. 3) |
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| 24 | |
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| 25 |  |
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| 26 | |
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| 27 | # Logistics |
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| 28 | |
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| 29 | Each participant will be assigned to a network. Depending on the |
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| 30 | number of participants, either a single person or a group will be |
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| 31 | responsible for the configuration of a router. You may be asked |
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| 32 | to rotate and work on a different router so that you have the |
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| 33 | opportunity to understand the network from another point of view. |
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| 34 | |
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| 35 | As you go through the exercises, you will see examples of |
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| 36 | configurations for one or more routers. **Make sure to take those |
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| 37 | examples and adapt them to your own router, network topology and |
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| 38 | addressing scheme. Use the diagrams to guide you.** |
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| 39 | |
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| 40 | Refer to the *Lab Access Instructions* document for information |
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| 41 | about logging into the routers that have been assigned to you. |
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| 42 | |
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| 43 | # Address Space Allocation |
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| 44 | |
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| 45 | ## End networks (universities, etc) |
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| 46 | |
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| 47 | Group IPv4 IPv6 ASN |
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| 48 | ------- ------------ ------------- ------- |
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| 49 | 1 10.10.0.0/16 fd00:10::/32 10 |
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| 50 | 2 10.20.0.0/16 fd00:20::/32 20 |
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| 51 | 3 10.30.0.0/16 fd00:30::/32 30 |
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| 52 | |
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| 53 | *The list will continue in the same pattern if there are more |
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| 54 | groups.* |
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| 55 | |
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| 56 | Each group will then further partition their space as follows: |
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| 57 | |
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| 58 | IPv4 IPv6 Description |
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| 59 | --------------- --------------- -------------------- |
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| 60 | 10.X0.0.0/17 fd00:X0::/40 End user space |
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| 61 | 10.X0.254.0/24 fd00:X0:fe::/64 Point-to-point links |
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| 62 | 10.X0.255.0/24 fd00:X0:ff::/64 Router loopbacks |
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| 63 | |
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| 64 | Where X is your group number (1,2,3...) |
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| 65 | |
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| 66 | Prefixes for point to point links will be of length /30 for IPv4 |
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| 67 | and /127 for IPv6 (we will adopt the recommendations of RFC6164 |
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| 68 | for IPv6 inter-router links): |
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| 69 | |
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| 70 | IPv4 IPv6 Description |
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| 71 | --------------- ---------------- -------------------- |
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| 72 | 10.X0.254.0/30 fd00:X0:fe::/127 P2P #1 |
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| 73 | 10.X0.254.4/30 fd00:X0:fe::2/127 P2P #2 |
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| 74 | 10.X0.254.8/30 fd00:X0:fe::4/127 P2P #3 |
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| 75 | |
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| 76 | ... and so on. |
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| 77 | |
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| 78 | Router loopback addresses will be of size /32 for IPv4 and /128 |
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| 79 | for IPv6: |
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| 80 | |
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| 81 | IPv4 IPv6 Description |
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| 82 | --------------- ---------------- -------------------- |
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| 83 | 10.X0.255.1/32 fd00:X0:ff::1/128 RX1 Loopback |
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| 84 | 10.X0.255.2/32 fd00:X0:ff::2/128 RX2 Loopback |
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| 85 | |
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| 86 | |
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| 87 | ## Commercial Internet Service Providers (ISPs) |
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| 88 | |
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| 89 | ISP IPv4 IPv6 ASN |
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| 90 | ----- ------------ ------------- ------- |
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| 91 | 1 10.201.0.0/16 fd00:200::/32 201 |
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| 92 | 2 10.202.0.0/16 fd00:201::/32 202 |
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| 93 | |
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| 94 | ... and so on. |
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| 95 | |
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| 96 | ## Internet Exchange Points (IXPs) |
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| 97 | |
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| 98 | IXP IPv4 IPv6 |
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| 99 | ----- ------------ --------------- |
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| 100 | 1 10.251.1.0/24 fd00:251:1::/64 |
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| 101 | |
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| 102 | |
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| 103 | # Basic Router Configuration |
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| 104 | |
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| 105 | 1. Name the router |
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| 106 | |
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| 107 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 108 | enable |
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| 109 | config terminal |
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| 110 | hostname R11 |
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| 111 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 112 | |
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| 113 | 2. Configure Authentication |
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| 114 | |
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| 115 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 116 | aaa new-model |
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| 117 | aaa authentication login default local |
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| 118 | aaa authentication enable default enable |
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| 119 | username nsrc secret nsrc |
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| 120 | enable secret nsrc |
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| 121 | service password-encryption |
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| 122 | line vty 0 4 |
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| 123 | transport preferred none |
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| 124 | line console 0 |
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| 125 | transport preferred none |
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| 126 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 127 | |
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| 128 | 3. Configure logging |
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| 129 | |
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| 130 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 131 | no logging console |
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| 132 | logging buffered 8192 debugging |
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| 133 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 134 | |
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| 135 | 4. Disable DNS resolution |
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| 136 | |
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| 137 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 138 | no ip domain-lookup |
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| 139 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 140 | |
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| 141 | 5. Make sure the router understands CIDR. This is the default |
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| 142 | setting in recent IOS versions, but just in case. |
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| 143 | |
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| 144 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 145 | ip subnet-zero |
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| 146 | ip classless |
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| 147 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 148 | |
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| 149 | 6. Disable source routing |
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| 150 | |
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| 151 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 152 | no ip source-route |
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| 153 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 154 | |
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| 155 | 7. Activate IPv6 routing |
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| 156 | |
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| 157 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 158 | ipv6 unicast-routing |
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| 159 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 160 | |
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| 161 | 8. Exit configuration mode and save |
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| 162 | |
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| 163 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 164 | end |
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| 165 | write memory |
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| 166 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 167 | |
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| 168 | 9. Configure your interfaces according to the diagram |
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| 169 | |
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| 170 | *Notice that for the links to the ISP we will use the ISP's |
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| 171 | addresses, while for internal links we use internal addresses.* |
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| 172 | |
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| 173 | On R11: |
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| 174 | |
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| 175 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 176 | interface GigabitEthernet2/0 |
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| 177 | description P2P Link to R12 |
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| 178 | ip address 10.10.254.1 255.255.255.252 |
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| 179 | no ip directed-broadcast |
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| 180 | no ip redirects |
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| 181 | no ip proxy-arp |
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| 182 | ipv6 address fd00:10:fe::/127 |
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| 183 | ipv6 nd ra suppress |
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| 184 | no shutdown |
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| 185 | ! |
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| 186 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 187 | |
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| 188 | |
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| 189 | On R12: |
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| 190 | |
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| 191 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 192 | interface GigabitEthernet1/0 |
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| 193 | description P2P Link to ISP1 |
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| 194 | ip address 10.201.254.2 255.255.255.252 |
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| 195 | no ip directed-broadcast |
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| 196 | no ip redirects |
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| 197 | no ip proxy-arp |
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| 198 | ipv6 address fd00:201:fe::1/127 |
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| 199 | ipv6 nd ra suppress |
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| 200 | no shutdown |
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| 201 | ! |
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| 202 | interface GigabitEthernet2/0 |
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| 203 | description P2P Link to R11 |
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| 204 | ip address 10.10.254.2 255.255.255.252 |
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| 205 | no ip directed-broadcast |
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| 206 | no ip redirects |
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| 207 | no ip proxy-arp |
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| 208 | ipv6 address fd00:10:fe::1/127 |
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| 209 | ipv6 nd ra suppress |
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| 210 | no shutdown |
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| 211 | |
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| 212 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 213 | |
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| 214 | Explanations for some of the above commands: |
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| 215 | |
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| 216 | *no ip directed-broadcast* |
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| 217 | |
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| 218 | An IP directed broadcast is an IP packet whose destination address |
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| 219 | is a valid broadcast address for some IP subnet, but which originates |
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| 220 | from a node that is not itself part of that destination subnet. |
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| 221 | |
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| 222 | Because directed broadcasts, and particularly Internet Control Message |
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| 223 | Protocol (ICMP) directed broadcasts, have been abused by malicious persons, |
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| 224 | we recommend disabling the ip directed-broadcast command on any intereface |
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| 225 | where directed broadcasts are not needed (probably all). |
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| 226 | |
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| 227 | *no ip proxy-arp* |
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| 228 | |
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| 229 | Proxy ARP is the technique in which one host, usually a router, answers |
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| 230 | ARP requests intended for another machine. By "faking" its identity, the |
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| 231 | router accepts responsibility for routing packets to the "real" destination. |
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| 232 | Proxy ARP can help machines on a subnet reach remote subnets without the need |
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| 233 | to configure routing or a default gateway. |
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| 234 | |
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| 235 | Disadvantages of proxy arp: |
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| 236 | |
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| 237 | * It increases the impact of ARP spoofing, in which a machine claims to |
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| 238 | be another in order to intercept packets. |
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| 239 | * It hides network misconfigurations in hosts |
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| 240 | * Hosts will have larger ARP tables |
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| 241 | |
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| 242 | *no ip redirects* |
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| 243 | |
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| 244 | ICMP redirects can be sent to a host when the router knows that another router in |
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| 245 | the same subnet has a better path to a destination. If a hacker installs |
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| 246 | a router in the network that causes the legitimate router to learn these |
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| 247 | ilegitimate paths, the hacker's router will end up diverting legitimate |
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| 248 | traffic thanks to ICMP redirects. Thus, we recommend that you disable this |
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| 249 | feature in all your interfaces. |
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| 250 | |
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| 251 | *ipv6 nd ra supress* |
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| 252 | |
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| 253 | IPv6 router advertisements are sent periodically by routers to inform hosts |
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| 254 | that the router is present, and to allow hosts to autoconfigure themselves using |
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| 255 | stateless autoconfiguration mechanisms. This is not necessary on |
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| 256 | point-to-point interfaces. |
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| 257 | |
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| 258 | 10. Do some PING tests |
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| 259 | |
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| 260 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 261 | R12# ping 10.10.254.1 <- R11 |
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| 262 | R12# ping fd00:10:fe::0 <- R11 |
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| 263 | R12# ping 10.201.254.1 <- ISP1 |
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| 264 | R12# ping fd00:201:fe::0 <- ISP1 |
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| 265 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 266 | |
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| 267 | and then verify the output of the following commands: |
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| 268 | |
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| 269 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 270 | show arp : Show ARP cache |
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| 271 | show interface <int> : Show interface state and config |
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| 272 | show ip interface : Show interface IP state and config |
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| 273 | show ipv6 neighbors : Show IPv6 neighbors |
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| 274 | show ipv6 interface <int> : Show interface state and config |
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| 275 | show cdp neighbors : Show neighbors seen via CDP |
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| 276 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 277 | |
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| 278 | 11. Create Loopback interface |
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| 279 | |
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| 280 | On R11: |
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| 281 | |
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| 282 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 283 | interface loopback 0 |
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| 284 | ip address 10.10.255.1 255.255.255.255 |
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| 285 | ipv6 address fd00:10:ff::1/128 |
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| 286 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 287 | |
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| 288 | do the same for R12 (obviously, using different |
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| 289 | addresses). |
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| 290 | |
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| 291 | 12. Verify and save the configuration. |
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| 292 | |
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| 293 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 294 | show running-config |
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| 295 | write memory |
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| 296 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 297 | |
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| 298 | # Routing |
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| 299 | |
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| 300 | ## OSPF |
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| 301 | |
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| 302 | 1. Try pinging the loopback addresses of your neighbor |
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| 303 | |
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| 304 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 305 | R11# ping 10.10.255.2 <- R12 loopback |
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| 306 | R11# ping fd00:10:ff:2 <- R12 loopback |
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| 307 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 308 | |
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| 309 | Q. What is happening? |
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| 310 | |
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| 311 | 2. Configure a new OSPF routing process. |
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| 312 | |
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| 313 | Notice that we will use the number "10" as the |
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| 314 | OSPF process number for routers R11 and R12. |
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| 315 | This number is local to the router, so it doesn't |
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| 316 | need to match the process number of a neighboring |
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| 317 | router. However, it is recommended that you |
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| 318 | use the same number throughout your network. Most |
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| 319 | people use their Autonomous System number (although |
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| 320 | OSPF has nothing to do with the BGP ASN). |
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| 321 | |
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| 322 | On R11 and R12: |
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| 323 | |
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| 324 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 325 | router ospf 10 |
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| 326 | log-adjacency-changes |
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| 327 | passive-interface default |
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| 328 | ! |
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| 329 | ipv6 router ospf 10 |
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| 330 | log-adjacency-changes |
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| 331 | passive-interface default |
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| 332 | area 0 authentication ipsec spi 256 md5 0123456789ABCDEF0123456789ABCDEF |
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| 333 | |
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| 334 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 335 | |
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| 336 | 3. Now configure OSPF on the interfaces where adjacencies |
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| 337 | need to be established: |
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| 338 | |
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| 339 | On R11 and R12: |
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| 340 | |
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| 341 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 342 | interface GigabitEthernet2/0 |
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| 343 | ip ospf 10 area 0 |
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| 344 | ip ospf authentication message-digest |
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| 345 | ip ospf authentication-key N$RC |
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| 346 | ip ospf network point-to-point |
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| 347 | ipv6 ospf 10 area 0 |
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| 348 | ipv6 ospf network point-to-point |
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| 349 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 350 | |
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| 351 | Notice two things: |
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| 352 | |
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| 353 | a) We are configuring authentication to have control |
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| 354 | over who becomes an adjacent router and protect |
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| 355 | against ilegitimate routing information. We configure |
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| 356 | authentication per interface in IPv4 and per area in |
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| 357 | IPv6, just because it is simpler that way. |
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| 358 | |
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| 359 | b) We use the "network point-to-point" statement |
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| 360 | because we are using point-to-point links over a broadcast |
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| 361 | network. There is no reason for OSPF to elect a Designated |
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| 362 | Router (DR) and Backup Designated Router (BDR). |
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| 363 | |
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| 364 | Then, since we have configured OSPF to make all |
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| 365 | interfaces passive by default (recommended!), we need |
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| 366 | to explicitly activate the *OSPF Hello* function on |
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| 367 | the interfaces where routing information needs to |
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| 368 | be exchanged: |
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| 369 | |
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| 370 | R11 and R12: |
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| 371 | |
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| 372 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 373 | router ospf 10 |
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| 374 | no passive-interface GigabitEthernet2/0 |
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| 375 | ! |
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| 376 | ipv6 router ospf 10 |
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| 377 | no passive-interface GigabitEthernet2/0 |
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| 378 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 379 | |
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| 380 | Now configure OSPF on any interface that needs |
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| 381 | to have its subnets advertised by OSPF, if OSPF has |
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| 382 | not been enabled already: |
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| 383 | |
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| 384 | On R11 and R12: |
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| 385 | |
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| 386 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 387 | interface Loopback0 |
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| 388 | ip ospf 10 area 0 |
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| 389 | ipv6 ospf 10 area 0 |
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| 390 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 391 | |
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| 392 | 5. STOP. Checkpoint |
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| 393 | |
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| 394 | Now try the following show commands: |
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| 395 | |
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| 396 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 397 | sh ip ospf neighbor : show adjacencies |
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| 398 | sh ip route : show routes in routing table |
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| 399 | sh ip ospf : show general OSPF information |
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| 400 | sh ip ospf interface : show the status of OSPF in an interface |
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| 401 | |
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| 402 | show ipv6 ospf neighbor |
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| 403 | show ipv6 route |
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| 404 | show ipv6 ospf |
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| 405 | show ipv6 ospf interface |
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| 406 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 407 | |
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| 408 | Repeat the last ping tests. |
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| 409 | |
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| 410 | Q. Can you ping the loopback address of the neighboring router now? |
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| 411 | |
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| 412 | ## Static default routes |
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| 413 | |
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| 414 | 1. Configure static default routes to reach the outside world. |
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| 415 | |
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| 416 | On R11: |
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| 417 | |
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| 418 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 419 | ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 10.10.254.2 |
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| 420 | ipv6 route ::/0 fd00:10:fe::1 |
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| 421 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 422 | |
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| 423 | On R12: |
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| 424 | |
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| 425 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 426 | ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 10.201.254.1 |
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| 427 | ipv6 route ::/0 fd00:201:fe:: |
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| 428 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 429 | |
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| 430 | Do some ping and traceroute tests. |
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| 431 | |
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| 432 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 433 | R11# ping 10.20.255.1 |
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| 434 | R11# ping 10.30.255.1 |
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| 435 | R11# traceroute 10.20.255.1 |
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| 436 | R11# traceroute 10.30.255.1 |
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| 437 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 438 | |
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| 439 | Q. Can you reach the routers in other networks? |
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| 440 | |
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| 441 | Don't forget to save your configurations. |
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| 442 | |
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| 443 | \pagebreak |
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| 444 | |
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| 445 | # Appendix A - ISP1 Sample Configuration |
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| 446 | |
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| 447 | |
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| 448 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 449 | hostname ISP1 |
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| 450 | aaa new-model |
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| 451 | aaa authentication login default local |
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| 452 | aaa authentication enable default enable |
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| 453 | username nsrc secret nsrc |
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| 454 | enable secret nsrc |
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| 455 | service password-encryption |
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| 456 | line vty 0 4 |
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| 457 | transport preferred none |
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| 458 | line console 0 |
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| 459 | transport preferred none |
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| 460 | no logging console |
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| 461 | logging buffered 8192 debugging |
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| 462 | no ip domain-lookup |
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| 463 | ip subnet-zero |
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| 464 | ip classless |
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| 465 | no ip source-route |
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| 466 | ipv6 unicast-routing |
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| 467 | ! |
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| 468 | interface Loopback0 |
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| 469 | ip address 10.201.255.1 255.255.255.255 |
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| 470 | ipv6 address fd00:201:ff::1/128 |
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| 471 | ! |
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| 472 | interface GigabitEthernet1/0 |
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| 473 | description Link to IXP |
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| 474 | ip address 10.251.1.1 255.255.255.0 |
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| 475 | no ip directed-broadcast |
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| 476 | no ip redirects |
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| 477 | no ip proxy-arp |
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| 478 | ipv6 address fd00:251:1::1/64 |
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| 479 | ipv6 nd ra supress |
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| 480 | no shutdown |
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| 481 | ! |
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| 482 | interface GigabitEthernet3/0 |
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| 483 | description P2P Link to R12 |
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| 484 | ip address 10.201.254.1 255.255.255.252 |
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| 485 | no ip directed-broadcast |
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| 486 | no ip redirects |
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| 487 | no ip proxy-arp |
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| 488 | ipv6 address fd00:201:fe::/127 |
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| 489 | ipv6 nd ra supress |
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| 490 | no shutdown |
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| 491 | ! |
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| 492 | ip route 10.10.0.0 255.255.0.0 10.201.254.2 |
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| 493 | ipv6 route fd00:10::/32 fd00:201:fe::1 |
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| 494 | ! |
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| 495 | ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 10.251.1.2 |
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| 496 | ipv6 route ::/0 fd00:251:1::2 |
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| 497 | |
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| 498 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| 499 | |
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