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CCNA Cisco Certified Network Associate Study Guide - FTP Server

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272 Chapter 5 � IP Routing<br />

2501B<br />

2501C<br />

To configure 2501B, you need, once again, to turn on IGRP using AS 10.<br />

2501B#config t<br />

Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with<br />

CNTL/Z.<br />

2501B(config)#router igrp 10<br />

2501B(config-router)#netw 172.16.0.0<br />

2501B(config-router)#^Z<br />

2501B#<br />

The last router is 2501C; you need to use AS 10 as well.<br />

2501C#config t<br />

Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with<br />

CNTL/Z.<br />

2501C(config)#router igrp 10<br />

2501C(config-router)#netw 172.16.0.0<br />

2501C(config-router)#^Z<br />

RouterC#<br />

Verifying the IGRP Routing Tables<br />

Once the routers are configured, you need to verify the configuration<br />

with the show ip route command.<br />

In all of the following router outputs, notice that the only routes to networks<br />

are either directly connected or IGRP-injected routes. Since we did not<br />

turn off RIP, it is still running in the background and taking up both router<br />

CPU cycles and bandwidth. However, the routing tables will never use a RIPfound<br />

route because IGRP has a better administrative distance than<br />

RIP does.

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