Hello all,
I am a little stumped here and have been reading for an answer all night with no luck, so I thought I would post.
We moved to a new MPLS network with our provider. We have 4 subnets at each location. All /24 bit masks.
LOCATION A, 10.128.0.0,10.128.1.0, 10.128.2.0, 10.128.3.0
LOCATION B, 10.128.4.0,10.128.5.0, 10.128.6.0, 10.128.7.0
etc....
So our isp just routed the supernets to each location on the mpls network.
LOCATION A, 10.128.0.0/22
LOCATION B, 10.128.4.0/22
etc...
my question is, how do i break them back apart? I have cisco 3725s with 5 FE interfaces at each location. (We are also using ASA5510 for the internet that comes on a different port from our isp, but this is a different topic.)
I know I can assign each subnet to 4 of the FE interfaces, but the transport interface (interface connected to port provided by isp) is where i get confused. do i just assign that an IP address with a 22bit mask (i.e. 10.128.0.2/22) or will it get confused and think its on the same subnet as the other interfaces? i have considered EIGRP, etc, but I don't know if my isp is running any of those protocols and am concerned about the other interfaces being part of the same supernet.
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks
Andy.
I am a little stumped here and have been reading for an answer all night with no luck, so I thought I would post.
We moved to a new MPLS network with our provider. We have 4 subnets at each location. All /24 bit masks.
LOCATION A, 10.128.0.0,10.128.1.0, 10.128.2.0, 10.128.3.0
LOCATION B, 10.128.4.0,10.128.5.0, 10.128.6.0, 10.128.7.0
etc....
So our isp just routed the supernets to each location on the mpls network.
LOCATION A, 10.128.0.0/22
LOCATION B, 10.128.4.0/22
etc...
my question is, how do i break them back apart? I have cisco 3725s with 5 FE interfaces at each location. (We are also using ASA5510 for the internet that comes on a different port from our isp, but this is a different topic.)
I know I can assign each subnet to 4 of the FE interfaces, but the transport interface (interface connected to port provided by isp) is where i get confused. do i just assign that an IP address with a 22bit mask (i.e. 10.128.0.2/22) or will it get confused and think its on the same subnet as the other interfaces? i have considered EIGRP, etc, but I don't know if my isp is running any of those protocols and am concerned about the other interfaces being part of the same supernet.
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks
Andy.