Redistributing Routes - HP 7102dl - ProCurve Secure Router Configuration Manual

Procurve secure router 7000dl series - advanced management and configuration guide
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IP Routing—Configuring RIP, OSPF, BGP, and PBR
Configuring RIP
15-22
For example, you would configure Router A in Figure 15-3 as follows:
ProCurve(config-rip)# network 192.168.1.0 255.255.255.0
ProCurve(config-rip)# network 10.1.1.0 255.255.255.252
Router A
Network 1
192.168.1.0/24
Figure 15-3. Example RIP Network
You can also use RIP to connect to a network running an internal routing
protocol such as OSPF to an external network. You would then enable RIP
only on the WAN interface.

Redistributing Routes

As mentioned earlier, RIP updates include all routes in the RIP routing table.
You can also configure interfaces to include the following routes in updates:
routes to networks directly connected to interfaces not running RIP
OSPF routes
static routes
For example, you can run RIP v2 as an EGP on a router that connects to an
external network. You can then redistribute connected, OSPF, and/or static
routes into RIP (depending on the routing method used in the private network)
to advertise local routes.
Similarly, when a local site connects to one or more remote sites through a
virtual private network (VPN), the local router can run RIP to advertise local
routes to the ISP. The ISP can then tunnel those routes to the remote site. (See
"VRF and MPLS" on page 15-69.) If the ISP does not support RIP, you could
configure a Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE) tunnel to transport the
WAN Connection
10.1.1.0 /30
.1
.2
Router B
Network 2
192.168.2.0/24

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