Search:       

Friday, 16 May 2008       

 
Home / Computers / Computer Certification

Cisco CCNP / BSCI Exam Tutorial: EIGRP Route Summarization

By:Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933


Summarizing routes is a vital skill to learn to pass the BSCI exam and get one step closer to earning your CCNP. The actual binary conversions are only part of the test, though! You've got to know how to correctly apply the summary routes, and that differs from one protocol to the next. In the last few CCNP / BSCI tutorials, we've looked at using the "area range" and "summary-address" commands to perform OSPF route summarization. Today, we'll take a look at summarizing routes in EIGRP.



We'll use the following four loopback addresses in this example:



Loopback 16, 16.16.16.16 /32



Loopback 17, 17.17.17.17 /32



Loopback 18, 18.18.18.18 /32



Loopback 19. 19.19.19.19 /32



On R1, we'll place these four addresses into EIGRP AS 100.



R1(config-if)#router eigrp 100



R1(config-router)#network 16.16.16.16 0.0.0.0



R1(config-router)#network 17.17.17.17 0.0.0.0



R1(config-router)#network 18.18.18.18 0.0.0.0



R1(config-router)#network 19.19.19.19 0.0.0.0



R3 is an EIGRP neighbor of R1, and that router's EIGRP routing table now looks like this:



R3#show ip route eigrp


17.0.0.0/32 is subnetted, 1 subnets



D 17.17.17.17 [90/2297856] via 172.12.123.1, 00:00:29, Serial0


16.0.0.0/32 is subnetted, 1 subnets



D 16.16.16.16 [90/2297856] via 172.12.123.1, 00:00:36, Serial0


19.0.0.0/32 is subnetted, 1 subnets



D 19.19.19.19 [90/2297856] via 172.12.123.1, 00:00:08, Serial0


18.0.0.0/32 is subnetted, 1 subnets



D 18.18.18.18 [90/2297856] via 172.12.123.1, 00:00:22, Serial0



To perform manual route summarization, write out the network addresses in binary and then determine the point at which the addresses no longer have a bit in common. For these four addresses, it will be enough to write out the first octet in binary:



16 00010000



17 00010001



18 00010010



19 00010011



Working from left to right, the common bits are the first six bits - 000100xx. In decimal, this value is 16. The summary mask must be determined as well, and that value is derived from putting a "1" in the mask for each common bit. With the first six bits all set to one - 11111100 - the resulting mask is 252.0.0.0. The full summary address is 16.0.0.0 252.0.0.0.



In EIGRP, the summary address is actually configured on an interface, not under the routing process.



R1(config)#interface serial0



R1(config-if)#ip summary-address eigrp 100 16.0.0.0 252.0.0.0



02:39:50: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: IP-EIGRP 100: Neighbor

172.12.123.3 (Serial0) is down: summary configured



02:39:50: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: IP-EIGRP 100: Neighbor

172.12.123.2 (Serial0) is down: summary configured



02:40:16: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: IP-EIGRP 100: Neighbor

172.12.123.2 (Serial0) is up : new adjacency



02:40:17: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: IP-EIGRP 100: Neighbor

172.12.123.3 (Serial0) is up: new adjacency



There's an immediate side effect here that most books leave out. Your EIGRP adjacencies are going to come down after you configure this summary, but they should come back up quickly. The key word there is "should". If you configure EIGRP summary addresses on a production network, you may want to do this during non-peak hours. The timestamps on the above commands indicate that the adjacencies were down for about 27 seconds over the NBMA network. That's about 30 minutes in end-user time. ;)



Check R3's EIGRP routing table.



R3#show ip route eigrp



D 16.0.0.0/6 [90/2297856] via 172.12.123.1, 00:01:46, Serial0



The four summarized routes are no longer in the routing table, and they have been replaced by the summary route shown at the bottom of the routing table. Notice the mask is /5, which is prefix notation for 248.0.0.0.



Knowing how and why to summarize routes is a valuable skill, regardless of the protocol in use. But before you take the BSCI exam on your way to the CCNP, make sure you know how to perform summarization with all of the core protocols!



Article Source: http://www.dailynewarticles.com

It’s not enough to know how to summarize routes to pass the BSCI exam, you need to know the commands for each protocol! Learn how to summarize routes in EIGRP with Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933.








More Articles from Computer Certification Category:
Cisco CCNP Certification / BCMSN Exam Tutorial: Writing QoS Policy
Cisco CCNP / BCSI Exam Tutorial: Configuring EIGRP Packet Authentication
Cisco CCNP / BSCI Certification: Introduction To ISIS Terminology
What To Expect When Taking Your First Cisco Certification Exam
Cisco CCNA / CCNP Home Lab: Why You Need An ISDN Simulator
Be Certifiable! The Basics Of MCSE And MCP
Cisco CCNP / BCSI Exam Tutorial: Broadcasts And The IP Helper-Address Command
Webroot Window Washer
Cisco CCNA / CCNP Home Lab Tutorial: Using 2520 Routers
CCNA / CCNP Home Lab Tutorial: The VLAN.DAT File
Cisco CCNP / BCMSN Exam Tutorial: Changing Root Bridge Election Results
CCNP Certification / BCMSN Exam Tutorial: HSRP MAC Addresses And Timers
Cisco CCNP / BCMSN Exam Tutorial: Switches, QoS, And Cisco's Networking Model
Cisco CCNA Exam Tutorial: Troubleshooting Directly Connected Serial Interfaces
How To Earn Cisco’s Firewall Specialist Certification

 


Main Menu
Home
Most Popular Articles
Top Authors
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Link to Us
Bookmark
Contact Us

Partners
Blue Articles

 

 

- Privacy Policy -