Cisco Systems 1900 Series Manual De Usuario

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Cisco 1900 Series Hardware Installation
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Chapter 5      Configuring the Router
  Performing the Initial Configuration on the Router
Specifying a Default Route or Gateway of Last Resort
This section describes how to specify a default route with IP routing enabled. For alternative methods of 
specifying a default route, see the 
 tech note.
The Cisco IOS software uses the gateway (router) of last resort if it does not have a better route for a 
packet and if the destination is not a connected network. This section describes how to select a network 
as a default route (a candidate route for computing the gateway of last resort). The way in which routing 
protocols propagate the default route information varies for each protocol.
Configuring IP Routing and IP Protocols
For comprehensive configuration information about IP routing and IP routing protocols, see 
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IP Routing
You can configure integrated routing and bridging (IRB) so the router can route and bridge 
simultaneously. The router will act as an IP host on the network whether routing is enabled or not. To 
read more about IRB see the following URL on Cisco.com, 
IP routing is automatically enabled in the Cisco IOS software. When IP routing is configured, the system 
will use a configured or learned route to forward packets, including a configured default route.
Note
This task section does not apply when IP routing is disabled. To specify a default route when IP routing 
is disabled, refer to the 
 tech note.
Default Routes
A router might not be able to determine the routes to all other networks. To provide complete routing 
capability, the common practice is to use some routers as smart routers and give the remaining routers 
default routes to the smart router. (Smart routers have routing table information for the entire 
internetwork.) These default routes can be passed along dynamically, or can be configured into the 
individual routers.
Most dynamic interior routing protocols include a mechanism for causing a smart router to generate 
dynamic default information that is then passed along to other routers.
Default Network
If a router has an interface that is directly connected to the specified default network, the dynamic 
routing protocols running on the router will generate or source a default route. In the case of RIP, the 
router will advertise the pseudonetwork 0.0.0.0. In the case of IGRP, the network itself is advertised and 
flagged as an exterior route.
A router that is generating the default for a network also may need a default of its own. One way a router 
can generate its own default is to specify a static route to the network 0.0.0.0 through the appropriate 
device.