CodeBlox wrote: » I thought I submitted a post but guess not. Anyhow, to add on to Chickennuggetz, you can have multiple routing protocols in the same networking environment and use whats called route redistribution to take the routes of one source and as the term says, redistribute them in another routing protocol.
Forsaken_GA wrote: » I actually like EIGRP. It's a simpler protocol than OSPF, and as long as you take proper care to limit the query range, it's quite scalable. And if I could guarantee nothing but Cisco gear on the network, I'd be happy implementing it. On the other hand, I know better than that, and todays guarantee is tomorrows 'oh, by the way.... we're buying Juniper gear'. I'd agree that OSPF is the better choice to implement, but it has nothing to do with it being a better protocol, that's subjective. I'd employ OSPF for three reasons: #1 - Open standard. No need to worry about vendor lockin #2 - Mature and active code development (comparitively, anyway) #3 - The crapload of people out there that know OSPF. Unfortunately, technical matters aren't the only consideration when you're designing a network. Integration, vendor support, and staffing are all very relevant factors.