Im using OCG, 2nd Edition:
Page 240's Figure 7-8:
[B]Area 34:[/B]
[R3] <-------- [R1]
[R4] <---/
[R3] <----\
[R4] <-------- [R2]
ABRs (R1, R2) area advertising their default route into Area 34. Both ABRs advertise to both Area 34 routers (R3, R4).
ABRs are connected to Area 0. See below for Area 0 information.
[B]Area 0:[/B]
External Routes:
11.11.0.0/16
11.12.0.0/16
11.13.0.0/16
Data Center:
10.16.11.0/24
10.16.12.0/24
10.16.13.0/24
I've gone over the example 5 times in my head, after reading the next small section on Configuration.
First the example that I've been focused on:
"
For example, consider the diagram in Figure 7-8 with area 34 as simply a stub area. ...[Explains it filters the External routes]... Finally, because the area is not a totally stubby area, the ABRs do create and flood Type 3 LSAs for interarea routes as usual, so they flood LSAs for the 10.16.11.0/24, 10.16.12.0/24, and 10.16.13.0/24 subnets listed in the figure."
However, in the configuration section, afterwards - on the same page (241):
"
Figure 7-9 shows a more detailed view of Area 34 from Figure 7-8, so by making area 34 a stub area, ABRs R1 and R2 will not flood Type 5 LSAs into area 34 - other than the Type 3 LSA for the default routes."
The configuration shows that "
Area 34 stub" has been configured. Making the area a "
Stub" area. Not a "
Totally Stubby" area - which as I understand "
Totally Stubby/Totally NSSA" filters all Type 3 LSAs, besides the default route.
With the backdrop set, this is my confusion:1) If Area 34 is considered a "
Stub"
U]Not[/U] [I]Totally Stubby[/I area, why would the configuration example say: "
Other than the Type 3 LSA for the default routes."
a) Should it be advertising the Type 3 LSAs for the Data Center subnets [10.13.11.0/24...] as well?
As for Figure 7-9:
I]Shows the physical connections/Ip addresses. As well as R3 and R4 are connected together by a LAN[/I
Thread name pun intended.
I am looking for a solution using the internet, but the sources I've found all explain that Type 3 wouldn't be filtered.
One source:
http://users.lmi.net/canepa/subdir/ospf_fundamentals.html