
raghujindia at gmail
Nov 13, 2009, 1:04 AM
Post #3 of 3
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Yeah Paul, The ip location goes sequentially. First range 10 should exhaust and then it goes to range 20 and so on... On Wed, Nov 11, 2009 at 5:37 PM, Ilir Nako <inako [at] abcom> wrote: > Hi Paul > > You can use this config : > peer default ip address pool pooltest1 pooltest2 pooltest3 > > ip local pool pooltest1 10.0.0.10 10.0.0.50 > ip local pool pooltest2 20.0.0.10 20.0.0.50 > ip local pool pooltest3 30.0.0.10 30.0.0.50 > > > show ip local pool : to see the allocation of Ip > > Regards > > Ilir > > > Paul Cole wrote: > >> --> >> >> >> Hi all, >> >> I am trying to work out how Cisco NAS allocate IPs to customers in a PPPoe >> environment. >> >> Lets say that I have a pool named pooltest with different ranges of IP >> addresses: >> >> peer default ip address pool pooltest >> >> ip local pool pooltest 10.0.0.10 10.0.0.50 >> ip local pool pooltest 20.0.0.10 20.0.0.50 >> ip local pool pooltest 30.0.0.10 30.0.0.50 >> >> I am trying to work out how the NAS will operate here...randomly or using >> the addresses in the range 10 and when addresses are all used there jump to >> the range of 20..and then 30...? >> >> I need help understanding that. >> >> Would be great if someone can come up with some links or docs. >> >> Thanks >> >> >> Regards, >> >> >> _________________________________________________________________________________ >> >> Paul >> >> >> ------------------------------------------------------------------------ >> >> _______________________________________________ >> cisco-bba mailing list >> cisco-bba [at] puck >> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-bba >> > _______________________________________________ > cisco-bba mailing list > cisco-bba [at] puck > https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-bba > -- Thanks Raghu SAVE TREES..GO GREEN
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