2.2.13 Packet Tracer – Point-to-Point Single-Area OSPFv2 Configuration Answers

Packet Tracer – Point-to-Point Single-Area OSPFv2 Configuration (Answers Version)

Answers Note: Red font color or gray highlights indicate text that appears in the instructor copy only.

Addressing Table

Device

Interface

IP Address

Subnet Mask

R1

G0/0/0

192.168.10.1

/24

R1

S0/1/0

10.1.1.1

/30

R1

S0/1/1

10.1.1.5

/30

R2

G0/0/0

192.168.20.1

/24

R2

S0/1/0

10.1.1.2

/30

R2

S0/1/1

10.1.1.9

/30

R3

G0/0/0

192.168.30.1

/24

R3

S0/1/0

10.1.1.10

/30

R3

S0/1/1

10.1.1.6

/30

PC1

NIC

192.168.10.10

/24

PC2

NIC

192.168.20.10

/24

PC3

NIC

192.168.30.10

/24

Objectives

Part 1: Configure Router IDs.

Part 2: Configure Networks for OSPF Routing.

Part 3: Configure Passive Interfaces.

Part 4: Verify OSPF configuration.

Background

In this activity, you will activate OSPF routing using network statements and wildcard masks, configuring OSPF routing on interfaces, and by using network statements quad-zero masks. In addition, you will configure explicit router IDs and passive interfaces.

Instructions

Part 1:  Configure router IDs.

  1. Start the OSPF routing process on all three routers. Use process ID 10.

Open configuration window

Router(config)# router ospf process-id

  1. Use the router-id command to set the OSPF IDs of the three routers as follows
  • R1: 1.1.1.1
  • R2: 2.2.2.2
  • R3: 3.3.3.3

Use the following command:

Router(config-router)# router-id rid

R1(config)# router ospf 10

R1(config-router)# router-id 1.1.1.1

 

R2(config)# router ospf 10

R2(config-router)# router-id 2.2.2.2

 

R3(config)# router ospf 10

R3(config-router)# router-id 3.3.3.3

Close configuration window

Part 2:  Configure Networks for OSPF Routing

Step 1:  Configure networks for OSPF routing using network commands and wildcard masks.

Questions:

How many statements are required to configure OSPF to route all the networks attached to router R1?

Type your answers here.

3

The LAN attached to router R1 has a /24 mask. What is the equivalent of this mask in dotted decimal representation?

Type your answers here.

255.255.255.0

Subtract the dotted decimal subnet mask from 255.255.255.255. What is the result?

Type your answers here.

0.0.0.255

What is the dotted decimal equivalent of the /30 subnet mask?

Type your answers here.

255.255.255.252

Subtract the dotted decimal representation of the /30 mask from 255.255.255.255. What is the result?

Type your answers here.

0.0.0.3

  1. Configure the routing process on R1 with the network statements and wildcard masks that are required to activate OSPF routing for all the attached networks. The network statement values should be the network or subnet addresses of the configured networks.

Open configuration window

Router(config-router)# network network-address wildcard-mask area area-id

  1. Verify that OSPF has been configured properly by the displaying the running configuration. If you find an error, delete the network statement using the no command and reconfigure it.

R1(config-router)# network 192.168.10.0 0.0.0.255 area 0

R1(config-router)# network 10.1.1.0 0.0.0.3 area 0

R1(config-router)# network 10.1.1.4 0.0.0.3 area 0

Step 2:  Configure networks for OSPF routing using interface IP addresses and wildcard masks.

On router R2, configure OSPF using network commands with the IP addresses of the interfaces and quad-zero masks. The syntax of the network command is the same as was used above.

R2(config-router)# network 192.168.20.1 0.0.0.255 area 0

R2(config-router)# network 10.1.1.2 0.0.0.3 area 0

R2(config-router)# network 10.1.1.9 0.0.0.3 area 0

Step 3:  Configure OSPF routing on router interfaces

On router R3, configure the required interfaces with OSPF.

Question:

Which interfaces on R3 should be configured with OSPF?

Type your answers here.

G0/0/0, S0/1/0, S0/1/1

Configure each interface using the command syntax shown below:

Router(config-if)# ip ospf process-id area area-id

 

R3(config)# interface GigabitEthernet0/0/0

R3(config-if)# ip ospf 10 area 0

R3(config-if)# interface Serial0/1/0

R3(config-if)# ip ospf 10 area 0

R3(config-if)# interface Serial0/1/1

R3(config-if)# ip ospf 10 area 0

Close configuration window

Part 3:  Configure Passive Interfaces

OSPF will send its protocol traffic out of all interfaces that are participating in the OSPF process. On links that are not configured to other networks, such as LANs, this unnecessary traffic consumes resources. The passive-interface command will prevent the OSPF process from sending unnecessary routing protocol traffic out LAN interfaces.

Question:

Which interfaces on R1, R2, and R3 are a LAN interfaces?

Type your answers here.

G0/0/0 on all three routers.

Configure the OSPF process on each of the three routers with the passive-interface command.

Open configuration window

Router(config-router)# passive-interface interface

 

R1(config)# router ospf 10

R1(config-router)# passive interface GigabitEthernet0/0/0

 

R2(config)# router ospf 10

R2(config-router)# passive interface GigabitEthernet0/0/0

 

R3(config)# router ospf 10

R3(config-router)# passive interface GigabitEthernet0/0/0

Close configuration window

Part 4:  Verify OSPF Configuration

Use show commands to verify the network and passive interface configuration of the OSPF process on each router.

End of document

Answer Scripts

Router R1

enable

configure terminal

router ospf 10

 router-id 1.1.1.1

 network 192.168.10.0 0.0.0.255 area 0

 network 10.1.1.0 0.0.0.3 area 0

 network 10.1.1.4 0.0.0.3 area 0

 passive-interface g0/0/0

end

Router R2

enable

configure terminal

router ospf 10

 router-id 2.2.2.2

 network 192.168.20.1 0.0.0.255 area 0

 network 10.1.1.2 0.0.0.3 area 0

 network 10.1.1.9 0.0.0.3 area 0

 passive-interface g0/0/0

end

Router R3

enable

configure terminal

router ospf 10

 router-id 3.3.3.3

interface GigabitEthernet0/0/0

 ip ospf 10 area 0

interface Serial0/1/0

 ip ospf 10 area 0

interface Serial0/1/1

 ip ospf 10 area 0

router ospf 10

 passive-interface g0/0/0

end

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