OSPF Network design

Rizkalla, Simon srizkalla at uecomm.com.au
Wed Aug 15 00:39:00 UTC 2001


Jan,
	Creating 9 different areas might be hard to manage, therfore I
propose that you may want to simplify this by clustering the remote sites
into provinces/states.  A book that my collegue and I have been reading in
regards to our OSPF network design has been the Cisco - OSPF Design Guide,
or Designing and Implementing an OSPF network - Cisco.

Regards
Simon

-----Original Message-----
From: jan Huizinga [mailto:jhui at gdb.com.gr]
Sent: Tuesday, August 14, 2001 8:24 PM
To: nanog at merit.edu
Subject: OSPF Network design



Hello,

I have a question regarding OSPF design.

I have a customer which has a hub and spoke topology, in the main site the
have 5 routers and every remote site is using 3 routers and a 1/4 class C
addresses. There are 8 remote sites.

They have created for every site an area, so in total 9 areas + an area 0
makes 10 areas. Is this a typical OSPF design? At this moment this network
is a 100% VoIP network (H.323). In the future they want also to give
Internet access to their customers (dial-up and leased lines). The remote
sites are connected with 1MB links, and some of them shall be upgraded to
2MB links.

Any ideas? Or does some one have a good reference to a site or a book that
deals with the designing of a (OSPF) network. I have books about OSPF but
they talk all about the protocol, and don't give real world examples how to
design this. 

Thanks,

Jan



More information about the NANOG mailing list