While I was reading through some documentation I found this :
" When a router is routing IP, an IP broadcast will never
be forwarded from one interface to another by default.
An IP broadcast can be forwarded between interfaces if the router is transparently bridging, but will not be forwarded out the same interface it was received on.
Therefore, assuming that the hub of the network is routing IP, spoke devices on the NBMA network can neither send nor receive broadcast or multicast packets between each other ".
I have got couple questions:
1- How can a router be transparently bridging ?
2- Is the concept here similar to the concept in the link below:
3- Bold word "Therefore" means; this is conclision which depends on what has been mentioned before therfore,,,Am I right ?,,,,but I can not see what has been mentioned before, related to the paragraph after word "Therefore",,,Any comment ?
" When a router is routing IP, an IP broadcast will never
be forwarded from one interface to another by default.
An IP broadcast can be forwarded between interfaces if the router is transparently bridging, but will not be forwarded out the same interface it was received on.
Therefore, assuming that the hub of the network is routing IP, spoke devices on the NBMA network can neither send nor receive broadcast or multicast packets between each other ".
I have got couple questions:
1- How can a router be transparently bridging ?
2- Is the concept here similar to the concept in the link below:
Code:
[URL unfurl="true"]http://www.freesoft.org/CIE/Topics/30.htm[/URL]
3- Bold word "Therefore" means; this is conclision which depends on what has been mentioned before therfore,,,Am I right ?,,,,but I can not see what has been mentioned before, related to the paragraph after word "Therefore",,,Any comment ?