I knew that technique, I just didn’t know it was called a floating static route. And didnt know it wouldn’t show up on our routing table. Thank you so much sir! God bless you!
When using OSPF in the topology and one of the links goes down the OSPF will automatically publish a link state change so all the routers will change their routing tables accordingly. I don't see any benefits of this so called "Floating Static route".
Top quality tutorial as always Kevin. Cheers!
I knew that technique, I just didn’t know it was called a floating static route. And didnt know it wouldn’t show up on our routing table. Thank you so much sir! God bless you!
great explanation.😍😍
Kevin: I love your bombed interface, very clear to understand. Thanks a lot for your cool explanation!. Regards from Argentina!.
great video as always 😃
That’s very interesting thank you 😁 I always wanted to learn this as I didn’t study it in my CCNA so yeah.
Is there a way to visually see in cli the floating static routes that have been configured, even when they are on standby? Any show commands for that?
Great Video, Thanks Kevin! Will you be at Cisco Live this Year in Las Vegas?
Thanks! Unfortunately, I won’t make it to Cisco Live this year, but I hope you have a great time!
@@kwallaceccie Will do, Thank you. I'm also taking the CCNP Encore exam while at Cisco Live, Im excited!!!
Hi Kevin, what emulator are you using to create the lab topology?
I use CML for most of my demos. I hope you enjoyed the training!
If you're using OSPF in the topology, when would you actually use floating static routes?
When using OSPF in the topology and one of the links goes down the OSPF will automatically publish a link state change so all the routers will change their routing tables accordingly.
I don't see any benefits of this so called "Floating Static route".