11-08-2012, 01:14 PM
The question states:
"What does a router do if it has no EIGRP feasible successor route to a destination network and the successor route to that destination network is in active state."
The answer should be:
It routes all traffic that is addressed to the destination network to the interface indicated in the routing table.
Explanation:
Since the successor route is in active state, it does not need a feasible successor route. EIGRP only cares that a route is working in this case. Now if the successor route should fail, then it would send a multicast query packet to adjacent neighbors requesting available routing paths to the destination network.
"What does a router do if it has no EIGRP feasible successor route to a destination network and the successor route to that destination network is in active state."
The answer should be:
It routes all traffic that is addressed to the destination network to the interface indicated in the routing table.
Explanation:
Since the successor route is in active state, it does not need a feasible successor route. EIGRP only cares that a route is working in this case. Now if the successor route should fail, then it would send a multicast query packet to adjacent neighbors requesting available routing paths to the destination network.