- Apr 3, 2009
- 6,188
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I'm in the early stages of the cisco networking academy and I've come across a topic that I may be thinking entirely too hard about at this time, but maybe some of the guru's here could clarify this for me.
Why would you ever want two or more routers on a single LAN? Is it an issue of capacity?
Everything I know about networking at this point comes from small at home applications, and I know that with DHCP on a consumer router you do not want to connect two routers together unless you turn off DHCP on one and change it's IP address. Doing this essentially turns the second router into a switch.
What allows the routers used in my CCNA courses to continue to function as routers and not glorified switches?
Like I said I may be thinking entirely too hard about this, but it has basically blown my mind at this point and I'm lost.
Why would you ever want two or more routers on a single LAN? Is it an issue of capacity?
Everything I know about networking at this point comes from small at home applications, and I know that with DHCP on a consumer router you do not want to connect two routers together unless you turn off DHCP on one and change it's IP address. Doing this essentially turns the second router into a switch.
What allows the routers used in my CCNA courses to continue to function as routers and not glorified switches?
Like I said I may be thinking entirely too hard about this, but it has basically blown my mind at this point and I'm lost.