Cisco CCNA Exam Tutorial: Route Summarization
Preparing to pass the CCNA exam and earn this important Cisco
certification? Route summarization is just one of the many
skills you'll have to master in order to earn your CCNA. Whether
it's RIP version 2, OSPF, or EIGRP, the CCNA exam will demand
that you can flawlessly configure route summarization.
Route summarization isn't just important for the CCNA exam. It's
a valuable skill to have in the real world as well. Correctly
summarizing routes can lead to smaller routing tables that are
still able to route packets accurately - what I like to call
"concise and complete" routing tables.
The first skill you've got to have in order to work with route
summarization is binary math; more specifically, you must be
able to take multiple routes and come up with both a summary
route and mask to advertise to downstream routers. Given the
networks 100.16.0.0 /16, 100.17.0.0 /16, 100.18.0.0 /16, and
100.19.0.0 /16, could you quickly come up with both the summary
address and mask? All you need to do is break the four network
numbers down into binary strings. We know the last two octets
will all convert to the binary string 00000000, so in this
article we'll only illustrate how to convert the first and
second octet from decimal to binary.
100 16 = 01100100 00010000
100 17 = 01100100 00010001
100 18 = 01100100 00010010
100 19 = 01100100 00010011
To come up with the summary route, just work from left to right
and draw a line where the four networks no longer have a bit in
common. For these four networks, that point comes between the
14th and 15th bits. This leaves us with this string: 01100100
000100xx. All you need to do is convert that string back to
decimal, which gives us 100 for the first octet and 16 for the
second. (The two x values are bits on the right side of the
line, which aren't used in calculating the summary route.) Since
we know that zero is the value for the last two octets, the
resulting summary network number is 100.16.0.0.
But we're not done! We now have to come up with the summary mask
to advertise along with the summary route. To arrive at the
summary route, write out a mask in binary with a "1" for every
bit to the left of the line we drew previously, and a "0" for
every bit to the right. That gives us the following string:
11111111 11111100 00000000 00000000
Converting that to dotted decimal, we arrive at the summary mask
255.252.0.0. The correct summary network and mask to advertise
are 100.16.0.0 252.0.0.0.
For the CCNA exam, emphasis is put on knowing how to advertise
these summary routes in RIPv2 and EIGRP. For both of these
protocols, route summarization happens at the interface level -
it's not configured under the protocol. On the interface that
should advertise the summary route, use the command "ip
summary-address". Here are examples of how the above summary
route would be configured on ethernet0 in both RIPv2 and EIGRP.
R1(config-if)#ip summary-address rip 100.16.0.0 255.252.0.0
R1(config-if)#ip summary-address eigrp 100 100.16.0.0 255.252.0.0
The main difference between the two is that the EIGRP command
must specify the AS number - that's what the "100" is in the
middle of the EIGRP command. Since RIPv2 does not use AS
numbers, there's no additional value needed in the configuration.
For OSPF, the commands differ. If you're configuring inter-area
route summarization, use the "area range" command; if you are
summarizing routes that are being redistributed into OSPF, use
the summary-address command under the OSPF routing process on
the ASBR. Neither of these are interface-level commands.
I speak from experience when I tell you that practice makes
perfect on the CCNA exam, especially with binary and
summarization questions. The great thing about these questions
is that there are no grey areas with these questions - you
either know how to do it or you don't. And with practice and an
eye for detail, you can master these skills, pass the exam, and
become a CCNA. Here's to your success!