ODR allows you to easily install IP stub networks where the hubs dynamically maintain routes to the stub networks. This installation
is accomplished without requiring the configuration of an IP routing protocol on the stubs. In fact, from the standpoint of
ODR, a router is automatically considered to be a stub when no IP routing protocols have been configured.
A stub router that supports the ODR feature advertises IP prefixes corresponding to the IP networks configured on all directly
connected interfaces. If the interface has multiple logical IP networks configured, only the primary IP network is advertised
through ODR. Because ODR advertises IP prefixes and not simply IP network numbers, ODR is able to carry variable-length subnet
mask (VLSM) information.
Once ODR is enabled on a hub router, the hub router begins installing stub network routes in the IP forwarding table. The
hub router also can be configured to redistribute these routes into any configured dynamic IP routing protocols.
ODR uses the Cisco Discovery Protocol to carry minimal routing information between the hub and stub routers. The stub routers
send IP prefixes to the hub router. The hub router provides default route information to the stub routers, thereby eliminating
the need to configure a default route on each stub router.