Well it sounds like you answered your own question for the most part.
Scott once advised me offline to purposely break my lab once I had
completed it. In other words, do your 8 hour lab from
IPE/INE/Narbik/etc. Then, once you are happy, go break it in a really
bad way and see if you can figure out a different way to fix it. Yes,
you will lose hair. No, you will not always succeed. But when you are
done you will have learned some new commands along the way.
--Hammer--
On 9/14/2010 4:05 PM, Bodnar, Edward wrote:
I think what happens to me is this.
I go into a question and I know of 3 or 4 ways that that thing can
break. If it's none of those then I don't quite know how to address
it. Other then just look over the config. I need to know how to
fish. Funny I went through the same thing with the lab portion last
time.
I need to work on Debug and more show commands and my troubleshooting
process. I just need help with that. I just order a 200 $ book with
lab scenarios that I am hoping will put some structure behind my
troubleshooting. But I need to know how to trouble shoot. Any other
suggestions would be very helpful.
*From:* [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] *On Behalf Of *--Hammer--
*Sent:* Tuesday, September 14, 2010 4:53 PM
*To:* [email protected]
*Subject:* Re: [OSL | CCIE_RS] Help Troubleshooting
Regrets Edward. Did you nail the configuration? Or just slide by?
--Hammer--
On 9/14/2010 3:42 PM, Bodnar, Edward wrote:
I just failed my Lab exam again
Let me clarify. I failed because of the troubleshooting section. I
need help with troubleshooting...... Is there any body out there with
suggestions?
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_______________________________________________
For more information regarding industry leading CCIE Lab training, please visit
www.ipexpert.com