I certainly wouldn't do it, if you end up being strapped for time towards the 
end of the day you are pretty much screwed since now you have to back to every 
device and REMOVE these from flash! 

Thank you,
 
Steve Di Bias
Network Engineer - Information Systems
Valley Health System - Las Vegas
Office - 702- 369-7594
Cell - 702-241-1801
[email protected] 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David Hafke
Sent: Friday, December 02, 2011 7:59 AM
To: Jay Taylor; J D'Silva; CCIE OSL
Subject: Re: [OSL | CCIE_RS] access to flash

"copy <filename> start" and then reload is a much better way to revert
than trying to paste from notepad. But, you are right, seeing a bunch of
files scattered about the flash is probably not something the graders
would look kindly upon. 

 

 

From: Jay Taylor [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, December 02, 2011 8:26 AM
To: J D'Silva; David Hafke; CCIE OSL
Subject: Re: [OSL | CCIE_RS] access to flash

 

I don't know the official answer but I'd be wary of saving configs to
flash... I would save to text files on the desktop instead. For both my
trips to the lab I used notepad a ton but didn't end up saving any text
files.

 

 

On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 10:22 PM, J D'Silva <[email protected]>
wrote:

It's funny you mention this...  I had this exact conversation with a
friend
today.

Having been to the lab once I don't see why it wouldn't be possible to
do
this, but I think that you'd almost certainly want to go around
afterwards
and clean up all your stray saved configs in much the same way you
should
remove any alias you may have used.

If one was so inclined you could even used the Archive feature to set
this
up so every time you did a wr mem it saved a separate version...

Jason


On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 7:29 PM, David Hafke <[email protected]> wrote:

> Does anyone know if it's OK to save extra copies of your configs to
> flash? I think it may come in useful to get a snapshot of where you
are
> at various parts of the lab ... especially if you felt you were about
to
> step on a landmine. Not trying to toe the line of the NDA, but I
> definitely had a moment where I knew pressing enter would be reaching
a
> point of no return. Was afraid to save my config after that ... in
real
> life you have TFTP to back out. No such luxury in the lab.
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> For more information regarding industry leading CCIE Lab training,
please
> visit www.ipexpert.com
>
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>
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>
_______________________________________________
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please visit www.ipexpert.com

Are you a CCNP or CCIE and looking for a job? Check out
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-- 

Jay Taylor
CCIE #28391
@JTIE_6EE7



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Are you a CCNP or CCIE and looking for a job? Check out 
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