Awesome Kevin, congrats!

Did you leave all your terminal windows to all your devices open the whole 
time? Did you find that cumbersome at times since they are pinned in front of 
everything else?

Mark Rieber


-----Original Message-----
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Subject: CCIE_Security Digest, Vol 89, Issue 24

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Today's Topics:

   1. CCIE Sec Pass (Kevin Sheahan)
   2. Re: CCIE Sec Pass (Mulholland, Michael (DFP))


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Thu, 21 Nov 2013 10:09:38 -0500
From: "Kevin Sheahan" <sheaha...@gmail.com>
To: <ccie_security@onlinestudylist.com>
Subject: [OSL | CCIE_Security] CCIE Sec Pass
Message-ID: <014201cee6cb$b4a0f500$1de2df00$@gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Gents,

 

It is with great pleasure that I can tell you I've passed my CCIE Security Lab 
on Tuesday in RTP. It has been a very difficult year both personally and 
professionally to prepare for this exam. This was my third attempt. For study, 
I leaned very heavily on IPExpert's material/intructors/racks. Piotr Kaluzny - 
I can't speak highly enough about this guy - suffice it to say that if you are 
feeling lost, get his attention and he will lead you in the right direction. 
His expertise, patience, and all around cool-dudeness are sincerely appreciated 
and valuable when you start to feel like you're drowning in the blueprint. I 
also used my own personal hardware and read A LOT of Cisco configuration guides 
pertaining to blueprint (There are a lot of "Notes" in those config guides that 
provide great info).

 

Lessons learned:

 

-        My strategy played a very large role in time management and
organization during the exam.

o   Build a table to keep track of.. EVERYTHING:

*  Obj | Points |  Desc  | V1 | V2 | Comments
1.1         4       ASAMC    F                Unable to ping <subnet>, check
later
1.2         5       IPS-IVP    P                Re-verify @ end, core
objective.

*  I would create and fill out this table (first 3 columns) as I'm reading 
through the lab at the beginning. The "Comments" section became extremely 
useful for me to shorten the amount of end-lab verification because instead of 
re-reading the objective for verification I would only have to see what I wrote 
down from previous verification failures. Anything with a "P" for pass in the 
V2 column should be money in the bank, ensure that you've paid attention to the 
fine details in the objective which can cause loss of points.

o   Prep the lab:

*  Pager 20 / Term length 20

*        This will allow you to execute long-output show commands later in
the day without the screen scrolling away from you. This should be done on ALL 
devices.

*  Logging

*        ASA

o   Logging console warnings / Logging on - This will tell you throughout
your lab when your ASA is denying traffic due to ACL and/or NAT failures.
Very useful!

*        IOS

o   Logging console - This will tell you when routing processes drop, when
ISAKMP is ON/OFF, etc. As well, this will allow for your debug output to show 
up.

*  Suspicion 

*        Switches and Routers

o   Show access-list - Check for ACLs, you may find some that were designed
to screw with you and you may find some that are legitimately necessary.
Don't change/add/remove ACL's at this point, just make note of them at the 
bottom on the page where you created your tracking table. This will make 
troubleshooting simpler and faster later on.

o   Show run - This is not a fine-tooth-comb type check. Just briefly scroll
through the running-config for every IOS device. If something looks out of 
place (CoPP, CoPr, STP/Routing manipulation, etc), jot it down below your 
tracking table for reference later.

o   Draw a diagram?

*  I didn't do this, but it's up to your personal preference. My feeling is 
that the topology on the monitor is in great detail and only a few clicks away. 
That, and I've managed to make a distracting mess everytime in my life I've 
tried to draw a quick diagram. 

o   Quicksand

*  This may be the same for you, maybe not. But for me,  there is a point (or a 
few) where I feel like the lab is swallowing me. Something is not working the 
way I want it to, logs are scrolling, devices are misbehaving..
DON'T PANIC. Move away from that objective, mark it down in your table and move 
on. That feeling, like you're sinking fast in quicksand, is the enemy.

o   Close it out

*  I'm not sure of the rules/points impact of some of the above changes, namely 
changing the term length and enabling console logging. To be safe, script 
changes for the end of the exam to remove this changes quickly if time permits. 
Better safe than sorry I guess.

 

I'm very excited to enjoy the holidays and a nice long study break. Good luck 
and work hard at it, absolutely worth the achievement!

 

Kevin Sheahan

CCIE # 41349 (Security)

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Message: 2
Date: Thu, 21 Nov 2013 15:35:18 +0000
From: "Mulholland, Michael (DFP)" <michael.mulholl...@dfpni.gov.uk>
To: Kevin Sheahan <sheaha...@gmail.com>,
        "ccie_security@onlinestudylist.com"
        <ccie_security@onlinestudylist.com>
Subject: Re: [OSL | CCIE_Security] CCIE Sec Pass
Message-ID:
        <219dbe78a4c2084cbec29efdc3c9abd88a0a515...@pr-clus-excms09.nigov.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"

kevin

congratulations on your achievement

well done

From: ccie_security-boun...@onlinestudylist.com 
[mailto:ccie_security-boun...@onlinestudylist.com] On Behalf Of Kevin Sheahan
Sent: 21 November 2013 15:10
To: ccie_security@onlinestudylist.com
Subject: [OSL | CCIE_Security] CCIE Sec Pass

Gents,

It is with great pleasure that I can tell you I've passed my CCIE Security Lab 
on Tuesday in RTP. It has been a very difficult year both personally and 
professionally to prepare for this exam. This was my third attempt. For study, 
I leaned very heavily on IPExpert's material/intructors/racks. Piotr Kaluzny - 
I can't speak highly enough about this guy - suffice it to say that if you are 
feeling lost, get his attention and he will lead you in the right direction. 
His expertise, patience, and all around cool-dudeness are sincerely appreciated 
and valuable when you start to feel like you're drowning in the blueprint. I 
also used my own personal hardware and read A LOT of Cisco configuration guides 
pertaining to blueprint (There are a lot of "Notes" in those config guides that 
provide great info).

Lessons learned:


-        My strategy played a very large role in time management and 
organization during the exam.

o   Build a table to keep track of.... EVERYTHING:

*  Obj | Points |  Desc  | V1 | V2 | Comments
1.1         4       ASAMC    F                Unable to ping <subnet>, check 
later
1.2         5       IPS-IVP    P                Re-verify @ end, core objective.

*  I would create and fill out this table (first 3 columns) as I'm reading 
through the lab at the beginning. The "Comments" section became extremely 
useful for me to shorten the amount of end-lab verification because instead of 
re-reading the objective for verification I would only have to see what I wrote 
down from previous verification failures. Anything with a "P" for pass in the 
V2 column should be money in the bank, ensure that you've paid attention to the 
fine details in the objective which can cause loss of points.

o   Prep the lab:

*  Pager 20 / Term length 20

*        This will allow you to execute long-output show commands later in the 
day without the screen scrolling away from you. This should be done on ALL 
devices.

*  Logging

*        ASA

o   Logging console warnings / Logging on - This will tell you throughout your 
lab when your ASA is denying traffic due to ACL and/or NAT failures. Very 
useful!

*        IOS

o   Logging console - This will tell you when routing processes drop, when 
ISAKMP is ON/OFF, etc. As well, this will allow for your debug output to show 
up.

*  Suspicion

*        Switches and Routers

o   Show access-list - Check for ACLs, you may find some that were designed to 
screw with you and you may find some that are legitimately necessary. Don't 
change/add/remove ACL's at this point, just make note of them at the bottom on 
the page where you created your tracking table. This will make troubleshooting 
simpler and faster later on.

o   Show run - This is not a fine-tooth-comb type check. Just briefly scroll 
through the running-config for every IOS device. If something looks out of 
place (CoPP, CoPr, STP/Routing manipulation, etc), jot it down below your 
tracking table for reference later.

o   Draw a diagram?

*  I didn't do this, but it's up to your personal preference. My feeling is 
that the topology on the monitor is in great detail and only a few clicks away. 
That, and I've managed to make a distracting mess everytime in my life I've 
tried to draw a quick diagram.

o   Quicksand

*  This may be the same for you, maybe not. But for me,  there is a point (or a 
few) where I feel like the lab is swallowing me. Something is not working the 
way I want it to, logs are scrolling, devices are misbehaving.... DON'T PANIC. 
Move away from that objective, mark it down in your table and move on. That 
feeling, like you're sinking fast in quicksand, is the enemy.

o   Close it out

*  I'm not sure of the rules/points impact of some of the above changes, namely 
changing the term length and enabling console logging. To be safe, script 
changes for the end of the exam to remove this changes quickly if time permits. 
Better safe than sorry I guess.

I'm very excited to enjoy the holidays and a nice long study break. Good luck 
and work hard at it, absolutely worth the achievement!

Kevin Sheahan
CCIE # 41349 (Security)

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