They're just hub ports, with an internal controller.... BUT, if you want to
pass traffic to another segment or if you want to employ other "routing"
functions, i.e. ACL's, Policy Routing destinations, caching tweaks, etc.
then the hub connected devices are the segment/broadcast domain
those routing functions would target. In other words, you're routing
TO the devices connected to the hub through the E0 virtual interface.
FTP is one of the TCP/IP applications and TFTP is another =8^) ....
c'mon mister mcse, you knew that! you're testing us, right? =8^)
but seriously, if you want the NT box to run the TFTP daemon (listening
service) all you need to do is put one on there and configure it.
Hummingbird Exceed, Netmanage Chameleon Suite are both good
commercial products. You can also get some good information from:
http://www.microsoft.com/NTServer/nts/exec/vendors/freeshare/default.asp
r/
rainman
Dave Page wrote:
> Please help out a Cisco newbie with two naive questions:
>
> 1. The 2505 has two serial interfaces and 8 RJ-45 ethernet ports. Are the
> 8 ethernet ports routable interfaces, or is it just the serial ports? My
> hunch is that the ethernet ports just perform a hub function.
>
> 2. What qualifies as a TFTP server? My NT 4.0 server is an FTP server,
> does that count? If it's possible, what has to be done to an NT box to make
> it a TFTP server?
>
> Thanks in advance everyone!
>
> Dave Page
>
> MCSE, MCP+I, A+
>
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