Actually it says you've got 8MB of flash and 4MB of RAM.

The 2500 series is one of the routers that has a single pool of RAM that
gets split at boot time into Processor memory and I/O memory.  On these
platforms, you add up the two numbers to get the total RAM.

A few models (particularly the AS5xxx series and XL switches) have
separate memory chips for I/O (packet) memory.  On these, only the first
number counts towards IOS requirements.

Thanks,
Shawn

"Robert D. Cluett" wrote:
> 
> All, am I reading this right?  Does this state that there is 8MB Flash and
> 2MB of DRAM?  If so, what do I need to do to get it to the latest version
of
> IOS that Cisco uses for the tests?  Help would be more than appreciated!
> 
> cisco 2500 (68030) processor (revision L) with 2048K/2048K bytes of memory.
> Processor board ID 06992214, with hardware revision 00000000
> Bridging software.
> X.25 software, Version 2.0, NET2, BFE and GOSIP compliant.
> 1 Token Ring/IEEE 802.5 interface(s)
> 2 Serial network interface(s)
> 32K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
> 8192K bytes of processor board System flash (Read ONLY)




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