Be aware that this is not like translating word by word to get the same functionality. The same will apply if you compare Google Translator against a real studied translator in person.
-- Sebastian Becker s...@lab.dtag.de > Am 05.06.2016 um 17:51 schrieb Mark Tinka <mark.ti...@seacom.mu>: > > > > > On 5/Jun/16 16:37, Doug McIntyre wrote: > >> I would expect to find such a tool on *cisco's* website, its not like >> a vendor will write a tool for you to go away from them. But then >> again I wouldn't expect Cisco to be that accomidating either. >> >> I've not heard of such a tool, of course several vendors provide an IOS >> to their kit, but the opposite doesn't tend to happen all that often. And >> with the slight subtle differences in IOS vs IOS-XE and IOS-XR depending >> on what your target platform is, might be pretty difficult to maintain. >> >> It would probably be pretty straight forward to translate Juniper >> configs over to IOS, the layout of the config should be pretty >> straightforward and self-documenting (unlike IOS, with hidden defaults, >> or really magical things, like dynamic routing prefix filter lists). > > You can't even get an IOS to IOS XR converter, so no chance Cisco will > write a Junos to IOS converter. > > Back in 2008, when I deployed my first IOS XR box (a 4-slot CRS router), > I spent a month reading about IOS XR (3.9 at the time), and mapping > every IOS command to IOS XR where one existed. > > Mark. > _______________________________________________ > juniper-nsp mailing list juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net > https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp _______________________________________________ juniper-nsp mailing list juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp