RE: Cisco uBR924 and Internet problems... [7:61754]

2003-01-24 Thread Peter van der Voort
Hi Leonardo, Basically, you're answering your own question: the provider lets you download a file that disables your service. Normally, this file specifies the Class Of Service you get from your provider, like upstream and downstream bandwidth. Now for some reason, the provider doesn't want to

RE: BGP origin attribute type e - EGP? [7:61075]

2003-01-16 Thread Peter van der Voort
A route with origin egp is not learned from an external BGP peer, but from a peer running the protocol EGP (External Gateway Protocol, the predecessor of BGP). It's also possible to change this origin code via a route-map. Peter -Original Message- From: cebuano [mailto:[EMAIL

RE: NAT overload vs. static [7:57420]

2002-11-14 Thread Peter van der Voort
So if you have a router with S0 to the outside and e0 to the inside. Suppose you have an inside network of 10.10.10.0/24, where 10.10.10.30 is your webserver. Suppose the IP addres of S0 is 172.16.0.1 ip nat inside source list 2 interface serial 0 overload ip nat inside source static tcp

RE: recover lost password WITHOUT losing config on 2500 router [7:57384]

2002-11-13 Thread Peter van der Voort
If you copied you running config to startup config then there shouldn't be a problem. Set the confreg to 0x2142, which causes the router to startup without getting its config. When it's back up, go into enable mode. There isn't a password obviously. Then do a copy start run, and change the

RE: please help with vlan scenario [7:57245]

2002-11-12 Thread Peter van der Voort
Barry, You can enable a trunk on the 3548, and create subinterfaces on the 3550 at site A. I don't know the exact configuration details about a 3550, but it should be something like: interface gigabitethernet 0/2 no switchport ! interface gigabitethernet 0/2.10 encapsulation dot1q 10

RE: serial up, line ptotocol up..for a while [7:56515]

2002-10-30 Thread Peter van der Voort
10 seconds? That almost sound like the keepalive time setting. After the no shut, the router tried to bring the interface up, sending a keepalive to the other side, but it didn't receive anything back so it brought the interface down again. You may want to check the way you are receiving you're

RE: cable network [7:56267]

2002-10-25 Thread Peter van der Voort
-Original Message- From: Barbu Alexandru [mailto:nastybruno;yahoo.com] Sent: Friday, October 25, 2002 11:40 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: cable network [7:56267] Hi guys! I have a probem with some cable modems. The fact is that in the network there are around 150 cable

RE: what is this spantree msg? [7:55540]

2002-10-14 Thread Peter van der Voort
you may want to have a look at: http://www.cisco.com/en/US/tech/tk389/tk214/technologies_tech_note09186a0080 093dcb.shtml Good luck! -Original Message- From: Sim, CT (Chee Tong) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Monday, October 14, 2002 1:13 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: what is

RE: Frame Relay: connectionless or connection-oriented? [7:54707]

2002-10-02 Thread Peter van der Voort
Some documentation may say that it's connection oriented because you have to set up a PVC (or an SVC) so you pre-establish a connection. But in fact it's connectionless, since it doesn't have, like you say, a retransmission system or error checking mechanism like TCP. And the terms connection

RE: Frame Relay: connectionless or connection-orie [7:54707]

2002-10-02 Thread Peter van der Voort
Thinking of the subject again, I would have to come back to what I've said before. TCP is connection oriented because there's the three-way handshake session establishment. It's reliable because of the retransmission and error checking mechanismns. UDP is connectionless, because there's no