You need a desktop or enterprise image. It seems you only have an IP IOS
image.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Shane Stockman
Sent: Friday, November 03, 2000 11:38 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: IPX Problem
This might seem silly but
The IOS may not support IPX. Go to the CCO site and research it, but more
than likely that is the problem.
Raul
-Original Message-
From: Shane Stockman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Friday, November 03, 2000 3:06 PM
Subject: IPX Problem
>This might
It sounds like your running an IOS that doesn't have IPX includedtry
upgrading your IOS
Thanks,
Chris Boyd
Network Support
CCNA
Alex Lee, Inc.
120 4th Street SW
Hickory, NC 28601
(828) 323-4103
http://www.alexlee.com
- Original Message -
From: "Shane Stockman" <[EMAIL PROTECTE
Shane,
It seems you have an IP only image. You may have been confused by the L in
the image, but as far as I know when the L appears in that position it just
indicates a relocatable image, not IPX.
Appletalk isn't anywhere in there.
Cheers,
Gareth
""Shane Stockman"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
did anything else change? I ask because on the surface, everything is fine.
IPX EIGRP should have no effect on your throughput. I ran an eight site dual
homed IPX network for several years, with no WAN issues other than the usual
telco related problems. I've done numerous labs.
the so called AS n
Did you know you can do trace route with IPX on Cisco routers? It's not
just an IP thing.
I suggest you try this. Maybe you caused some weird routing somehow. Your
network sounds sort of complicated and non-hierarchical. Maybe the branch
offices used to communicate directly and how they go thr
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