RE: MRTG on Windows NT

2000-07-25 Thread Eddie M. Parra

Guys,

I used these two URL's and had no problems setting up MRTG on NT 4.0.

http://ee-staff.ethz.ch/~oetiker/webtools/mrtg/mrtg.html#NT

And "The MRTG Guide for Windows NT Users" by David S. Divins
http://ee-staff.ethz.ch/~oetiker/webtools/mrtg/nt-guide.html

-Eddie


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Swart, Douwe
Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 1:20 AM
To: 'Erwin Novriyanto'
Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: MRTG on Windows NT


I have been playing around with this for a while too.

There does not appear to be a great deal of information around.  I have not
had much success as yet.  I will let you know if I have any major
breakthroughs.

Please let me know if you have the same.

Have you found a way in MRTG where you can monitor the total amount of data
passing across a link, rather than just the bandwidth utilisation?

Cheers

Douwe
-Original Message-
From:   Erwin Novriyanto [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Monday, July 24, 2000 6:23 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:MRTG on Windows NT

Dear All,

I want to make MRTG on Windows NT for viewing our network
performance, can
anybody help me for the instruction. Like documentation for
that,...thanks
for your help.

Bye

Erwin

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines:
http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info:
http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Visit our Website : http://www.traveland.com.au

Disclaimer - This message and any attachments are confidential and may
contain privileged information intended only for the use of the addressee
named above. If you are not the intended recipient of this message you are
hereby notified that any use, dissemination, distribution or reproduction of
this message is prohibited. If you have received this message in error
please notify Traveland Pty Ltd immediately by return email. Any views
expressed in this message are those of the individual sender and may not
necessarily reflect the views of Traveland Pty Ltd.

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Modem/Console port logon problem

2000-07-25 Thread AABAN34

Make sure you have set 9600 8-N-1 on you program or you will not get in and 
make sure you are using the right Cisco cable and hard shell connector . If 
you are still having problems try another computer their might be something 
wrong with the com port on that machine..

Brian

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



CIsco DCN book Appendix

2000-07-25 Thread Ken Yeo

Half of the book are appendixes, are they covered in the CCDA / DCN exam?

TIA.
Ken


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



CVOICE before CCIE written / CCIE ?

2000-07-25 Thread Ken Yeo

Need your advise, do you think I should tak CVOICE before CCIE written and
CCIE lab? I know VoIP is officially one of the objectives for the lab now. I
know chances are I better equid myself with VoIP knowledge by talking
CVOICE, we always want to easy way out, don't we?

TIA.




___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Modem/Console port logon problem

2000-07-25 Thread Jason A. Diegmueller

 I have a problem when I dial in to a 2610 router; the router has a U.S. 
 Robotics modem attached via the console port. Upon dialing in, I get a 
 connection but no login prompt. When I telnet in to the router at the same 
 time and configure something on the router, the terminal window which I use 
 for the dial-up connection logs this action, so it looks like my dial-up 
 connection is connected to the router.
 Do you have an idea why I don't get a login prompt ? Here is the output from 
 the running configuration:
 
 line con 0
 exec-timeout 3 0
 password 7 0526071D354540
 login

I always have trouble with USR Sporsters unless I specify
  `modem autoconfigure type usr_sportster'
  
Also, you'll probably going to want to specify `modem Dialin'
if you're dialing in to it remotely.

Good luck.

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Fwd: Re: Very good web site for CCNA

2000-07-25 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer

Thanks for sending the legal wording that came with the Syngress book and 
CD. It sounds like they covered themselves. They do not allow someone to 
post the book on a server where multiple people could read it at once.

In answer to your question, no, the poster has not added comments, though 
he did make the self tests more interactive. Comments wouldn't matter 
anyway. It's still illegal and unethical to post huge chunks of someone 
else's work without permission or even any acknowledgement.

You could have sent your response to the list!? ;-) People need to be 
educated. I couldn't believe the person who thought it was the same as 
linking to someone else's page!?!

OK, no more messages on this topic. Let's get back to cisco questions!

Priscilla


From: "Dick Silva" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Priscilla Oppenheimer" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Very good web site for CCNA
Date: Tue, 25 Jul 2000 07:51:43 -0400
X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 4.72.2106.4

/
Priscilla...

Reading from the page facing the CD

Copyright Statement
This software is protected by both United States copyright law and
international
..
Except as noted in the contents of the CD-ROM, you must treat this software
just like a book.  However, you may copy it into a computer to be used and
you may make archival copies of the software for the sole purpose of backing
up the software and protecting your investment from loss.  By saying, "just
like a book," The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. ("Osborne/McGraw") means, for
example, that this software may be used by any number of people and may be
freely moved from one computer location to  another, so long as there is no
possibility of its being used at one location or on one computer while it is
being used at another.  Just as a book cannot be read by two different
people in two different places at the same time, neither can the software be
used by two different people in two different places at the same time.

A thought occurred to me.  Has the individual at the web site made comments
along the way as one is reading the contents on the web site?

"Just an old dog trying to learn new tricks".
dsilva



-Original Message-
From: Priscilla Oppenheimer [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 1:00 AM
Subject: RE: Very good web site for CCNA


 Ben Lovegrove's Web site links to Amazon's site so you can buy the books.
 Of course, that's completely different than what this other person did.
 This other person posted the whole book online on what appears to be his
 own personal Web site. He doesn't appear to be associated with the
 publisher. I don't think he's one of the authors either, though that's
 generally irrelevant. The publisher usually owns the copyright.
 
 The publisher, Syngress, got what they deserved possibly, since they
 published the whole book on the included CD. But when you open that CD you
 agree to use it for your own personal use only. (At least that's usually
 the case. Does anyone have the book with the original CD packaging? Could
 you tell us what it says?)
 
 Priscilla
 
 
 
 At 09:30 PM 7/24/00, William E Gragido wrote:
 Priscilla,
 
 On the one hand, its a definite ethical error, on the flipside(gotta play
 the devil's advocate here), is it any different than what thousands of
 technical sites do?  I am not justifying it, from a legal perspective
 however I would like to point out that some the best sites on the internet
 dedicated to networking and data communications have or are doing the same
 thing.  Take Ben Lovegrove's site, which by the way, I love!  He has links
 to several other sites containing entire volumes of information(see the
 Syngress link).  Is it wrong?  To some perhaps, if copyright and credit
are
 not giving their due, but I would be curious to see how many of who
utilize
 these resources would actively campaign against them.  Just a few
thoughts!
 By the way, your books are great!
 
   -Original Message-
   From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
   Priscilla Oppenheimer
   Sent: Monday, July 24, 2000 2:40 PM
   To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'; 'Neelanga Udash'
   Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Subject: RE: Very good web site for CCNA
  
  
   I was really impressed when I first reviewed this online
   material. It's so
   much better than most of the crap that's out there. Then I realized
it's
   the "CCNA Cisco Certified Network Associate Study Guide" by Syngress!
How
   could someone publish this online?? It appears to be a flagrant
   example of
   theft.
  
   Priscilla
  
  
  
   --  From:   Neelanga Udash  Reply To:   Neelanga
   Udash  Sent:   Monday, 24 July, 2000 7:43
   AM  To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'  Subject:Very good
   web site for
   CCNA
   
   Dear all,
   
   Take a look at this site. There is a whole book of CCNA material
written
   by  a CCIE,
   
   

Re: Modem/Console port logon problem

2000-07-25 Thread Jason A. Diegmueller

 after adding the line "modem dialin" to my aux port config line, I now get a 
 password prompt; the problem I have now is that the password prompt doesn't 
 respond to my keyboard, the passwords just time out. What could be the 
 reason for this ?

 Thanks in advance for your help.

Interesting indeed.

All I usually have is the "modem Dialin", a "modem autoconfigure 
type usr_sportster", and a "speed 9600" line.  Obviously, 
"login" and "password xxx", although those aren't required.

Are you sure the problem isn't modem-related?  Perhaps you could
try resetting the line? (clear line aux 0)

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



wan LAN confusion!

2000-07-25 Thread tayta

sorry normaly I ask only router stuff here but I'm desperate

have MS messed up TCP or did I miss something

does anybody know how I can get traffic destined for my LAN to go over my
WAN gateway when I am out o the office, notebook win98 (shame on me)

all traffic destined for what is normaly my LAN will not use the WAN
gateway,

not very good with windows, tried  to edit the Route table without success

Plees

Murt


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: Simple question on VLANS

2000-07-25 Thread Phill Jolliffe

Assuming that you don't want to use a RSM either or make them all part of
the same Vlan, I suppose you could just run a cross-over cable from a port
set to vlan X to a port set to vlan Y.  Bit naff and you'd need to look at
the spanning tree set up.

What about a using a plain old bridge or setting bridging on a router
connected to both?

Hmm..  or maybe none of the above
-Original Message-
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of joe
Sent:   25 July 2000 01:25
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:Simple question on VLANS

Can I enable communication between two vlans without using a MSFC card or a
router.


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



(no subject)

2000-07-25 Thread ex99_rgg



___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



passed Support 2.0 for CCNP!

2000-07-25 Thread Dave Hennen

Hi all, I passed the Support 2.0 exam on Friday to finish my CCNP.  

The exam was 61 questions, 75 minutes, 692 required to pass.  All questions
where you needed to give more than one answer indicated how many answers
were needed.

I got a half dozen or so type in the answer questions, a couple of place the
labeled blocks on the right place in the diagram questions, a few questions
on Microsoft networking and about the same on web resources.  A dozen or so
questions with exhibits like debug and show screens.  There were a couple of
pretty vague questions and a few that weren't so vague if you took the time
to read them carefully.

I passed the test on Friday and the information was updated on the Galton
site this morning (Tues), pretty quick service.

I'm glad to have finished CCNP, thanks to everyone who contributes to the
list.  It's a valuable resource for information

Now for the CCDP.  Like someone else wrote, it doesn't seem right if I don't
have a study subject I should be working on.

daveh
CCNP, CCDA, MCSE

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: Clear channel question?

2000-07-25 Thread Dave Hennen

not sure if this is 100% correct (if I'm way off someone please correct me)
but...

it has to do with how much bandwidth you get out of a ds0 channel.  most
common is 56k and clear channel gives you 64k but you need clear channel
capable equipment to implement it.  The difference has to do with how
signaling is implemented, I think robbed-bit signaling is why the 56k is
common.  I don't know how signaling is implemented with clear channel

daveh

-Original Message-
From: Gert Jan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 11:47 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Clear channel question?


On the Foundation Routing and Switching there was a question What is a clear
channel?
Anyone met this qeustion and can provide me some explanation?

Thanks,
Gert jan


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: passed Support 2.0 for CCNP!

2000-07-25 Thread Daniel Ji

Congrats! guy!!!
good luck!

Daniel.
CCNP


"Dave Hennen" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi all, I passed the Support 2.0 exam on Friday to finish my CCNP.

 The exam was 61 questions, 75 minutes, 692 required to pass.  All
questions
 where you needed to give more than one answer indicated how many answers
 were needed.

 I got a half dozen or so type in the answer questions, a couple of place
the
 labeled blocks on the right place in the diagram questions, a few
questions
 on Microsoft networking and about the same on web resources.  A dozen or
so
 questions with exhibits like debug and show screens.  There were a couple
of
 pretty vague questions and a few that weren't so vague if you took the
time
 to read them carefully.

 I passed the test on Friday and the information was updated on the Galton
 site this morning (Tues), pretty quick service.

 I'm glad to have finished CCNP, thanks to everyone who contributes to the
 list.  It's a valuable resource for information

 Now for the CCDP.  Like someone else wrote, it doesn't seem right if I
don't
 have a study subject I should be working on.

 daveh
 CCNP, CCDA, MCSE

 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 ---


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: TFTP question

2000-07-25 Thread Michael Fountain

Expect and Perl seem to be the two most common scripting/programming 
languages for doing stuff like that.


Hi All,

Currently, we back up all the configuration files of our routers and
switches to a tftp server manually. (need to telnet to every single router
and do "copy start tftp" )

Is there anyway or any program that could automate this process?
(how are the other companies dealing with this problem?)

thanks

tristan


Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: Modem/Console port logon problem

2000-07-25 Thread Puckett, Larry

I had to go to download.com and get a copy of tera term pro to use instead
of hyperterm. It worked for me.

Larry Puckette - LANCP
Temple-Inland
Network Analyst
ph -512/434-1838
fax-512/434-1861
cell-512/751-8315
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 -Original Message-
From:   Jason A. Diegmueller [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent:   Tuesday, July 25, 2000 11:28 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:Re: Modem/Console port logon problem

 after adding the line "modem dialin" to my aux port config line, I now get
a 
 password prompt; the problem I have now is that the password prompt
doesn't 
 respond to my keyboard, the passwords just time out. What could be the 
 reason for this ?

 Thanks in advance for your help.

Interesting indeed.

All I usually have is the "modem Dialin", a "modem autoconfigure 
type usr_sportster", and a "speed 9600" line.  Obviously, 
"login" and "password xxx", although those aren't required.

Are you sure the problem isn't modem-related?  Perhaps you could
try resetting the line? (clear line aux 0)

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: MRTG and DDR

2000-07-25 Thread David Smith

Never mind.  I figured it out.  You have to set up dialer interfaces for
every remote connection.  

Dave

-Original Message-
From: David Smith 
Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 11:19 AM
To: Study group (E-mail)
Subject: MRTG and DDR


Hi all,

I want to use MRTG to monitor my central ISDN router.  This router has a PRI
that other routers (using BRI) in the same metro area call into.  We use
Multilink PPP, so the remote offices create Virtual-Access interfaces on the
hub router when they dial into the hub router.

I am wondering if there is a way to set up these Virtual-Access interfaces
so that a particular remote office always gets the same Virtual-Access
interface (allowing MRTG to always monitor the same office with on a
particular Virtual-Access interface), or if there is some other way to have
an interface statically associated with a remote router.  Without this
capability, any given B channel on the PRI could be associated with one
office one day, and a new office the next day.

Any help is greatly appreciated.

Thanks,
Dave

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: BGP minimum

2000-07-25 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer

Yes, a book on operational Internet routing issues would be great. For 
example, what is SWIP? What is a route registry? In fact, could you answer 
those questions here?? ;-)

Priscilla


At 10:44 AM 7/25/00, Howard C. Berkowitz wrote:
This is a good question, and I'd like to pose a question myself to people 
who read my response. As far as I am concerned, my answers here are at the 
minimum real-world level for Internet routing operations.  I draw a 
distinction between Internet routing operations and "BGP".

ACRC was completely useless, IMNSHO, when it came to BGP and the wider 
subject of Internet routing operations. There's a lot of discussion about 
a new emphasis on BGP in BCSN. From talking to some BCSN instructors, 
however, my sense is that the operational issues I describe below are 
_not_ considered in the courseware.  Am I correct in that assumption?

Do some current instructors go beyond that level in chalktalks or 
supplementary materials?

Aside from personal curiosity and planning the next BGP paper for 
CertZone, I have the ulterior motive of writing a proposal for an Internet 
Routing book, that is more operational-environment, less configuration and 
protocol mechanics oriented than the books out there now. It would also be 
multivendor (Cisco, gated/rsd, Bay RS, JunOS). I'm trying to figure out if 
these are problems I should write a book to solve.


I trying to add redundency to my network at work (I work for a very small
local ISP) and I'd like to run BGP on this router so that if line A dies to
upstream provider A, line B will take over to upstream provider B.

What is the least requirement for BGP? Someone told me I needed at least a
/20 of IP's from ARIN. Someone else told me that I need SWIP instead of
RWHOIS. So I'm left wondering exactly what is the minimum overall
requirements to run BGP?

BGP itself does not have any minimum requirement.  A decreasing number of 
major ISPs, however, filter routes longer than /19 or /20.

If you are homed to at least two upstream providers, with at least T1 
speed, you can generally justify your own AS number. That assignment is 
independent of your address space; you do not necessarily need 
provider-independent address space to get a registered AS.

When requesting an AS, expecting to advertise provider-assigned space, you 
will probably need to document that the provider that is assigning you the 
address space will advertise your more-specific assignment as well as 
their supernet.  You will also need to document that your alternate 
provider will advertise this same more-specific block assigned to your 
primary provider, and the primary provider consents to the alternate 
provider advertising it.  All this should be recorded in a route registry 
as well as in the AS number application.

As far as the address space, there is a "fast start" procedure at 
ARIN.  If an ISP can demonstrate efficient use of a /21, and is growing, 
it can request a "fast start" /20. This /20 will be one half of a /19, and 
you are permitted to advertise the /19 to get through prefix length 
filters. You have to agree to justify the full /19 in 18 months, or 
renumber back into provider assigned space.

Yes, I would agree SWIP is far more widely used than RWHOIS.  Check with 
ARIN if RWHOIS is acceptable for documenting your address 
assignments.   SWIP and DNS are part of your routing/address management.


Maybe I don't need BGP? Maybe a floating static route might also work? Please
explain and give sample code if possible.

Floating statics can be fine when you have multiple points of attachment 
to a single upstream, but it is much more problematic when connecting to 
multiple ISPs. The key issue is this:  how does the secondary provider 
know whether or not to advertise your block if it doesn't have a routing 
protocol to let it know when the route between you is active?

Thanx in advance,

Ken

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Priscilla Oppenheimer
http://www.priscilla.com

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: BGP minimum

2000-07-25 Thread Howard C. Berkowitz

Brian [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote


   
   There is none.  You can be single homed and run BGP (But why do that?).
  
   Depends on what you mean by multihomed.  It can be quite reasonable
   to run BGP when you are connected to multiple POPs of a single
   provider, and want to optimize the way your provider sends you
   traffic at multiple points.  See RFC1998 for this application of the
   well-known community of NO-EXPORT.

Nod.  I said above "single homed" not "multi homed".  What you describe
was exactly my point.  UUnet does this sort of thing all the time, for
example to do ebgp multihop...

Good point. People new to design, in particular, should be aware LOTS 
of very different things are called "multihoming."  I have enlisted a 
couple of colleagues to participate in finishing my expired Internet 
Draft on definitions of multihoming.


  
   In this case, if your providers do announce netblocks in a useful
   way.  Useful walks the thin line between what is good for their
   customer and what is good for the global routing system.

I agree, but I would argue that the bulk of the "problem" with todays
global routing tables falls on the major backbones/NSP's and not the
individule end user/ISP (althought the burden is shared by all).  An ISP
may need to inject thru multiple upstreams a /22, this may be the only way
his organization can get the redundancy they need via BGP with two
upstreams...not much he can do about that.  On the other hand you have
giants like UUnet, who insist on leaking a TON of more specific routes
into the table, from their single homed customers, even though they are
announcing aggregates.  Do they know about this? yes. Do they fix
it? no.  They have no operational reason for doing this, yet they do it,
while ISP "foo.com" has a true operational reason to inject a /22 or
whatever.

No argument. Failing to aggregate when practical is a major problem. 
Of course, I have an idealized view that people routinely register 
their routing policies, so we have a way to tell if someone actually 
is multihomed via multipl providers.


   
   Using a little tuning is needed, prepending AS and fiddiling around with
   various knobs until you get the balance just right.
  
  
   I wouldn't call it that simple. You can prepend AS and twiddle MED,
   local pref, etc., all you want, but if, for example, your primary
   upstream doesn't advertise your more specific route and your
   secondary does, it's entirely possible that all of your outgoing
   traffic will go out the primary and return through the secondary.

This can be avoided by making a good business decision when choosing
upstreams.  We have transit with UUnet, Qwest, Sprint, Frontier (Global
Crossing), Cable and Wirelessand all of them will gladly announce
even a /24 for youI wouldn't dare go smaller though.  That being
the case, it comes down to a knobs game, which IMHO can take a while, but
you can get a reasonable balance and redundancy for almost any situation.

Again you make a critical real-world point.  Your upstream(s) must be 
clueful, and you cannot unilaterally set up multihomed routing and 
expect it to work.  If one is doing this for the first time, it's 
insane to do it without provider support.  Some providers have 
excellent resources to guide one through the process (waves to 
Michelle Truman).


   Internet routing has a lot of coordination aspects and isn't just
   tuning your BGP knobs,

Right, I didn't say that.  BGP tuning for your typical ISP that is
multi-homed, is usually accomplished by tuning the knobs at your disposal,
and sometimes needing the upstream to do the same.  I agree that
coordination is needed, in the form of some well placed phone calls to
some cluefull engineers.for example normally you can't just change
the size of your netblock announcments if your upstream has them nailed
with an access-listso that needs to be coordinated...not
trying to make light of it, but choosing the right upstream is definitly
half the bat
tle.


Only half? :-)

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Another CCNA

2000-07-25 Thread John Ryan



Hi all. Passed CCNA 1.0 yesterday. 897/1000. It 
wasn't too bad, about a 30 minute test. 
Used Syngress guide, Cisco Certification exam 
guide, boson. Good prep. Needed to know ISDN protocols, zones.
Thanks to everyone who posts good inforation on 
this list. It helps a lot.

John Ryan 
CCNA CCDA MCSE CNA A+ (future CCIE)
"Anyone need a network 
designed?"


can't see secondary routes

2000-07-25 Thread Barronton, Ken

Hello All,
Long time watcher, first time post!
Partial config below from a 4500M.
Problem - When redistributing can only see 100.0 network. Can't see
secondaries of networks 101.1 or 102.1 out FastEth0.

Help!?!

Thanks,
Ken

!
interface FastEthernet0
 ip address 192.168.101.1 255.255.255.0 secondary
 ip address 192.168.102.1 255.255.255.0 secondary
 ip address 192.168.100.1 255.255.255.0
 full-duplex
 ipx network 2493
 bridge-group 1
!
router eigrp 64561
 redistribute bgp 64561 metric 1544 100 230 10 1500
 network 192.168.101.0
 network 192.168.102.0
 network 192.168.100.0
 no auto-summary
!
router rip
 redistribute eigrp 64561 
 redistribute eigrp 64561
 passive-interface Serial0.1
 passive-interface TokenRing0
 passive-interface TokenRing1
 network 192.168.100.0
 network 192.168.101.0
 network 192.168.102.0
 default-metric 2

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: TFTP question

2000-07-25 Thread Khalid Ahmed

Michael we use scripting to control 600 plus Routers and switches and I use
MKS Toolkit (Now marketed with the Win 2000 by MS) allows shell scripting
and Expect (Free download and use) it works beautifully and you do not need
to be a expert programmer either.


hope that helps

Khalid Ahmed
WAN Consultant NYCHA
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


- Original Message -
From: "Michael Fountain" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 1:00 PM
Subject: Re: TFTP question


 Expect and Perl seem to be the two most common scripting/programming
 languages for doing stuff like that.

 
 Hi All,
 
 Currently, we back up all the configuration files of our routers and
 switches to a tftp server manually. (need to telnet to every single
router
 and do "copy start tftp" )
 
 Is there anyway or any program that could automate this process?
 (how are the other companies dealing with this problem?)
 
 thanks
 
 tristan

 
 Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com

 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



1601 async back to back

2000-07-25 Thread idris

hi ,
   I have connected  a modem(us robotics ) to serial interface and made it
as physical-layer async  . I am tring to connected to connect to another
1601 with same configuration ,  i am able to dial  to router in either ends
but, not able to ping to serial interface , in choosen encapsulatio as slip
and configured the both the side with modem inout command .
  It work some time with modem dtr-active  and modem answer-timeout 30 but,
i don't know how it work..
can anyone give me solution for this asap...

idris



___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Real Low Level Ethernet Stuff

2000-07-25 Thread Steve Brokaw

Hey all, 

I discovered a link looking for some information on Manchester encoding.  This page 
has some very excellent explanations of ethernet at it's lowest levels.


There's a bunch of other stuff too.  It looks like most of a upper-level college 
course on telecommunications (data) networks.



http://www.erg.abdn.ac.uk/users/gorry/course/
Steve Brokaw, MCSE CCNA
Sprint Enterprise Network Services
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (pager)


***

 Never mistake motion for action.

  -- Ernest Hemingway
***
 

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: TFTP question

2000-07-25 Thread Peter Simmons

Tristan,

If you have a UNIX host with a TFTP server, this is the basics of a script
to back up the configs using SNMPSET to kick off a
"WRITE NET" command.

-

NODELIST=/tftpdir/routers/nodelist# list of router names to back
up
TFTPSERVADDRESS=10.1.1.1   # Address of TFTP server storing
configs

for NODE in `cat $NODELIST`
  do
  TFTPFILENAME="$NODE-confg"
  snmpget private $NODE .1.3.6.1.4.1.9.2.1.55.$TFTPSERVADDRESS  octetstring
$TFTPFILENAME  /dev/null
done



The script I use runs to over 900 lines of code, error checking, logging and
so on.

Once you have your script, run it from the cron daemon in the quiet
overnight slot you reserve for such things!

There is lots more than this to do to make this a viable production script,
but it should get you on your way, or let
one of your UNIX colleagues look at this and they can probably run you up
something suitable in no time.

Regards
Pete S.

/DISCLAIMER
All the ususal legal rubbush means that if If your house burns down after
reading this it's NOT my fault, OK!
/DISCLAIMER OFF



-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: 25 July 2000 17:11
Subject: TFTP question


Hi All,

Currently, we back up all the configuration files of our routers and
switches to a tftp server manually. (need to telnet to every single router
and do "copy start tftp" )

Is there anyway or any program that could automate this process?
(how are the other companies dealing with this problem?)

thanks

tristan

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Official course material for the CID test

2000-07-25 Thread Sanjay Dalal ([EMAIL PROTECTED])


To ALL:
Does anyone have the official cisco book from the class "Cisco Internetwork
Design" (CID).
I am interested in buying it and you can contact me at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
or call me at (203) 688 8619
thanks,
Sanjay

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Re: TFTP Question

2000-07-25 Thread peter . simmons


Tristan,

If you have a UNIX host with a TFTP server, this is the basics
of a script
to back up the configs using SNMPSET to kick off a
"WRITE NET" command.

-

NODELIST=/tftpdir/routers/nodelist# list of router
names to back
up
TFTPSERVADDRESS=10.1.1.1   # Address of TFTP server
storing
configs

for NODE in `cat $NODELIST`
  do
  TFTPFILENAME="$NODE-confg"
  snmpget private $NODE .1.3.6.1.4.1.9.2.1.55.$TFTPSERVADDRESS
 octetstring
$TFTPFILENAME  /dev/null
done



The script I use runs to over 900 lines of code, error checking,
logging and
so on.

Once you have your script, run it from the cron daemon in the
quiet
overnight slot you reserve for such things!

There is lots more than this to do to make this a viable production
script,
but it should get you on your way, or let
one of your UNIX colleagues look at this and they can probably
run you up
something suitable in no time.

Regards
Pete S.

/DISCLAIMER
All the ususal legal rubbush means that if If your house burns
down after
reading this it's NOT my fault, OK!
/DISCLAIMER OFF



-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: 25 July 2000 17:11
Subject: TFTP question


Hi All,

Currently, we back up all the configuration files of our routers
and
switches to a tftp server manually. (need to telnet to every
single router
and do "copy start tftp" )

Is there anyway or any program that could automate this process?
(how are the other companies dealing with this problem?)

thanks

tristan



-
Sent using MailStart.com ( http://MailStart.Com/welcome.html )
The FREE way to access your mailbox via any web browser, anywhere!

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: Gateway vs L3

2000-07-25 Thread Steve Brokaw

I have a question, the title at Gateway is "Design Engineer" but what will you be 
designing? Would you still be in the Networking/Telecommunications or would you be 
doing something different.

I have a lot of experience with Level 3 from the customer side of the world. Their 
networking facilities are absolutely awesome. I've toured their Dallas facility and 
was amazed (and I've been in some pretty awesome data centers EDS, Perot Systems, 
Kennedy Space Center, The Associates, etc.).

For me my decisions are pretty much always based on "mo money mo money mo money" but I 
think Level 3 is a pretty good place to learn alot, or at least it appears so from the 
outside.

If you have a different opinion of the opportunites from the inside perspective I'd 
sure be interested in hearing some of them.




[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I need advice

 I recently graduated with a BS in Computer Networking and I just got my
 CCNA. I was working for Lucent as a Systems Application Specialist but
 recently left. I accepted a position with Level 3 Communications as a
 Telecommunications Consulting Manager. I will be receiving calls from
 customers to fix their problems. I will have a group of dedicated customers.
 I took this position so I could get some hands on experience with routers.
 The position is M-F 8am - 5 PM.
 Last week I received an offer from Gateway for about 7,000 more, but at L3 I
 will get $5,800 bonus + $12,000 in stock options. The job at Gateway is
 called a Sr. Design Engineer. The job is more what I want to do, but Gateway
 is not very big in Colorado and the hours I would be working would be nights
 and weekends. The job at L3 is not as appealing because I would be dealing
 with customers, but after I do it for a year, I can move on to a different
 position with L3.Also, L3 is close by my house and Gateway is about 25 miles
 away.
 Does anyone have any advice on this. Do you take the better job now or look
 at the future with a company. The guy at Gateway is willing to teach me a lot
 of design stuff hands on.

 Thanks.. 

 

 Subject: Gateway vs L3
 Date: Mon, 24 Jul 2000 16:34:58 EDT
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 I recently graduated with a BS in Computer Networking and I just got my CCNA.
 I was working for Lucent as a Systems Application Specialist but recently
 left. I accepted a position with Level 3 Communications as a
 Telecommunications Consulting Manager. I will be receiving calls from
 customers to fix their problems. I will have a group of dedicated customers.
 I took this position so I could get some hands on experience with routers.
 The position is M-F 8am - 5 PM.
 Last week I received an offer from Gateway for about 7,000 more, but at L3 I
 will get $5,800 bonus + $12,000 in stock options. The job at Gateway is
 called a Sr. Design Engineer. The job is more what I want to do, but Gateway
 is not very big in Colorado and the hours I would be working would be nights
 and weekends. The job at L3 is not as appealing because I would be dealing
 with customers, but after I do it for a year, I can move on to a different
 position with L3.Also, L3 is close by my house and Gateway is about 25 miles
 away.
 Does anyone have any advice on this. Do you take the better job now or look
 at the future with a company. The guy at Gateway is willing to teach me a lot
 of design stuff hands on.

 Thanks..

___
To unsubscribe from the Jobs list, send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the 
body containing:
unsubscribe jobs
Steve Brokaw, MCSE CCNA
Sprint Enterprise Network Services
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (pager)


***

Never mistake motion for action.

-- Ernest Hemingway
***
Steve Brokaw, MCSE CCNA
Sprint Enterprise Network Services
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (pager)


***

 Never mistake motion for action.

  -- Ernest Hemingway
***
 

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Fiber

2000-07-25 Thread Jay Hennigan

On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, Jeff Duchin wrote:

 Quick question... is there a major difference (besides the connectors)
 between SC and ST MMF? Does one perform better than the other? Also, what's
 the difference between Duplex and Simplex and Riser/Plenum? I know what
 Plenum is used for as far as fire safety in the ceiling/walls. Any help
 would be cool.

Just the connectors.  In an emergency, one can shove a round peg into
a square hole.  (ST will friction-fit into most SC fittings and work.)

No significant performance difference.

In terms of the physical medium, duplex is two fibers with a figure-8 
jacket.  Looks a lot like lamp cord.  Convenient because the transmit and 
receive fibers are physically tied together into a common jacket.  Simplex
is a single fiber.  

Riser/Plenum has the outer protective jacket made of a material that does
not produce toxic fumes (or produces less such fumes) when it burns.  The
glass fiber itself doesn't burn, but the outer jacket is plastic. 

-- 
Jay Hennigan  -  Network Administration  -  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
NetLojix Communications, Inc.  NASDAQ: NETX  -  http://www.netlojix.com/
WestNet:  Connecting you to the planet.  805 884-6323 

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Cisco and the Montgomery GI Bill

2000-07-25 Thread Thomas Lisa

Dale,

When I left Networkers 2K I was under the impression that the new CCNP program
was going to be based on Ver. 2.0 exams.  What is the source of your
information?  I have sent an email to Cisco requesting clarification.  I'll post
to the group when I find out the official word.

Tom Lisa, Instructor, CCNA, CCAI
Community College of Southern Nevada
Cisco Regional Networking Academy

Dale Cantrell wrote:

 Yes indeed! Community Colleges with Cisco Networking Academies are
 expanding. This year some are starting/offering CCNP programs starting with
 ACRC. I'm registering tomorrow for the fall semester, at a college
 15 miles away. Only downside is you must have completed the first four
 modules (two a semester) or have attained the CCNA certification. Ten
 routers and two switches, for three months, for $145...WOOHOOO!!! Four hours
 college credit also.
 ACRC...Yes I know. I beleive they said  they would work off of notes or
 something. This ought to be good!? :)

 Dale CCNA

 Original Message Follows
 From: "William E Gragido" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reply-To: "William E Gragido" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: "Brian" [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: RE: Cisco and the Montgomery GI Bill
 Date: Sun, 23 Jul 2000 20:01:35 -0500

 Good question, I have never heard of it.  However I think it would work if
 the institution(i.e. School/College/University) was/is an accredited
 educational institute.  Check with the VA reps at the your local JCs and
 Universities/Colleges.  Some are Cisco Academies as well.

   -Original Message-
   From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
   Brian
   Sent: Sunday, July 23, 2000 7:32 PM
   To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Subject: Cisco and the Montgomery GI Bill
  
  
  
   Has anyone ever heard of anyone being able to use the GI Bill for any
   Cisco Training or Certifications?
  
   Brian
  
   -
   Brian Feeny, CCNA   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   318-222-2638 x 109   http://www.shreve.net/~signal
   Network Administrator   ShreveNet Inc. (ASN 11881)
  
   ___
   UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
   FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
   Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  

 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 
 Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com

 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



(NAT) P.A.T. on overloaded interface..

2000-07-25 Thread David L Miller


Using IOS 11.3 Enterprise on a RSM with (PAT) port address translation configured

Is it possible to map an internal IP address to a PORT number on the overloaded NAT 
outside interface?  

  So let's say for example that if Joe Internet user was to connect to my overloaded 
ip address with a tcp port number of  the Cisco NAT would forward that connection 
to the statically mapped INSIDE IP address?







Dave Miller
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



What Path works?

2000-07-25 Thread Doug Guth

Looking for some feedback... There seem to be some different paths followed
to CCNP.  What have you found to be a balance between book smarts and real
life prep for CCNP?


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



CCNA 2.0 details again.....

2000-07-25 Thread jclark



Hi guys,


Please don't slander me, but I also wanted to know the 
main differences between the CCNA 2.0 and 1.0 exam. All of my materials, such as 
the Todd Lammle book for 640-407, The Sybex e-trainer, and Exam Notes all are 
for the 1.0 exam. I wanted to know if there was any other material in addition 
to these references are needed in order to ACE this exam.Not to mention the 
passing score(822), # of questions(65), and time limit(90min) speculations were 
true. If someone could give me a brief overview of all this stuff, that'd be 
great!

Thanks in advance for the help,

Jay


RE: CCNA 2.0 details again.....

2000-07-25 Thread Taylor, Don



From 
what I've heard (I haven't taken 2.0), the main difference is the heightened 
emphasis on switching in the new exam.

- 
Don

-Original Message-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 3:28 
PMTo: GroupStudy Mailing ListSubject: CCNA 2.0 details 
again.
Hi guys,


Please don't slander me, but I also wanted to know the 
main differences between the CCNA 2.0 and 1.0 exam. All of my materials, such as 
the Todd Lammle book for 640-407, The Sybex e-trainer, and Exam Notes all are 
for the 1.0 exam. I wanted to know if there was any other material in addition 
to these references are needed in order to ACE this exam.Not to mention the 
passing score(822), # of questions(65), and time limit(90min) speculations were 
true. If someone could give me a brief overview of all this stuff, that'd be 
great!

Thanks in advance for the help,

Jay


RE: What Path works?

2000-07-25 Thread Taylor, Don

You have to take the same 4 exams to get your CCNP, so the path you take
probably depends upon your strengths and weaknesses. If I were to do it
again from scratch, I would probably do the ACRC* first 'cause I'm strong in
routing, then the BCRAN, then the BCMSN 'cause I'm weakest in switching
(VLANs, STP, etc.), and finally the CIT to wrap it all together. If you're
strong in switching, for example, you might want to take the BCMSN first
just to get it out of the way.

- Don

*This exam is gonna be replaced in a few days, but it's the one I took, so
it's the one I listed.

-Original Message-
From: Doug Guth [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 3:33 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: What Path works?


Looking for some feedback... There seem to be some different paths followed
to CCNP.  What have you found to be a balance between book smarts and real
life prep for CCNP?


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
*
The information in this email is confidential and may be legally privileged.
It is intended solely for the addressee. Access to this email by anyone else
is unauthorized. 

If you are not the intended recipient, any disclosure, copying, distribution
or any action taken or omitted to be taken in reliance on it, is prohibited
and may be unlawful. When addressed to our clients any opinions or advice
contained in this email are subject to the terms and conditions expressed in
the governing KPMG client engagement letter. 
*

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Cisco Switch 4006

2000-07-25 Thread Sandeep Kulkarni

Hi All,
I have a cisco Cat 4006 newly installed. The switch is
working absolutly fine except the show module command
shows me the supervisor module is faulty. I have
attached the show module command out put  show
version command output. Is this some kind of bug with
Cisco 4006???

Regards

Sandeep


Mod Slot Ports Module-Type   Model
  Status
---  - -
--- 
1   12 1000BaseX Supervisor  WS-X4013 
  faulty
2   24810/100BaseTx Ethernet WS-X4148 
  ok
3   34810/100BaseTx Ethernet WS-X4148 
  ok
   

WS-C4006 Software, Version NmpSW: 5.4(2)
Copyright (c) 1995-2000 by Cisco Systems, Inc.
NMP S/W compiled on Apr  7 2000, 17:05:03
GSP S/W compiled on Apr 07 2000, 15:17:58

System Bootstrap Version: 5.4(1)

Hardware Version: 1.1  Model: WS-C4006  Serial #:
JAB041704WT

Mod Port Model  Serial #  Versions
---  -- 
-
1   2WS-X4013   JAB041704WT  Hw : 1.1
 Gsp: 5.4(2.0)
 Nmp: 5.4(2)
2   48   WS-X4148   JAF041300QM  Hw : 2.3
3   48   WS-X4148   JAF041300QT  Hw : 2.3

   DRAMFLASH  
NVRAM
Module Total   UsedFreeTotal   UsedFree   
Total Used  Free
-- --- --- --- --- --- ---
- - -
1   65536K  31019K  34517K  16384K   4468K  11916K
 480K  193K  287K 
 


__
Do You Yahoo!?
Get Yahoo! Mail – Free email you can access from anywhere!
http://mail.yahoo.com/

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Clear channel question?

2000-07-25 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer


At 02:12 PM 7/25/00, Lonnie Paschall wrote:
Clear channel is a t1 with B8ZS (Binary Eight Zero Substitution) line
coding. AMI line coding steals 1 bit from every 8 for timing. Which results
in 56Kbps instead of 64Kbps. B8ZS coding allows you to use the full DS0 rate
of 64Kbps by using the BPV's in the signal for timing. I may not be 100%
technically right but it gives you a good picture of whats going on.

It's true, you aren't quite technically right, I don't think. ;-)

Whether you use B8ZS or AMI bit encoding won't affect whether you get 56 
Kbps or 64 Kbps. It's the signalling method that robs bits and causes a 
single DS0 to be only 56 Kbps instead of 64 Kbps. If you're not using 
robbed-bit signalling, then you have a "clear channel."

Alternate Mark Inversion (AMI) simply means that each logical 1 bit is 
transmitted as a positive or a negative pulse, after which the line voltage 
always returns to zero. A logical 0 bit is transmitted as a zero voltage. 
This format is called AMI because each pulse, or mark, is of opposite 
polarity from the previous pulse.

Binary Eight Zero Substitution (B8ZS) is an enhancement that deals with the 
problem with AMI whereby a long sequence of zeros provides no activity on 
the line and is indistinguishable from a loss of signal. With B8ZS, any 
sequence of eight consecutive zeros is replaced on the line by: 4 zeros, a 
bipolar violation, a valid pulse, a zero, another violation, and a valid pulse.

(A bipolar violation is not a mental disease. It's an intentional breaking 
of the rule that says if the last pulse was negative then the next pulse 
must be positive. ;-)

Robbed bits are used to transmit voice signalling information, such as 
on-hook, off-hook, etc. Voice signaling is placed in the least significant 
bit position of every DS0 in the 6th and 12 frame of every superframe, and 
the 18th and 24th frame of an extended superframe (ESF).

If you use all four bits, then they are called the A,B,C, and D bits, and 
they provide 16 possible value for voice signalling. If these bits are 
being robbed, then a T1 or fractional T1 cannot carry transparent channels 
of 64 Kbps each. In the U.S., carriers offer some number of 56-Kbps 
channels, using only seven bits in every octet in order to avoid the data 
corruption that would result from the insertion of signalling bits. If you 
don't want this "feature," you could ask the carrier to provide you a set 
of transparent 64 Kbps channels. This is sometimes called "clear channel."

I must admit, after getting to this point, though, that the term "clear 
channel" could have other meanings as well. We would have to know the 
context to give you more help with your question

Priscilla





Lonnie

""Gert Jan"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
8lkd3a$j8q$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8lkd3a$j8q$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  On the Foundation Routing and Switching there was a question What is a
clear
  channel?
  Anyone met this qeustion and can provide me some explanation?
 
  Thanks,
  Gert jan
 




Priscilla Oppenheimer
http://www.priscilla.com

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Cisco and the Montgomery GI Bill

2000-07-25 Thread Thomas Lisa

Dale,

Just got a response back from Cisco.  You are right, the first semester is based
on ACRC.  I'm waiting for a response back to my follow-on of when they will
update (I hope it's before we start our CCNP program next year.).  Of course,
much of the information in the old ACRC is still useful for the BSCN exam.  BTW,
if it was me, I would study for the CCDA while waiting for the CCNP course.
After all, it all starts with good design or lack thereof unfortunately.

Tom Lisa, Instructor, CCNA, CCAI
Community College of Southern Nevada
Cisco Regional Networking Academy

Dale Cantrell wrote:

 Howdy Tom!
 www.ecc.dcccd.edu/bus-ps/cis/cisframe.htm This takes you to El Centro in
 downtown Dallas. Then click, Cisco Networking Academy, then
 click on,  "prepare for CCNP" *NEW*   I registered yesterday morning!
 First class day, I'll bring in the Cisco Press BSCN book,(if it's out then)
 and see what's up.
 Heard someone say that this takes a long time for certification. So instead
 of studying routing protocols for two months, and then start class to study
 same for three more months seems counter productive. So
 either study for CCDA, or Switching 2.0 for two months before ACRC (:)
 starts. Any comments on this course of thinking???
 I value the comments alot.
 Dale CCNA
 P.S. ANY problem with URL, feel free to email me.

 Original Message Follows
 From: Thomas Lisa [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reply-To: Thomas Lisa [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Cisco and the Montgomery GI Bill
 Date: Tue, 25 Jul 2000 12:16:34 -0700

 Dale,

 When I left Networkers 2K I was under the impression that the new CCNP
 program
 was going to be based on Ver. 2.0 exams.  What is the source of your
 information?  I have sent an email to Cisco requesting clarification.  I'll
 post
 to the group when I find out the official word.

 Tom Lisa, Instructor, CCNA, CCAI
 Community College of Southern Nevada
 Cisco Regional Networking Academy

 Dale Cantrell wrote:

   Yes indeed! Community Colleges with Cisco Networking Academies are
   expanding. This year some are starting/offering CCNP programs starting
 with
   ACRC. I'm registering tomorrow for the fall semester, at a college
   15 miles away. Only downside is you must have completed the first four
   modules (two a semester) or have attained the CCNA certification. Ten
   routers and two switches, for three months, for $145...WOOHOOO!!! Four
 hours
   college credit also.
   ACRC...Yes I know. I beleive they said  they would work off of notes or
   something. This ought to be good!? :)
  
   Dale CCNA
  
   Original Message Follows
   From: "William E Gragido" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Reply-To: "William E Gragido" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   To: "Brian" [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Subject: RE: Cisco and the Montgomery GI Bill
   Date: Sun, 23 Jul 2000 20:01:35 -0500
  
   Good question, I have never heard of it.  However I think it would work
 if
   the institution(i.e. School/College/University) was/is an accredited
   educational institute.  Check with the VA reps at the your local JCs and
   Universities/Colleges.  Some are Cisco Academies as well.
  
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
 Brian
 Sent: Sunday, July 23, 2000 7:32 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Cisco and the Montgomery GI Bill



 Has anyone ever heard of anyone being able to use the GI Bill for any
 Cisco Training or Certifications?

 Brian

 -
 Brian Feeny, CCNA   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 318-222-2638 x 109   http://www.shreve.net/~signal
 Network Administrator   ShreveNet Inc. (ASN 11881)

 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

  
   ___
   UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
   FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
   Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  
   
   Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com
  
   ___
   UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
   FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
   Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

BCRAN Exam

2000-07-25 Thread Timothy W. Roberts

Does any one have a list of the objectives?  The objectives on Cisco's
page on summarized.  Do you need to know the particulars about every
router?

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Blocking access from geographic location on the Internet

2000-07-25 Thread TKager

Hi Everyone,

I have a need to block access to an application by geographic location on the 
Internet...This would not likely be attempted through access lists, but probably 
through firewalling technology such as Firewall-1

1) Can the domain name extension of an address be an accurate indicator? For example 
if I wan't to block access to all locations trying to connect from Japan, is it fair 
to block anyone trying to connect from a site that resolves to x.jp?

2) Would all the IP networks that a particular Core Nodal gateway services be capable 
of being summarized?

3) Does anyone know how Microsft restricted access to 128 bit encrypted service packs 
to non-US customers?

I know that there would be very little of a way to prevent someone from dialing into 
an ISP in the US from gaining access, or by means of some other type of "proxy", but I 
am just looking for a more generalized answer.

Any help would be greatly appreciated...

Thanks,
Tom Kager

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: MRTG on Windows NT

2000-07-25 Thread Swart, Douwe

Are you running it on NT, or on a Unix box?

There is a lot of config and playing around to do.  The first thing that I
noticed was the instructions for  NT and the zip files do not correlate, so
you need to go through and modify the directories that the docos point to.
You will find everything that you need in the mrtg\mrtg directory and the
mrtg\mrtg\run directory.
I have replaced the advides mrtg5.21. (or whatever it is) for a simpler
mrtg.

Does this make sense?  I hope it helps

Douwe
-Original Message-
From:   Leon Bass [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Tuesday, July 25, 2000 11:04 PM
To: Swart Douwe
Cc: 'Erwin Novriyanto'; '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject:Re: MRTG on Windows NT

Well,

You guys are lucky, I get the service to run, but I have
not been able to get anything to start, any helpful hints???

"Swart, Douwe" wrote:

 I have been playing around with this for a while too.

 There does not appear to be a great deal of information
around.  I have not
 had much success as yet.  I will let you know if I have
any major
 breakthroughs.

 Please let me know if you have the same.

 Have you found a way in MRTG where you can monitor the
total amount of data
 passing across a link, rather than just the bandwidth
utilisation?

 Cheers

 Douwe
 -Original Message-
 From:   Erwin Novriyanto
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent:   Monday, July 24, 2000 6:23 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject:MRTG on Windows NT

 Dear All,

 I want to make MRTG on Windows NT for
viewing our network
 performance, can
 anybody help me for the instruction. Like
documentation for
 that,...thanks
 for your help.

 Bye

 Erwin

 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines:
 http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info:
 http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure
violations to
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 Visit our Website : http://www.traveland.com.au

 Disclaimer - This message and any attachments are
confidential and may contain privileged information intended only for the
use of the addressee named above. If you are not the intended recipient of
this message you are hereby notified that any use, dissemination,
distribution or reproduction of this message is prohibited. If you have
received this message in error please notify Traveland Pty Ltd immediately
by return email. Any views expressed in this message are those of the
individual sender and may not necessarily reflect the views of Traveland Pty
Ltd.

 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines:
http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info:
http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Visit our Website : http://www.traveland.com.au
 
Disclaimer - This message and any attachments are confidential and may contain 
privileged information intended only for the use of the addressee named above. If you 
are not the intended recipient of this message you are hereby notified that any use, 
dissemination, distribution or reproduction of this message is prohibited. If you have 
received this message in error please notify Traveland Pty Ltd immediately by return 
email. Any views expressed in this message are those of the individual sender and may 
not necessarily reflect the views of Traveland Pty Ltd.

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: CCNA 2.0 details again.....

2000-07-25 Thread Ole Drews Jensen

I have taken and passed CCNA 2.0, but I have not tried the CCNA 1.0, so I
can't tell you the big difference. However, the only real thing I could see
that was different between Todd Lammle's old book for CCNA 1.0 and the
objectives for CCNA 2.0 were the switching topics: VLAN and STA/STP. I can
recommend Cisco Press' official ICND book for that. They have about 60 pages
telling you everything you need to know to pass that area of the new exam.

Good luck,

Ole


 Ole Drews Jensen
 Systems Network Manager
 CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I
 RWR Enterprises, Inc.
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]




-Original Message-
From: Priscilla Oppenheimer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 4:52 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: CCNA 2.0 details again.


I haven't taken CCNA 2.0 either, but the new test is based on the 
Interconnecting Cisco Network Devices (ICND) class, which has more emphasis 
on switching than the old Introduction to Cisco Router Configuration (ICRC) 
class.

The new class also has an added chapter on ISDN configuration. You didn't 
have to know ISDN for the old test. It appears that you do have to know it 
for the new test.

Priscilla



At 04:52 PM 7/25/00, Taylor, Don wrote:
 From what I've heard (I haven't taken 2.0), the main difference is the 
 heightened emphasis on switching in the new exam.

- Don

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 3:28 PM
To: GroupStudy Mailing List
Subject: CCNA 2.0 details again.

Hi guys,


Please don't slander me, but I also wanted to know the main differences 
between the CCNA 2.0 and 1.0 exam. All of my materials, such as the Todd 
Lammle book for 640-407, The Sybex e-trainer, and Exam Notes all are for 
the 1.0 exam. I wanted to know if there was any other material in addition 
to these references are needed in order to ACE this exam.Not to mention 
the passing score(822), # of questions(65), and time limit(90min) 
speculations were true. If someone could give me a brief overview of all 
this stuff, that'd be great!

Thanks in advance for the help,

Jay




Priscilla Oppenheimer
http://www.priscilla.com

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Thanks, Passed the CCNA

2000-07-25 Thread Doug Guth

Thanks to all who post here.  I have been reading quietly and learning.
Passed the CCNA today.  1 down... tons to go

Thanks Again


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Passed CCNP

2000-07-25 Thread Simon Watson

Hi

On the question if you should take the CCNP1.0 or 2.0. It depends what you 
have studied for in the pass  if you are already prepared to take the 
exams.

The CCNP1.0 exams expire on the 31st July(in 6 days) so if you have just 
commenced studying it would be advisable to go the version 2.0 route.

Unfortunatley I can't help you much with recommeded reading, I had the 
student course work for all the exams plus the cisco ACRC book from 
ciscopress.

Rgrds

Simon


From: "Phan H. Son" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Simon Watson" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re:  Passed CCNP
Date: Mon, 24 Jul 2000 04:47:34 -0700

Simon,

It was GREAT !!!  I was so  excited when i passed the CCNA  few days a go
:--)
Bytheway, need to consult you ! Should  I take CCNP 1.0 or 2.0 ?
Can you name some web sites which are helpfull for your exam 
preparation

Thanks a lot!
Phan

- Original Message -
From: Simon Watson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, July 24, 2000 1:41 AM
Subject: Passed CCNP


  Dear Guys
 
  Just Letting you know that I've just passed my CCNP.
 
  The path I took was the FRS exam and then the CIT
 
  got 900 out of 1000 on the FRS( 91% ACRC,91% CMTD,79% CLSC)  778 out 
off
  1000 for the CIT.
 
  I found the CIT the hardest exam, make sure you know ISDN well as there
was
  a lot of ISDN questions on my exam.
 
  This was for the CCNP1.0, how long before I need to recertify ??.I've
heard
  it is 2 years.
 
  Well I must thank God for his immense help,  and for you guys for your
  valuble input.
 
 
  Rgrds
 
  Simon CCNP,CCNA
  
  Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com
 
  ___
  UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
  FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
  Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 




Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Cisco and the Montgomery GI Bill

2000-07-25 Thread Dale Cantrell

Howdy Tom!
www.ecc.dcccd.edu/bus-ps/cis/cisframe.htm This takes you to El Centro in 
downtown Dallas. Then click, Cisco Networking Academy, then
click on,  "prepare for CCNP" *NEW*   I registered yesterday morning!
First class day, I'll bring in the Cisco Press BSCN book,(if it's out then) 
and see what's up.
Heard someone say that this takes a long time for certification. So instead 
of studying routing protocols for two months, and then start class to study 
same for three more months seems counter productive. So
either study for CCDA, or Switching 2.0 for two months before ACRC (:)
starts. Any comments on this course of thinking???
I value the comments alot.
Dale CCNA
P.S. ANY problem with URL, feel free to email me.

Original Message Follows
From: Thomas Lisa [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Thomas Lisa [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Cisco and the Montgomery GI Bill
Date: Tue, 25 Jul 2000 12:16:34 -0700

Dale,

When I left Networkers 2K I was under the impression that the new CCNP 
program
was going to be based on Ver. 2.0 exams.  What is the source of your
information?  I have sent an email to Cisco requesting clarification.  I'll 
post
to the group when I find out the official word.

Tom Lisa, Instructor, CCNA, CCAI
Community College of Southern Nevada
Cisco Regional Networking Academy

Dale Cantrell wrote:

  Yes indeed! Community Colleges with Cisco Networking Academies are
  expanding. This year some are starting/offering CCNP programs starting 
with
  ACRC. I'm registering tomorrow for the fall semester, at a college
  15 miles away. Only downside is you must have completed the first four
  modules (two a semester) or have attained the CCNA certification. Ten
  routers and two switches, for three months, for $145...WOOHOOO!!! Four 
hours
  college credit also.
  ACRC...Yes I know. I beleive they said  they would work off of notes or
  something. This ought to be good!? :)
 
  Dale CCNA
 
  Original Message Follows
  From: "William E Gragido" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Reply-To: "William E Gragido" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: "Brian" [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: RE: Cisco and the Montgomery GI Bill
  Date: Sun, 23 Jul 2000 20:01:35 -0500
 
  Good question, I have never heard of it.  However I think it would work 
if
  the institution(i.e. School/College/University) was/is an accredited
  educational institute.  Check with the VA reps at the your local JCs and
  Universities/Colleges.  Some are Cisco Academies as well.
 
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Brian
Sent: Sunday, July 23, 2000 7:32 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Cisco and the Montgomery GI Bill
   
   
   
Has anyone ever heard of anyone being able to use the GI Bill for any
Cisco Training or Certifications?
   
Brian
   
-
Brian Feeny, CCNA   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
318-222-2638 x 109   http://www.shreve.net/~signal
Network Administrator   ShreveNet Inc. (ASN 11881)
   
___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   
 
  ___
  UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
  FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
  Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
  
  Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com
 
  ___
  UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
  FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
  Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



New Track

2000-07-25 Thread Wayne Roan

Group,

I am a CCNA 1.0.  Do I have to take the CCNA 2.0 before I can take
the CCNP 2.0 tests?  I know the CCNP 1.0 retires on July 31, 2000, and I
have not even started on the CCNP.  Therefore, I am trying to figure out if
my CCNA 1.0 is valid for taking the CCNP 2.0 tests.

Thanks,

Wayne

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Just Passed the CCNA Today

2000-07-25 Thread m. jean stockton

I just passed the CCNA today.   I am a little disappointed with my score of
832 but I will just have to live with it.

Know the OSI model.   Know the OSI model.

Congratulations Doug!!!


Now, I am off to my African Drum Class for the big release.


Instead of studying this weekend, I will drum for the African dance class
and make some jewelry.

Will begin a job search a little later.

This is a great list.   Now I can begin to focus on the issues for more than
just passing the exam.

mjs





___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: Very good web site for CCNA

2000-07-25 Thread William E Gragido

I could be wrong, and do correct me if thats the case, but I was under the
impression that once someone has purchased a book, that they have the right
to share that book with others provided that no monetary exchange is taking
place.  If there is such an exchange then I could see how an author could
get his/her feathers in an uproar, but if there is no exchange what is the
harm?  If what you are proposing was truly the case, than the disbursement
of knowledge via books(that in centuries past were hand copied), would never
had occurred.  Furthermore, what you are proposing directly targets the
largest offenders this sort of breach of ethics.libraries, schools,
colleges and universities.  Not trying to start another flame war, simply
striving for more clarity.  Tell me this, have you ever leant a book to
someone?  Any book, doesn't have to be a technical book necessarily, just a
book.  If so, I would encourage you to discipline yourself!  :-)

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
 Priscilla Oppenheimer
 Sent: Monday, July 24, 2000 11:34 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: RE: Very good web site for CCNA


 Ben Lovegrove's Web site links to Amazon's site so you can buy the books.
 Of course, that's completely different than what this other person did.
 This other person posted the whole book online on what appears to be his
 own personal Web site. He doesn't appear to be associated with the
 publisher. I don't think he's one of the authors either, though that's
 generally irrelevant. The publisher usually owns the copyright.

 The publisher, Syngress, got what they deserved possibly, since they
 published the whole book on the included CD. But when you open
 that CD you
 agree to use it for your own personal use only. (At least that's usually
 the case. Does anyone have the book with the original CD packaging? Could
 you tell us what it says?)

 Priscilla



 At 09:30 PM 7/24/00, William E Gragido wrote:
 Priscilla,
 
 On the one hand, its a definite ethical error, on the flipside(gotta play
 the devil's advocate here), is it any different than what thousands of
 technical sites do?  I am not justifying it, from a legal perspective
 however I would like to point out that some the best sites on
 the internet
 dedicated to networking and data communications have or are
 doing the same
 thing.  Take Ben Lovegrove's site, which by the way, I love!  He
 has links
 to several other sites containing entire volumes of information(see the
 Syngress link).  Is it wrong?  To some perhaps, if copyright and
 credit are
 not giving their due, but I would be curious to see how many of
 who utilize
 these resources would actively campaign against them.  Just a
 few thoughts!
 By the way, your books are great!
 
   -Original Message-
   From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
   Priscilla Oppenheimer
   Sent: Monday, July 24, 2000 2:40 PM
   To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'; 'Neelanga Udash'
   Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Subject: RE: Very good web site for CCNA
  
  
   I was really impressed when I first reviewed this online
   material. It's so
   much better than most of the crap that's out there. Then I
 realized it's
   the "CCNA Cisco Certified Network Associate Study Guide" by
 Syngress! How
   could someone publish this online?? It appears to be a flagrant
   example of
   theft.
  
   Priscilla
  
  
  
   --  From:   Neelanga Udash  Reply To:   Neelanga
   Udash  Sent:   Monday, 24 July, 2000 7:43
   AM  To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'  Subject:Very good
   web site for
   CCNA
   
   Dear all,
   
   Take a look at this site. There is a whole book of CCNA
 material written
   by  a CCIE,
   
   http://www.rkingma.com/cisco/testhome.htmhttp://www.rkingma.com
   /cisco/testhome.htm
   http://www.rkingma.com/cisco/testhome.htm
   
   
   
   
   
   ***  U.D. Neelanga Udash
Network
   Support Analyst
   
   IT Division  The British Council  49 Alfred House Gardens  Colombo
   00300  Sri Lanka
   
   Tel:  +94 (0)1 581171 (ext.260)  Fax: +94 (0)1 587079  E-mail:
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]mailto:neelanga.udash@b
 ritishcouncil.lk
  Web: http://www.britishcouncil.lkhttp://www.britishcouncil.lk
  
  ***
  
  ___  UPDATED Posting Guidelines:
 
http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.htmlhttp://www.groupstudy.com/list/g
uide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info:
 http://www.groupstudy.comhttp://www.groupstudy.com  Report misconduct
 and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Priscilla Oppenheimer
http://www.priscilla.com

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to 

Re: New Track

2000-07-25 Thread vsdhillo:First vsdhillo:Last

You can still take the CCNP 2.0 tests with the CCNA 1.0 done BUT you will
still be a CCNP 1.0, you need to take the CCNA 2.0 to be considered a CCNP
2.0. Hope this helps.
--Vic

"Wayne Roan" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Group,

 I am a CCNA 1.0.  Do I have to take the CCNA 2.0 before I can take
 the CCNP 2.0 tests?  I know the CCNP 1.0 retires on July 31, 2000, and I
 have not even started on the CCNP.  Therefore, I am trying to figure out
if
 my CCNA 1.0 is valid for taking the CCNP 2.0 tests.

 Thanks,

 Wayne

 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 ---


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Can two High density Serial ports be tied together?

2000-07-25 Thread rtc


 A HSSI high density serial port is 50 pins and the size of a normal PC
serial connector.
We need a cale that goes  [50pinHSSI high density serial port]--- [50pinHSSI
high density serial port]

Its the only we can tie our 7513 to our other 3 routers because we cant
afford more Ethernet Boards.

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: can't see secondary routes

2000-07-25 Thread Jay Hennigan

On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, Barronton, Ken wrote:

 Hello All,
 Long time watcher, first time post!
 Partial config below from a 4500M.
 Problem - When redistributing can only see 100.0 network. Can't see
 secondaries of networks 101.1 or 102.1 out FastEth0.
 
 Help!?!

Hint: What mechanism prevents sending a route out the same interface
  from which it was learned?

-- 
Jay Hennigan  -  Network Administration  -  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
NetLojix Communications, Inc.  NASDAQ: NETX  -  http://www.netlojix.com/
WestNet:  Connecting you to the planet.  805 884-6323 



___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: complete Cisco CCIE lab for sale

2000-07-25 Thread Daniel Ji

Hi,
Can you give me a quote(individually and as a whole) on the following stuff?
coz I'm trying to build a home lab for CCIE.
2503
2513
2509 or 2511
4000 series with 2 Ether and 4 serial.
ISDN simulator or switch.(this one I'm not so sure which I should get)
plus all the stuff below:
(1) Octal Cable for reverse telnet
(4) Router serial back-to-back cables (DCE to DTE)
(1) Token ring mau
(1) Token ring media filter
(2) Ethernet Transceivers
(1) Console cable kit

thanks,
Daniel Ji
CCNP


[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message 8lkamp$cts$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8lkamp$cts$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Cisco 2501
 Cisco 2502
 Cisco 2509
 Cisco 2520
 Cisco 2505 (same as 2501, but with 8 RJ45 repeated hub ports!)
 Cisco 1912-EN Switch (ISL capable)
 (1) Octal Cable
 (4) Router x-over cables (DB60-DB60)
 (1) Token ring mau
 (1) Token ring media filter
 (2) Ethernet Transceivers
 (1) Console cable kit
 (1) DOCS CD

 $6000 + S/H

 (All routers have at least 8/8, enough to run Enterprise 11.2 IOS which is
 pre-loaded on
 all routers)

 -Brad Ellis
 CCIE#5796
 www.optsys.net



 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 ---


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: New Track

2000-07-25 Thread Brian

On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, Wayne Roan wrote:

 Group,
 
   I am a CCNA 1.0.  Do I have to take the CCNA 2.0 before I can take
 the CCNP 2.0 tests?  I know the CCNP 1.0 retires on July 31, 2000, and I
 have not even started on the CCNP.  Therefore, I am trying to figure out if
 my CCNA 1.0 is valid for taking the CCNP 2.0 tests.

You can take the CCNP 2.0 tests and would be a CCNP 2.0 if you completed
them.

If any of the tests you take are CCNP 1.0 tests, then you become a CCNP
1.0. If all the tests you complete are CCNP 2.0 tests, then you are a CCNP
2.0.

Brian


 
 Thanks,
 
 Wayne
 
 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

-- 
-
Brian Feeny, CCNA   [EMAIL PROTECTED]   
318-222-2638 x 109  http://www.shreve.net/~signal  
Network Administrator   ShreveNet Inc. (ASN 11881)

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: New Track

2000-07-25 Thread Brian

On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, vsdhillo:First vsdhillo:Last wrote:

 You can still take the CCNP 2.0 tests with the CCNA 1.0 done BUT you will
 still be a CCNP 1.0, you need to take the CCNA 2.0 to be considered a CCNP
 2.0. Hope this helps.

This is not true.  CCNA 1.0 and CCNA 2.0 both qualify as as the
prerequisite for a CCNP 2.0.

Brian


 --Vic
 
 "Wayne Roan" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Group,
 
  I am a CCNA 1.0.  Do I have to take the CCNA 2.0 before I can take
  the CCNP 2.0 tests?  I know the CCNP 1.0 retires on July 31, 2000, and I
  have not even started on the CCNP.  Therefore, I am trying to figure out
 if
  my CCNA 1.0 is valid for taking the CCNP 2.0 tests.
 
  Thanks,
 
  Wayne
 
  ___
  UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
  FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
  Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  ---
 
 
 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

-- 
-
Brian Feeny, CCNA   [EMAIL PROTECTED]   
318-222-2638 x 109  http://www.shreve.net/~signal  
Network Administrator   ShreveNet Inc. (ASN 11881)

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Cisco Web Site - Good Info

2000-07-25 Thread Chuck Larrieu

www.cisco.com/tac

includes direct links to information about all our favorite topics,
including password recovery. I haven't had a chance to compare, but there
appear to be separate areas for registered and guest users.

Chuck

Think life is unfair? Consider that if life were completely fair, in EVERY
circumstance you'd get EXACTLY what you deserved...:-

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: New Track

2000-07-25 Thread Croyle, James

There is no relation of either test series to each other, nor for the CCIE
is it a prerequisite to be a CCNA, or CCNP...  Take anything you want in any
order!  =)

Jim Croyle
CCNA and 2 tests from the professional series...

-Original Message-
From: Wayne Roan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 6:58 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: New Track
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Group,

I am a CCNA 1.0.  Do I have to take the CCNA 2.0 before I can take
the CCNP 2.0 tests?  I know the CCNP 1.0 retires on July 31, 2000, and I
have not even started on the CCNP.  Therefore, I am trying to figure out if
my CCNA 1.0 is valid for taking the CCNP 2.0 tests.

Thanks,

Wayne

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Can two High density Serial ports be tied together?

2000-07-25 Thread Jay Hennigan

On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, rtc wrote:

  A HSSI high density serial port is 50 pins and the size of a normal PC
 serial connector.
 We need a cale that goes  [50pinHSSI high density serial port]--- [50pinHSSI
 high density serial port]
 
 Its the only we can tie our 7513 to our other 3 routers because we cant
 afford more Ethernet Boards.

Normal HSSI cables are identical to small-format 50-pin SCSI cables.   

However, you'll need a HSSI null-modem cable...

Or a pair of DS-3 CSU/DSUs and two regular HSSI cables.  If you can't 
afford more Ethernet boards, forget about the DS-3 CSU/DSUs.

Cisco sells a CAB-HNUL cable that does what you want, list price US$ 100.

-- 
Jay Hennigan  -  Network Administration  -  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
NetLojix Communications, Inc.  NASDAQ: NETX  -  http://www.netlojix.com/
WestNet:  Connecting you to the planet.  805 884-6323 

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: console omnistack 4024

2000-07-25 Thread cv . perez



The cable console is a simple DB9 F/M gender (-serial port). By default, it is
set to 9600bps, 8 data bits, none parity, one stop bit.

Hope this may help you, cvp.





rudhy [EMAIL PROTECTED] on 07/25/2000 10:12:49 PM

Please respond to rudhy [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc:(bcc: Claude-Vincent PEREZ/JP-TOKYO-HOLDING/LVMH)

Subject:  console omnistack 4024



I have a problem with console omnistack 4024 xylan, can you help me how to
set configure port setting ?
how speed, parity , flow control. and how the cable console connectivity  .
thanks.
best regards.

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]






___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



PIX and NAT

2000-07-25 Thread Oscar Rau

We are implementing a DMZ which will be using public IP addresses. The
DMZ systems interfacing the PIX interface will have a public IP
addresses and not a private IP addresses. In this case, can GLOBAL/NAT
statements be still used to add any valuable security to the DMZ
systems? Is there any point in using NAT, because we do not have private

IP addresses to the DMZ systems?

Any thoughts/ideas for this solution appreciated.

Thank you in advance.

Oscar Rau
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



CCDP question

2000-07-25 Thread Daniel Ji

Hi, guys:
I just got CCNP and thinking to go for CCDP, but I don't have CCDA yet,
My question is, do I have to have CCDA in order to get CCDP? or just take
CID

thanks in advance.
Daniel.


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: CCDP question

2000-07-25 Thread Daniel Ma

yes, you need.

"Daniel Ji" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
8llbcs$bmp$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8llbcs$bmp$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi, guys:
 I just got CCNP and thinking to go for CCDP, but I don't have CCDA yet,
 My question is, do I have to have CCDA in order to get CCDP? or just take
 CID

 thanks in advance.
 Daniel.


 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 ---


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: New Track

2000-07-25 Thread Brian

On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, Croyle, James wrote:

 There is no relation of either test series to each other, nor for the CCIE
 is it a prerequisite to be a CCNA, or CCNP...  Take anything you want in any
 order!  =)

You must be a CCNA before you are a CCNP
You must be a CCDA and a CCNA before you are a CCDP

Brian

 
 Jim Croyle
 CCNA and 2 tests from the professional series...
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Wayne Roan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 6:58 PM
 To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
 Subject: New Track
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 Group,
 
   I am a CCNA 1.0.  Do I have to take the CCNA 2.0 before I can take
 the CCNP 2.0 tests?  I know the CCNP 1.0 retires on July 31, 2000, and I
 have not even started on the CCNP.  Therefore, I am trying to figure out if
 my CCNA 1.0 is valid for taking the CCNP 2.0 tests.
 
 Thanks,
 
 Wayne
 
 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

-- 
-
Brian Feeny, CCNA   [EMAIL PROTECTED]   
318-222-2638 x 109  http://www.shreve.net/~signal  
Network Administrator   ShreveNet Inc. (ASN 11881)

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Very good web site for CCNA:Off Topic

2000-07-25 Thread hal9001

This was always going to be a problem with the Internet from day one.  Not
only do you have access to information on a grand scale but it crosses so
many national boundaries, in the case of America State Boundaries and in
both cases law.  Both American laws and other sovereign states.  I could
have any authors book here and publish it on the web from a remote site
without anybody else having legal recourse because I am in some sort of
virtual or cyberspace which nobody has control of!

The actualities are that the net allows increased access to information from
all who place it there or use it.  Has nobody thought that this increased
access far from diminishing an authors income may increase it and their
fame/demand.  Where would Todd, Priscilla, Chellis, Odom and others be
without the advertisements and spread of information that the web and web
sites provide, not to mention the free advertisement space that this
provides.  America is a large place with very very many back woods to get
lost in intellectually or not and without the web and Cisco some people
would be deep in the woods!

Regardless of the amount of people who rip off the authorsmany other
people like me..will buy the book, yes I buy the things for hard cash!
I will be doing CID and I will buy Priscillas Book, Top Down Network Design
as it is regarded as a de facto standard as far as I can see in Cisco
Internetwork Design and in addition a book until some other medium is found
is an excellent portable storage system.  Has anyone tried really to study
from a Notebook/Laptop/Screen etc for several hours/daysget real, want
eyes like a mole!  So the/a CD (I do get one don't I or I shall feel short
changed out of £42.99 or $70-00 plus dollars) is a by the way bonus!  To
print out some 500 to 900 pages of a Cisco style technical book on PDF with
the standard inkjet would cost the same as the price of the book and more,
unless your doing it on an employers equipment which now does amount to
plain theft.  To take it off the web without unmetered access would cost
even more.

I think the problem and the complaint could be seen not as intellectual
property rights but simply the maximisation of profits and rewards.  Besides
what happens when I now decide I have no further use for the book and decide
to sell it on with its CD to defray my costs of the same authors next book
or second addition, should I have to destroy the tome or should I pass it on
or sell it to others who hopefully will learn and make use of it.  Should I
offer it back to the author for a price after all its intellectually his.

Should we be out burning all second hand books then to keep authors in
largesse, or, information controlled!  Now I know a nice German gentleman
that practised book burning and strangely he was an author too!  I think
that authors of highly technical books who have the maximum exposure on the
web will reap profits far in excess of their ordinary chances (there is only
room for a very few Stephen HAWKINGS in the wider publishing world), after
all is ABC or NBC really interested in the latest hot offering in detail
about OSPF/IGRP etc, would you really get a look in there, no.there far
more interested in who blew in with the President today (I think I got the
wording right there).  But this is not the first time this has been
discussed here and my guess is not the last..talk about off topic, 30
pieces of silver please!

Karl HUTCHINSON
- Original Message -
From: "William E Gragido" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Priscilla Oppenheimer" [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 26, 2000 12:08 AM
Subject: RE: Very good web site for CCNA


 I could be wrong, and do correct me if thats the case, but I was under the
 impression that once someone has purchased a book, that they have the
right
 to share that book with others provided that no monetary exchange is
taking
 place.  If there is such an exchange then I could see how an author could
 get his/her feathers in an uproar, but if there is no exchange what is the
 harm?  If what you are proposing was truly the case, than the disbursement
 of knowledge via books(that in centuries past were hand copied), would
never
 had occurred.  Furthermore, what you are proposing directly targets the
 largest offenders this sort of breach of ethics.libraries, schools,
 colleges and universities.  Not trying to start another flame war, simply
 striving for more clarity.  Tell me this, have you ever leant a book to
 someone?  Any book, doesn't have to be a technical book necessarily, just
a
 book.  If so, I would encourage you to discipline yourself!  :-)

  -Original Message-
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
  Priscilla Oppenheimer
  Sent: Monday, July 24, 2000 11:34 PM
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: RE: Very good web site for CCNA
 
 
  Ben Lovegrove's Web site links to Amazon's site so you can buy the
books.
  Of course, that's completely 

RE: New Track

2000-07-25 Thread Croyle, James

Oops, I stand corrected.  No more answering emails after a 13 hour day.

-Original Message-
From: Brian [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 8:44 PM
To: Croyle, James
Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: New Track


On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, Croyle, James wrote:

 There is no relation of either test series to each other, nor for the CCIE
 is it a prerequisite to be a CCNA, or CCNP...  Take anything you want in
any
 order!  =)

You must be a CCNA before you are a CCNP
You must be a CCDA and a CCNA before you are a CCDP

Brian

 
 Jim Croyle
 CCNA and 2 tests from the professional series...
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Wayne Roan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 6:58 PM
 To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
 Subject: New Track
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 Group,
 
   I am a CCNA 1.0.  Do I have to take the CCNA 2.0 before I can take
 the CCNP 2.0 tests?  I know the CCNP 1.0 retires on July 31, 2000, and I
 have not even started on the CCNP.  Therefore, I am trying to figure out
if
 my CCNA 1.0 is valid for taking the CCNP 2.0 tests.
 
 Thanks,
 
 Wayne
 
 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

-- 
-
Brian Feeny, CCNA   [EMAIL PROTECTED]   
318-222-2638 x 109  http://www.shreve.net/~signal  
Network Administrator   ShreveNet Inc. (ASN 11881)

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Cisco Switch 4006

2000-07-25 Thread Chris McCoy

Something that comes to mind is you have more than one power supply
installed and one isn't plugged in.  Is that the case?

Chris M.

- Original Message -
From: "Sandeep Kulkarni" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 1:07 PM
Subject: Cisco Switch 4006


 Hi All,
 I have a cisco Cat 4006 newly installed. The switch is
 working absolutly fine except the show module command
 shows me the supervisor module is faulty. I have
 attached the show module command out put  show
 version command output. Is this some kind of bug with
 Cisco 4006???

 Regards

 Sandeep


 Mod Slot Ports Module-Type   Model
   Status
 ---  - -
 --- 
 1   12 1000BaseX Supervisor  WS-X4013
   faulty
 2   24810/100BaseTx Ethernet WS-X4148
   ok
 3   34810/100BaseTx Ethernet WS-X4148
   ok


 WS-C4006 Software, Version NmpSW: 5.4(2)
 Copyright (c) 1995-2000 by Cisco Systems, Inc.
 NMP S/W compiled on Apr  7 2000, 17:05:03
 GSP S/W compiled on Apr 07 2000, 15:17:58

 System Bootstrap Version: 5.4(1)

 Hardware Version: 1.1  Model: WS-C4006  Serial #:
 JAB041704WT

 Mod Port Model  Serial #  Versions
 ---  -- 
 -
 1   2WS-X4013   JAB041704WT  Hw : 1.1
  Gsp: 5.4(2.0)
  Nmp: 5.4(2)
 2   48   WS-X4148   JAF041300QM  Hw : 2.3
 3   48   WS-X4148   JAF041300QT  Hw : 2.3

DRAMFLASH
 NVRAM
 Module Total   UsedFreeTotal   UsedFree
 Total Used  Free
 -- --- --- --- --- --- ---
 - - -
 1   65536K  31019K  34517K  16384K   4468K  11916K
  480K  193K  287K



 __
 Do You Yahoo!?
 Get Yahoo! Mail - Free email you can access from anywhere!
 http://mail.yahoo.com/

 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: CCDP question

2000-07-25 Thread Brian


Yes you must have a CCDA.

Brian


On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, Daniel Ji wrote:

 Hi, guys:
 I just got CCNP and thinking to go for CCDP, but I don't have CCDA yet,
 My question is, do I have to have CCDA in order to get CCDP? or just take
 CID
 
 thanks in advance.
 Daniel.
 
 
 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

-- 
-
Brian Feeny, CCNA   [EMAIL PROTECTED]   
318-222-2638 x 109  http://www.shreve.net/~signal  
Network Administrator   ShreveNet Inc. (ASN 11881)

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: can't see secondary routes

2000-07-25 Thread arthurx4

Ken

I bet that if you do show ip eigrp neighbors you won't show any neighbor for
the 101.0 or 102.0 networks.  If not, that's why you are not learning the
route, EIGRP won't form a neighbor relationship on secondary addresses --
therefore no neighbor, no route

Joe

""Barronton, Ken"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED].
com...
| Hello All,
| Long time watcher, first time post!
| Partial config below from a 4500M.
| Problem - When redistributing can only see 100.0 network. Can't see
| secondaries of networks 101.1 or 102.1 out FastEth0.
|
| Help!?!
|
| Thanks,
| Ken
|
| !
| interface FastEthernet0
|  ip address 192.168.101.1 255.255.255.0 secondary
|  ip address 192.168.102.1 255.255.255.0 secondary
|  ip address 192.168.100.1 255.255.255.0
|  full-duplex
|  ipx network 2493
|  bridge-group 1
| !
| router eigrp 64561
|  redistribute bgp 64561 metric 1544 100 230 10 1500
|  network 192.168.101.0
|  network 192.168.102.0
|  network 192.168.100.0
|  no auto-summary
| !
| router rip
|  redistribute eigrp 64561
|  redistribute eigrp 64561
|  passive-interface Serial0.1
|  passive-interface TokenRing0
|  passive-interface TokenRing1
|  network 192.168.100.0
|  network 192.168.101.0
|  network 192.168.102.0
|  default-metric 2
|
| ___
| UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
| FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
| Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
| ---


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RES: CCIE review....

2000-07-25 Thread Henrique Issamu Terada

Answering just one question.

1) Who handles retransmition is Layer 4 , through TCP flow control.
   I'm not sure if there is also a retransmition in HDLC, but I'm sure that 
there's no one in Frame Relay , and there is in X25.

Henrique

- Mensagem original -
De: Schmendrick Dawes [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Enviada em: Sunday, May 07, 2000 2:54 AM
Para:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Assunto:CCIE review

While doing a scan of my review outline, I realized
there were several points I was unclear on in my weak
areas

1)Who handles retransmission between two ethernet
hosts
over HDLC serial links if there is a line hit? Router
or hosts?

2)What are some typical reasons that a Lec could fail
to find a lecs in ATM LANE?

3)What does a star (asterisk *) next to the S mean in
a routing table?

4)How does IPX queuing work with STUN?

Any help on any of these weak areas would be
appreciated!
Thanks



__
Do You Yahoo!?
Send instant messages  get email alerts with Yahoo! Messenger.
http://im.yahoo.com/

___
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RES: AUX Port capacity in Cisco Router?

2000-07-25 Thread Henrique Issamu Terada

Hi everybody

Paul

Aux 0 speed is up to 38.4Kbps, but it DOES support PPP.
It does not support PPP framing in microcode.
You can see more details in CMTD course, page 4-13.

Henrique


- Mensagem original -
De: paul doyl [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Enviada em: Sunday, May 07, 2000 11:33 AM
Para:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Assunto:Re: AUX Port capacity in Cisco Router?

I have no experience of implementing this but I believe that the max speed
of the Aux port is 38400 bps and cannot support PPP.
Go to
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios113ed/113ed_cr/d  
ial_c/dcprt1/dcmodem.htm#1103
As always watch the wrapping-round on the url.
HTH
Paul DOyle




From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (d4526011)
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (d4526011)
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: AUX Port capacity in Cisco Router?
Date: Sun, 07 May 2000 11:08:55 GMT


Finding an interface async 1 in Cisco 2500 series routers
(not access servers such as 2509/2511),
it can be configured as ppp encapsulation and
given an IP address.

Is it mapped to the AUX Port?
And anyone has experience to use such interface as
a dial-up remote access channel running IPCP?

Please advise.
D.D.

___
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html


Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com

___
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Integrator wanted!

2000-07-25 Thread swvaroot

Friends,

I have a Cisco 2505, laptop on Win98, and a desktop with Linux 
6.2 and I will like to connect them.

I have a PCMCIA ethernet LAN card for the laptop, an ethernet 
LAN for the PC with cables all around.

The objective is to learn Cisco router configuration and 
Linux/Win98 TCP/IP operations.  

Anyone want to volunteer to instruct me to put all the pieces to 
together over the coming week or so?

-edgar
CCNA/CCDA

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



cat5 series switch

2000-07-25 Thread Ronald James

Hope you can help:

anyone can explain the differences between cat5 series IOS and the rest of
cat models?
what IOS the cat5 is running?
any lower models which supports the same IOS as cat5 with lower price?
Is the enterprise version IOS is the same as what cat5 series can provide?


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: New Track

2000-07-25 Thread Don Orlik

To make it easier on everyone, here is the link to Cisco's Website.

CCNP Track
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/10/wwtraining/certprog/lan/programs/ccnp.ht
ml

CCDP Track
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/10/wwtraining/certprog/lan/programs/ccdp.ht
ml

I hope this helps.

Don Orlik

"Croyle, James" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Oops, I stand corrected.  No more answering emails after a 13 hour day.

 -Original Message-
 From: Brian [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 8:44 PM
 To: Croyle, James
 Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
 Subject: RE: New Track


 On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, Croyle, James wrote:

  There is no relation of either test series to each other, nor for the
CCIE
  is it a prerequisite to be a CCNA, or CCNP...  Take anything you want in
 any
  order!  =)

 You must be a CCNA before you are a CCNP
 You must be a CCDA and a CCNA before you are a CCDP

 Brian

 
  Jim Croyle
  CCNA and 2 tests from the professional series...
 
  -Original Message-
  From: Wayne Roan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
  Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 6:58 PM
  To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
  Subject: New Track
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
  Group,
 
  I am a CCNA 1.0.  Do I have to take the CCNA 2.0 before I can take
  the CCNP 2.0 tests?  I know the CCNP 1.0 retires on July 31, 2000, and I
  have not even started on the CCNP.  Therefore, I am trying to figure out
 if
  my CCNA 1.0 is valid for taking the CCNP 2.0 tests.
 
  Thanks,
 
  Wayne
 
  ___
  UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
  FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
  Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
  ___
  UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
  FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
  Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

 --
 -
 Brian Feeny, CCNA   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 318-222-2638 x 109 http://www.shreve.net/~signal
 Network Administrator   ShreveNet Inc. (ASN 11881)

 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 ---


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Radia Perlman's Interconnections

2000-07-25 Thread Jim Rampley


I know I have read from several posters that Radia Perlman's
Interconnections book is a great book.  Are we talking about the first or
2nd edition or both?  I found the first edition on a bookshelf at work, but
it was copyrighted in 1992.  Seems kinda old, but thumbing through the book
most of the concepts still seem valid.  Is this edition worth reading or
should I skip it for the 2nd edition?

Jim

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: PIX and NAT

2000-07-25 Thread Don Orlik

The answer really depends on your Corporate Security Policy.  Most security
policies want the "physical" addresses of the boxes hidden, so NAT would be
used.  If there is no security policy, then I wouldn't really worry about
using NAT.

Again, this could be one of those corporate decisions or a personal one.  It
is really up to you. If it were me implementing this solution, I would use
NAT for sure and most likely private addresses.

Regards,

Don Orlik.


Oscar Rau [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 We are implementing a DMZ which will be using public IP addresses. The
 DMZ systems interfacing the PIX interface will have a public IP
 addresses and not a private IP addresses. In this case, can GLOBAL/NAT
 statements be still used to add any valuable security to the DMZ
 systems? Is there any point in using NAT, because we do not have private

 IP addresses to the DMZ systems?

 Any thoughts/ideas for this solution appreciated.

 Thank you in advance.

 Oscar Rau
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]


 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 ---


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Deferred Packets

2000-07-25 Thread John Nemeth

On Nov 3, 10:39am, Erick wrote:
} Subject: Re: Deferred Packets
}  
}  } Defered packets occur when the ethernet is too
}  busy
}  } and the interface can't put the packet out on the
}  } wire, so the packet is dropped. This is normal. I
}  
}   Bzzt, wrong!  The packet isn't dropped, it's
}  held and transmitted when the wire is free.
} 
} My mistake. I would argue that if there are many
} deferred packets queue'd up waiting to being
} transmitted that possibly the buffer for holding these
} packets could become full, thus packets could get
} dropped. 

 True, but this would be a "dropped packets" statistic and isn't
implied by deferred packets.

}-- End of excerpt from Erick

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: TCP

2000-07-25 Thread John Nemeth

On Dec 9,  4:01am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
}
} Pls. elaborate your point of view

 It is not a "point of view", but rather part of the TCP spec.  You
asked what happens to the original piece of data when a duplicate
arrives due to the lose of an acknowledgement packet.  The short answer
is that nothing happens to the original piece of data.  The duplicate
piece of data is discarded.  A critical point the Ole didn't mention is
that another acknowledgement is sent out.  Hopefully the sender will
see the (duplicate) acknowledgement, which will cause it to stop
sending the data.  If the sender never sees an acknowledgement, for
whatever reasons, it will assume that something has happened to the
connection and will drop the connection.  See RFC793 (
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc793.html ) for all the gory details.

obRant
 I really wish people would learn to write e-mails properly.
Replies belong at the bottom of the message, so that context can easily
be seen, not at the top!  Excess text (greetings, signatures, anything
else not related to the issue) should be snipped.  There were three
standard groupstudy signtures plus personal signatures in this
message!  That's a lot of waste.  And, people shouldn't be using crappy
mail software that fails to distinguish between who wrote what.
/obRant

} Ole Drews Jensen [EMAIL PROTECTED] on 07/18/2000 08:39:06 PM
} 
} To:   harora, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
} 
} The receiver will look at the data and see that it has already received it
} and drop it.
} 
}  -Original Message-
}  From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
}  Sent:   Tuesday, July 18, 2000 8:26 AM
} 
}  Can anyone resolve my problem? My question is as follows:
} 
}  In a TCP connection, there is an acknowledgement between the sender and
}  the
}  reciever. The reciever sends the acknowledgement to the sender after the
}  reception of the packets. The sender recieves the packet and further
} sends
}  the data. Now suppose the reciever's acknowledgement is dropped in
} between
}  i.e. the sender did not recieve any ack. The sender will re-transmit the
}  data. But what will happen to the previous data which has been recieved
} by
}  the reciever. Suppose this happens for a no. of times, then the reciever
}  will have the same data again and again.
} 
}-- End of excerpt from [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Switch and SPAN port

2000-07-25 Thread William

"Oscar Rau" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 One of the issues we are facing with the switched environment is the
 ability to monitor some selected ports and VLANs. I am new to the
 switching environment.
 Is a monitor port or SPAN port identifiable or is it configured on a
 random port on the switch?
You can just pick any port on the switch as a span port.

 What would be the configuration command to implement a SPAN port on a
 switch?
set span the port that is to be monitor etc: 2/1, 2/1-5, the span port it
self
To disable it
set span disable span port

 Thank you in advance.

 Oscar Rau
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]


 ___
 UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 ---


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



FW: Resolve Networking Problems Without Opening A Case

2000-07-25 Thread Muralidhar A.



 _
 
 Cisco Technical Assistance Center (TAC)
 News Flash - July 25, 2000
 http://www.cisco.com/tac 
 
 -
 
 Cisco "TAC Top Issues" Pages For 
 LAN, Access-Dial, IBM, and Password Recovery 
 Now Available Via the Cisco TAC Web Site!
 _
 
 
 Dear Cisco Customer,
 
 I am pleased to announce the Cisco TAC Web site's new 
 "TAC Top Issues" section, located at http://www.cisco.com/tac 
 This easily accessible resource will help you quickly 
 identify and resolve common networking problems.  
 
 Developed by Cisco TAC engineers, the solutions found 
 in the "Top Issues" section represent the most typical 
 networking challenges reported by Cisco customers 
 worldwide.  Cisco TAC engineers regularly review 
 "Top Issues" solutions so that they are always fresh.  
 As specific networking problems decrease in reported 
 frequency worldwide, technical solutions are shifted 
 to an appropriate "Product" or "Technology" section 
 of the TAC Web site.  No stale content here... 
 
 "TAC Top Issues" categories currently available:
 - LAN
 - Access-Dial
 - IBM
 - Password Recovery
 
 Additional categories will be added shortly!  
 Please visit Cisco's "TAC Top Issues" section 
 today at http://www.cisco.com/tac
 
 
 Sincerely,
 Steve Gordon
 Director, Cisco TAC Web Services
 
 
 
 
 ---
 Copyright (c) 2000 Cisco Systems is a trademark, and Cisco, 
 Cisco Systems, the Cisco Systems logo are registered 
 trademarks in the U.S. or certain other countries worldwide.
 
 
 
 If you do not wish to receive future communications about 
 the latest online technical support content and tools from 
 Cisco, please respond to this e-mail and write 
 "UNSUBSCRIBE" in the subject heading.
 
 You are subscribed at: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



MCNS V2.0 Courseware

2000-07-25 Thread Bernard



Is there anyone who 
is willing to exchange his MCNS courseware with my ATM?
or, sell it to me 
outright?

Bernard
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Dial-up Access Server Trouble

2000-07-25 Thread Gary Alterson

Had someone e-mail this config today.  He just installed CiscoSecure for NT
2.4 and went from using a local user database to TACACS+ off his NT Domain
Database.  Since then his users randomly get shell sessions rather than PPP
sessions.  I went through his logs and it does, at first glance, appear
random when a user gets a shell vs. PP session.  However, when they get a
shell session they seem to be unable to get anything else for a period of
time lasting an hour or so.  According to the log, it's also not line or
interface specific as these users come in different lines each time they
try.

His Cisco Secure was setup by a Cisco SE who chose all the defaults for
setting up the users except that 1) they're coming off a NT domain database
and 2) a few of them have denied IP address ranges.  (No correlation here
either).  I haven't been able to see the config on this myself as of yet.

His router config follows.  I was going to tell him to try taking out his
"async mode interactive/autoselect during login/autosellect PPP" lines and
instead have him try "async mode dedicated" under his async interfaces.  OR,
what if I just have him remove "autoselect during login"?  I'm not sure if
either will help him or not.  He says he's had a case open with TAC for a
while now.Does anyone know if this will work?  Does anyone have any
better suggestions or a possible solution?

Thanks in advance,
Gary Alterson


-- show version --

Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) 3600 Software (C3640-IS-M), Version 11.3(7)T,  RELEASE SOFTWARE
(fc1)
Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Tue 01-Dec-98 23:58 by ccai
Image text-base: 0x600088E0, data-base: 0x6085

ROM: System Bootstrap, Version 11.1(19)AA, EARLY DEPLOYMENT RELEASE SOFTWARE
(fc
1)

dialx uptime is 12 weeks, 4 days, 26 minutes
System restarted by reload at 08:05:11 UTC Fri Apr 28 2000
System image file is "flash:c3640-is-mz.113-7.T", booted via flash

cisco 3640 (R4700) processor (revision 0x00) with 24576K/8192K bytes of
memory.
Processor board ID 11414494
R4700 processor, Implementation 33, Revision 1.0
MICA-6DM Firmware: CP ver 2310 - 6/3/1998, SP ver 2310 - 6/3/1998.
Bridging software.
X.25 software, Version 3.0.0.
Primary Rate ISDN software, Version 1.1.
1 FastEthernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
48 Serial network interface(s)
48 terminal line(s)
2 Channelized T1/PRI port(s)
DRAM configuration is 64 bits wide with parity disabled.
125K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
16384K bytes of processor board System flash (Read/Write)
2048K bytes of processor board PCMCIA Slot0 flash (Read/Write)

Configuration register is 0x2102


-- show running-config --


Building configuration...

Current configuration:
!
! Last configuration change at 15:50:36 UTC Mon Jul 24 2000 by rf
! NVRAM config last updated at 15:50:38 UTC Mon Jul 24 2000 by rf
!
version 11.3
service timestamps debug uptime
service timestamps log datetime
no service password-encryption
!
hostname removed
!
aaa new-model
aaa authentication login default local tacacs+
aaa authentication ppp default local tacacs+
aaa authorization exec default if-authenticated
aaa authorization network default tacacs+ local
aaa accounting exec default start-stop tacacs+
aaa accounting network default start-stop tacacs+
enable secret level 3 5 removed
enable secret level 7 5 removed
enable secret 5 removed
enable password removed
!
username rf password 7 removed
username test password 7 removed
username cisco password 0 removed
username alltech password 0 removed
username rfprod password 0 removed
ip host dial2 removed.147.4.2
ip host dial3 removed.147.4.9
ip name-server removed.147.4.55
ip address-pool local
isdn switch-type primary-dms100
!
!
!
controller T1 0/0
 framing esf
 linecode b8zs
 pri-group timeslots 1-24
 description 800-889-6765 630-438-1420 service(888)886-1779
!
controller T1 0/1
 framing esf
 linecode b8zs
 pri-group timeslots 1-24
 description 800-889-6765 second t1
!
!
interface FastEthernet0/0
 ip address removed.147.4.16 255.255.255.0
 ip helper-address removed.147.4.69
 ip helper-address removed.147.3.13
 ip helper-address removed.147.4.82
 ip helper-address removed.147.4.1
 ip helper-address removed.147.4.25
!
interface Serial0/0:23
 no ip address
 no ip directed-broadcast
 dialer rotary-group 1
 dialer-group 1
 isdn switch-type primary-dms100
 isdn tei-negotiation first-call
 isdn incoming-voice modem
 no fair-queue
 no cdp enable
!
interface Serial0/1:23
 no ip address
 no ip directed-broadcast
 dialer rotary-group 1
 dialer-group 1
 isdn switch-type primary-dms100
 isdn tei-negotiation first-call
 isdn incoming-voice modem
 no fair-queue
 no cdp enable
!
interface Group-Async1
 ip unnumbered FastEthernet0/0
 ip helper-address removed.147.3.13
 ip helper-address removed.147.4.69
 ip helper-address removed.147.4.25
 ip tcp header-compression passive
 encapsulation ppp
 no ip route-cache
 no ip 

what is the helper address meaning?

2000-07-25 Thread Zhang Jin



___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Simple question on VLANS ( simple answer :) )

2000-07-25 Thread Atif Awan

nope

-Original Message-
From: joe [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Newsgroups: groupstudy.cisco
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tuesday, July 25, 2000 8:41 PM
Subject: Simple question on VLANS


Can I enable communication between two vlans without using a MSFC card or a
router.


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]


___
UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]