Re: Bring equipments in and out of US

2000-09-17 Thread Casey Fahey


Hmm.  I remember one of our trainers flew in from Canada and brought some 
1600s, what they did was specify on the commercial invoice that the routers 
were being sent for a limited time and for a specific purpose.

I can't remember if he got a refund of duty after the fact or didn't pay in 
the first place.

What I would do is call Fedex and ask for the international desk.  They are 
pretty sharp and can point you in the right direction.

HTH,

Casey

From: "Jason" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: "Jason" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Bring equipments in and out of US
Date: Sat, 16 Sep 2000 15:03:24 -0700

I need to bring a few routers out of US and maybe in a couple of months,
bring them back again. What can I do to avoid any inport and export taxes
since I plan to bring the same equipments in and out for personal use. But
I'm sure I'll have a hard time convincing them that I have 6 routers for
personal use !! :-P

Anybody has any experiences, trainers, etc , please let me know.

Thanks !!



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ACL Log

2000-09-17 Thread Mohammed Hussain
Title: ACL Log





Hi


I applied access-list for serial inbound to see the traffic. But logging is now
showing the source  destination ports. How can I see the tcp  udp ports in log?


access-list 101 permit ip any any log-input


2w5d: %SEC-6-IPACCESSLOGP: list 101 permitted tcp 192.168.103.37(0) (Serial0 *HD
LC*) - 192.168.100.149(0), 1 packet
2w5d: %SEC-6-IPACCESSLOGP: list 101 permitted tcp 192.168.103.55(0) (Serial0 *HD
LC*) - 192.168.100.158(0), 1 packet
2w5d: %SEC-6-IPACCESSLOGP: list 101 permitted udp 192.168.103.55(0) (Serial0 *HD
LC*) - 192.168.100.158(0), 1 packet
2w5d: %SEC-6-IPACCESSLOGP: list 101 permitted tcp 192.168.103.67(0) (Serial0 *HD
LC*) - 192.168.100.74(0), 1 packet



Mohammed Hussain





Re: max no of connections for vty

2000-09-17 Thread Fanglo MA

I try on my 2611 with IOS 12.0 (8) Enterprise. line vty 0 133 is allowed.

"Kristopher B. Climie" wrote:

 I cannot find anyway of getting it to work on my 2620.  I have tried both
 "vty 0 29" and the "ip alias 192.168.1.1 3001" suggestion.  Below is the
 output.  (and if you arent set up for a monotype font, the ^ is below the 5)

 K

 2620#conf t
 Enter configuration commands, one per line.  End with CNTL/Z.
 2620(config)#int loopback 0
 2620(config-if)#ip address 192.168.1.2 255.255.255.0
 2620(config-if)#ip alias 192.168.1.1 3001
 2620(config)#line vty 5 29
   ^
 % Invalid input detected at '^' marker.

 2620(config)#

 -
 Kristopher B. Climie, CCNP, CCDP

 ""John Kaberna"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
 03da01c01efa$ac4c1b20$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:03da01c01efa$ac4c1b20$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Maybe it works on 2500's and not 2600's.  Anyone have a 2600 to try on?
 
  - Original Message -
  From: Atif Awan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: John Kaberna [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Thomas Peroutka
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]; jason yee [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Friday, September 15, 2000 2:53 AM
  Subject: Re: max no of connections for vty
 
 
   works on my 2509.. Actually you need a terminal server for it i think ,,
  am
   not that sure ..
  
   - Original Message -
   From: "John Kaberna" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   To: "Thomas Peroutka" [EMAIL PROTECTED]; "jason yee"
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Sent: Friday, September 15, 2000 1:20 PM
   Subject: Re: max no of connections for vty
  
  
I tried on my 2600 at home.  Wouldnt allow it.  Have you actually done
  it?
   
- Original Message -
From: Thomas Peroutka [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: jason yee [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, September 15, 2000 12:59 AM
Subject: Re: max no of connections for vty
   
   
router(config)#line vty 0 197
   
197 is the maximum number of telnet sessions; you can use any number
in between, so for your constellation (24 students, one teacher) for
   example
router(config)#line vty 0 25
   
Friday, September 15, 2000, 7:24:13 AM, you wrote:
   
jy hi ,
jy I am a instructor currently delivering CCNA course.The
jy setup of the classroom consists of 2 routers but I
jy have got 24 students telnetting to the 2 routers . I
jy have problems for them telnetting to the routers
jy because the max no of connections for the telnet
jy sessions are 5 , my question is how can I increase the
jy no. of connections so as to accomodate all the
jy students without buying more routers.
   
   
jy thanks
   
jy suaveguru
   
jy __
jy Do You Yahoo!?
jy Yahoo! Mail - Free email you can access from anywhere!
jy http://mail.yahoo.com/
   
jy **NOTE: New CCNA/CCDA List has been formed. For more information
 go
  to
jy http://www.groupstudy.com/list/Associates.html
jy _
jy UPDATED Posting Guidelines:
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jy FAQ, list archives, and subscription info:
 http://www.groupstudy.com
jy Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   
   
   
   
   
--
Viele Grüsse/ Best regards,
 Thomasmailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   
   
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Re: Homelab setup

2000-09-17 Thread Ejay Hire

I use a Linux PC with multiple IP addresses.  It can also source/accept RIP 
updates.


Original Message Follows
From: rick [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: rick [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Homelab setup
Date: Sat, 16 Sep 2000 10:59:48 -0500 (CDT)


Consider adding a  couple of ethernet loopback plugs to
simulate lans.

rick


On Sat, 16 Sep 2000, michael wrote:

 Date: Sat, 16 Sep 2000 14:00:08 GMT
 From: michael [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Newsgroups: groupstudy.cisco
 Subject: Homelab setup
 
 Hi,group
   I have 1 2501,1 2502 and 1 2504,also two Back to Back cables and
 only one PC. I want to know  what is the best way to setup a lab with
 these equipments.Do I need any other cables(of course I have the
 console cable)?
 Thanks.
 
 Respectfully,
  Michael Ritchie
 
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Secondary IP for Catalyst switches?

2000-09-17 Thread Derek Chung

Can a secondary IP be assigned to a Catalyst switch SC0 interface
temporarily?
If so, once I logon (by console/telnet) to the switch, I can troubleshoot
the connectivity to an attached PC/server by pinging its IP address
(assuming the secondary IP temporarily added is the same subnet as this
PC/server IP address.)
This will help troubleshooting the functionality of the TCPIP stack of the
PC/server, don't you think?





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Re: max no of connections for vty

2000-09-17 Thread Kristopher B. Climie

Yup, I don't have the enterprise edition, you do.
K

-
"Fanglo MA" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I try on my 2611 with IOS 12.0 (8) Enterprise. line vty 0 133 is allowed.

 "Kristopher B. Climie" wrote:

  I cannot find anyway of getting it to work on my 2620.  I have tried
both
  "vty 0 29" and the "ip alias 192.168.1.1 3001" suggestion.  Below is the
  output.  (and if you arent set up for a monotype font, the ^ is below
the 5)
 
  K
 
  2620#conf t
  Enter configuration commands, one per line.  End with CNTL/Z.
  2620(config)#int loopback 0
  2620(config-if)#ip address 192.168.1.2 255.255.255.0
  2620(config-if)#ip alias 192.168.1.1 3001
  2620(config)#line vty 5 29
^
  % Invalid input detected at '^' marker.
 
  2620(config)#
 
  -
  Kristopher B. Climie, CCNP, CCDP
 
  ""John Kaberna"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
  03da01c01efa$ac4c1b20$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:03da01c01efa$ac4c1b20$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
   Maybe it works on 2500's and not 2600's.  Anyone have a 2600 to try
on?
  
   - Original Message -
   From: Atif Awan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   To: John Kaberna [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Thomas Peroutka
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]; jason yee [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Sent: Friday, September 15, 2000 2:53 AM
   Subject: Re: max no of connections for vty
  
  
works on my 2509.. Actually you need a terminal server for it i
think ,,
   am
not that sure ..
   
- Original Message -
From: "John Kaberna" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Thomas Peroutka" [EMAIL PROTECTED]; "jason yee"
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, September 15, 2000 1:20 PM
Subject: Re: max no of connections for vty
   
   
 I tried on my 2600 at home.  Wouldnt allow it.  Have you actually
done
   it?

 - Original Message -
 From: Thomas Peroutka [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: jason yee [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Friday, September 15, 2000 12:59 AM
 Subject: Re: max no of connections for vty


 router(config)#line vty 0 197

 197 is the maximum number of telnet sessions; you can use any
number
 in between, so for your constellation (24 students, one teacher)
for
example
 router(config)#line vty 0 25

 Friday, September 15, 2000, 7:24:13 AM, you wrote:

 jy hi ,
 jy I am a instructor currently delivering CCNA course.The
 jy setup of the classroom consists of 2 routers but I
 jy have got 24 students telnetting to the 2 routers . I
 jy have problems for them telnetting to the routers
 jy because the max no of connections for the telnet
 jy sessions are 5 , my question is how can I increase the
 jy no. of connections so as to accomodate all the
 jy students without buying more routers.


 jy thanks

 jy suaveguru

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

 jy **NOTE: New CCNA/CCDA List has been formed. For more
information
  go
   to
 jy http://www.groupstudy.com/list/Associates.html
 jy _
 jy UPDATED Posting Guidelines:
   http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
 jy FAQ, list archives, and subscription info:
  http://www.groupstudy.com
 jy Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]





 --
 Viele Grüsse/ Best regards,
  Thomas
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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  UPDATED 

MAU trouble shooting

2000-09-17 Thread Circusnuts



Does this mean my MAU is fried ??? It has never come off 
initializing (left the routers run connected all night)...


TokenRing0 is initializing, line 
protocol is down Hardware is TMS380, address is .30c0.ec2a (bia 
.30c0.ec2a) Internet address is 195.5.5.10/24 MTU 4464 
bytes, BW 16000 Kbit, DLY 630 usec, rely 255/255, load 1/255 
Encapsulation SNAP, loopback not set, keepalive set (10 sec) ARP type: 
SNAP, ARP Timeout 04:00:00 Ring speed: 16 Mbps Single ring 
node, Transparent Bridge capable Source bridging enabled, srn 49904 bn 
0 trn 49904 proxy explorers disabled, spanning explorer 
disabled, NetBIOS cache disable

Thanks !!!
Phil


Re: Obscure (?) questions

2000-09-17 Thread Kristopher B. Climie

Sorry, suppose I should have mentioned that-

In the Exam Cram for CCIE, on pp. 396, the question asks what the rif is
from PC-a to PC-c.  PC-a is on a token ring and pc-c isn't, it is on
etherenet.  Well, that is great I understand that the RIF will be removed.
However, the question got me thinking, what about the RIF from PC-a to PC-b
which is on a seperate token ring.  The disparraging part is that the
virtual ring on bridge 1 is 10 and the virtual ring on bridge 2 is 0x10 (or
16).  My question is this -- doesn't the virutal ring number need to be the
same among all bridges?


Also, while going over ATM LANE, I began to wonder exactly how broadcasts
are handled.  I understand that the BUS is supposed to handle all
broadcasts, and also that an LE_ARP request is maps MAC address to ATM
addresses.  That got me wondering how an IP ARP request is handled.  Does
the client send the ARP to the BUS, which then forwards it via its
point-to-Multicast Forward vcc, or does the BUS just handle it on its own?

Thanks,
K

-
Kristopher B. Climie, CCNP, CCDP

""Atif Awan"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
005001c0203d$538828a0$291a87cb@atifawan">news:005001c0203d$538828a0$291a87cb@atifawan...
 Can you please tell us from where did you get hold of these questions ?
 Something wrong here :-)




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RE: CCIE Questions...

2000-09-17 Thread joel.studtmann

Replying out of order:

Question 2)  Packet is damaged and has a bad CRC at the datalink layer, so
is dropped by next switch or router or end PC that verifies the CRC.  (A hub
wouldn't notice).  Retransmission is sent from the original source (IP host)
after not receiving an acknowledgement for that packet from the destination.

Question 3)  Collison occurs, and is detected by Router B.  Router B then
retransmits the packet.  Source MAC address will be Router B, as the router
changes the source MAC to itself and the destination to the next hop.  (In
this case, computer 2)

Question 4)  Layer 3 sources and destinations will not change.  (Ignoring
issues such as NAT here, for simplicity).  Layer 2 MAC addresses will change
whenever the packet crosses a layer-3 device, as the router removes the old
datalink information, examines the layer 3 information, and repackages the
packet for the next hop device, changing the destination MAC address to the
next hop and the source MAC address to itself.

Back to Question 1)  My first answer is that the packet is simply lost.  The
protocol is simply IP, which provides best-effort delivery, and wouldn't be
retransmitted by the host (assuming it's not a TCP packet).  I'm not
completely familiar with all types of  serial line encapsulations, but I
believe it would be retransmitted by the router if it was over an x25 link.
Possibly PPP as well. Not really sure:  What's the answer?

My two bits,

Joel Studtmann



-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Derek Chung
Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2000 2:19 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: CCIE Questions...


Question 1:
Router A and Router B are configured to route IP to each other over a serial
line. Host A is connected to Router A and Host B is connected to Router B. A
packet is sent from Host A to host B. A hit on the serial line causes an
error in the packet. Retransmission is sent by:

Question 2:
During the middle of a TCP conversion across a routed backbone, the network
receives a voltage spike and several of the packets are damaged. Where are
the packets retransmitted from?

Question 3:
Computer1 [Segment
A]---RouterA--RouterB--[SegmentB]--Compu
ter2
A packet is sent to Computer 2 from Computer 1. A collision occurs on
Segment B. Which device will retransmit the frame and what will the source
MAC address be (when the packet actually reaches Segment B)?

Question 4:
When computer A sends a frame to computer B across many routers, how will
the source and destination layer 3 addresses change? How will the source and
destination layer 2 addresses change?




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Re: Secondary IP for Catalyst switches?

2000-09-17 Thread NeoLink2000

In a message dated 9/17/00 8:42:12 AM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 Can a secondary IP be assigned to a Catalyst switch SC0 interface
temporarily?
If so, once I logon (by console/telnet) to the switch, I can troubleshoot
the connectivity to an attached PC/server by pinging its IP address
(assuming the secondary IP temporarily added is the same subnet as this
PC/server IP address.)
This will help troubleshooting the functionality of the TCPIP stack of the
PC/server, don't you think?
 

Hey, 
   Instead of going through all of this what I think you could do is try 
to ping the server from a router that is on the other side of the switch. It 
would make it through the switch because it (as you know) uses layer 2. This 
way you could test how it would probably run in a real world situation: 
PC-switch, switch-router, router-switch, switch to server. I don't 
know...this is how I would do it...I would also place a sniffer on one of the 
lines to break down the TCP/IP stack like you wanted. Hope I helped a 
little...Good luck. ;)

Mark Zabludovsky ~ CCNA, CCDA
A HREF="mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]"[EMAIL PROTECTED]/A

"Destiny is not a matter of chance, it is a matter of choice; it is not a 
thing to be waited for, it is a thing to be achieved."
  
  ~William Jennings Bryan~

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CCIE Lab 30 Sep for Swap

2000-09-17 Thread Richard Dollins


Hello

I have a CCIE Lab date of September 30 in RTP, would like to swap with
someone for a RTP date in November or early December.. Email me if you
can swap..

Thanks

Rick

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Foundation 2.0

2000-09-17 Thread Adegbemi Tolulope V.

Hello folks,

Good day. Please I will like to have your views on this:

I am planning to take FRS 2.0 (Foundation 2.0) in the next couple of days. I 
have visited Cisco Site and couldn't get much info on this exam. Please I 
need to know those of you who have taken this exam. I really need to know if 
the exam has gone live. I called my testing Centre in Nigeria and they said 
they have not started testing on the exam.

I'll appreciate dropping any information for me.

Thanks.




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Re: Foundation 2.0

2000-09-17 Thread John Kaberna

Foundation was available as of August 28th.  There isn't an exam outline
posted on CCO yet.  If you are taking it in the next couple of days and
don't know what's on it I suggest you consider rescheduling.   This test
covers Building Cisco Remote Access Networks, Building Multilayer Switch
Networks, and Building Scalable Cisco Networks.  All 3 are Cisco Press books
that you can buy or courses you can take.  The test is 150 questions and
they give you 2 1/2 hours.  I called Sylvan Friday and talked to them about
it as I am scheduled to take it in 2 days.

John

- Original Message -
From: Adegbemi Tolulope V. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2000 8:19 AM
Subject: Foundation 2.0


 Hello folks,

 Good day. Please I will like to have your views on this:

 I am planning to take FRS 2.0 (Foundation 2.0) in the next couple of days.
I
 have visited Cisco Site and couldn't get much info on this exam. Please I
 need to know those of you who have taken this exam. I really need to know
if
 the exam has gone live. I called my testing Centre in Nigeria and they
said
 they have not started testing on the exam.

 I'll appreciate dropping any information for me.

 Thanks.




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

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Packet Generator

2000-09-17 Thread ccie10

Anyone have info/recommendations for a packet generator?

thanks


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What is Loopback address for IPv6?

2000-09-17 Thread Manishkumar Patel

Hi All!
Can anybody tell me what is Loopback address for IPv6.
Any site good for IPv6 concepts?
Thanks
MK


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Re: Homelab setup

2000-09-17 Thread Billha

Rather than buying ethernet loopback plugs just use the command 'no
keepalive' under your ethernet interface and the interface will be up/up.

Regards,

Bill.
rick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED].
us...

 Consider adding a  couple of ethernet loopback plugs to
 simulate lans.

 rick


 On Sat, 16 Sep 2000, michael wrote:

 Date: Sat, 16 Sep 2000 14:00:08 GMT
 From: michael [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Newsgroups: groupstudy.cisco
 Subject: Homelab setup
 
 Hi,group
   I have 1 2501,1 2502 and 1 2504,also two Back to Back cables and
 only one PC. I want to know  what is the best way to setup a lab with
 these equipments.Do I need any other cables(of course I have the
 console cable)?
 Thanks.
 
 Respectfully,
  Michael Ritchie
 
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Re: Packet Generator

2000-09-17 Thread Billha

Yes, www.solarwinds.net used to have an application called 'WANkiller',
great for packet generation and to fully load a link.

Regards,
Bill.


"ccie10" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
8q2o98$nle$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8q2o98$nle$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Anyone have info/recommendations for a packet generator?

 thanks


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Re: Packet Generator

2000-09-17 Thread Billha

More info...

http://www.solarwinds.net/Tools/Professional+/index.htm

WANkiller
The WAN Killer is a Wide Area Network traffic generator. Set the circuit
bandwidth and the percent of load needed and WAN Killer will generate random
traffic. The packet size can also be adjusted.


Regards,
Bill.


"Billha" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
8q2pb6$ogd$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8q2pb6$ogd$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Yes, www.solarwinds.net used to have an application called 'WANkiller',
 great for packet generation and to fully load a link.

 Regards,
 Bill.


 "ccie10" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
 8q2o98$nle$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8q2o98$nle$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Anyone have info/recommendations for a packet generator?
 
  thanks
 
 
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Re: What is Loopback address for IPv6?

2000-09-17 Thread Atif Awan

The loop back address in IPv6 is

   :::::::1

This can be shortned to :

  ::1

A nice basic article can be found on :

http://www.samw.com/knowledge/whitepapers27.asp?whitepaperid=27institution%
5Fid=

Regards

-Original Message-
From: Manishkumar Patel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Cisco_LIST [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sunday, September 17, 2000 11:39 AM
Subject: What is Loopback address for IPv6?


Hi All!
Can anybody tell me what is Loopback address for IPv6.
Any site good for IPv6 concepts?
Thanks
MK


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Re: Obscure (?) questions

2000-09-17 Thread Atif Awan

1) It depends. If you have RSRB configured then the virtual ring number must
be the same on both the bridges whereas this virtual ring number can be
different if you are using DLSW.

2) Yes you are right about the ARP requests. When a LEC receives an ARP
request it forwards the request to the BUS using the multicast send VCC. The
BUS then forwards the request to all the LECs through the multicast forward
VCC. The LEC with the destination device attached will also receive this ARP
request and will forward the request to all ports in the corresponding VLAN.
The destination device will service the request and then the LEC will have
to uni cast this reply back to the oriiginator. Here is where the
LE_ARP_REQUEST is generated in order to map the MAC address of the source to
a NSAP address. In short the IP ARP request is serviced by the BUS while the
LE_ARP_REQUEST is serviced by the LES. Eventually a Data Direct VCC will be
established between the two LECs. There are some other issues before the
successfull establishment of a data direct vcc but i should rather not go
into the details :)

My recommendation is that if you need more insight into ATM LANE and other
advanced switching concepts get a hold of Cisco LAN Switching by Kenedy
Clark.

Regards
Atif

-Original Message-
From: Kristopher B. Climie [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Newsgroups: groupstudy.cisco
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sunday, September 17, 2000 9:09 AM
Subject: Re: Obscure (?) questions


Sorry, suppose I should have mentioned that-

In the Exam Cram for CCIE, on pp. 396, the question asks what the rif is
from PC-a to PC-c.  PC-a is on a token ring and pc-c isn't, it is on
etherenet.  Well, that is great I understand that the RIF will be removed.
However, the question got me thinking, what about the RIF from PC-a to PC-b
which is on a seperate token ring.  The disparraging part is that the
virtual ring on bridge 1 is 10 and the virtual ring on bridge 2 is 0x10 (or
16).  My question is this -- doesn't the virutal ring number need to be the
same among all bridges?


Also, while going over ATM LANE, I began to wonder exactly how broadcasts
are handled.  I understand that the BUS is supposed to handle all
broadcasts, and also that an LE_ARP request is maps MAC address to ATM
addresses.  That got me wondering how an IP ARP request is handled.  Does
the client send the ARP to the BUS, which then forwards it via its
point-to-Multicast Forward vcc, or does the BUS just handle it on its own?

Thanks,
K

-
Kristopher B. Climie, CCNP, CCDP

""Atif Awan"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
005001c0203d$538828a0$291a87cb@atifawan">news:005001c0203d$538828a0$291a87cb@atifawan...
 Can you please tell us from where did you get hold of these questions ?
 Something wrong here :-)




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Re: CCIE Questions...

2000-09-17 Thread Ed

I agree with your answers excpet for #1.  Just because a transport layer
protocol hasn't been specified, I don't think we can assume UDP.  I would
have to guess that the original host retransmits.  I don't think the router
would,
since it doesn't care about anything above the 3rd layer unless otherwise
configured with QOS type stuff...

Ed
""joel.studtmann"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Replying out of order:

 Question 2)  Packet is damaged and has a bad CRC at the datalink layer, so
 is dropped by next switch or router or end PC that verifies the CRC.  (A
hub
 wouldn't notice).  Retransmission is sent from the original source (IP
host)
 after not receiving an acknowledgement for that packet from the
destination.

 Question 3)  Collison occurs, and is detected by Router B.  Router B then
 retransmits the packet.  Source MAC address will be Router B, as the
router
 changes the source MAC to itself and the destination to the next hop.  (In
 this case, computer 2)

 Question 4)  Layer 3 sources and destinations will not change.  (Ignoring
 issues such as NAT here, for simplicity).  Layer 2 MAC addresses will
change
 whenever the packet crosses a layer-3 device, as the router removes the
old
 datalink information, examines the layer 3 information, and repackages the
 packet for the next hop device, changing the destination MAC address to
the
 next hop and the source MAC address to itself.

 Back to Question 1)  My first answer is that the packet is simply lost.
The
 protocol is simply IP, which provides best-effort delivery, and wouldn't
be
 retransmitted by the host (assuming it's not a TCP packet).  I'm not
 completely familiar with all types of  serial line encapsulations, but I
 believe it would be retransmitted by the router if it was over an x25
link.
 Possibly PPP as well. Not really sure:  What's the answer?

 My two bits,

 Joel Studtmann



 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
 Derek Chung
 Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2000 2:19 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: CCIE Questions...


 Question 1:
 Router A and Router B are configured to route IP to each other over a
serial
 line. Host A is connected to Router A and Host B is connected to Router B.
A
 packet is sent from Host A to host B. A hit on the serial line causes an
 error in the packet. Retransmission is sent by:

 Question 2:
 During the middle of a TCP conversion across a routed backbone, the
network
 receives a voltage spike and several of the packets are damaged. Where are
 the packets retransmitted from?

 Question 3:
 Computer1 [Segment

A]---RouterA--RouterB--[SegmentB]--Compu
 ter2
 A packet is sent to Computer 2 from Computer 1. A collision occurs on
 Segment B. Which device will retransmit the frame and what will the source
 MAC address be (when the packet actually reaches Segment B)?

 Question 4:
 When computer A sends a frame to computer B across many routers, how will
 the source and destination layer 3 addresses change? How will the source
and
 destination layer 2 addresses change?




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Re: Packet Generator

2000-09-17 Thread ccie10

Is anybody aware of any freeware/shareware tools for packet generation? I
need it for load testing OC3/12 interfaces?


""ccie10"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
8q2o98$nle$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8q2o98$nle$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Anyone have info/recommendations for a packet generator?

 thanks


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Exam Sequence for CCNP/CCDP?

2000-09-17 Thread Glenn Johnson


Does anyone know if the CID exam be taken before any of the other three
CCNP/CCDP exams?

I was unaware of any sequence requirements, just Cisco's suggested path,
until I noticed in a few CID books that this exam "could" be taken after the
other three were completed.

Thanks

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RE: CCIE Questions...

2000-09-17 Thread joel.studtmann

Actually, I never specified that the packet in questioin number 1 had to be
UDP.  Question 1 only specifies that the routers are routing IP.  It could
be an ICMP, IGMP, RIP, EIGRP, etc... packet.  Not all IP packets use a
transport protocol.  Granted, 99% of user traffic does, but the question
doesn't specify.  I'm just not completely familiar with all of the possible
data-link protocols available over a serial link, and which ones (if any)
would detect the bad packet and have the last station retransmit.  I think
x25 would, as its overengineered for providing error-checking, and think PPP
might.

Joel Studtmann

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Ed
Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2000 7:16 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: CCIE Questions...


I agree with your answers excpet for #1.  Just because a transport layer
protocol hasn't been specified, I don't think we can assume UDP.  I would
have to guess that the original host retransmits.  I don't think the router
would,
since it doesn't care about anything above the 3rd layer unless otherwise
configured with QOS type stuff...

Ed
""joel.studtmann"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Replying out of order:

 Question 2)  Packet is damaged and has a bad CRC at the datalink layer, so
 is dropped by next switch or router or end PC that verifies the CRC.  (A
hub
 wouldn't notice).  Retransmission is sent from the original source (IP
host)
 after not receiving an acknowledgement for that packet from the
destination.

 Question 3)  Collison occurs, and is detected by Router B.  Router B then
 retransmits the packet.  Source MAC address will be Router B, as the
router
 changes the source MAC to itself and the destination to the next hop.  (In
 this case, computer 2)

 Question 4)  Layer 3 sources and destinations will not change.  (Ignoring
 issues such as NAT here, for simplicity).  Layer 2 MAC addresses will
change
 whenever the packet crosses a layer-3 device, as the router removes the
old
 datalink information, examines the layer 3 information, and repackages the
 packet for the next hop device, changing the destination MAC address to
the
 next hop and the source MAC address to itself.

 Back to Question 1)  My first answer is that the packet is simply lost.
The
 protocol is simply IP, which provides best-effort delivery, and wouldn't
be
 retransmitted by the host (assuming it's not a TCP packet).  I'm not
 completely familiar with all types of  serial line encapsulations, but I
 believe it would be retransmitted by the router if it was over an x25
link.
 Possibly PPP as well. Not really sure:  What's the answer?

 My two bits,

 Joel Studtmann



 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
 Derek Chung
 Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2000 2:19 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: CCIE Questions...


 Question 1:
 Router A and Router B are configured to route IP to each other over a
serial
 line. Host A is connected to Router A and Host B is connected to Router B.
A
 packet is sent from Host A to host B. A hit on the serial line causes an
 error in the packet. Retransmission is sent by:

 Question 2:
 During the middle of a TCP conversion across a routed backbone, the
network
 receives a voltage spike and several of the packets are damaged. Where are
 the packets retransmitted from?

 Question 3:
 Computer1 [Segment

A]---RouterA--RouterB--[SegmentB]--Compu
 ter2
 A packet is sent to Computer 2 from Computer 1. A collision occurs on
 Segment B. Which device will retransmit the frame and what will the source
 MAC address be (when the packet actually reaches Segment B)?

 Question 4:
 When computer A sends a frame to computer B across many routers, how will
 the source and destination layer 3 addresses change? How will the source
and
 destination layer 2 addresses change?




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Re: Support Exam

2000-09-17 Thread Randy Carlson

I just passed Routing 2.0 this week and Switching 2.0 the week before (so I am
on a roll).  Support is next.  The BCRAN test will be tough because I have a
limited amount of time on the As5200/As5300 products.

V/R
FRC

Rah Sta wrote:

 What advice do you have for thepassing the BCRAN exam? I plan on taking this
 exam next. PEACE

Raheem

 From: "Sheahan, Ryan" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reply-To: "Sheahan, Ryan" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: "'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Support Exam
 Date: Tue, 12 Sep 2000 19:13:45 -0400
 
 I passed the BCRAN exam this past weekend with an 853.  Not the best score,
 but I got it over with.
 
 Thanks to all for the help.  One more to go, Support 2.0
 
 
 Any advice would be much appreciated.
 
 Thanks,
 
 Ryan Sheahan
 Internetworking Engineer CCNA, NCAE
 Greenwhich Technology Partners
 
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Re: Bring equipments in and out of US

2000-09-17 Thread Kevin Wigle

Well, I have done this from Canada to the US and back and the method is
simple.

Go to a border point with your stuff. (before you travel or the same day)

Go into customs and fill out the form "Identification of Articles for
Temporary Exportation", form Y 38 (94/02)

for each item on the back you fill out:

Article
Make
License or Serial No.

An agent will stamp it.

That's it.

I have a card that I carry permanently in my notebook case.  It has the
notebook and a Palm Pilot on it.

So when I return to Canada and a Canadian customs agent wants to make sure I
didn't buy that stuff in the US I show that card and does it.

I would think the US must have something similar.

Kevin Wigle


- Original Message -
From: "Casey Fahey" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, 17 September, 2000 03:16
Subject: Re: Bring equipments in and out of US



 Hmm.  I remember one of our trainers flew in from Canada and brought some
 1600s, what they did was specify on the commercial invoice that the
routers
 were being sent for a limited time and for a specific purpose.

 I can't remember if he got a refund of duty after the fact or didn't pay
in
 the first place.

 What I would do is call Fedex and ask for the international desk.  They
are
 pretty sharp and can point you in the right direction.

 HTH,

 Casey

 From: "Jason" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reply-To: "Jason" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Bring equipments in and out of US
 Date: Sat, 16 Sep 2000 15:03:24 -0700
 
 I need to bring a few routers out of US and maybe in a couple of months,
 bring them back again. What can I do to avoid any inport and export taxes
 since I plan to bring the same equipments in and out for personal use.
But
 I'm sure I'll have a hard time convincing them that I have 6 routers for
 personal use !! :-P
 
 Anybody has any experiences, trainers, etc , please let me know.
 
 Thanks !!
 
 
 
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CCIE LAB Study AppleTalk Question

2000-09-17 Thread Kirk Bollinger

I have two routers connected via tokenring and a 64K serial crossover.

I'm running RTMP over the tokenring and appletalk EIGRP over the serial
link. My routes are favoring the serial link.

Obviously with DVRP's both paths are seen as one hop.

I played with both the bandwidth and delay on the serial link but, it
wasn't enough to change the route.

How can I get this to reflect the best path?

I looked into administrative distance and offset list but could find an
answer there.

Assuming end stations on the tokenring - use both RTMP and EIGRP on it?
 - yes, this works but I would think there should be another way.


Also, the routes are list as [1/G] - the 1 is hops what is the G ??

-Kirk

With the serial link shut

VENUS#sh apple rou 198
Codes: R - RTMP derived, E - EIGRP derived, C - connected, A - AURP
   S - static  P - proxy
3 routes in internet

The first zone listed for each entry is its default (primary) zone.

R Net 198-198 [1/G] via 40.1, 1 sec, TokenRing0, zone ether
  Route installed 00:00:01, updated 1 sec ago
  Next hop: 40.1, 1 hop away
  Zone list provided by 40.1
  Valid zones: "ether"
  There is 1 path for this route
* RTMP path, to neighbor 40.1, installed 00:00:01 via TokenRing0
   Composite metric is 256524800, 1 hop
VENUS#

Normal Operation


VENUS#sh apple ro 198
Codes: R - RTMP derived, E - EIGRP derived, C - connected, A - AURP
   S - static  P - proxy
3 routes in internet

The first zone listed for each entry is its default (primary) zone.

E Net 198-198 [1/G] via 101.43, 238 sec, Serial1, zone ether
  Route installed 00:11:02, updated 238 secs ago
  Next hop: 101.43, 1 hop away
  Zone list provided by 101.43
  Valid zones: "ether"
  There is 1 path for this route
* EIGRP path, to neighbor 101.43, installed 00:03:58 via Serial1
   Composite metric is 2195456, 1 hop
Delay is 537600 microseconds, minimum bandwidth is 1657856 Kbit
Reliability 255/255, minimum MTU 1500 bytes
Loading 1/255, 1 EIGRP hop
Path is derived from CONNECTED from 2
Path's external metric is 0 hops

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Re: Exam Sequence for CCNP/CCDP?

2000-09-17 Thread Kevin Wigle

I'm not aware of any sequence requirements like you CAN'T take this exam
before that one.

However, if for example you take and pass CID before CCDA (assuming you have
all the others) you won't get your CCDP.  Even though CCDA is a "junior"
exam in this case - the CCDP requires it.

So, take them in any order depending on your current knowledge/experience
but until the entire requirements list is completed you won't get your
initials.

In general I think those books are just suggesting a logical path of exams
since I think it is commonly thought that you start at the beginning and
make your way to the end.  Since CID and CIT are at the top of their paths,
it is thought that you should do the junior (or intermediate) stuff first.

Actually, it's your choice.  But again, you may pass the "senior" exams
first but you still have to pass the other stuff before you get the
initials.

Kevin Wigle
CCDP/CCNP.


- Original Message -
From: "Glenn Johnson" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, 17 September, 2000 13:55
Subject: Exam Sequence for CCNP/CCDP?



 Does anyone know if the CID exam be taken before any of the other three
 CCNP/CCDP exams?

 I was unaware of any sequence requirements, just Cisco's suggested path,
 until I noticed in a few CID books that this exam "could" be taken after
the
 other three were completed.

 Thanks

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Medium enterprise design assistance

2000-09-17 Thread Shane Stockman

I am currently designing a new network for a medium size enterprise.Here are 
the details .
17 remote sites (8 users currently)
1 central site (HQ)
Wan - ISDN from each site running to PSTN. From PSTN PRI is used to central 
site.
For the remote sites I am using a 1720 with a isdn WIC.
At HQ I will use a 3662(1x 2port ISDN PRI module  1xdigital modem(30))
1x Pix Firewall and a 2924 in a DMZ area.
On the inside I will use a 5500 for the servers and running gigabit to the 
servers.
I initially thought of creating a 6500 backbone running giga ether and 
connecting all the servers to the backbone but financial constraints might 
not make it advisable.
Any solutions or suggestions.
Thanks
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Re: Medium enterprise design assistance

2000-09-17 Thread Ed

No offense meant here, Shane, but this really isn't the place to have people
do your job for you.  Next time, at least make it look like a study
question...


""Shane Stockman"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I am currently designing a new network for a medium size enterprise.Here
are
 the details .
 17 remote sites (8 users currently)
 1 central site (HQ)
 Wan - ISDN from each site running to PSTN. From PSTN PRI is used to
central
 site.
 For the remote sites I am using a 1720 with a isdn WIC.
 At HQ I will use a 3662(1x 2port ISDN PRI module  1xdigital modem(30))
 1x Pix Firewall and a 2924 in a DMZ area.
 On the inside I will use a 5500 for the servers and running gigabit to the
 servers.
 I initially thought of creating a 6500 backbone running giga ether and
 connecting all the servers to the backbone but financial constraints might
 not make it advisable.
 Any solutions or suggestions.
 Thanks
 _
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Novell Server for your Home Lab ! (MS-DOS TSR Running on your PC)

2000-09-17 Thread Billha

Back in '95 I run an MS-DOS App (60k TSR) on my 386 turning it into a mini
Novell Server that sends out SAPs etc.

Program called 'SerView'

I am trying to locate the program again to use as a Novell Server in my Home
Lab, and will pay for it.

All I have been able to find out is the following:

http://www.home-run.com/ornet11.html

I have e-mailed without a response back.

Can anyone tell me where I can locate/buy the software ?





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CIPT 2.0 Exam

2000-09-17 Thread peter whittle

Hi,

Is anyone upto date on CIPT?

Is the CIPT exam 9E0-569 an updated version to reflect CIPT 2.0 course
changes and Cisco Call Manager v3.0xxx?

I gather that there was a new Beta 9E1-569 on trial in August, has this
now been released?

Does anyone know where the syllabus / exam objectives are? The entries
on CCO do not have active hypertext links.

Thanks

Peter


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need reference for checksum calculation

2000-09-17 Thread Igor

i am looking for an explanation of
one's complement arithmetic and other checksum
calculation methods

thank you fellow cissies

igor

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Re: Novell Server for your Home Lab ! (MS-DOS TSR Running on yourPC)

2000-09-17 Thread Kirk Bollinger

If you can (and have some time to learn) install linux - it allows both
Micorosoft and Novell emulation. Also works as a web server, tftp, ftp -
you can run tcpdump (a basic sniffer). Invaluable for learning.

-Kirk

On Sun, 17 Sep 2000, Billha wrote:

 Back in '95 I run an MS-DOS App (60k TSR) on my 386 turning it into a mini
 Novell Server that sends out SAPs etc.
 
 Program called 'SerView'
 
 I am trying to locate the program again to use as a Novell Server in my Home
 Lab, and will pay for it.
 
 All I have been able to find out is the following:
 
 http://www.home-run.com/ornet11.html
 
 I have e-mailed without a response back.
 
 Can anyone tell me where I can locate/buy the software ?
 
 
 
 
 
 **NOTE: New CCNA/CCDA List has been formed. For more information go to
 http://www.groupstudy.com/list/Associates.html
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 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

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E1 back-to-back ?

2000-09-17 Thread Hans Schimek

Hi!

for testing purposes i would like to connect E1 interfaces back-to-back.
i am using cross-over cables ( pin 1,2 - 4,5 ).
can anyone tell me how to achieve getting up the link.
for up-to-now the link only comes up if i loop the entire E1 interface.

would be great if anybody could tell me how i can do this
respectively which commands i have to use.


thanx in advance


hans

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Re: E1 back-to-back ?

2000-09-17 Thread Jim Rampley

Ethernet uses pins 1,2,3,6.  You should loop pin 1 to 3 and 2 to 6.  A T1
uses pins 1,2,4,5.

Jim
- Original Message -
From: "Hans Schimek" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2000 4:17 PM
Subject: E1 back-to-back ?


 Hi!

 for testing purposes i would like to connect E1 interfaces back-to-back.
 i am using cross-over cables ( pin 1,2 - 4,5 ).
 can anyone tell me how to achieve getting up the link.
 for up-to-now the link only comes up if i loop the entire E1 interface.

 would be great if anybody could tell me how i can do this
 respectively which commands i have to use.


 thanx in advance


 hans

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Re: Novell Server for your Home Lab ! (MS-DOS TSR Running on yourPC)

2000-09-17 Thread Kirk Bollinger

Does that use IPX or have they gone only with IP?

I use Linux already myself. Also, IPX static saps and static rip routes
are probably enough for study unless you really want to get into DDR spx
watchdog, etc..

-Kirk

On Sun, 17 Sep 2000, hal9000 wrote:

 My understanding is that for $15 or about £10 plus shipping you can obtain a
 3 user licence for Novell 5 for educational purposes!
 
 Karl
 - Original Message -
 From: "Kirk Bollinger" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; "Billha" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2000 7:11 AM
 Subject: Re: Novell Server for your Home Lab ! (MS-DOS TSR Running on your
 PC)
 
 
  If you can (and have some time to learn) install linux - it allows both
  Micorosoft and Novell emulation. Also works as a web server, tftp, ftp -
  you can run tcpdump (a basic sniffer). Invaluable for learning.
 
  -Kirk
 
  On Sun, 17 Sep 2000, Billha wrote:
 
   Back in '95 I run an MS-DOS App (60k TSR) on my 386 turning it into a
 mini
   Novell Server that sends out SAPs etc.
  
   Program called 'SerView'
  
   I am trying to locate the program again to use as a Novell Server in my
 Home
   Lab, and will pay for it.
  
   All I have been able to find out is the following:
  
   http://www.home-run.com/ornet11.html
  
   I have e-mailed without a response back.
  
   Can anyone tell me where I can locate/buy the software ?
  
  
  
  
  
   **NOTE: New CCNA/CCDA List has been formed. For more information go to
   http://www.groupstudy.com/list/Associates.html
   _
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RE: Is it any new question format in CCNP v2 exam?

2000-09-17 Thread Jeff Wang
Title: RE: Is it any new question format in CCNP v2 exam?



Hi Jack,

Routing 2.0 (or ACRC v2) is in my opinion easier than 
the original ACRC. I took the ACRC in March this year, just barely passed 
it. There were questions in ACRC that I had never seen before and 
sometimes questions were ambiguous. 

I wrote the Routing 2.0 (to update my CCNP to 2.0) last 
week without much study, apart from reading up a bit more on BGP using Sam 
Halabi's book (by the way an excellent volume on BGP), and passed with a high 
score. The questions in Routing 2.0 are a bit more straight forward, and 
you don't have to memorize the commands.

Just remember to know all the ins  outs of OSPF 
 BGP, then you are more than 2/3 of the way there. Read the official 
Cisco ACRC book plus one other book like Sam Halabi's Internet Routing 
Architecture, and you can't go wrong.

Good luck on your Routing 2.0!

Jeff Wang

  -Original Message-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of jackSent: Friday, 
  September 15, 2000 5:35 PMTo: Jeff Wang; 'Raymond Mak'; 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: Re: Is it any new question format in 
  CCNP v2 exam?
  Are you sure about theACRC v2 ? 
  I was reading 5 hours a day, memorized all the commands, and 
  had the exam the last day before it retire (July 31) and now 
  you tell me that the ACRC v2 is easier ? Oh! my 
  GOD! 
!..
  
  Jack
  
  
-Original Message-From: 
Jeff Wang [EMAIL PROTECTED]To: 
'Raymond Mak' [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]Date: 
ÐáñáóêåõÞ, 15 Óåðôåìâñßïõ 2000 10:04 ðìSubject: RE: Is it any 
new question format in CCNP v2 exam?
Raymond, 
When I took the ACRC (aka CCNP v1), the questions on command 
fill-ins were blank, i.e. you'd have to memorise the CLI commands. 
With Routing 2.0 (aka CCNP v2), you still get to type out the commands, but 
you get an exhibit with about 80 to 90 commands to choose from. So in 
a sense, CCNP v2 is easier than v1 because you don't have to committ to 
memory all the IOS commands. Passing score is also lower in 
v2.
Cheers  good luck! 
Jeff Wang 
-Original Message- From: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On 
Behalf Of Raymond Mak Sent: 
Saturday, September 16, 2000 6:41 AM To: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Is it any new question 
format in CCNP v2 exam? 
As title 
Thanks 
Regards, Raymond 
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2nd Edition of Internet Routing Architectures by Halabi

2000-09-17 Thread Jimmi1015

Hi to everyone studying BGP in preparation for the CCIE lab,

I just recently found out that the 2nd edition of this book is out.  I'm 
wondering if anyone has had a chance to spend enough time with it to have an 
opinion on whether there's enough new and relevant material in this edition 
to make it worth buying.  I already have the first edition. 

I'm scheduled to take the ccie lab on Oct 5 and I know how important BGP is 
to passing.  Aside from the author and Cisco press, are there any people who 
feel that its well worth the money and time to get and study this new edition?

Jim

Good luck to all those about to take the lab.

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pls remove my mail address from the mailing list

2000-09-17 Thread Pragnesh Trivedi

pls remove my mail address from the mailing list
_
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OSPF NSSA Type 7 LSA translated into Type 5 LSA

2000-09-17 Thread Gerry Lian

Hi,
Do you know how to translate NSSA type 7 LSA to Type 5 LSA ?
NSSA type 7 will not be sent to OSPF backbone unless it can be translated
from type 7(N1,N2) to type 5(E1,E2) at ABR.
I don't know what command can do that.

Thanks a lot

Gerry Lian

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Re: Novell Server for your Home Lab ! (MS-DOS TSR Running on yourPC)

2000-09-17 Thread Bob Karen Timmons

NetWare 5 can use either IP or IPX or both.

You can order it from here:
http://www.novell.com/products/netware/evaluation.html

Bob

- Original Message -
From: Kirk Bollinger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: hal9000 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Billha [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2000 3:31 AM
Subject: Re: Novell Server for your Home Lab ! (MS-DOS TSR Running on
yourPC)


 Does that use IPX or have they gone only with IP?

 I use Linux already myself. Also, IPX static saps and static rip routes
 are probably enough for study unless you really want to get into DDR spx
 watchdog, etc..

 -Kirk

 On Sun, 17 Sep 2000, hal9000 wrote:

  My understanding is that for $15 or about £10 plus shipping you can
obtain a
  3 user licence for Novell 5 for educational purposes!
 
  Karl
  - Original Message -
  From: "Kirk Bollinger" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; "Billha" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2000 7:11 AM
  Subject: Re: Novell Server for your Home Lab ! (MS-DOS TSR Running on
your
  PC)
 
 
   If you can (and have some time to learn) install linux - it allows
both
   Micorosoft and Novell emulation. Also works as a web server, tftp,
ftp -
   you can run tcpdump (a basic sniffer). Invaluable for learning.
  
   -Kirk
  
   On Sun, 17 Sep 2000, Billha wrote:
  
Back in '95 I run an MS-DOS App (60k TSR) on my 386 turning it into
a
  mini
Novell Server that sends out SAPs etc.
   
Program called 'SerView'
   
I am trying to locate the program again to use as a Novell Server in
my
  Home
Lab, and will pay for it.
   
All I have been able to find out is the following:
   
http://www.home-run.com/ornet11.html
   
I have e-mailed without a response back.
   
Can anyone tell me where I can locate/buy the software ?
   
   
   
   
   
**NOTE: New CCNA/CCDA List has been formed. For more information go
to
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http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   
  
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Re: CCIE LAB Study AppleTalk Question

2000-09-17 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer

Devices take a long time to come up on Token Ring because they have to 
select an active monitor which can take many seconds. So the routers are 
probably learning the EIGRP path much more quickly because the serial 
interfaces come up immediately. Also, EIGRP generally learns new routes 
quicker than RTMP anyway, regardless of the data-link layer.

I don't think AppleTalk has any concept of administrative distance. 
Whichever path is learned first is the one that ends up in the routing 
table. You could try using the "appletalk maximum-paths" command to put 
more than one route in the table. The software then distributes output on a 
packet-by-packet basis in round-robin fashion. (Note that it really is 
packet-by-packet load-sharing and not load sharing by destination, unlike IP.)

In answer to your question about G in the output of the "show appletalk 
route" command, the letter after the hop count shows the state of the 
route. G means "good." The state goes from good to suspect to bad.

With RTMP, if one RTMP update is missed, the route immediately becomes 
suspect. RTMP sends updates every 10 seconds, so the route becomes suspect 
if an update hasn't been heard in 10 seconds. After 20 seconds, the route 
is considered bad and eligible for replacement by a path with a higher hop 
count. After 60 seconds by default, the route is removed. You can change 
these parameters with the "appletalk timers" command.

HTH,

Priscilla


At 12:00 AM 9/17/00, Kirk Bollinger wrote:
I have two routers connected via tokenring and a 64K serial crossover.

I'm running RTMP over the tokenring and appletalk EIGRP over the serial
link. My routes are favoring the serial link.

Obviously with DVRP's both paths are seen as one hop.

I played with both the bandwidth and delay on the serial link but, it
wasn't enough to change the route.

How can I get this to reflect the best path?

I looked into administrative distance and offset list but could find an
answer there.

Assuming end stations on the tokenring - use both RTMP and EIGRP on it?
  - yes, this works but I would think there should be another way.


Also, the routes are list as [1/G] - the 1 is hops what is the G ??

-Kirk

With the serial link shut

VENUS#sh apple rou 198
Codes: R - RTMP derived, E - EIGRP derived, C - connected, A - AURP
S - static  P - proxy
3 routes in internet

The first zone listed for each entry is its default (primary) zone.

R Net 198-198 [1/G] via 40.1, 1 sec, TokenRing0, zone ether
   Route installed 00:00:01, updated 1 sec ago
   Next hop: 40.1, 1 hop away
   Zone list provided by 40.1
   Valid zones: "ether"
   There is 1 path for this route
* RTMP path, to neighbor 40.1, installed 00:00:01 via TokenRing0
Composite metric is 256524800, 1 hop
VENUS#

Normal Operation


VENUS#sh apple ro 198
Codes: R - RTMP derived, E - EIGRP derived, C - connected, A - AURP
S - static  P - proxy
3 routes in internet

The first zone listed for each entry is its default (primary) zone.

E Net 198-198 [1/G] via 101.43, 238 sec, Serial1, zone ether
   Route installed 00:11:02, updated 238 secs ago
   Next hop: 101.43, 1 hop away
   Zone list provided by 101.43
   Valid zones: "ether"
   There is 1 path for this route
* EIGRP path, to neighbor 101.43, installed 00:03:58 via Serial1
Composite metric is 2195456, 1 hop
 Delay is 537600 microseconds, minimum bandwidth is 1657856 Kbit
 Reliability 255/255, minimum MTU 1500 bytes
 Loading 1/255, 1 EIGRP hop
 Path is derived from CONNECTED from 2
 Path's external metric is 0 hops

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Priscilla Oppenheimer
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Re: CCIE Questions...

2000-09-17 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer

Where did these questions come from? Please specify the source (book, etc.) 
so that we know we aren't disobeying the NDA and giving you answers from an 
actual test. These sure sound like questions from the CCIE written. Also, I 
think it would be best to limit each e-mail message to one topic. It makes 
discussions easier to follow.

Despite all that, I can't resist giving you my answers! ;-) See below.

At 05:18 AM 9/17/00, Derek Chung wrote:
Question 1:
Router A and Router B are configured to route IP to each other over a serial
line. Host A is connected to Router A and Host B is connected to Router B. A
packet is sent from Host A to host B. A hit on the serial line causes an
error in the packet. Retransmission is sent by:

Host A retransmits the packet. The data-link layer protocols in use today 
on serial lines, including PPP, Frame Relay, and Cisco HDLC, detect errors 
but are not responsible for error correction or retransmission.


Question 2:
During the middle of a TCP conversion across a routed backbone, the network
receives a voltage spike and several of the packets are damaged. Where are
the packets retransmitted from?

The TCP sender. This is almost a repeat of the last question.


Question 3:
Computer1 [Segment
A]---RouterA--RouterB--[SegmentB]--Compu
ter2
A packet is sent to Computer 2 from Computer 1. A collision occurs on
Segment B. Which device will retransmit the frame and what will the source
MAC address be (when the packet actually reaches Segment B)?

Router B senses the collision and retransmits at the MAC layer. The MAC 
address is Router B's Ethernet address.


Question 4:
When computer A sends a frame to computer B across many routers, how will
the source and destination layer 3 addresses change? How will the source and
destination layer 2 addresses change?

Layer 3 addresses won't change (unless you have NAT or tunnelling or 
something else bizarre.) The Layer 2 addresses change each time a router 
re-encapsulates the packet in a data-link-layer header than includes 
layer-2 addresses.

Priscilla



Priscilla Oppenheimer
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Configuration Comparison

2000-09-17 Thread mo



Hello All,


I am looking for a software program that will allow 
me to compare to Cisco configs at the same time. This software will compare the 
two documents and highlight the difference between the two.There was an 
email sent about two months ago that had a link to this type of software. 


Any help will be appreciated,

Thanks
Mo


Re: OSPF NSSA Type 7 LSA translated into Type 5 LSA

2000-09-17 Thread Cthulu, CCIE Candidate

Define the NSSA  area as NSSA.  (on all routers in teh NSSA area;  ABR
router will do the magic).

HTH,

Charles

More specifics:

From
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios120/12cgcr/np1_c
/1cprt1/1cospf.htm#xtocid1066410


Configure OSPF Not So Stubby Area (NSSA)
NSSA area is similar to OSPF stub area. NSSA does not flood Type 5 external
link state advertisements (LSAs) from the core into the area, but it has the
ability of importing AS external routes in a limited fashion within the
area.

NSSA allows importing of Type 7 AS external routes within NSSA area by
redistribution. These Type 7 LSAs are translated into Type 5 LSAs by NSSA
ABR which are flooded throughout the whole routing domain. Summarization and
filtering are supported during the translation.

Use NSSA to simplify administration if you are an Internet service provider
(ISP), or a network administrator that must connect a central site using
OSPF to a remote site that is using a different routing protocol.

Prior to NSSA, the connection between the corporate site border router and
the remote router could not be run as OSPF stub area because routes for the
remote site cannot be redistributed into stub area. A simple protocol like
RIP is usually run and handle the redistribution. This meant maintaining two
routing protocols. With NSSA, you can extend OSPF to cover the remote
connection by defining the area between the corporate router and the remote
router as an NSSA.

In router configuration mode, use the following command to specify area
parameters as needed to configure OSPF NSSA:

Command
Purpose
area area-id nssa [no-redistribution] [default-information-originate]
Define an area to be NSSA.




In router configuration mode on the ABR, use the following command to
control summarization and filtering of Type 7 LSA into Type 5 LSA:

Command
Purpose
summary address prefix mask [not advertise] [tag tag]
(Optional) Control the summarization and filtering during the translation



""Gerry Lian"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
000e01c020fe$47fb2fc0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:000e01c020fe$47fb2fc0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi,
 Do you know how to translate NSSA type 7 LSA to Type 5 LSA ?
 NSSA type 7 will not be sent to OSPF backbone unless it can be translated
 from type 7(N1,N2) to type 5(E1,E2) at ABR.
 I don't know what command can do that.

 Thanks a lot

 Gerry Lian

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cool network testing tool

2000-09-17 Thread Yee, Jason

hi all,

check the website below for a cool network testing tool :

http://www.ccci.com/product/network_mon/tnm32/ttcp.htm

http://www.ccci.com/product/network_mon/tnm31/ttcp.htm


Jason

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about CCIE !

2000-09-17 Thread ±èÈï¼ö

Hi every one ,
Let me introduce myself to you , my name is Heung-su Kim , and am from seoul
, in south Korea.
Well about a month back i have finished my CCNP 1.0 , and am now preparing
for my CCIE, well would any one be kind enough to prepare with me or at
least kind enough to give me links to clear the CCIE exams


Good luck!

[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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RE: Configuration Comparison

2000-09-17 Thread Ben



You 
find this feature in RME (Resource Manager Essentials) that is part of Cisco's 
network management program: CWSI.
RME 
has many administrative tools, one of them being comparison of 
configuration.
This 
software is not cheap.

Bernard


  
  
  
  Hello All,
  
  
  I am looking for a software program that will 
  allow me to compare to Cisco configs at the same time. This software will 
  compare the two documents and highlight the difference between the 
  two.There was an email sent about two months ago that had a link to this 
  type of software. 
  
  Any help will be appreciated,
  
  Thanks
  Mo


RE: cool network testing tool

2000-09-17 Thread Yee, Jason

care to elaborate?

-Original Message-
From: Ledwidge, Feargal [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, September 18, 2000 10:26 AM
To: Yee, Jason; cisco@groupstudy. com (E-mail)
Subject: RE: cool network testing tool


Cool it may be ,,, .,... but never EVER EVER even THINK about using it in a
production environment. 

Bad things can happen...

Feargal

-Original Message-
From: Yee, Jason [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2000 6:35 PM
To: cisco@groupstudy. com (E-mail)
Subject: cool network testing tool


hi all,

check the website below for a cool network testing tool :

http://www.ccci.com/product/network_mon/tnm32/ttcp.htm

http://www.ccci.com/product/network_mon/tnm31/ttcp.htm


Jason

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RE: cool network testing tool

2000-09-17 Thread Ledwidge, Feargal

Cool it may be ,,, .,... but never EVER EVER even THINK about using it in a
production environment. 

Bad things can happen...

Feargal

-Original Message-
From: Yee, Jason [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2000 6:35 PM
To: cisco@groupstudy. com (E-mail)
Subject: cool network testing tool


hi all,

check the website below for a cool network testing tool :

http://www.ccci.com/product/network_mon/tnm32/ttcp.htm

http://www.ccci.com/product/network_mon/tnm31/ttcp.htm


Jason

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Re: Configuration Comparison

2000-09-17 Thread whatshakin



I believe 'windiff' from the Microsoft NT 4 
resource kit is one.

Pretty much all flavors of unixcan handle 
this with built in commands but I cannot remember any of them right now. :-( 


- Original Message - 

  From: 
  mo 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2000 5:39 
  PM
  Subject: Configuration Comparison
  
  Hello All,
  
  
  I am looking for a software program that will 
  allow me to compare to Cisco configs at the same time. This software will 
  compare the two documents and highlight the difference between the 
  two.There was an email sent about two months ago that had a link to this 
  type of software. 
  
  Any help will be appreciated,
  
  Thanks
  Mo


radius question

2000-09-17 Thread Rey Martin

Hi,

I just configure Steel-belted radius and 2600 series for dial-up, it works
but if I enter the wrong password, the system just terminate the connection
without 2nd or 3rd retries. I already tried to set the steel-belted for 3
retries, but still the same, any suggestions? or do u suggest another radius
software? (for NT)

Thanks

Ray

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When do you clear ARP?

2000-09-17 Thread Derek CHUNG

When do you clear ARP on a router? Any scenario related to firewall or local
director?


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Re: When do you clear ARP?

2000-09-17 Thread BE

Can you be more specific?

I talked with an engineer in TAC last week, and he mentioned he had a case
that had to do with a switch talking to a router.  A few workstations on a
network wouldn't comunicate across the router until they cleared the ARP
cache...

-Brad Ellis
CCIE#5 7 9 6
bellis@opt sys.net

used cisco hardware:  www.opt sys.net
cisco hardware newsgroup:   news://news.opt sys.net/cisco.hardware

""Derek CHUNG"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
8q42mq$o4c$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8q42mq$o4c$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 When do you clear ARP on a router? Any scenario related to firewall or
local
 director?


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Re: Help about a technical interview I had PLEASE!

2000-09-17 Thread John Barnes

See comments below.


--- "David L. Blair" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  1) What is the size of a token ring frame?
  My answer: Token ring has a variable frame size.
  His answer: 3 bytes..
 
  Isn't that the size of the Token frame?
 
 Yes.
 
 
  2) What the MTU of a token ring frame?  (Isn't
 this
  about the same question as #1?)
  My answer: slightly larger that 16K (I couldn't
  remember the exact number)
  His answer: about 4470 bytes .
 
 He is correct.

No, he isn't.  Token ring has a variable MTU.  


 
 
  Ahh... what?  He claimed I was thinking about
  FDDI.g  Ah. Who's thinking about what?
 
  3) What is the decision making process involved
 when a
  packet enters a router?  What three criteria are
 used
  to make this decision?
 My answer:  It depends. Is this the first
  packet with this destination to arrive at this
 router?
   What switching mode is the router configured for.
 
 Most routers actually do not switch that requires a
 switching module in the
 router. Since routers have to make a routing
 decision on a packet, by
 default a router reads the whole packet before it
 makes a decision that is
 why routers forward packets slower than a switch.  A
 switch is basically a
 fixed function bridge that can have one of three
 modes: Cut Through, Store
 and Forward, or Fragment Free.
 


Actually, every router does.  Unless you disable it
with a no ip-route cache on the interface, almost
every Cisco router does fast switching by default. 
This means the first packet is checked against the
routing information base, then subsequent packets
recieved on the same interface with the same
destination are fast switched using the route cache,
not process switched.  Regardless, the first packet
received for a given destination on an interface is
ALWAYS process switched.


 
 His answer:  Forget about that stuff. how
 does
  it determine which route to use.
 
 My answer:  longest match in the routing
 table
 
 His answer:  What if multiple routes exist
 in
  the table.
 
 My answer:  It depends.
 
 
 
Maybe I should have picked up on this stuff
 when
  the recruiter asked me with BGP was a DV or LS
 based
  routing protocol.  My answer. ahh.neither, it's
 path
  vector.
 
 BGP is an External Gateway Protocol which most
 closely resembles DV.
 

BGP is a Path Vector routing protocol, although it
more closely resembles a DV, it is not.  


__
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RE: radius question

2000-09-17 Thread Ben

I don't know about Steel-belt, but on Cisco AS5200 this is a feature.
wrong username and password, no connection. You do not get a second chance.
And logically, that is a good and secure design.

Bernard



Hi,

I just configure Steel-belted radius and 2600 series for dial-up, it works
but if I enter the wrong password, the system just terminate the connection
without 2nd or 3rd retries. I already tried to set the steel-belted for 3
retries, but still the same, any suggestions? or do u suggest another radius
software? (for NT)

Thanks

Ray

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Cisco 3640 grunty enough for full-BGP routing?

2000-09-17 Thread Jeff Wang
Title: Cisco 3640 grunty enough for full-BGP routing?






Hi all,


Just a quick question regarding 3640 with 128MB DRAM. Will it be grunty enough to run full-BGP, talking to two different providers and getting full routes, with one E1 2Mbps WAN link to each provider? What's your minimum configuration from experience?

TIA,


Jeff Wang





Zone Delegation/Reverse Delegation

2000-09-17 Thread Benny Leong (HTHK - Senior Engineer II - iServices Development, NNSD)

I have 2 T1 connected to 2 separate ISPs.   The DNS is being hosted on one
ISP.  Now, I have created a subdomain.  Is the zone delegation done at the
ISP and the reverse delegation done at the APNIC ? 

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Re: When do you clear ARP?

2000-09-17 Thread Clayton Price

I've had to clear the arp cache when replacing a firewall.

This is because both firewalls had the same IP address. Since they were
different computers they had different MAC addresses.


Clayton Price

""Derek CHUNG"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
8q42mq$o4c$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8q42mq$o4c$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 When do you clear ARP on a router? Any scenario related to firewall or
local
 director?


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Re: Secondary IP for Catalyst switches?

2000-09-17 Thread JEK

Regardless, the Issue here is giving a Switch a  secondary ip address 
on the
interface, which is pointless.Question to the Question is WHY?.When
you give
your switch an ip address it's only just an IP Address to remotely connecty
to the
switch to run diags on it thru a  telnet/ rlogin/ lat/ etc...  If the NT
Administrator
is trying to blame the network; and he doesn't understand that Switches run
on
Layer-2 then it sounds like he needs to go back to school or take the lovely
MS Networking Essentials  ha, ha, ha  or get some actual network
experience..
Since we all know that the Lan Admins are always right and that it's always
a network
problem so us Network Admins have to deal with it over and over...Okay
Okay, back
to the Question in Question here.If you put a Secondary IP Address on
the switch it's
not doing anything for the Network itself; unless your using a L3
switch.The reason
being is that the Switch is L2 and the Router-L3.Your PC/Server doesn't
have a GW
of the Switch does it (( NO )).Then why use up more IP's just cause the
Lan Admin doesn't know
how to network.I mean if he's trying to blame it on the Network then
replace the Switch
with a hub; it's going to do basically the same thing other than the Switch
is more sophiscated
and will have a better broadcast domain and cut down on those goodies.So
if the Lan Admin
wants to argue with that then tell him to go back to school and LEARN how
Networks really
function and then he can give you a reason of why it would be a network
problem and not
the NT Server's problem..Well there's my $0.02.Hope this helps.

JEK


"Derek Chung" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
8q2dfl$8so$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8q2dfl$8so$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Can a secondary IP be assigned to a Catalyst switch SC0 interface
 temporarily?
 If so, once I logon (by console/telnet) to the switch, I can troubleshoot
 the connectivity to an attached PC/server by pinging its IP address
 (assuming the secondary IP temporarily added is the same subnet as this
 PC/server IP address.)
 This will help troubleshooting the functionality of the TCPIP stack of the
 PC/server, don't you think?





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RE: When do you clear ARP?

2000-09-17 Thread Jeff Wang
Title: RE: When do you clear ARP?



Sorry, didn't read the question properly! :(

I once had a firewall gone bad on a segment, and the firewall answered 
every single ARP request (so all MAC addresses on the segment now go to the 
firewall, instead of the intended recipients!). It took me a while to 
troubleshoot the problem, because I couldn't ping anything from the router, 
although the switch LEDs seem okay. I had to restart the firewall, and 
clear the arp-cache on the router.

Cheers

Jeff Wang


  -Original Message-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Jeff WangSent: 
  Monday, September 18, 2000 2:11 PMTo: 'Derek CHUNG'; 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: RE: When do you clear 
  ARP?
  Hi Derek, 
   clear 
  arp-cache 
  Cheers 
  Jeff Wang 
  -Original Message- From: 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf 
  Of Derek CHUNG Sent: Monday, 
  September 18, 2000 1:35 PM To: 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: When do you clear 
  ARP? 
  When do you clear ARP on a router? Any scenario related to 
  firewall or local director? 
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