problem on FR

2001-01-02 Thread Frank

I am configuring a multichannel E1 board on 7513 to connect with a FR net.
when i use SH FRAME PVC ,i got the the PVC status is "deleted " or
"inactive"
what acturally does it mean ?
as far as i know ,"deleted" means the line between router and FR switch is
not OK,
and "inactive" means OK.
i also got the following infor when i unplug the line from the router and
then plug it back.
(i opened deb frame packet and deb frame event on)

serial4/0/0:0 broadcast search
serial4/0/0:0 encaps failed on broadcast for link 7(IP)

what does it mean?

Any help is appreciated.

Frank



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Raw TCP Connection

2001-01-02 Thread Emil

Hello

Could you please tell me where to find any information about preparing  Raw
TCP connection from analog modem to access server (cisco). How it works ?
Client says also something about PP4 protocol. I can't find any information
about that on Cisco side. Any help?

Regards
EMil


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RE: problem on FR

2001-01-02 Thread Andrew Larkins

from my understanding, "inactive" means the line to the switch is fine, but
the end to end connectivity is a problem

As for the log messages, maybe a form of lmi auto sensing

-Original Message-
From: Frank [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 02 January 2001 10:36
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: problem on FR


I am configuring a multichannel E1 board on 7513 to connect with a FR net.
when i use SH FRAME PVC ,i got the the PVC status is "deleted " or
"inactive"
what acturally does it mean ?
as far as i know ,"deleted" means the line between router and FR switch is
not OK,
and "inactive" means OK.
i also got the following infor when i unplug the line from the router and
then plug it back.
(i opened deb frame packet and deb frame event on)

serial4/0/0:0 broadcast search
serial4/0/0:0 encaps failed on broadcast for link 7(IP)

what does it mean?

Any help is appreciated.

Frank



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RE: Lab Preparation Advice Revised

2001-01-02 Thread Khambay, Inderpal



Please can some one advise if there is a "CCIE" certification in
Security. Thank you in advance.



Regards


Inderpal

 -Original Message-
 From: Ronald James [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Saturday, December 09, 2000 11:32 AM
 To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject:  Re: Lab Preparation Advice Revised
 
 thanks, Chuck!
 
 ""Chuck Larrieu"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
 001d01c060e7$46e68c00$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:001d01c060e7$46e68c00$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Hey, everyone, I've cleaned up my CCIE Lab preparation advice file,
 adding
  some thoughts from some folks who recently passed ( with their
 permission,
  of course. )
 
  Check it out on my web site
 
  www.chuck.to/CCIEAdvice.htm
 
  Chuck
  --
  I am Locutus, a CCIE Lab Proctor. Xx_Brain_dumps_xX are futile. Your
 life
 as
  it has been is over ( if you hope to pass ) From this time forward, you
 will
  study US!
  ( apologies to the folks at Star Trek TNG )
 
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This message may contain information which is confidential or privileged.
If you are not the intended recipient, please advise the sender immediately
by reply e-mail and delete this message and any attachments
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Switching 2.0 and DDR

2001-01-02 Thread wwoch

Hello group,

The test outline for BCMSN 640-504 indicates that the exam includes
DDR and Cisco TAC/CCO. I've been studying from the Coriolis Exam Prep,
and there's no mention of Dial On Demand Routing or Cisco TAC/CCO.

http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/10/wwtraining/certprog/testing/pdf/bcmsn.pdf

Can somebody confirm that these topic are covered on 640-504?

Thanks.


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Re:

2001-01-02 Thread suaveguru

ip subnet-zero is cool only for routing protocols that
support VLSM 

basically by putting ip subnet-zero in your
configuration you allow your network number to be used
as a host so you save one ip address

but remember only works on protocols that support VLSM

examples are eigrp, ospf , bgp etc.


suaveguru
--- caifeng tang [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Hi.guy
 Happy new year to all of you.
 I wonder what is the ip subnet-zero, when and where
 use it. Would any =
 one can tell me? Thanks.
 
 Shelly=20
 
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Trade

2001-01-02 Thread Iyuri Yagami

Hello Everybody.

I am looking for CISCO CCNP / CCIE Ebooks.. If anybody have Sybex or any
other publisher's Ebooks than please let me know.I want to trade these
ebooks. I have lot of resources / tests for A+, MCSE, Oracle, CNE and MCSE
2000. ( All are very cool tests )
If anyone is interested in this trade than please send me an email at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Thanks
Iyuri


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Frame Relay - can't get the clear picture of it yet!

2001-01-02 Thread Jaeheon Yoo

Hi,

Before I bother you about this, I searched the archives, but I
can't get it clear to me. Sorry but this has been constantly irritating me.
I quess there's a big BUG in my understanding.

This example is roughly from Jeff Doyle's Routing TCP/IP pp.557~565

There is a star topology frame relay network. HQ is a hub router
with three branch routers BR1 , BR2 and BR3. Branch routers have only one
PVC each to HQ(This is a partially meshed FR network).
(point-to-point subinterfaces are not configured)

Please correct me if I'm wrong!

CASE 1  - UNICAST packet: Can BR1 ping to another branch router BR2?(I
believe so)  If it's YES, HQ is responsible for "relaying" ping to BR2.
What's happening is as follows:

1. BR1 originates a ping packet and encapsulates it with its own locally
significant DLCI number (for example, 200)

2. It is propagated via the established PVC through F/R Cloud to HQ with
HQ's local DLCI number (for example, 100: I understand there's no direct
correspondence between two DLCI numbers),

3. HQ's layer 2 (ie,F/R) strips F/R header off the received frame and
examines its destination IP, then decides it doesn't belong to HQ itself.

4. HQ's layer 2 looks up its frame relay maps configured statically or
dynamically(through Inverse ARP). If there is a matching entry for it,
It is properly encapsulated and propagated to BR1. If there's no matching
entry for it, HQ just drops it.

5. Finally BR2 receives the frame.


CASE 2 - BROADCAST packet: Can BR1 send RIPv1 updates to all other branch
routers BR2 and BR3 as well as to HQ. (I believe so)

1. BR1's RIP delivers RIPv1 updates to lower layer F/R, and if F/R is not
configured to propagate broadcast traffic, the packet is dropped,
Otherwise, if it is configured so through frame-relay map command)
It is propagated to HQ as explained step 1 of case 1. But in this case
destination ip is set to broadcast address 255.255.255.255.

2. In this case, HQ recognizes it as broadcast packet, so HQ replicates and
propagates the broadcast traffic to each PVC except originationing PVC

3. BR2 and BR3 receives the frame.

CASE 3 - BROADCAST revisited: If BR2 and B3 are directly connected,
from my understanding of CASE 2, there might be a broadcast storm like
what happens on LAN Switching.

All of this probable misunderstanding is due to my lack of field experience.
So I always try to read widely, which is the only way I can do now.
Please correct my ignorance.

Thanks in advance.

Jaeheon Yoo



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CCNP Exam

2001-01-02 Thread Chiao Liang

Hi all

I have jsut passed my CCDA, it was tough. Now i going for CCNP, i wonder
which paper should i go first. Can anyone recommend which one should i
go first then followed..

Thank, with regards
Chan
CCDA, CCNA

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Ping response between subnets slow

2001-01-02 Thread Amit Gupta

Hi Everybody,

Need some help on the following problem

I have 2 subnets configured on my LAN say ( x.x.1.0
and x.x.2.0 )with a SM of 255.255.255.0.
There are 2 Catalyst switches ( each one on a
different subnet)

The router is configured with a primary and a
secondary address on the ethernet port say x.x.1.1 and
x.x.2.1

When I ping a station on one subnet to another and
viceversa the response time is very high (sometimes
upto 80ms) while the response time while pinging in
the same subnet is less than 10ms.

Need some clues on the possible reasons for this


Thanks  Regards

Amit

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Re: Job Openings??? (fwd)

2001-01-02 Thread Andy Walden



A CCIE list is not the right forum for anyone to be seeking a job,
especially someone entry level. Go to monster.com or dice.com and do a web
search like everyone else. Also, attachments are not allowed on the
list. AOL addresses probably shouldn't be either for that matter.



On Tue, 2 Jan 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hello---I have been a CCNA since July 13 and have had no luck finding a job.  
 I live in Houston and would prefer a job in Houston but I also have family in 
 Chicago; VirginaiaBeach, Virginia; and New York.  I have pc helpdesk 
 experience troubleshooting Compaq hardware and software, but have no 
 professional networking or Cisco experience..only classroom and lab 
 experience with 2500 series routers.I am not looking for a high salary 
 just enough to get by, my main focus is getting experience.  My resume is 
 attached.  Feel free to look at it and send me an email or call.
 
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BCMSN Questions - Pls Help

2001-01-02 Thread Giggsy

Hi

While i am preparing for my Switching 2.0 Exam, i encounter the following 2
questions while i do the pracice exams which have different answers. Would
appreciate if someone could enlighten me what should be the CORRECT answer.

Question 1
==
The ACME company is a small manufacturing company that wants to interconnect
users on multiple floors in the same building. To date, the company has only
15 employees but plans to triple in number in the next year. Users require
access to large graphic files on the workgroup servers. What is the most
appropriate device for the access layer?

A. Catalyst 8500 series switch
B. Catalyst 5500 series switch with an internal RSM
C. Catalyst 1900 series switch with 10 BaseT ports
D. Catalyst 2900 series switch with 100 BaseTX ports

COLT said that the answer should be D BUT the course book's answer is C. So
which one should it be???

Question 2
===
how to find out what error messages were being sent to the other out-bands
besides the console port.

So what is the answer for this?


Hope someone can help. Thanks


Regards


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Cool DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) link

2001-01-02 Thread Chuck Church

From Network Computing:

http://www.nwc.com/1201/1201f1c1.html

Chuck Church
CCNP, CCDP, MCNE, MCSE
Sr. Network Engineer
Magnacom Technologies
140 N. Rt. 303
Valley Cottage, NY 10989
845-267-4000 x218


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Re: CCNP Exam

2001-01-02 Thread L Reid


 ROUTING 2.0

  Chiao Liang [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 
Hi all

I have jsut passed my CCDA, it was tough. Now i going for CCNP, i wonder
which paper should i go first. Can anyone recommend which one should i
go first then followed..

Thank, with regards
Chan
CCDA, CCNA

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= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =


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Spanning Tree and Root Bridge Question

2001-01-02 Thread Giggsy

Hi

Pls refer to my Switch1 Spanning Tree display. Is this my Root Bridge?
How come the MAC for Switch1 is 00-00-00-00-00-00?
Any problem with this switch? it is so different from Switch2 (pls refer to
the below)


Switch1 (enable) sh spantree
VLAN 1
Spanning tree enabled
Spanning tree type  ieee

Designated Root 00-00-00-00-00-00
Designated Root Priority0
Designated Root Cost0
Designated Root Port1/0
Root Max Age   0  secHello Time 0  sec   Forward Delay 0  sec

Bridge ID MAC ADDR  00-00-00-00-00-00
Bridge ID Priority  32768
Bridge Max Age 20 secHello Time 2  sec   Forward Delay 15 sec

Port Vlan Port-StateCost  Priority Portfast
Channel_id
  - -  -- --

Switch1 (enable)


  
Switch2 (enable) sh spantree
VLAN 1
Spanning tree enabled
Spanning tree type  ieee

Designated Root 00-02-fc-10-40-00
Designated Root Priority32768
Designated Root Cost0
Designated Root Port1/0
Root Max Age   20 secHello Time 2  sec   Forward Delay 15 sec

Bridge ID MAC ADDR  00-02-fc-10-40-00
Bridge ID Priority  32768
Bridge Max Age 20 secHello Time 2  sec   Forward Delay 15 sec

Port  Vlan  Port-State Cost   Priority  Fast-Start  Group-Method
-   -  -    --  
 2/1  1 forwarding1932   disabled
 2/9  1 not-connected10032   disabled
 2/10 1 not-connected10032   disabled
 2/11 1 not-connected10032   disabled
 2/12 1 not-connected10032   disabled
 2/13 1 not-connected10032   disabled
 2/14 1 not-connected10032   disabled
 2/15 1 not-connected10032   disabled
 2/16 1 not-connected10032   disabled
Switch2 (enable)


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Re: Router 1700 showing Junk

2001-01-02 Thread Paul Lalonde

It certainly sounds like Hyperterminal settings need to be changed. Some
people fiddle with the config-register on their routers and end up changing
the baud rate (to 2400, 4800, etc.)

Word to the wise, though... if you change your baud rate in HYPERTERMINAL
then you have to 'disconnect' and 're-connect' for the settings to take
effect. Simply changing the baud rate didn't fix the communications problem
until I did the disconnect/re-connect.

Paul

Hitesh Pathak [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Dear All,

 I'm having a problem with my 1700 series router. The problem is whenever I
 start my router it shows continously junk characters on the console.
 Nothing seems to be working. i have tried changing diff PC as well as
 console cable. Also I have checked for terminal settings like Baud rate ,
 stop bits , Flow control etceverything is perfect. I am using windows
 98 as a terminal (Hyper Terminal).

 Can anyone help me on this?can it be a DRAM corruption problem. Router
 has 8 mb of DRAM.

 many thanks in advance.



 
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RE: BCMSN Questions - Pls Help

2001-01-02 Thread Andrew Larkins

Q1 should be D - 1900 is too small and only 10MB - not good for LARGE
graphic files
Q2- check the log

-Original Message-
From: Giggsy [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 02 January 2001 15:56
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: BCMSN Questions - Pls Help


Hi

While i am preparing for my Switching 2.0 Exam, i encounter the following 2
questions while i do the pracice exams which have different answers. Would
appreciate if someone could enlighten me what should be the CORRECT answer.

Question 1
==
The ACME company is a small manufacturing company that wants to interconnect
users on multiple floors in the same building. To date, the company has only
15 employees but plans to triple in number in the next year. Users require
access to large graphic files on the workgroup servers. What is the most
appropriate device for the access layer?

A. Catalyst 8500 series switch
B. Catalyst 5500 series switch with an internal RSM
C. Catalyst 1900 series switch with 10 BaseT ports
D. Catalyst 2900 series switch with 100 BaseTX ports

COLT said that the answer should be D BUT the course book's answer is C. So
which one should it be???

Question 2
===
how to find out what error messages were being sent to the other out-bands
besides the console port.

So what is the answer for this?


Hope someone can help. Thanks


Regards


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DRAM Upgrades for 1601R

2001-01-02 Thread Hans Stout

Hi colleagues,

I have two 1601R routers, and I want to upgrade them from their standard 8MB 
DRAM to 16MB DRAM. I have a few questions about this:

1. Is the DRAM the same for the entire 1600 series ? So can I use the DRAM 
form a 1603R for the 1601R ?
2. When I buy an additional 8MB of DRAM, can I add that on without problems 
to the already existing (standard) 8MB in the 1601R ? (I am referring to the 
problems that exist with PCs, when the PC needs matching SIMMs).

Thanks for your help in advance.

Regards,

Georg Pauwen
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AUX Port

2001-01-02 Thread Austin

I have a Cisco 2511 Access Server.
I want to connect to the 2511 via Modem. I have an old Motorola 14.4 modem.
The aux port has the ffg config:

line aux 0
login
password cisco
modem inout
transport input all

I have the phone line plugged into the Modem (where it says TO WALL) and I
have the Parallel connector (Modem) from Cisco's console kit plugged into
the Modem Parallel Port. Then I have a regular Cisco console cable running
from the modem to the aux port.

When I call the number it just rings and rings. The modem does not answer.
What am I doing wrong or what am I not doing?
All help appreciated.


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Re: BCMSN Questions - Pls Help

2001-01-02 Thread Howard C. Berkowitz

Hi

While i am preparing for my Switching 2.0 Exam, i encounter the following 2
questions while i do the pracice exams which have different answers. Would
appreciate if someone could enlighten me what should be the CORRECT answer.

Question 1
==
The ACME company is a small manufacturing company that wants to interconnect
users on multiple floors in the same building. To date, the company has only
15 employees but plans to triple in number in the next year. Users require
access to large graphic files on the workgroup servers. What is the most
appropriate device for the access layer?

A. Catalyst 8500 series switch
B. Catalyst 5500 series switch with an internal RSM
C. Catalyst 1900 series switch with 10 BaseT ports
D. Catalyst 2900 series switch with 100 BaseTX ports

COLT said that the answer should be D BUT the course book's answer is C. So
which one should it be???

Seriously, what do you think is the best answer?  Why? Why not?

Knowing which test answer is "right" is less important than knowing 
how the answer is determined.

Have you looked at the dates of both and thought that both might be 
correct, reflecting switch pricing at the time of publication?


Question 2
===
how to find out what error messages were being sent to the other out-bands
besides the console port.

So what is the answer for this?


Seriously, what do you think is the best answer?  Why? Why not?

Not quite sure what you mean by an out-band.


Hope someone can help. Thanks


Regards


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Re: How to verify port speed and CIR

2001-01-02 Thread Dennis

Here is an example of the output from sh fram map command.  It will only
work if you are using cisco lmi.

Router#sh fram map
Serial0/0.11 (up): point-to-point dlci, dlci 45(0x2D,0x8D0), broadcast,
IETF, BW = 32000
  status defined, active
Serial0/0.12 (up): point-to-point dlci, dlci 40(0x28,0x880), broadcast,
IETF, BW = 19200
  status defined, active



[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hello Clayton  Dennis,

 Could you provide me sample output of "SH FRAME MAP"
 since i could not find any indication on CIR in my lab setup.
 thanx,

 -Original Message-
 From: Clayton Price [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 9:35 AM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: How to verify port speed and CIR


 I was thinking the same thing as Dennis.

 "Jim Bond" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Hello,
 
  We have a frame relay link with 512K/256K. How do I
  verify port speed is 512K and CIR is 256K? I used some
  tools, like MRTG, but I don't think it shows the real
  speed.
 
  Thanks in advance.
 
 
  Jim
 
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PIX failover

2001-01-02 Thread Florin Mechetiuc

I have couple of 520 firewalls ordered a while back but I don't know if is a
way to check
if they are in failover bundle.
To be more specific , I have one up and running but I would like to install
the failover and I don't which one is ( I have other three
ordered for other projects). I think it might be a way of checking on
Cisco's website by having the serial number of the main firewall and
then I can get the the serial number of the failover.



Thanks and Happy New Year !


Florin Mechetiuc
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Lab trade

2001-01-02 Thread folks

Hi group
  I have booked lab test in Beijing/China on 5th of  Feb.  I want to
postpone the test to March or Apirl, anyone wants to trade let me know

Thanks

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Re: BCMSN Questions - Pls Help

2001-01-02 Thread Jonathan Hays

In addition to just getting the "right" answers I would suggest doing some research. Go
to www.cisco.com, under Prodcuts and Technologies select Switches. You will be 
presented
with a top level description of Cisco's switch line and many links to explore. Learning
HOW to figure out the answers will be important on the job.

Right away you see that the 8500 series switch is an ATM switch, so you can throw that
one out. The 1900 series is fixed at 24 ports maximum (the two 100 Mbps ports are
generally used for uplinks). The question points to a backbone switch solution with the
keywords "multiple floors" and the desire to expand to 45 ports. Although there is a
2948 (48 ports) and a 2980 (80 ports) most of the Cisco training literature suggests 
the
use of a Catalyst 5500 (or 6500) as a backbone series switch.



Giggsy wrote:

 Hi

 While i am preparing for my Switching 2.0 Exam, i encounter the following 2
 questions while i do the pracice exams which have different answers. Would
 appreciate if someone could enlighten me what should be the CORRECT answer.

 Question 1
 ==
 The ACME company is a small manufacturing company that wants to interconnect
 users on multiple floors in the same building. To date, the company has only
 15 employees but plans to triple in number in the next year. Users require
 access to large graphic files on the workgroup servers. What is the most
 appropriate device for the access layer?

 A. Catalyst 8500 series switch
 B. Catalyst 5500 series switch with an internal RSM
 C. Catalyst 1900 series switch with 10 BaseT ports
 D. Catalyst 2900 series switch with 100 BaseTX ports

 COLT said that the answer should be D BUT the course book's answer is C. So
 which one should it be???

 Question 2
 ===
 how to find out what error messages were being sent to the other out-bands
 besides the console port.

 So what is the answer for this?

 Hope someone can help. Thanks

 Regards

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RE: PIX failover

2001-01-02 Thread Andrew Twigger

If you do sh ver from enable mode you get :-

PIX_TH_BB# sh ver

PIX Version 4.4(4)
Compiled on Thu 06-Jan-00 16:07 by pixbuild
PIX BIOS (4.0) #0: Tue May 18 16:29:54 PDT 1999

PIX_TH_BB up 104 days 21 hours

Hardware:   PIX-515, 64 MB RAM, CPU Pentium 200 MHz
Flash strata @ base 0x300
0: ethernet0: address is 0050.54ff.382e, irq 9
1: ethernet1: address is 0050.54ff.382f, irq 7

Licensed Options:
Failover:   Enabled
IPSec:  Disabled
Ports allowed:  6

Serial Number:  1234567890
--

Two things that say its a UnRestricted  pix.

1)  64Meg of Ram - Restricted pix has only 32meg
2)  the Failover option is enabled

If you have a Restricted and buy the upgrade you get 32meg of ram and a
software patch.

Hope this helps

Andrew

-Original Message-
From: Florin Mechetiuc [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 3:22 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: PIX failover


I have couple of 520 firewalls ordered a while back but I don't know if is a
way to check
if they are in failover bundle.
To be more specific , I have one up and running but I would like to install
the failover and I don't which one is ( I have other three
ordered for other projects). I think it might be a way of checking on
Cisco's website by having the serial number of the main firewall and
then I can get the the serial number of the failover.



Thanks and Happy New Year !


Florin Mechetiuc
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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RE: PIX failover

2001-01-02 Thread Jim Dixon

Of course the REAL test is to unplug one of them once you are certain it is
configured properly to test
the failover and see first hand how it reacts by viewing the routes,
protocols and translations to verify
that all is working according to plan.
Then failover again just to return to the original and prove that it will
return after the initial failure has been resolved.
Put your results into your operating manual(s) for future reference.

-Original Message-
From: Andrew Twigger [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 9:55 AM
To: 'Florin Mechetiuc'; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: PIX failover


If you do sh ver from enable mode you get :-

PIX_TH_BB# sh ver

PIX Version 4.4(4)
Compiled on Thu 06-Jan-00 16:07 by pixbuild
PIX BIOS (4.0) #0: Tue May 18 16:29:54 PDT 1999

PIX_TH_BB up 104 days 21 hours

Hardware:   PIX-515, 64 MB RAM, CPU Pentium 200 MHz
Flash strata @ base 0x300
0: ethernet0: address is 0050.54ff.382e, irq 9
1: ethernet1: address is 0050.54ff.382f, irq 7

Licensed Options:
Failover:   Enabled
IPSec:  Disabled
Ports allowed:  6

Serial Number:  1234567890
--

Two things that say its a UnRestricted  pix.

1)  64Meg of Ram - Restricted pix has only 32meg
2)  the Failover option is enabled

If you have a Restricted and buy the upgrade you get 32meg of ram and a
software patch.

Hope this helps

Andrew

-Original Message-
From: Florin Mechetiuc [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 3:22 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: PIX failover


I have couple of 520 firewalls ordered a while back but I don't know if is a
way to check
if they are in failover bundle.
To be more specific , I have one up and running but I would like to install
the failover and I don't which one is ( I have other three
ordered for other projects). I think it might be a way of checking on
Cisco's website by having the serial number of the main firewall and
then I can get the the serial number of the failover.



Thanks and Happy New Year !


Florin Mechetiuc
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Re: Knowledge Net

2001-01-02 Thread lawrence sculark

html
DIV
Pjeff, i think they are great...i took intro and advanced through them [may99] they 
were awesomegreat suport structure also especially if you have some equiment to 
work with...lawrenceBRBR/P/DIV
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DIV/DIVgt; 
DIV/DIVgt;Has anyone taken any of the classes through Knowledge Net? I just did 
the 
DIV/DIVgt;6509 class which was pretty cool. 
DIV/DIVgt; 
DIV/DIVgt;Jeff 
DIV/DIVgt; 
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RE: Spanning Tree and Root Bridge Question

2001-01-02 Thread Evan Francen

Switch2 is the root bridge.  Bridge ID MAC ADDR and Designated Root are
identical, and cost is 0.  Switch1's configuration is incorrect.  Recheck
your VLAN and STP configurations.

HTH,
Evan

-Original Message-
From: Giggsy [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 7:59 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Spanning Tree and Root Bridge Question


Hi

Pls refer to my Switch1 Spanning Tree display. Is this my Root Bridge?
How come the MAC for Switch1 is 00-00-00-00-00-00?
Any problem with this switch? it is so different from Switch2 (pls refer to
the below)


Switch1 (enable) sh spantree
VLAN 1
Spanning tree enabled
Spanning tree type  ieee

Designated Root 00-00-00-00-00-00
Designated Root Priority0
Designated Root Cost0
Designated Root Port1/0
Root Max Age   0  secHello Time 0  sec   Forward Delay 0  sec

Bridge ID MAC ADDR  00-00-00-00-00-00
Bridge ID Priority  32768
Bridge Max Age 20 secHello Time 2  sec   Forward Delay 15 sec

Port Vlan Port-StateCost  Priority Portfast
Channel_id
  - -  -- --

Switch1 (enable)


  
Switch2 (enable) sh spantree
VLAN 1
Spanning tree enabled
Spanning tree type  ieee

Designated Root 00-02-fc-10-40-00
Designated Root Priority32768
Designated Root Cost0
Designated Root Port1/0
Root Max Age   20 secHello Time 2  sec   Forward Delay 15 sec

Bridge ID MAC ADDR  00-02-fc-10-40-00
Bridge ID Priority  32768
Bridge Max Age 20 secHello Time 2  sec   Forward Delay 15 sec

Port  Vlan  Port-State Cost   Priority  Fast-Start  Group-Method
-   -  -    --  
 2/1  1 forwarding1932   disabled
 2/9  1 not-connected10032   disabled
 2/10 1 not-connected10032   disabled
 2/11 1 not-connected10032   disabled
 2/12 1 not-connected10032   disabled
 2/13 1 not-connected10032   disabled
 2/14 1 not-connected10032   disabled
 2/15 1 not-connected10032   disabled
 2/16 1 not-connected10032   disabled
Switch2 (enable)


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Syslog

2001-01-02 Thread Kevin Wigle

Dear Group,

Happy New Year!

In the lab, trying to configure syslog.

On CCO, an example is given with the command:  logging trap informational

I try this and the command is accepted but it is not visible after "sh run".

I had used "logging history information" but I think this is for SNMP
management stations, not syslog.

However, that command is accepted and can be seen after "sh run".

The router is a 7505 running 11.3(2)T

Can anyone lend any insights ?

Kevin Wigle



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RE: Syslog

2001-01-02 Thread Aaron K. Dixon

That's because routers don't show default commands.  By default, logging
trap informational is turned on.

Regards,
Aaron K. Dixon

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Kevin Wigle
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 10:26 AM
To: cisco
Subject: Syslog


Dear Group,

Happy New Year!

In the lab, trying to configure syslog.

On CCO, an example is given with the command:  logging trap informational

I try this and the command is accepted but it is not visible after "sh run".

I had used "logging history information" but I think this is for SNMP
management stations, not syslog.

However, that command is accepted and can be seen after "sh run".

The router is a 7505 running 11.3(2)T

Can anyone lend any insights ?

Kevin Wigle



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Re: Foundation 2.0

2001-01-02 Thread Bryon

I have herd and seen so many diffrent times and question so I called cisco
training and asked since the details are not on the web site. I was told
90-120 questions in 2hrs and 15min. I was also told question are weighted
meaning easy question receive less points and harder question more points
making it near impossable to come up with rules of thumb as to what is a
passing score before you take the test in tearms of number of question
wright or wrong.You must pass all three section to pass exam. I plan on
taking this exam this month. I will become a CCNP and CCDP at the same time
with this exam. Study hard and good luck.

Bryon Phillips
CCNA,CCDA

""Terence Lee"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
91lqui$j84$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:91lqui$j84$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Has anyone taken Foundation 2.0 exam? I have research and found different
 info about it? tcpmag.com says that there are only 76 question. Other
 sources says 135? Promectric tell me that they are not sure. Does anyone
 have an idea about time lenght and amount questions? Thanks

 Terence Lee
 MSCE, CCNA


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Cisco Catalyst Supervisor Engines

2001-01-02 Thread Shane Stockman

Could someone please explain the difference between the supervisor 1,2,3 
engines that go with the Catalyst 5000 and 6500,why are they used and where 
would I use them ( Core , Distribution, Access).

Another question - What would be the easiest way to test serial and ethernet 
ports on a router with minimal equipment and cables ( what would be needed 
to do so ).


Thanks
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Re: PIX IOS upgrades and registration questions.

2001-01-02 Thread gwakin

for that matter- has anyone tried to replace a PIX motherboard?  I mean, it's just a
Pentium-200... ;-)

GWA

Jason Roysdon wrote:

 But I believe his question is: does he have to pay to go from 4.x to 5.x?  I
 don't believe so (please correct me if I'm wrong).

 Also, a PIX 515R is a great deal.  They are now allowed to have 3 ports, you
 just have to get a new license code (free).

 One thing I'm curious about: Has anyone tried to install a non-Cisco part
 number NIC?  I mean, they're just Intel NICs...

 --
 Jason Roysdon, CCNA, MCSE, CNA, Network+, A+
 List email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Homepage: http://jason.artoo.net/
 Cisco resources: http://r2cisco.artoo.net/

 "Todd Plambeck" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  You can upgrade 5.1 and 5.2 Pix Software to support ipsec 56k DES for
  free ( if you have a cisco login ( reseller, consultant, or customer )).
  The 3DES license has a charge around $1200.00. If you purchase this pix
  off of ebay you will need to upgrade the PIX Software to 5.1 or 5.2
  ( 4.x does not support ipsec ) you will also need 32meg of ram.
  hope this helps.
 
  Todd
 
  whatshakin wrote:
 
   OK guys,What's the deal with the PIX licensing structure and IOS
   upgrade process?  Looking on CCO, I found docs that mention needing to
   register with TAC to get IPsec functionality in your PIX.  Does anyone
   know whether this registration costs money?  The reason I ask is I am
   contemplating buying a used PIX off eBay and I want to be sure I can
   get IPSec functionality without it costing an arm and a leg...the PIX
   will cost me enough already! I need to know that if I purchase say a
   PIX 520/515 with 4.X IOS, what the cost will be to upgrade it to 5.X
   with IPSec features?  This will be the deciding factor of whether I
   buy one that has everything already (means waiting until one shows up)
   for buying one right away and upgrading it to get the features I
   want. Thanks a lot.
 
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Re: PIX and OSPF help! (Revisited)

2001-01-02 Thread gwakin

it is my understanding that a GRE tunnel is required for passing multicast traffic over
a VPN link... however I won't even attempt to forge a working config here- you're 
better
off checking CCO for that.

GWA

Nabil Fares wrote:

 Greetings,

 I can't seem to find any information about PIX passing OSPF traffic between
 routers.  I'm trying to install a PIX515 between 2 regional routers.

 Router-C1--PIX515---Router-C2

 Cisco recommends using the OSPF neighbor command, anyone out there used this
 configuration before?  Any information would be helpful.

 Thanks,

 Nabil

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Re: Cable ???????????????????????????

2001-01-02 Thread gwakin

ensure your cable is smoke-blue in color and has a Manchester (block) connector with
male pins... there- now you know to order from Cisco!

GWA

b1zzei72 wrote:

 Hello Guys:
 What kind of Cable will be required to connect Cisco 4000 router to
 CSU/DSU. I guess it would be V.35 DTE because on CSU there is a V.35 DCE
 port. Does it vary from vendor to vendor? Do I need to ask carrier about
 CSU all the time? Does it differ in case of different speed circuit? Or
 does it matter I have a Frame Relay Circuit or a leased Circuit?
 Your comments will be appreciated...
 Thanks...

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T-1 versus PRI in asynch remote access shelf?

2001-01-02 Thread Michael Vicchiollo

Hello all...

I have a remote access shelf (AS5300) with a Quad T1/PRI module.  Is there
an increase in the level of difficulty of configuration and maintenance
associated with using straight T1 over the PRI that would justify pushing
for the PRI lines?  This assumes that we are going to use 2 T1s for dial in
and have our 800 number somehow associated with the AS5300 T1 signaling
channel AND that we can use the same system for dial out regardless of our
choice of circuit type. I have configured a system with PRIs before and it
was a piece of cake.  I just don't have any idea of how to point an 800
number at a T1 without an associated phone number.  Any help would be
appreciated.

Mike



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RE: Foundation 2.0

2001-01-02 Thread MCDONALD, ROMAN (SBCSI)

Only if you've taken and passed the CID test will you become a CCDP!

-Original Message-
From: Bryon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 10:57 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Foundation 2.0


I have herd and seen so many diffrent times and question so I called cisco
training and asked since the details are not on the web site. I was told
90-120 questions in 2hrs and 15min. I was also told question are weighted
meaning easy question receive less points and harder question more points
making it near impossable to come up with rules of thumb as to what is a
passing score before you take the test in tearms of number of question
wright or wrong.You must pass all three section to pass exam. I plan on
taking this exam this month. I will become a CCNP and CCDP at the same time
with this exam. Study hard and good luck.

Bryon Phillips
CCNA,CCDA

""Terence Lee"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
91lqui$j84$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:91lqui$j84$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Has anyone taken Foundation 2.0 exam? I have research and found different
 info about it? tcpmag.com says that there are only 76 question. Other
 sources says 135? Promectric tell me that they are not sure. Does anyone
 have an idea about time lenght and amount questions? Thanks

 Terence Lee
 MSCE, CCNA


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RE: PIX and OSPF help! (Revisited)

2001-01-02 Thread Chuck Larrieu

You can always check:

http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/471/top_issues/vpn/vpn_index.shtml

There is a very large ( 2 meg plus ) document on CCO called  ipsc_dg.pdf

IPSec Design guide. You get to it through the www.cisco.com/tac link, but it
can be a bit indirect, and the actual link to the document off the tac page
is broken. I haven't tried in a while to download this document. You may
need a CCO login to do so. Over 300 pages and tons of configuration
examples.

HTH

Chuck

-Original Message-
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
gwakin
Sent:   Tuesday, January 02, 2001 9:19 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:Re: PIX and OSPF help! (Revisited)

it is my understanding that a GRE tunnel is required for passing multicast
traffic over
a VPN link... however I won't even attempt to forge a working config here-
you're better
off checking CCO for that.

GWA

Nabil Fares wrote:

 Greetings,

 I can't seem to find any information about PIX passing OSPF traffic
between
 routers.  I'm trying to install a PIX515 between 2 regional routers.

 Router-C1--PIX515---Router-C2

 Cisco recommends using the OSPF neighbor command, anyone out there used
this
 configuration before?  Any information would be helpful.

 Thanks,

 Nabil

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CCIE Lab Equipment for sale...

2001-01-02 Thread Eddie Parra

I am selling the equipment in my CCIE rack if anyone is interested
separately.  Here is what I am asking for the units.

(1) 2610 24/8 (No Wics)  $1100
(1) 2610 32/8 (No Wics)  $1200
(2) 2503 8/8 $600 (each)
(1) CS-516   $500
(1) Catalyst 2901$1900
(1) Teltone ISDN Simulator   $1500

Misc

(2) NM-1V$500 (each)
(1) FXO WIC  $150
(1) FXS WIC  $150
(2) WIC-1T   $250 (each)
(1) 4000 4T  $500


I prefer Pay Pal and will only ship within the US.  Buyer pays shipping.
Please email me if you have any questions.  Thank you...

-Eddie


   Eddie M. Parra, CCIE# 6428
   Professional Services Project Engineer II
  |   |GCOE Customer Core Design Team
 ||| |||   Virtual Office: (954) 455-8161
   .|. .|. Fax: (954) 458-8148 / eFax (413) 845-5684
.:|:.:|:.  Cellular: (954) 647-3656
 C i s c o S y s t e m s   Email Page: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

  "Empowering the Internet Generation"

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Re: AUX Port

2001-01-02 Thread Paul Lalonde

Hey,

Throw in the following and see what happens:

speed 19200
modem type autoconfigure

this should set the AA on the modem.

Paul

"Austin" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
92ssgt$rg2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:92ssgt$rg2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I have a Cisco 2511 Access Server.
 I want to connect to the 2511 via Modem. I have an old Motorola 14.4
modem.
 The aux port has the ffg config:

 line aux 0
 login
 password cisco
 modem inout
 transport input all

 I have the phone line plugged into the Modem (where it says TO WALL) and I
 have the Parallel connector (Modem) from Cisco's console kit plugged into
 the Modem Parallel Port. Then I have a regular Cisco console cable running
 from the modem to the aux port.

 When I call the number it just rings and rings. The modem does not answer.
 What am I doing wrong or what am I not doing?
 All help appreciated.


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Re: Syslog

2001-01-02 Thread Kevin Wigle

cool,

all the CCO pages I had seen using the command did not mention the default.

just found the command syntax listing and there it was "informational".

thanks

Kevin Wigle

- Original Message -
From: "Aaron K. Dixon" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Kevin Wigle" [EMAIL PROTECTED]; "cisco" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 11:45 AM
Subject: RE: Syslog


 That's because routers don't show default commands.  By default, logging
 trap informational is turned on.

 Regards,
 Aaron K. Dixon

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
 Kevin Wigle
 Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 10:26 AM
 To: cisco
 Subject: Syslog


 Dear Group,

 Happy New Year!

 In the lab, trying to configure syslog.

 On CCO, an example is given with the command:  logging trap informational

 I try this and the command is accepted but it is not visible after "sh
run".

 I had used "logging history information" but I think this is for SNMP
 management stations, not syslog.

 However, that command is accepted and can be seen after "sh run".

 The router is a 7505 running 11.3(2)T

 Can anyone lend any insights ?

 Kevin Wigle



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Cisco 3600 Pri ISDN connection problem

2001-01-02 Thread Andrew Lawrence

I've inherited a Cisco 3600 which originally had a Pri rate ISDN interface
and a network interface.

This was setup and running to not only dial our ISP but also to dial into
some other customers via ISDN. I was told that 15 isdn channels fed into
this interface.

We then moved over to a leased line and purchased an X.21 card. At the same
time we added a firewall. Due to the configuration of the firewall we lost
the ability to dial into our customers (The router was no longer reachable
from our network as the firewall had hidden it!) We now have a different
firewall and the router is visible again. 

I'm trying to resurrect the ISDN connections but I am not having much fun !
I need some help in debugging it to try and find out what is going on.

I issued the commands debug isdn q921 and debug isdn q931 and then when I
ping something that has a route entry and dialer setup I get the following
debug output

interprod1-1-gw#ping 192.168.88.1
 
Type escape sequence to abort.
Sending 5, 100-byte ICMP Echos to 192.168.88.1, timeout is 2 seconds:
 
01:38:50: Serial1/0:15: rotor dialout [priority]
01:38:50: Serial1/0:15: Dialing cause ip (s=193.xxx.xxx.xx, d=192.168.88.1)
01:38:50: Serial1/0:15: Attempting to dial 90171xx..
01:38:54: %ISDN-6-LAYER2DOWN: Layer 2 for Interface Se1/0:15, TEI 0 changed
to d
own
01:38:54: ISDN Se1/0:15: Event: received NL_REL_IND
01:38:54: Serial1/0:15: wait for carrier timeout, call id=0x800E.
01:38:56: Serial1/0:15: rotor dialout [priority]
01:38:56: Serial1/0:15: Dialing cause ip (s=193.xxx.xxx.xx, d=192.168.88.1)
01:38:56: Serial1/0:15: Attempting to dial 90171xx..
Success rate is 0 percent (0/5)
interprod1-1-gw#
01:39:00: %ISDN-6-LAYER2DOWN: Layer 2 for Interface Se1/0:15, TEI 0 changed
to d
own
01:39:00: ISDN Se1/0:15: Event: received NL_REL_IND
01:39:00: Serial1/0:15: wait for carrier timeout, call id=0x800F


When I do show int 
The serial interface for serial 1/0:0 to serial 1/0:14 is down,line protocol
is down 
but for serial 1/0:15 it is up, line protocol is up (spoofing)

Sho isdn status gives me 

ISDN Serial1/0:15 interface
Layer 1 Status:
ACTIVE
Layer 2 Status:
TEI = 0, Ces = 1, SAPI = 0, State = TEI_ASSIGNED
Layer 3 Status:
0 Active Layer 3 Call(s)
Activated dsl 0 CCBs = 0
Number of L2 Discards = 129, L2D_Task Discards = 53
Total Allocated ISDN CCBs = 0 

Does any of this shed any light on why it does n't  work. What other things
do I need to look at.

As you've probably realised I'm new to this Cisco stuff !

The only other thing I can remember is when the firewall people reconfigured
the Cisco they did have some problems with Timeslots. Are these important !

If any more info is require let me know.

As an aside can anyone point in the direction of a good book on configuring
Cisco routers ?

TIA

Andy

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connect the ISP

2001-01-02 Thread gary gary

Hi guys:
We are a small ISP, just using static routing connect
 the mother ISP, the mother ISP assign a class C
 address to us, I want to know how the mother ISP
 locate the Class c networking , just using static
 routing? Need they redistribute the static to their
 dynamic routing (for example OSPF) in order to the
 internet router know the class c network,?
 Did the mother ISP create the stub area, then assign
 the lots of ip address to stub area ,if so  how to
 create the stub area by static routing? Anyone can
 give me some configuration,


  can the "default-information originate always"
command  redistribute the static route(locate our
class c network) into the ospf routing domain? in
order to let the internet router know the C class
network

 
 Thanks in advice



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RE: PIX IOS upgrades and registration questions.

2001-01-02 Thread Chris Lemagie

The Pix OS upgrade is not free with a CCO logon.  It is free with Smart Net
maintenance on the Pix appliance, well kinda free since you are paying
annually for the maintenance contract.  You would technically be in
violation of the license agreement if you download new Pix software without
Smart Net maintenance.

That said, make sure that if you upgrade, upgrade to 5.2.  I would skip 5.1.
5.2 adds support for gratuitous ARPs (much needed if using failover in a
switched environment) as well as support for the VPN 3000 client (i.e. mode
config).  There are many more additions which are listed on CCO.

Chris Lemagie
Systems Engineer
Cisco Systems
Seattle Commercial Region
(425) 468-0959
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
gwakin
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 9:11 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: PIX IOS upgrades and registration questions.


for that matter- has anyone tried to replace a PIX motherboard?  I mean,
it's just a
Pentium-200... ;-)

GWA

Jason Roysdon wrote:

 But I believe his question is: does he have to pay to go from 4.x to 5.x?
I
 don't believe so (please correct me if I'm wrong).

 Also, a PIX 515R is a great deal.  They are now allowed to have 3 ports,
you
 just have to get a new license code (free).

 One thing I'm curious about: Has anyone tried to install a non-Cisco part
 number NIC?  I mean, they're just Intel NICs...

 --
 Jason Roysdon, CCNA, MCSE, CNA, Network+, A+
 List email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Homepage: http://jason.artoo.net/
 Cisco resources: http://r2cisco.artoo.net/

 "Todd Plambeck" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  You can upgrade 5.1 and 5.2 Pix Software to support ipsec 56k DES for
  free ( if you have a cisco login ( reseller, consultant, or customer )).
  The 3DES license has a charge around $1200.00. If you purchase this pix
  off of ebay you will need to upgrade the PIX Software to 5.1 or 5.2
  ( 4.x does not support ipsec ) you will also need 32meg of ram.
  hope this helps.
 
  Todd
 
  whatshakin wrote:
 
   OK guys,What's the deal with the PIX licensing structure and IOS
   upgrade process?  Looking on CCO, I found docs that mention needing to
   register with TAC to get IPsec functionality in your PIX.  Does anyone
   know whether this registration costs money?  The reason I ask is I am
   contemplating buying a used PIX off eBay and I want to be sure I can
   get IPSec functionality without it costing an arm and a leg...the PIX
   will cost me enough already! I need to know that if I purchase say a
   PIX 520/515 with 4.X IOS, what the cost will be to upgrade it to 5.X
   with IPSec features?  This will be the deciding factor of whether I
   buy one that has everything already (means waiting until one shows up)
   for buying one right away and upgrading it to get the features I
   want. Thanks a lot.
 
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RE: T-1 versus PRI in asynch remote access shelf?

2001-01-02 Thread Michael Vicchiollo

Nevermind...   I found the answer I was looking for.  Thanks all..

Mike

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
 Michael Vicchiollo
 Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 12:35 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: T-1 versus PRI in asynch remote access shelf?


 Hello all...

   I have a remote access shelf (AS5300) with a Quad T1/PRI
 module.  Is there
 an increase in the level of difficulty of configuration and maintenance
 associated with using straight T1 over the PRI that would justify pushing
 for the PRI lines?  This assumes that we are going to use 2 T1s
 for dial in
 and have our 800 number somehow associated with the AS5300 T1 signaling
 channel AND that we can use the same system for dial out regardless of our
 choice of circuit type. I have configured a system with PRIs before and it
 was a piece of cake.  I just don't have any idea of how to point an 800
 number at a T1 without an associated phone number.  Any help would be
 appreciated.

 Mike



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RE: Cable ???????????????????????????

2001-01-02 Thread Yanto Marzuki

If your CSU is of V.35 DCE (female) then you are safe to use the V35 DTE
(male) cable.

Cisco 4000 also supports other types of connectors, like V.24


-Original Message-
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
gwakin
Sent:   Wednesday, January 03, 2001 1:23 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:Re: Cable ???

ensure your cable is smoke-blue in color and has a Manchester (block)
connector with
male pins... there- now you know to order from Cisco!

GWA

b1zzei72 wrote:

 Hello Guys:
 What kind of Cable will be required to connect Cisco 4000 router to
 CSU/DSU. I guess it would be V.35 DTE because on CSU there is a V.35 DCE
 port. Does it vary from vendor to vendor? Do I need to ask carrier about
 CSU all the time? Does it differ in case of different speed circuit? Or
 does it matter I have a Frame Relay Circuit or a leased Circuit?
 Your comments will be appreciated...
 Thanks...

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RE: PIX VPNs

2001-01-02 Thread Rik Guyler

Here is an example of a 3-way PIX VPN (DES) using pre-shared keys.  I used
these as a template for setting up a VPN for a client of mine.

Rik Guyler

Austin wrote:

 I am looking for sample configs on PIX to PIX VPNs.

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nameif ethernet0 outside security0
nameif ethernet1 inside security100
enable password 8Ry2YjIyt7RRXU24 encrypted
passwd 2KFQnbNIdI.2KYOU encrypted
hostname pix2
fixup protocol ftp 21
fixup protocol http 80
fixup protocol h323 1720
fixup protocol rsh 514
fixup protocol smtp 25
fixup protocol sqlnet 1521
names
access-list 100 permit ip 10.1.2.0 255.255.255.0 10.1.1.0 255.255.255.0
access-list 101 permit ip 10.1.2.0 255.255.255.0 10.1.3.0 255.255.255.0
access-list nonat permit ip 10.1.2.0 255.255.255.0 10.1.1.0 255.255.255.0
access-list nonat permit ip 10.1.2.0 255.255.255.0 10.1.3.0 255.255.255.0
pager lines 24
logging on
no logging timestamp
no logging standby
no logging console
no logging monitor
no logging buffered
no logging trap
no logging history
logging facility 20
logging queue 512
interface ethernet0 10baset
interface ethernet1 10baset
mtu outside 1500
mtu inside 1500
ip address outside 192.168.1.20 255.255.255.0
ip address inside 10.1.2.1 255.255.255.0
arp timeout 14400
global (outside) 1 192.168.1.21-192.168.1.29
nat (inside) 0 access-list nonat
nat (inside) 1 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 0 0
conduit permit icmp any any
route outside 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 192.168.1.75 1
timeout xlate 3:00:00 conn 1:00:00 half-closed 0:10:00 udp 0:02:00
timeout rpc 0:10:00 h323 0:05:00
timeout uauth 0:05:00 absolute
aaa-server TACACS+ protocol tacacs+
aaa-server RADIUS protocol radius
no snmp-server location
no snmp-server contact
snmp-server community public
no snmp-server enable traps
floodguard enable
sysopt connection permit-ipsec
crypto ipsec transform-set myset esp-des esp-md5-hmac
crypto map mymap 10 ipsec-isakmp
crypto map mymap 10 match address 100
crypto map mymap 10 set peer 192.168.1.10
crypto map mymap 10 set transform-set myset
crypto map mymap 20 ipsec-isakmp
crypto map mymap 20 match address 101
crypto map mymap 20 set peer 192.168.1.30
crypto map mymap 20 set transform-set myset
crypto map mymap interface outside
isakmp enable outside
isakmp key cisco123 address 192.168.1.10 netmask 255.255.255.255
isakmp key cisco123 address 192.168.1.30 netmask 255.255.255.255
isakmp identity address
isakmp policy 10 authentication pre-share
isakmp policy 10 encryption des
isakmp policy 10 hash md5
isakmp policy 10 group 1
isakmp policy 10 lifetime 86400
telnet 10.1.1.0 255.255.255.0 inside
telnet timeout 60
terminal width 80
nameif ethernet0 outside security0
nameif ethernet1 inside security100
enable password 8Ry2YjIyt7RRXU24 encrypted
passwd 2KFQnbNIdI.2KYOU encrypted
hostname pix1
fixup protocol ftp 21
fixup protocol http 80
fixup protocol h323 1720
fixup protocol rsh 514
fixup protocol smtp 25
fixup protocol sqlnet 1521
names
access-list 100 permit ip 10.1.1.0 255.255.255.0 10.1.2.0 255.255.255.0
access-list 101 permit ip 10.1.1.0 255.255.255.0 10.1.3.0 255.255.255.0
access-list nonat permit ip 10.1.1.0 255.255.255.0 10.1.2.0 255.255.255.0
access-list nonat permit ip 10.1.1.0 255.255.255.0 10.1.3.0 255.255.255.0
pager lines 24
logging on
no logging timestamp
no logging standby
no logging console
no logging monitor
no logging buffered
no logging trap
no logging history
logging facility 20
logging queue 512
interface ethernet0 10baset
interface ethernet1 10baset
mtu outside 1500
mtu inside 1500
ip address outside 192.168.1.10 255.255.255.0
ip address inside 10.1.1.1 255.255.255.0
arp timeout 14400
global (outside) 1 192.168.1.11-192.168.1.19
nat (inside) 0 access-list nonat
nat (inside) 1 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 0 0
conduit permit icmp any any
route outside 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 192.168.1.75 1
timeout xlate 3:00:00 conn 1:00:00 half-closed 0:10:00 udp 0:02:00
timeout rpc 0:10:00 h323 0:05:00
timeout uauth 0:05:00 absolute
aaa-server TACACS+ protocol tacacs+
aaa-server RADIUS protocol radius
no snmp-server location
no snmp-server contact
snmp-server community public
no snmp-server enable traps
floodguard enable
sysopt connection permit-ipsec
crypto ipsec transform-set myset esp-des esp-md5-hmac
crypto map mymap 10 ipsec-isakmp
crypto map mymap 10 match address 100
crypto map mymap 10 

Re: Cisco Certification Digest V2 #916

2001-01-02 Thread Daniel Keller

I will be on vacation until January 8 and out of pager and cell phone range.  For all 
network related issues please contact our Network Operations Center at 800-610-4684.

Dan Keller

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Off topic

2001-01-02 Thread Naveen Sharma

Dear Friends,

Can any one give me wiring diagram for RJ-45 to DB 9 pin out and RJ-45 =
to DB 25 pin out.

Thanks for help

Best regards

Naveen

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RE: Off topic

2001-01-02 Thread Maness, Drew

http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/701/14.html

-Original Message-
From: Naveen Sharma [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, January 01, 2001 10:08 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Off topic


Dear Friends,

Can any one give me wiring diagram for RJ-45 to DB 9 pin out and RJ-45 =
to DB 25 pin out.

Thanks for help

Best regards

Naveen

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Re: BCMSN Questions - Pls Help

2001-01-02 Thread Jonathan Hays

Good point. Although the Test Question World did talk about expanding to 45
people and this idea of expandability and multiple floors point to a backbone
switch, IMHO. In the Real World often I have had customer who popluate the
Catalyst 5500 (more often a 6500 these days) with GigE and GBICs and run them
via fiber to 3548's on each floor.

-Jonathan

Jim Dixon wrote:

 Hi Jonathan,
 The question at the end of the description states  ACCESS layer as the layer
 for which we are to select the switch.
 While I don't disagree totally with your assessment of what should be
 selected, I think the answer should be 2900 series
 just more than one and if the truth be known the 3500 series might fit even
 better although IT is not listed as an option.

 Jim

 -Original Message-
 From: Jonathan Hays [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 9:46 AM
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: BCMSN Questions - Pls Help

 In addition to just getting the "right" answers I would suggest doing some
 research. Go
 to www.cisco.com, under Prodcuts and Technologies select Switches. You will
 be presented
 with a top level description of Cisco's switch line and many links to
 explore. Learning
 HOW to figure out the answers will be important on the job.

 Right away you see that the 8500 series switch is an ATM switch, so you can
 throw that
 one out. The 1900 series is fixed at 24 ports maximum (the two 100 Mbps
 ports are
 generally used for uplinks). The question points to a backbone switch
 solution with the
 keywords "multiple floors" and the desire to expand to 45 ports. Although
 there is a
 2948 (48 ports) and a 2980 (80 ports) most of the Cisco training literature
 suggests the
 use of a Catalyst 5500 (or 6500) as a backbone series switch.

 Giggsy wrote:

  Hi
 
  While i am preparing for my Switching 2.0 Exam, i encounter the following
 2
  questions while i do the pracice exams which have different answers. Would
  appreciate if someone could enlighten me what should be the CORRECT
 answer.
 
  Question 1
  ==
  The ACME company is a small manufacturing company that wants to
 interconnect
  users on multiple floors in the same building. To date, the company has
 only
  15 employees but plans to triple in number in the next year. Users require
  access to large graphic files on the workgroup servers. What is the most
  appropriate device for the access layer?
 
  A. Catalyst 8500 series switch
  B. Catalyst 5500 series switch with an internal RSM
  C. Catalyst 1900 series switch with 10 BaseT ports
  D. Catalyst 2900 series switch with 100 BaseTX ports
 
  COLT said that the answer should be D BUT the course book's answer is C.
 So
  which one should it be???
 
  Question 2
  ===
  how to find out what error messages were being sent to the other out-bands
  besides the console port.
 
  So what is the answer for this?
 
  Hope someone can help. Thanks
 
  Regards
 
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Using uplink to connect to server

2001-01-02 Thread Watson, Rick, , OUSDC

Knowing that this is not common practice, but I was wondering if it was
possible to connect a "host" (server) to one of the uplink ports on a
switch? Was wondering if there would be any difficulties involved with this?
Has ayone attempted this uncommon practice? Thanks.

Rick Watson
Network Engineer
OUSD(Comptroller)
703.697.5710
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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2501 not booting properly

2001-01-02 Thread Hans Stout

Hello colleagues,

I have a 2501 router that apparently doesn't boot anymore; when I turn it 
off and on, the system/ok LED doesn't blink and immediately goes to 
'steady'. I cannot get a router prompt through the console port, all I get 
are some 'rubbish' characters. Has any of you seen something similar yet ? I 
am used to see the system/ok LED blinking during the boot process and then 
go to steady. Can that indicate a memory and/or hardware failure ?

Regards,

Georg Pauwen
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Re: problem on FR

2001-01-02 Thread news.groupstudy.com


   What is the status of the main interface you are configuring this
Frame-relay subinterface on?

   I have typically seen a "deleted" status for a PVC to mean that the PVC
within the frame-relay net you are connecting to is not built.


"Frank" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
92s7rc$4f2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:92s7rc$4f2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I am configuring a multichannel E1 board on 7513 to connect with a FR net.
 when i use SH FRAME PVC ,i got the the PVC status is "deleted " or
 "inactive"
 what acturally does it mean ?
 as far as i know ,"deleted" means the line between router and FR switch is
 not OK,
 and "inactive" means OK.
 i also got the following infor when i unplug the line from the router and
 then plug it back.
 (i opened deb frame packet and deb frame event on)

 serial4/0/0:0 broadcast search
 serial4/0/0:0 encaps failed on broadcast for link 7(IP)

 what does it mean?

 Any help is appreciated.

 Frank



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Re: Using uplink to connect to server

2001-01-02 Thread Chris Boyd

Yes...


Thanks,

Chris Boyd, CCNA
Network Support
Alex Lee, Inc.
120 4th St SW
Hickory NC 28603
828-323-4103
www.alexlee.com
- Original Message -
From: "Watson, Rick, , OUSDC" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "[EMAIL PROTECTED] (E-mail)" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 1:54 PM
Subject: Using uplink to connect to server


 Knowing that this is not common practice, but I was wondering if it was
 possible to connect a "host" (server) to one of the uplink ports on a
 switch? Was wondering if there would be any difficulties involved with
this?
 Has ayone attempted this uncommon practice? Thanks.

 Rick Watson
 Network Engineer
 OUSD(Comptroller)
 703.697.5710
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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Re: Simple question

2001-01-02 Thread Mason Eike


 Those are symbols for use with Regular expressions.

  ^ = Matches the beginning of the input string
  $ = Matches the end of the input string

 What your example is doing is permitting advertisement(s) for any BGP
learned networks whose path either begins or ends with 100. In other words,
accept advertisements that were originated from AS 100.

Mas


mak [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi,

 For example, ip as-path access-list 20 permit ^100$

 What is the ^$ stands for?

 Thanks

 mak



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Re: about connect the ISP

2001-01-02 Thread Mason Eike


  The address space you were assigned from the Mother ISP is more than
likely going to be out of a larger block the Mother ISP was assigned from
ARIN.  Say your /24 prefix (Class C) is part of a /16 (Class B) that they
own..  They only announce the /16 to their peers unless a specific situation
arises where they'd need to send the /24.  All of the Major ISP's and org's
follow this procedure and that's why we don't have 9,000,000 routes in our
routing tables.. :)..  Route aggregation is the term..
  So to answer your question.. :)..

 Mother ISP assigns /24 to you statically.  Then they redistribute that
throughout their Autonomous Systems using a Dynamic routing protocol so all
of the internal routers know the path to the router you're connect to, and
then only announce the /16 to their peers.   Everyone knows how to get to
everyone else..

Hope that answers your question.
Mas


"Tony van Ree" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi,

 We provide a service to thousands of clients with anything from full class
"B" to 4 addresses out of a class "C".  In a nutshell you place a default
static back to the supplier.  The supplier has a static pointing your class
"C" down your link.

 In a number of places this is managed by auto type processes for example
going into a customer area and adding the routes you own to your service.
The process then updates the router from the supplier to you.

 Teunis
 Hobart, Tasmania
 Australia


 On Saturday, December 30, 2000 at 07:49:57 AM, gary gary wrote:

  Hi guys:
  We are a small ISP, just using static routing connect
  the mother ISP, the mother ISP assign a class C
  address to us, I want to know how the mother ISP
  locate the Class c networking , just using static
  routing? Need they redistribute the static to their
  dynamic routing (for example OSPF) in order to the
  internet router know the class c network,?
  Did the mother ISP create the stub area, then assign
  the lots of ip address to stub area ,if so  how to
  create the stub area by static routing? Anyone can
  give me some configuration,
 
 
  Thanks in advice
 
 
 
  gary
 
 
 
 
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Upgrade switch IOS on a 6500 via console

2001-01-02 Thread Roberts, Timothy


Can anyone provide me with info on how to do this.
Thanks





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Re: PIX VPNs

2001-01-02 Thread Adam Quiggle

Geroge,

Interesting perspective.  However, depending upon the VPN protocol you
are using it may or may not provide a connectivity solution.  Since we
are talking about the PIX firewall, we must be talking about IPSec.  I
don't see IPSec as a connectivity solution, it is a security solution.
There are many ways to provide security, the most obvious is encryption.
Another method for providing security would be to hide the real ip addresses
of my Intranet.  By using the private address range (RFC 1918) on my
Intranet and translating outgoing packets to an Internet routable address,
I almost guarantee that no one can send a packet directly to any
of the computers on my intranet without going through my firewall or VPN.

VPNs can solve many problems, but connectivity is not always one of them.
There are certain VPN protocols such as PPTP, L2F, L2TP that can give you
a connectivity solution.  If you want to run a routing protocol through a
VPN, specifically IPSec, then you do need to setup a GRE tunnel.  The way
I see it GRE tunnels are a connectivity solution, because it allows you to
transport protocols that are not routable across an IP only backbone.  Keep
in mind that GRE tunnels are not a security solution, which is why you might
encrypt a GRE tunnel with IPSec.

If you don't care about hiding your address space from the rest of the world
and thus want a solution that doesn't require two distinct address spaces,
why focus on a PIX firewall, especially since it's primary goal is to hide
your address space.  Instead, why not just terminate an IPSec tunnel between
two VPN accelerated routers? (They don't need to be accelerated, but
depending upon the projected bandwidth utilization they might need to be).
There are many routers that can be used to fit any number of requirements.
It all just depends upon that famous quote "what problem are we trying to 
solve".

As my father always said.."the right tool for the right job"  :-)

So, where was I?  Oh..right...Austin...here is the link you are looking for:
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/110/38.html

HTH,
AQ



At 11:40 AM 1/2/01, gwakin wrote:
I feel led to tell you that, unless IOS or PIX software has been enhanced 
since last I
dealt with this issue, you will need to ensure that you're running 
different IP schemas
on each PIX, and preferably non-translated schemas at that.  Also, if 
you're planning to
run a routing protocol such as OSPF across the VPN link, you will need to 
look at
setting up a GRE tunnel to accomplish that purpose.  Needless to say, 
Cisco needs to do
a better job of due diligence on this VPN solution.

GWA

Austin wrote:

  I am looking for sample configs on PIX to PIX VPNs.
 
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**
  Adam Quiggle
  Senior Network Engineer
  MCI Worldcom/NOC/BP Amoco
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
**

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Re: Cisco Catalyst Supervisor Engines

2001-01-02 Thread Chris McCoy


Here's what I remember (anyone please add thoughts):

--- Catalyst 5000/5500 ---

Supervisor I Engine (original) -- The supervisor that
is used in a 5000 or 5500 chassis.  1.2Gb/s bandwidth.
 No hot-standby.

Supervisor II Engine -- Hot-standby capable
supervisor.  1.2Gb/s bandwidth.  Used in a 5000/5500. 
5500 series required for hot-standby.  Uplinks
EtherChannel capable.

Supervisor III Engine -- Hot-standby capable
supervisor.  Utilized the Phoenix ASIC that connects
three 1.2Gb/s backplanes together.  3.6Gb/s aggregate
bandwidth.  Net Flow Feature Card (NFFC) available as
an option that provides wire-rate layer-3 switching.  

Supervisor IIIG Engine -- Hot-standby capable
supervisor.  Phoenix  NFFC equipped.  Gigabit
Ethernet uplinks (GBIC).

--- Catalyst 6000/6500 ---

Supervisor I -- Original supervisor engine.  16Gb/s
switching capacity (62.5 MHz x 256 bit).  Layer 2
only.  Used with the MSM to provide layer-3 capability
(6 Mpps w/64 byte packets).  Two GBIC.

Supervisor IA -- Updated supervisor engine.  Policy
Feature Card (PFC)/Multilayer Switch Feature Card
(MSFC) options allow native layer-3 switching without
a router module.  PFC is similar to NFFC, but with
enhancements that allow access control lists to be
used on the MSFC; offers greater performance (15Mpps).

Supervisor II -- Updated supervisor engine.  When
utilized with PFC2  MSFC2, provides Cisco Express
Forwarding (CEF) layer 3 switching.  Upgradable to 256
Gb/s capacity with Switch Fabric Module (SFM) on
Catalyst 6500s.

--- Shane Stockman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Could someone please explain the difference between
 the supervisor 1,2,3 
 engines that go with the Catalyst 5000 and 6500,why
 are they used and where 
 would I use them ( Core , Distribution, Access).
 
 Another question - What would be the easiest way to
 test serial and ethernet 
 ports on a router with minimal equipment and cables
 ( what would be needed 
 to do so ).
 
 
 Thanks

_
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 http://www.hotmail.com.
 
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RE: problem on FR

2001-01-02 Thread Dennis @ Eathlink

PVC deleted - your router does not see the DLCI that you have configured (
Check to see if you are getting lmi from the switch, if yes then check your
DLCI's or call telco)

PVC inactive - your router sees a DLCI on the frame relay but something is
stopping it from becomming active (check the configutation on both ends )

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
news.groupstudy.com
Sent: Wednesday, January 03, 2001 1:16 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: problem on FR



   What is the status of the main interface you are configuring this
Frame-relay subinterface on?

   I have typically seen a "deleted" status for a PVC to mean that the PVC
within the frame-relay net you are connecting to is not built.


"Frank" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
92s7rc$4f2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:92s7rc$4f2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I am configuring a multichannel E1 board on 7513 to connect with a FR net.
 when i use SH FRAME PVC ,i got the the PVC status is "deleted " or
 "inactive"
 what acturally does it mean ?
 as far as i know ,"deleted" means the line between router and FR switch is
 not OK,
 and "inactive" means OK.
 i also got the following infor when i unplug the line from the router and
 then plug it back.
 (i opened deb frame packet and deb frame event on)

 serial4/0/0:0 broadcast search
 serial4/0/0:0 encaps failed on broadcast for link 7(IP)

 what does it mean?

 Any help is appreciated.

 Frank



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Re: Cool DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) link

2001-01-02 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer

At 08:49 AM 1/2/01, Chuck Church wrote:
 From Network Computing:

http://www.nwc.com/1201/1201f1c1.html

Indeed, very nicely-written article. The best thing in it was the link to 
the Cisco site on Unicast Reverse Path Forwarding, which I'd never heard 
of. (I'd heard of Multicast RPF, but not unicast.)

I'm curious, is anyone using Unicast RPF? Does it work well? Any 
performance problems with it?

Here's what it does:

"When Unicast RPF is enabled on an interface, the router examines all 
packets received as input on that interface to make sure that the source 
address and source interface appear in the routing table and match the 
interface on which the packet was received. This 'look backwards' ability 
is available only when Cisco express forwarding (CEF) is enabled on the 
router, because the lookup relies on the presence of the Forwarding 
Information Base (FIB). CEF generates the FIB as part of its operation."

For  more info see:

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios121/121cgcr/secur_c/scprt5/scdrpf.htm

Priscilla


Chuck Church
CCNP, CCDP, MCNE, MCSE
Sr. Network Engineer
Magnacom Technologies
140 N. Rt. 303
Valley Cottage, NY 10989
845-267-4000 x218


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Priscilla Oppenheimer
http://www.priscilla.com

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RE: Cool DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) link

2001-01-02 Thread Chuck Church

It sounds like an anti-spoofing mechanism, much like not allowing packets
from the internet into your network with a source address of your network.
This goes a little beyond that by verifying that the source is reachable
from the interface it was received on.  I've always done this with an access
list, which is easy with only 1 connection to the 'Net.  Doing it with CEF
rather than process switching has got to offer some big performance
benefits.  Now, if I could only remember which platforms support CEF... 

Chuck Church
CCNP, CCDP, MCNE, MCSE
Sr. Network Engineer
Magnacom Technologies
140 N. Rt. 303
Valley Cottage, NY 10989
845-267-4000 x218



-Original Message-
From: Priscilla Oppenheimer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 3:58 PM
To: Chuck Church; '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: Re: Cool DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) link


At 08:49 AM 1/2/01, Chuck Church wrote:
 From Network Computing:

http://www.nwc.com/1201/1201f1c1.html

Indeed, very nicely-written article. The best thing in it was the link to 
the Cisco site on Unicast Reverse Path Forwarding, which I'd never heard 
of. (I'd heard of Multicast RPF, but not unicast.)

I'm curious, is anyone using Unicast RPF? Does it work well? Any 
performance problems with it?

Here's what it does:

"When Unicast RPF is enabled on an interface, the router examines all 
packets received as input on that interface to make sure that the source 
address and source interface appear in the routing table and match the 
interface on which the packet was received. This 'look backwards' ability 
is available only when Cisco express forwarding (CEF) is enabled on the 
router, because the lookup relies on the presence of the Forwarding 
Information Base (FIB). CEF generates the FIB as part of its operation."

For  more info see:

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios121/121cgcr/secu
r_c/scprt5/scdrpf.htm

Priscilla


Chuck Church
CCNP, CCDP, MCNE, MCSE
Sr. Network Engineer
Magnacom Technologies
140 N. Rt. 303
Valley Cottage, NY 10989
845-267-4000 x218


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http://www.priscilla.com

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RE: Cisco's TFTP Program

2001-01-02 Thread Nguyen_Trang

I have used Cisco TFTP on Win98/SE sending 
IOS to a router w/o any problem.  What kind
of error message are you getting.

Trang Nguyen

-Original Message-
From: Jennifer Mellone [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, December 29, 2000 7:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Cisco's TFTP Program


Hi Gang,

Is it me, or has anyone else had this problem using the Cisco TFTP
program---

I TFTPed software from my laptop to a switch just fine today.

But then I tried to TFTP IOS code from my laptop to a router today.  I got
an error message (from the TFTP program itself), and the program immediately
closed down.  I even rebooted the laptop and this did not help.

- Jennifer Mellone

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problem on FR

2001-01-02 Thread jenny . mcleod

"deleted" means that the frame relay switch doesn't know about the PVC.
"Inactive" means that the frame relay switch knows about the PVC but it
isn't working.
"active" means you have a working circuit.

If you do a 'debug frame lmi', every so often the switch will send a list
of PVCs.  Deleted PVCs won't show up on the list.  Inactive ones will (with
a status of 0x0 - active PVCs are 0x2).

If you are seeing PVCs in a 'deleted' state, you've either misconfigured
the DLCI, or the provider has misconfigured the switch with the wrong DLCI
(or the provider has not yet configured the switch).
If the PVC is 'inactive', it's hopefully configured with the correct DLCI -
but your circuit is not working end to end.

Can't help with the encapsulation errors, sorry.  It may be simply because
your PVC isn't active.

JMcL

-- Forwarded by Jenny Mcleod/NSO/CSDA on 03/01/2001
08:38 am ---


"Frank" [EMAIL PROTECTED]@groupstudy.com on 02/01/2001 07:35:46 pm

Please respond to "Frank" [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sent by:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]



To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc:


Subject:  problem on FR


I am configuring a multichannel E1 board on 7513 to connect with a FR net.
when i use SH FRAME PVC ,i got the the PVC status is "deleted " or
"inactive"
what acturally does it mean ?
as far as i know ,"deleted" means the line between router and FR switch is
not OK,
and "inactive" means OK.
i also got the following infor when i unplug the line from the router and
then plug it back.
(i opened deb frame packet and deb frame event on)

serial4/0/0:0 broadcast search
serial4/0/0:0 encaps failed on broadcast for link 7(IP)

what does it mean?

Any help is appreciated.

Frank



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Was: help with tacacs authentication -- Now: how did I do this?

2001-01-02 Thread jenny . mcleod

This one's a bit old, but I haven't noticed a response to it.
Sorry to disappoint you, Jim, but the R2501(boot)# prompt does indeed mean
that a configuration register value is not set correctly.  Or something
else has screwed up.

There was a thread recently about the capabilities of routers in boot mode.
You might like to check the archives (assuming you didn't sort this out
yourself ages ago).

JMcL
-- Forwarded by Jenny Mcleod/NSO/CSDA on 03/01/2001
09:16 am ---


"Croyle, James" [EMAIL PROTECTED]@groupstudy.com on 23/12/2000
07:52:35 pm

Please respond to "Croyle, James" [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sent by:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]



To:   "'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc:


Subject:  Was: help with tacacs authentication -- Now: how did I do this?


Well all, here is the new configuration of my router.  Seems one of those
commands did work after all.  Can anyone tell me which one it was?  Also, I
chose the hostname R2501, but the prompt is showing R2501(boot)#

My experience is with 4000 routers, 5000, 6500 and 3500 switches, and I
want
to be sure this prompt I have on the 2501 does not have something to do
with
a configuration register value that is not set correctly.  The new scenario
when I log in, is a normal secret password gets me right in.
Yes, I will be upgrading the IOS, no need to recommend that one.
Sorry so verbose, but I wanted to be clear.  ;-)

Jim Croyle

[snipped]

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RE: ISDN LAPD versus PPP

2001-01-02 Thread jenny . mcleod

LAPD is used on the ISDN D channel.  PPP (or HDLC or whatever) is used on
the B channels.  SO neither is encapsulated in the other.
The Paquet book for BCRAN has a useful table covering what protocols are
used at which layers on which channels, which I have attempted to reproduce
below...

  D channel B channel

Layer 3   DSS1 (Q.931)  IP/IPX

Layer 2   LAPD (Q.921)  HDLC/PPP/FR/LAPB

Layer 1  I.430/I.431/ANSI T1.601


Hope that helps,
JMcL
-- Forwarded by Jenny Mcleod/NSO/CSDA on 03/01/2001
09:27 am ---


"Pierre-Alex" [EMAIL PROTECTED]@groupstudy.com on 30/12/2000
10:45:47 am

Please respond to "Pierre-Alex" [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sent by:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]



To:   "Jim Dixon" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  "Cisco" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc:


Subject:  RE: ISDN LAPD versus PPP


Reading between the lines (see bellow) it seems that PPP is NOT
encapsulated
in LAPD. It looks like PPP starts encapsulating network traffic on its own
as soon as LAPD has set up the ISDN call. Please correct me if I am wrong.
Thank You.

"3.3.  Link Dead (physical-layer not ready)

   The link necessarily begins and ends with this phase.  When an
   external event (such as carrier detection or network administrator
   configuration) indicates that the physical-layer is ready to be used,
   PPP will proceed to the Link Establishment phase.

   During this phase, the LCP automaton (described later) will be in the
   Initial or Starting states.  The transition to the Link Establishment
   phase will signal an Up event to the LCP automaton."


Pierre-Alex

-Original Message-
From: Jim Dixon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, December 29, 2000 3:42 PM
To: Pierre-Alex
Subject: RE: ISDN LAPD versus PPP


Here are some RFC's that you might read that might help.
http://www.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc1661.txt
http://www.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2516.txt
http://www.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2878.txt

Jim

-Original Message-
From: Pierre-Alex [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, December 29, 2000 3:11 PM
To: Cisco
Subject: ISDN LAPD versus PPP


Is it a true statement to say that if your using ppp encapsulation on your
interface, the ppp packets are encapsulated in the LAPD packets. If not,
where else would ppp packets be encapsulated?
I have found no document showing the relationship of ppp and LAPD if you
have some reference I would greatly appreciate.

Pierer-Alex

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Re: Prototype and Pilot

2001-01-02 Thread Jonathan Hays

These terms derive from industries predating the Computer Revolution. The full terms 
are
more self-explanatory: Prototype Development and Pilot Production. In the Pilot
Production phase the majority of bugs have been removed and a small Production run
results in enough units to attempt a last real-world verification of the unit before
finalizing the Production line hardware, software, processes, etc. Not a big deal in 
the
software world but at a big automotive electronics plant (for example) that might
produce hundreds or thousands of automotive control computers PER DAY the Pilot
Production phase is critical.

Priscilla Oppenheimer wrote:

 It sounds like I may have had it backwards in my message, then??

 Bottom line: the terms are not used precisely in the real world. We need to
 find out if the questioner just wants to know how to use the terms for the
 DCN test, which is my guess, and then help him with the Cisco DCN viewpoint.

 The Cisco Press DCN book just has this confusing thing to say on the topic:

 "For larger configurations, a prototype is generally more feasible. For
 smaller configurations, a pilot might be more practical. The decision will
 probably be made on relative costs; the costs for prototyping a portion of
 the network will be relatively small for a larger network. However, if the
 network itself is small, then prototyping it could involve costs that are
 relatively large compared to the total costs of the project, so
 demonstrating basic functionality with a pilot might be more feasible."

 Does anyone have any other more useful CCDA books that would answer this
 question? My book has a whole chapter on testing a network design, but I
 didn't address the objective of distinguishing a prototype and pilot, since
 I can't (and I didn't know Cisco expected anyone to. ;-)

 Priscilla

 At 02:26 PM 12/29/00, Maness, Drew wrote:
 A pilot is used when you want to prove a minimal amount of functionality.
 Let say, for security reasons, you want to implement SSH on your routers.
 You don't need to create a large scale network to test functionality for
 SSH.  All you would do is take  one router for each type, plus maybe take
 into account different IOS images and test the different configurations for
 SSH.  This would be a pilot.
 
 A prototype is used when you need to prove a complex amount of functionality
 and interoperability. Let say you were asked to design a remote access
 solution for 10,000 sales people all using a small router XYZ connecting to
 a Core Router of type ZZZ. And you estimate that the Core Router of type ZZZ
 can handle N number of XYZ routers connecting to them. You also estimate
 that the company will need to purchase 1,000 ZZZ routers to handle the
 entire load. A prototype would be a couple of ZZZ routers and the
 appropriate amount of XYZ routers to test your theory.  A prototype is
 usually a scaled version or modular version of your final design.
 
 Also note that the use of a pilot or a prototype is usually driven by the
 customer requirements.  The more the customer requirements want you to prove
 the more likely you are to use a prototype.
 
 In short.  A pilot test a minimal amount of functionality.  A prototype is
 usually a scaled version of your design.
 
 Hope that helped more than it confused.
 
 Drew
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Hunt [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Friday, December 29, 2000 1:23 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Prototype and Pilot
 
 
 Can anyone please tell me what is the difference between a prototype and a
 pilot?  And when will you use them?
 
 Hunt
 
 
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 Priscilla Oppenheimer
 http://www.priscilla.com

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ISDN monitoring tool

2001-01-02 Thread Moe Kazemian

Dear All,
I am looking for a network tool which can be run on a pc to monitor an ISDN
network for network livelihood and heartbeat to assist network managers for
troubleshooting.
Thanks very much for any help.

Moe Kazemian MCSE,CCNA
Net. Enginner

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Re: Passed CCDA last year

2001-01-02 Thread James Garner

Congratulations ! ! !

What did you use to study?

Thanks,
Jay


"william" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
92rv3k$pu8$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:92rv3k$pu8$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi guys

 Just share the joy with you.  I passed it on 30/12/2000.

 Much more difficult than CCNA.

 Thanks.



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Re: Ping response between subnets slow

2001-01-02 Thread Tony van Ree

Hi,

10 ms seems high on a switched network.  

I assume that both networks (Switches) have a trunk between each other and from one 
switch back to the router if you are using VLAN's. 

Check your ethernet interface on your router.  See what traffic it is doing.  Check 
for collisions, Late collisions, CRC's.

Check the port on the switch connecting to the router.  Make sure the aggree on the 
port speed (they will or no comms) and the duplex settings (the most common problem).  
DO NOT LEAVE THE SWITCH IN AUTO NEGOTIATE MODE.  

Just some thoughts.

Teunis
Hobart, Tasmania
Australia


On Tuesday, January 02, 2001 at 05:25:17 AM, Amit Gupta wrote:

 Hi Everybody,
 
 Need some help on the following problem
 
 I have 2 subnets configured on my LAN say ( x.x.1.0
 and x.x.2.0 )with a SM of 255.255.255.0.
 There are 2 Catalyst switches ( each one on a
 different subnet)
 
 The router is configured with a primary and a
 secondary address on the ethernet port say x.x.1.1 and
 x.x.2.1
 
 When I ping a station on one subnet to another and
 viceversa the response time is very high (sometimes
 upto 80ms) while the response time while pinging in
 the same subnet is less than 10ms.
 
 Need some clues on the possible reasons for this
 
 
 Thanks  Regards
 
 Amit
 
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need routing table tutorial

2001-01-02 Thread Brian Lodwick

Group,
  Does anyone have a link to a site that has a good basic tutorial going 
over components in a Cisco router routing table? I have been trying to find 
one on Cisco's webpage and I can't find anything. I looked under everything. 
Well maybe not everything. I would really appreciate anyones help!

Brian
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Re: Off topic

2001-01-02 Thread Tony van Ree

Hi,

It depends on the use.  There can be different wiring for different devices.  Also the 
roll-over cable used by Cisco is different to a straight cable or a X-over cable.  SO 
it does really depend on what you intend to use it on and with what you intend to use 
it.

Check but I think the RJ45 Console  ports

1 - 8 are looped.
2 DTR connects to DSR on remote device
3 RXD connects to TXD on the remote device
4 Sig GRND connects Signal Ground on remote device
5 Sig GRND connects Signal Ground on remote device
6 TXD connects to RXD on the remote device
7 DSR connects to DTR on remote device
8 - looped to 1

25 PIN console port

1 Ground (do not connect to remote device)
2 RxD
3 Txd
4 Clear to Send (CTS)
5 Request to send (RTS)
7 Signal Ground.  (often connected to pin 1 internally)
8 Data terminal Ready (DTR)
20 Data Carrier Detect (DCD)

You PC manual will give the pinouts for your other devices.

Teunis
Hobart, Tasmania
Australia
 



On Tuesday, January 02, 2001 at 10:07:59 AM, Naveen Sharma wrote:

 Dear Friends,
 
 Can any one give me wiring diagram for RJ-45 to DB 9 pin out and RJ-45 =
 to DB 25 pin out.
 
 Thanks for help
 
 Best regards
 
 Naveen
 
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CCIE practice written exams

2001-01-02 Thread Nguyen, Thai

Hi all,

I have completed the CCNP and CCDP, and I am preparing for the CCIE written
exams, you would please advise me of any practice written exams?

How good are the ones from www.boson.com? 

Would you also offer any tip or study method.

Thai Nguyen
Senior Networking Engineer
IT Delivery
Australia Post
03 9204 5309

CAUTION

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information intended for the use of the addressee. The confidentiality and/or 
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Re: Job Openings???

2001-01-02 Thread Rob

Check out the job sites (hotjobs.com, monster.con. ect.)  put in your skills, and see
what pops up.  See if anything pops up that will get you near a networking shop.  or on
that might let you cross train.

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hello---I have been a CCNA since July 13 and have had no luck finding a job.
 I live in Houston and would prefer a job in Houston but I also have family in
 Chicago; VirginaiaBeach, Virginia; and New York.  I have pc helpdesk
 experience troubleshooting Compaq hardware and software, but have no
 professional networking or Cisco experience..only classroom and lab
 experience with 2500 series routers.I am not looking for a high salary
 just enough to get by, my main focus is getting experience.  My resume is
 attached.  Feel free to look at it and send me an email or call.

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VPN location

2001-01-02 Thread SH Wesson

I'm installing a new VPN box.  Traditionally, where in the network does the 
VPN box reside.  Does it run parallel to the PIX firewall and be connected 
to the inside the same way as the pix or should the VPN box be located in 
the DMZ with a secure tunnel created between the VPN box and the PIX 
firewall and all requests to the inside network would go through PIX firwall 
via conduits, etc.  Thanks.


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Re: Frame Relay - can't get the clear picture of it yet!

2001-01-02 Thread Jaeheon Yoo


Hi,

I have revised it myself through some more research.

- Original Message -
From: "Jaeheon Yoo" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 6:38 AM
Subject: Frame Relay - can't get the clear picture of it yet!



 Hi,

 Before I bother you about this, I searched the archives, but I
 can't get it clear to me. Sorry but this has been constantly irritating
me.
 I quess there's a big BUG in my understanding.

 This example is roughly from Jeff Doyle's Routing TCP/IP pp.557~565

 There is a star topology frame relay network. HQ is a hub router
 with three branch routers BR1 , BR2 and BR3. Branch routers have only one
 PVC each to HQ(This is a partially meshed FR network).
 (point-to-point subinterfaces are not configured)

 Please correct me if I'm wrong!

 CASE 1  - UNICAST packet: Can BR1 ping to another branch router BR2?(I
 believe so)  If it's YES, HQ is responsible for "relaying" ping to BR2.

"Relaying" is actually "Routing".

 What's happening is as follows:

 1. BR1 originates a ping packet and encapsulates it with its own locally
 significant DLCI number (for example, 200)

Step 1 needs some enumeration. After BR1's IP layer decides BR2 is directly
connected on its F/R interface, it delivers the ping packet to layer 2(F/R)
for encapsulation. Then F/R looks up frame-relay maps (in this case, the
same DLCI number for BR2 MUST be "statically" mapped, because Inverse ARP
only
provides DLCI for HQ), if a matchng entry is found, it is properly
encapsulated and propagated to HQ. If not, the ping packet is just dropped.

  http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/125/15.html#15-A


 2. It is propagated via the established PVC through F/R Cloud to HQ with
 HQ's local DLCI number (for example, 100: I understand there's no direct
 correspondence between two DLCI numbers),

When it is sent, the frame has a DLCI configured at BR1, when received it
has
a DLCI configured at HQ.
Through the F/R cloud a F/R switch changes it as preprogrammed.


 3. HQ's layer 2 (ie,F/R) strips F/R header off the received frame and
 examines its destination IP, then decides it doesn't belong to HQ itself.

   In this part, what is actually examing its destination ip is NOT layer
2(F/R) BUT layer 3(IP), it consults routing table for its destination. And
it decides it's directly connected on the same coming interface, therefore
it decrements TTL by one and delivers the packet to layer 2(F/R)


 4. HQ's layer 2 looks up its frame relay maps configured statically or
 dynamically(through Inverse ARP). If there is a matching entry for it,
 It is properly encapsulated and propagated to BR1. If there's no matching
 entry for it, HQ just drops it.

 5. Finally BR2 receives the frame.


 CASE 2 - BROADCAST packet: Can BR1 send RIPv1 updates to all other branch
 routers BR2 and BR3 as well as to HQ. (I believe so)


I guess I was wrong on this. In some how, update routing information could
be delivered to other branch routers, but the same original broadcast packet
never get to other branch routers, even if broadcast is enabled. So
following step 2 and step 3 is totally wrong.

 1. BR1's RIP delivers RIPv1 updates to lower layer F/R, and if F/R is not
 configured to propagate broadcast traffic, the packet is dropped,
 Otherwise, if it is configured so through frame-relay map command)
 It is propagated to HQ as explained step 1 of case 1. But in this case
 destination ip is set to broadcast address 255.255.255.255.

 2. In this case, HQ recognizes it as broadcast packet, so HQ replicates
and
 propagates the broadcast traffic to each PVC except originationing PVC


But the packet is self originated, it replicates and propagates the
broadcast traffic to each broadcast enabled PVC. And what is responsible for
"replicating" is HQ's layer 2(F/R). Am I right?

 3. BR2 and BR3 receives the frame.

 CASE 3 - BROADCAST revisited: If BR2 and B3 are directly connected,
 from my understanding of CASE 2, there might be a broadcast storm like
 what happens on LAN Switching.

I guess this is totally wrong.

Please confirm my understanding. From this I concluded that what is
important is: What type of the network it is viewed as, NBMA,
point-to-point, or
point-to-multipoint.

My next question: Does branch router BR1 have the same routing table when it
is configured as just NBMA and when as point-to-multipoint under OSPF?


 All of this probable misunderstanding is due to my lack of field
experience.
 So I always try to read widely, which is the only way I can do now.
 Please correct my ignorance.

 Thanks in advance.

 Jaeheon Yoo



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Re: AUX Port

2001-01-02 Thread David Nie

you should configure your modem to "auto answer"



""Austin"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
92ssgt$rg2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:92ssgt$rg2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I have a Cisco 2511 Access Server.
 I want to connect to the 2511 via Modem. I have an old Motorola 14.4
modem.
 The aux port has the ffg config:

 line aux 0
 login
 password cisco
 modem inout
 transport input all

 I have the phone line plugged into the Modem (where it says TO WALL) and I
 have the Parallel connector (Modem) from Cisco's console kit plugged into
 the Modem Parallel Port. Then I have a regular Cisco console cable running
 from the modem to the aux port.

 When I call the number it just rings and rings. The modem does not answer.
 What am I doing wrong or what am I not doing?
 All help appreciated.


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RE: Pass Written

2001-01-02 Thread Liu Jianxin-qch1927


Well done!

The listing is about 100 mail everyday, maybe you should check your setting or 
report the problem to the administrator.

I will take the written at this weekend.

-Original Message-
From: Hubert Pun [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, December 22, 2000 7:10 PM
To: Janto Cin; Cisco Study Group
Subject: Re: Pass Written


Here is what I used for the written exam yesterday

Doyle's book (too detail and too good for the written)
Kennedy's LAN Switching book (also too detail and too good for written)
Caslow book (ok, but too many editing error and too easy on the WAN, Routing
Protocol sections)
certification zone (harder than the real one)
All-in-one Lab book (which does not really help for the written).
exam-cram (too easy, not useful)

the courses that I took are ACRC, BCMSN, BCRAN and BGP courses.

btw, did you receive any email from study group for the last week?  i don't.

Hubert


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Re: PIX failover

2001-01-02 Thread ItsMe

PIX 520's don't have a R or UR version they all support failover.

""Florin Mechetiuc"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
92svsr$482$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:92svsr$482$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I have couple of 520 firewalls ordered a while back but I don't know if is
a
 way to check
 if they are in failover bundle.
 To be more specific , I have one up and running but I would like to
install
 the failover and I don't which one is ( I have other three
 ordered for other projects). I think it might be a way of checking on
 Cisco's website by having the serial number of the main firewall and
 then I can get the the serial number of the failover.



 Thanks and Happy New Year !


 Florin Mechetiuc
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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DFW area study group

2001-01-02 Thread Raul_DeLaGarza

Hello all!

Would anyone be interested in starting a Dallas/Ft. Worth area study group
(more specifically, Mesquite/Rowlett/Rockwall/Wylie areas)?  I may be able
to bring my company's 4500 and a couple of 2501s to the group.






Thank you,
Raul De La Garza III
CCNA NNCSS MCSE CNE
Senior Network Engineer
EmCare Incorporated
Work 214.712.2085
Mobile 817.991.7889
Pager 877.270.9755
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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RE: ISDN monitoring tool

2001-01-02 Thread Daniel Cotts

http://www.crannog-software.com/

 -Original Message-
 From: Moe Kazemian [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 4:50 PM
 To: Cisco@groupstudy (E-mail)
 Subject: ISDN monitoring tool
 
 
 Dear All,
 I am looking for a network tool which can be run on a pc to 
 monitor an ISDN
 network for network livelihood and heartbeat to assist 
 network managers for
 troubleshooting.
 Thanks very much for any help.
 
 Moe Kazemian MCSE,CCNA
 Net. Enginner
 
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Re: Backlog for CCIE Lab (RTP at least)

2001-01-02 Thread Ronald James

Guys!!   Rather than comment on anyone else (I mean the ones who have the
same goal as us), why not we raise our main concern to Cisco, this is a more
positive way than just critize others.  Maybe I am too subjective to your
comments, but I personally think criticism on people is not the main point
of our discussion.

"Nathan Casassa" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I certainly agree with all the points Chuck made. One thing that Cisco
could do is
 change the requirements to take the lab besides just passing the written
exam. I am not
 saying by any account that the written is easy, but I know people that
have passed it by
 pure luck and really don't know a darn thing. I know a person right now
that has passed
 the written by getting the passing score on the dime, and he is taking the
lab soon. I
 wish good luck to him, however he is walking in blindly with out EVER
actually
 configured a router. He has no internetworking design or troubleshooting
experience in
 the real world, however he is going to go and take the lab exam just to
"see what it is
 like"

 I don't think Chuck's ideas are cruel and unusual. I think they really
need to make this
 tougher then it already is. Who wants to put "CCIE #102,000" after their
name? If they
 just open more racks it may get to that point.  I believe the written exam
should be
 scratched with a new format with a higher passing score. Truly the money
issue sometimes
 makes little difference. If someone has 30,000 grand to spend on
equipment, classes,
 books etc., a few more grand can't hurt. And if their company is paying
then who cares
 right?  I know a company that has spent countless dollars actually flying
a guy to
 Canada, putting him up in a hotel...and paying for his labthey did
this 5 times
 before he passed his lab. Those slots could have been used for someone
that actually
 knew what they were doing and had a chance to pass.  It would be nice if
they had a 4
 hour lab prequal after taking the written. Something that would not
require a proctor to
 pass. You would be given many different scenarios at Sylvan and require to
configure
 them with a virtual IOS. The configs would be sent to an evaluator at
Cisco and then you
 would be contacted a week later concerning scheduling your real lab date.
This could
 weed out some of the flunkies.

 If Cisco ruins the value of this exam, they are not going to have any
future revenue
 from it.

 Nate

 Chuck Larrieu wrote:

   I was told Cisco was trying to reduce the problem, but not how they
were
  going to achieve their goal. (I wish them luck)
 
  some cruel and unusual thoughts come to mind.
 
  1) Set some arbitrary standard such that people who fail day one by more
  than so many points have a 90 day wait for retest, rather than 30 days.
Or
  you have to at least made it into day 2 to be able to retest within 30
days.
  Some such thing
 
  2) Limit the number of times one may attempt the lab in any 12 month
period.
 
  3) Increase the price charged for each lab attempt. E.g. 1K for first
  attempt, 2K for 2nd, 5K for third
 
  I say this half jokingly, but half seriously. I talk to a lot of people
who
  take the lab, both those who have passed and those who have not.
  The old rule of economics holds true - people act according to their
  perceived best interest. If someone else is footing the bill, and there
is
  no disincentive for failure, then people will act accordingly. They will
  book themselves and make attempts even when they know they have no hope
of
  passing. They will schedule attempt after attempt because there is no
reason
  not to, especially if someone else pays, and especially if there is no
  penalty for failure.
 
  To be frank, I don't see any incentive for Cisco to do anything to
change
  things on the demand side. They might add more racks, or more lab
locations.
  But do the numbers some time. Cisco is booking something like 25 - 30
people
  a week in San Jose alone. That's 25-30 K per week in revenue, or at
least
  1.3 million a year. So they pay a couple of lab proctors 150K each. The
rest
  is pure profit. ( yes, I know from an accounting standpoint there are
  several other cost factors ) So the incentive from Cisco's standpoint is
do
  figure out ways to add revenue, rather than limit testing attempts.
 
  I look for Cisco to announce a bit more capacity, either in terms of
adding
  another location or adding more racks at existing locations. Or both.
There
  is a ton of money to be made in the certification game, and as the
entity
  that controls the rules and the market, Cisco certainly enjoys the
lion's
  share of that revenue.
 
  Chuck
 
  -Original Message-
  From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf
Of
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent:   Sunday, December 31, 2000 9:04 AM
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject:Backlog for CCIE Lab (RTP at least)
 
  I am a little behind on my mail, so please 

Re: AUX Port

2001-01-02 Thread Ivan C. Permana (Telkomsel)

Hi All,

I suggest first you should make sure that the modem is having S0 register as 1. If the
modem have a front panel you can check it by see the setting ANSWER=RING #1 (well, it 
is
in the Motorola Codex 3266). If not, try to connect the modem to a PC and do
hyperterminal to COM1 and then type :

ats0=1
atw
aty

And then while in hyperterminal and connect to the modem, dial the modem from another
computer, you should see RING on hyperterminal and then connect.

Second you must make sure the modem is well connected to router. You can do this by
telnet to router port 2001 and then do

at
atv

If there is a response then psysical connection is OK.

Third do 'sh users' on router. If you see any aux line appear, then it mean the router
is busy trying to find out the modem type and you must clear the line. or you can put
'modem autoconfigure discovery' command.

Hope will help

-ivan-


David Nie wrote:

 you should configure your modem to "auto answer"

 ""Austin"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
 92ssgt$rg2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:92ssgt$rg2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  I have a Cisco 2511 Access Server.
  I want to connect to the 2511 via Modem. I have an old Motorola 14.4
 modem.
  The aux port has the ffg config:
 
  line aux 0
  login
  password cisco
  modem inout
  transport input all
 
  I have the phone line plugged into the Modem (where it says TO WALL) and I
  have the Parallel connector (Modem) from Cisco's console kit plugged into
  the Modem Parallel Port. Then I have a regular Cisco console cable running
  from the modem to the aux port.
 
  When I call the number it just rings and rings. The modem does not answer.
  What am I doing wrong or what am I not doing?
  All help appreciated.
 
 
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Frame-Relay spoke redundancy

2001-01-02 Thread ItsMe

All,

We just had a second T1 installed on our 3600. Our first supplies about 20
spokes, sub-if, with various CIR's all running EIGRP with bandwidth
statements. The second was provisioned via a different cloud path for
redundancy. We want to "automatically" backup the primary spokes with the
second T1. I can use the "backup" command but we already use this method for
ISDN on some of the links, so were leaning toward a load-balancing solution.

My main concern is due to the different provisioning paths the metric may be
lower for the majority of the spokes on one of the T1's, thereby having an
awfully lop-sided load balancing architecture. I could tweak these in via an
Easter egg method, but that's a lot of work for what its worth. Is anyone
running a similar configuration and want to shed some light?

Thanks!


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invalid

2001-01-02 Thread lijun

hi:
   all,i have a router 2620 prompt the information below:
  cisco 2620 (MPC860) processor (revision 0x102) with 28672K/4096K bytes of
memory.
Processor board ID JAD04310EXU (2782278826)
M860 processor: part number 0, mask 49
Bridging software.
X.25 software, Version 3.0.0.
Basic Rate ISDN software, Version 1.1.
1 FastEthernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
4 Low-speed serial(sync/async) network interface(s)
1 ISDN Basic Rate interface(s)
32K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
8192K bytes of processor board System flash (Read/Write)
Invalid percentage:  valid values are:10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 40, 50

what's the problem in this router
thanks

tom

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Re: Ping response between subnets slow

2001-01-02 Thread NeoLink2000

What about the times when you ping from switch to switch? Is it slow when you 
try that?

In a message dated 1/2/01 6:10:33 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 Hi,
 
 10 ms seems high on a switched network.  
 
 I assume that both networks (Switches) have a trunk between each other and 
 from one switch back to the router if you are using VLAN's. 
 
 Check your ethernet interface on your router.  See what traffic it is 
 doing.  Check for collisions, Late collisions, CRC's.
 
 Check the port on the switch connecting to the router.  Make sure the 
 aggree on the port speed (they will or no comms) and the duplex settings 
 (the most common problem).  DO NOT LEAVE THE SWITCH IN AUTO NEGOTIATE MODE. 
  
 
 Just some thoughts.
 
 Teunis
 Hobart, Tasmania
 Australia
 
 
 On Tuesday, January 02, 2001 at 05:25:17 AM, Amit Gupta wrote:
 
  Hi Everybody,
  
  Need some help on the following problem
  
  I have 2 subnets configured on my LAN say ( x.x.1.0
  and x.x.2.0 )with a SM of 255.255.255.0.
  There are 2 Catalyst switches ( each one on a
  different subnet)
  
  The router is configured with a primary and a
  secondary address on the ethernet port say x.x.1.1 and
  x.x.2.1
  
  When I ping a station on one subnet to another and
  viceversa the response time is very high (sometimes
  upto 80ms) while the response time while pinging in
  the same subnet is less than 10ms.
  
  Need some clues on the possible reasons for this
  
  
  Thanks  Regards
  
  Amit
 


Mark Zabludovsky ~ CCNA, CCDA, 1/2-NP
A HREF="mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]"[EMAIL PROTECTED]/A

 "Even if I knew I had only 1 more week to live, I would still schedule 
my CCIE lab. I would just have to work a little harder I guess. After all, 
without any goals in life, I'm dead already."
   ~Mark Zabludovsky~

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Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol

2001-01-02 Thread AABAN34

http://cio.cisco.com/warp/public/103/eigrp5.html

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Re: Job Openings???

2001-01-02 Thread tim sullivan

Look at the telco industry for a NOC position.
While it is not the best work it is often a good
place to start your career.
Good luck


From: Rob [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Rob [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Job Openings???
Date: Wed, 03 Jan 2001 09:27:55 -0800

Check out the job sites (hotjobs.com, monster.con. ect.)  put in your 
skills, and see
what pops up.  See if anything pops up that will get you near a networking 
shop.  or on
that might let you cross train.

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  Hello---I have been a CCNA since July 13 and have had no luck finding a 
job.
  I live in Houston and would prefer a job in Houston but I also have 
family in
  Chicago; VirginaiaBeach, Virginia; and New York.  I have pc helpdesk
  experience troubleshooting Compaq hardware and software, but have no
  professional networking or Cisco experience..only classroom and lab
  experience with 2500 series routers.I am not looking for a high 
salary
  just enough to get by, my main focus is getting experience.  My resume 
is
  attached.  Feel free to look at it and send me an email or call.
 
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Re: problem on FR

2001-01-02 Thread Dan Snyder

Frank,
check sh frame lmi to see if you are sending and receiving LMI.  if not,
chek the LMI type

- Original Message -
From: "Dennis @ Eathlink" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "'news.groupstudy.com'" [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 3:39 PM
Subject: RE: problem on FR


 PVC deleted - your router does not see the DLCI that you have configured (
 Check to see if you are getting lmi from the switch, if yes then check
your
 DLCI's or call telco)

 PVC inactive - your router sees a DLCI on the frame relay but something is
 stopping it from becomming active (check the configutation on both ends )

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
 news.groupstudy.com
 Sent: Wednesday, January 03, 2001 1:16 AM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: problem on FR



What is the status of the main interface you are configuring this
 Frame-relay subinterface on?

I have typically seen a "deleted" status for a PVC to mean that the PVC
 within the frame-relay net you are connecting to is not built.


 "Frank" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
 92s7rc$4f2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:92s7rc$4f2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  I am configuring a multichannel E1 board on 7513 to connect with a FR
net.
  when i use SH FRAME PVC ,i got the the PVC status is "deleted " or
  "inactive"
  what acturally does it mean ?
  as far as i know ,"deleted" means the line between router and FR switch
is
  not OK,
  and "inactive" means OK.
  i also got the following infor when i unplug the line from the router
and
  then plug it back.
  (i opened deb frame packet and deb frame event on)
 
  serial4/0/0:0 broadcast search
  serial4/0/0:0 encaps failed on broadcast for link 7(IP)
 
  what does it mean?
 
  Any help is appreciated.
 
  Frank
 
 
 
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2501 master reset

2001-01-02 Thread Troy

I have a used 2501 cisco router with no information about it.  It is
password protected in user mode.  I don't even know what subnet it is
configured for.  Is there some way to reset the router in this case.


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Re: confusion

2001-01-02 Thread Mr.K.RAMESH BABU

You have to enter ur sylven number to login.
Logo they will mail you if u give ur details in that site
Congratulations on ur success and new year wishes

Rameshbabu

On Fri, 29 Dec 2000, Kamran Sheikh wrote:

 Dear Sir /Madam,
 
 I have some confusion on registration on cisco
 tracking system. Kindly tell me i have my cisco ID i
 have cleared the CCNA 2.0 exam in previous month.
 
 I have tried on tracking system but it cannot be
 login. please help me.
 
 And another thing where CCNA 2.0 logo resides ?
 
 Waiting of your response.
 
 Regards,
 Kamran
 
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Re: Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol

2001-01-02 Thread Tony van Ree

This looks good.

Teunis
Hobart, Tasmania
Australia

On Tuesday, January 02, 2001 at 10:35:34 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 http://cio.cisco.com/warp/public/103/eigrp5.html
 
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Re: problem on FR

2001-01-02 Thread Tony van Ree

Hi,

I was under the impression that when you get "Deleted" there is no PVC between you and 
the frame switch.  You might still see an LMI but the DLCI you think you have is not 
connected at the frame switch.

When you see the PVC as "inactive" this indicates the DLCI to the frame switch is 
configured ok but the remote site is either down, the DLCI on the remote site is not 
configured or you are trying to get to the wrong DLCI on the remote site.

Hope this helps.

Teunis,
Hobart, Tasmania
Australia




On Tuesday, January 02, 2001 at 10:08:50 PM, Dan Snyder wrote:

 Frank,
 check sh frame lmi to see if you are sending and receiving LMI.  if not,
 chek the LMI type
 
 - Original Message -
 From: "Dennis @ Eathlink" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: "'news.groupstudy.com'" [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2001 3:39 PM
 Subject: RE: problem on FR
 
 
  PVC deleted - your router does not see the DLCI that you have configured (
  Check to see if you are getting lmi from the switch, if yes then check
 your
  DLCI's or call telco)
 
  PVC inactive - your router sees a DLCI on the frame relay but something is
  stopping it from becomming active (check the configutation on both ends )
 
  -Original Message-
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
  news.groupstudy.com
  Sent: Wednesday, January 03, 2001 1:16 AM
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: Re: problem on FR
 
 
 
 What is the status of the main interface you are configuring this
  Frame-relay subinterface on?
 
 I have typically seen a "deleted" status for a PVC to mean that the PVC
  within the frame-relay net you are connecting to is not built.
 
 
  "Frank" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
  92s7rc$4f2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:92s7rc$4f2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
   I am configuring a multichannel E1 board on 7513 to connect with a FR
 net.
   when i use SH FRAME PVC ,i got the the PVC status is "deleted " or
   "inactive"
   what acturally does it mean ?
   as far as i know ,"deleted" means the line between router and FR switch
 is
   not OK,
   and "inactive" means OK.
   i also got the following infor when i unplug the line from the router
 and
   then plug it back.
   (i opened deb frame packet and deb frame event on)
  
   serial4/0/0:0 broadcast search
   serial4/0/0:0 encaps failed on broadcast for link 7(IP)
  
   what does it mean?
  
   Any help is appreciated.
  
   Frank
  
  
  
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Re: about connect the ISP

2001-01-02 Thread Mr.K.RAMESH BABU

Having static route for ur network in their(mother isp) router
and redistributing static in to their dynamic routing protocol(like ospf)
is one option ...

Rameshbabu 



On Sat, 30 Dec 2000, gary gary wrote:

 Hi guys:
 We are a small ISP, just using static routing connect
 the mother ISP, the mother ISP assign a class C
 address to us, I want to know how the mother ISP
 locate the Class c networking , just using static
 routing? Need they redistribute the static to their
 dynamic routing (for example OSPF) in order to the
 internet router know the class c network,?
 Did the mother ISP create the stub area, then assign
 the lots of ip address to stub area ,if so  how to
 create the stub area by static routing? Anyone can
 give me some configuration,
 
 
 Thanks in advice
 
 
   
 gary
 
 
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Re: 2501 master reset

2001-01-02 Thread Edward Hartman

Troy-

Here is the URL for Cisco's instructions for password recovery.
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/474/pswdrec_2500.html

Once you have the password, you can see the configuration and do what you 
want with the router.  If this is a router for your study lab, my 
suggestion is to blow config away and start over.

-Eddie


At 11:17 PM 1/2/01 -0500, Troy wrote:
I have a used 2501 cisco router with no information about it.  It is
password protected in user mode.  I don't even know what subnet it is
configured for.  Is there some way to reset the router in this case.


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Re: 2501 master reset

2001-01-02 Thread EH

Troy-

Here is the URL for Cisco's instructions for password recovery.
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/474/pswdrec_2500.html

Once you have the password, you can see the configuration and do what you 
want with the router.  If this is a router for your study lab, my 
suggestion is to blow config away and start over.

-Eddie


At 11:17 PM 1/2/01 -0500, Troy wrote:
I have a used 2501 cisco router with no information about it.  It is
password protected in user mode.  I don't even know what subnet it is
configured for.  Is there some way to reset the router in this case.


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Re: Cisco Certification Digest V2 #917

2001-01-02 Thread Daniel Keller

I will be on vacation until January 8 and out of pager and cell phone range.  For all 
network related issues please contact our Network Operations Center at 800-610-4684.

Dan Keller

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Re: Ping response between subnets slow

2001-01-02 Thread Rick Thompson

One thing you can also try is to ping both interfaces
on the router from one of the hosts to see if it slows
over the router.  If it slows between the .1
interfaces then you may be running way to much
information over the router with an access-list that
is too complicated for a low end router (or one that
is low on memory.)   More then likely Tony's
suggestion will fix the issue from what i have seen.

Rick Thompson


--- Tony van Ree [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Hi,
 
 10 ms seems high on a switched network.  
 
 I assume that both networks (Switches) have a trunk
 between each other and from one switch back to the
 router if you are using VLAN's. 
 
 Check your ethernet interface on your router.  See
 what traffic it is doing.  Check for collisions,
 Late collisions, CRC's.
 
 Check the port on the switch connecting to the
 router.  Make sure the aggree on the port speed
 (they will or no comms) and the duplex settings (the
 most common problem).  DO NOT LEAVE THE SWITCH IN
 AUTO NEGOTIATE MODE.  
 
 Just some thoughts.
 
 Teunis
 Hobart, Tasmania
 Australia
 
 
 On Tuesday, January 02, 2001 at 05:25:17 AM, Amit
 Gupta wrote:
 
  Hi Everybody,
  
  Need some help on the following problem
  
  I have 2 subnets configured on my LAN say (
 x.x.1.0
  and x.x.2.0 )with a SM of 255.255.255.0.
  There are 2 Catalyst switches ( each one on a
  different subnet)
  
  The router is configured with a primary and a
  secondary address on the ethernet port say x.x.1.1
 and
  x.x.2.1
  
  When I ping a station on one subnet to another and
  viceversa the response time is very high
 (sometimes
  upto 80ms) while the response time while pinging
 in
  the same subnet is less than 10ms.
  
  Need some clues on the possible reasons for this
  
  
  Thanks  Regards
  
  Amit
  
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Re: kindly tell me

2001-01-02 Thread Leonard Ong

Hello,

You will have to create your tracking ID, using the data of your CCNA
Sylvan details, they will create an account for you, and you can enter
later either using the designated login name cscoxxx or your sylvan
number.

The data is all in your form, e.g. venue, date, passing score, your score, etc

Hope it helps

Regards,
Leonard Ong, ST, CCIE Candidate, CCNP RS+Voice, CCDP RS, CSE, SAIRGNU 
LCP, MCP, BCP, QSP

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