Re: Cisco Certification Digest V2 #926

2001-01-06 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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Connecting Cisco router with Async ports in IMACs

2001-01-06 Thread Ahmed Balamash

 Halloo
 
 We are trying to connect a serial ports of the 3600 CISCO router(IOS 11.2)
 with a COM port in IMACS for management system 
 and we make the following configuration
 
 Interface Serial 1/4
  ip address A.B.C.D  netmask
  encapsulation PPP
  async mode interactive
 
 line 21
 speed 19200
 
 However,the configuration does not work well,
 when we make "show interface" it show the line is up but the protocol is
 down.
 
 Could you Pls. . give me advise in how Can solve this issue
 
 Regards
 Ahmed Balamash

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RE: Good News for my CCIE Lab Prep

2001-01-06 Thread Bernard Omrani

You are lucky, not because your company is paying for this $4000.00 class,
but for the opportunity to meet one of the nicest, most knowledgeable,
caring and most dedicated persons that you will ever meet in your life.

I had the honor to be in Bruce Caslow's class in December of last year in
Annapolis and will cherish those 5 days for years to come.

Good luck,

Bernard




-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
info
Sent: Friday, January 05, 2001 11:42 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Good News for my CCIE Lab Prep


my company is going to pay for a class at
mentortech.com.being taught by Bruce
Caslow.

I take the lab exam March 12.starting to get
a little nervous.but hopefully that class with
Bruce will calm my nerves.

I've heard that you have to be pretty well prepared
to start with in that classsince it assumes you
are of a caliber worthy of taking a stab at the
CCIE lab exam.




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RE: A question

2001-01-06 Thread John Nemeth

On May 28,  9:48am, "Howard C. Berkowitz" wrote:
} Chuck Larrieu mentioned,
} 
} I believe the 169.250.0.0 is a Microsoft reserved address. Microsoft, if
} memory serves, uses it in conjunction with their automatic network
} configuration A search of the RFC's did not reveal anything.
} 
} As I remember, it's buried in the DHCP specification, or even a draft 
} revision.  I vaguely remember a proposal to document 169.254/16, but 
} can't remember if that was a draft or RFC.

 It was a draft, which has expired.  I used to have a reference to
the draft, but I don't know where it is at the moment.  However, a
search of Internet Drafts at http://www.ietf.org/ turned up the
following URL:

http://search.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-zeroconf-ipv4-linklocal-01.txt

which appears to be an updated version of the draft (covers machines
with multiple interfaces).  Surprisingly, it was written by somebody at
Apple.

}-- End of excerpt from "Howard C. Berkowitz"

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No Subject

2001-01-06 Thread Gus Pauw



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RE: A question regarding private addressing

2001-01-06 Thread John Nemeth

On May 28, 10:03am, Priscilla Oppenheimer wrote:
} 
} Microsoft stole this from AppleTalk. Ironically, Apple doesn't care and in 

 MS made a draft RFC about it, which has expired, and there is a
new draft by Apple (see my previous note).

} fact has been using the Automatic Private IP Addressing scheme for a few 
} years. I think Microsoft themselves only started using it pretty recently. 
} (Windows 2000, you say?)

 No, Windows 98 does it as well (not sure about Windows 95, but it
would be a good bet).

}-- End of excerpt from Priscilla Oppenheimer

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anyone WAN switching CC__

2001-01-06 Thread Brian Lodwick

Group,
  Has anyone taken any of the WAN switching tests? I am about halfway 
through the Ciscopress CCNA WAN switching book and I was wondering other 
people’s opinions on this test.
  If I were an IP packet my destination would say CCIE RS, but a little 
policy routing has sent me a different way of getting there and I kindof 
figured this will give me a look into the cloud (which I know can be 
dangerous). I do get on Strat switches quite often at work, but never dealt 
much with ATM. As I read this book I think to myself Oh so that's how that 
works. I also like the fact that I am forced to learn more about the 4th 
dimension- which some people like to call the ATM reference model, which I 
probably could've just briefly gone over LANE for RS.
  If anyone has taken a shot at this test I would love to hear your 
afterthoughts and anything else you might want to throw in about this track. 
I haven't really met anyone who has done any of these tests, but it seems 
like a good track with a lot of info.

Brian

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Can I Change the Interface Updating Intervals ???

2001-01-06 Thread Circusnuts

Is there a setting that has a router poll itself more often, say for =
connectivity.  I have a router in my lab, that seems to take a minute =
just to change status from UP to Down ( vise versa).  Debug is equally =
slow...

Thanks All !!!
Phil=20



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RE: A question regarding private addressing

2001-01-06 Thread Mask Of Zorro


MS started using the private addressing thing with Windows 98...

Z

From: Priscilla Oppenheimer [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Priscilla Oppenheimer [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: A question regarding private addressing
Date: Fri, 05 Jan 2001 15:28:00 -0800

At 08:40 PM 1/5/01, Willy Schoots wrote:
 If this
 attempt to locate a DHCP server fails, the Windows 2000 DHCP client
 autoconfigures its stack with a selected IP address from the 
IANA-reserved
 class B network 169.254.0.0 with the subnet mask 255.255.0.09 . The DHCP
 client tests (using a gratuitous ARP) to make sure that the IP address 
that
 it has chosen is not already in use. If it is in use, it selects another 
IP
 address (it does this for up to 10 addresses). Once the DHCP client has
 selected an address that is verifiably not in use, it configures the
 interface with this address. It continues to check for a DHCP server in 
the
 background every 5 minutes. If a DHCP server is found, the 
autoconfiguration
 information is abandoned, and the configuration offered by the DHCP 
server
 is used instead.

Good answer, Willy. I think there is a typo in the subnet mask. I think you
meant 255.255.0.0.

I would just like to ask, why does this look so familiar and who said
AppleTalk was silly?  ;-)

Microsoft stole this from AppleTalk. Ironically, Apple doesn't care and in
fact has been using the Automatic Private IP Addressing scheme for a few
years. I think Microsoft themselves only started using it pretty recently.
(Windows 2000, you say?)

When troubleshooting Macintoshes that can't get on the net, the first thing
I check for is a 169.254.x.x address which indicates the Mac couldn't find
the DHCP server (usually due to some silly Layer 1 problem ;-)

Now, we can start using this troubleshooting method with PCs also. Other
than for troubleshooting, I don't expect this private addressing scheme to
get too popular, though it's kind of cool and a great Apple invention! I
could see it being used in schools or small businesses that don't access
the Internet, but who doesn't access the Internet these days?

OK, enough rambling.

Priscilla




Priscilla Oppenheimer
http://www.priscilla.com

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Re: How to check IDB?

2001-01-06 Thread Jaeheon Yoo

Hi,

This is from "EIGRP Network Design Solutions" by Ivan Pepelnjak, p.296


NOTE: Using point-to-point subinterfaces in networks where the core router
has several neighbors can also lead to Interface Descriptor Block(IDB) limit
problems; most routers can support only up to 300 physical and logical
interfaces when running Cisco IOS prior to version 12.0. The IDB limit is
platform-dependent in IOS 11.1CA and IOS 12.0 and has been raised for the
high-end routers like 7x00 series routers or AS5800 access servers.


Hope this helps,

And my router(11.2 enterprise) doesn't accept "sh idb". What IOS version
does support it?


Jaeheon Yoo


- Original Message -
From: "Katson PN Yeung" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Newsgroups: groupstudy.cisco
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 2:15 AM
Subject: Re: How to check IDB?



 Thanks Chris.

 Your information is very useful.

 Another question is, how can I know the IDB number for each IOS version?
Any
 place I can find such info?

 Many thanks to you.



 "Chris McCoy" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 
  There's an undocumented command for showing the IDBs:
 
  [---Snip from Phrack 56---]
 
  @sh idb
 
  This command shows the hardware and software interface
  databases.
  this is cisco's way of keeping track of how many
  interfaces are present
  on the system.. includes hardware and software
  interfaces (physical,
  subinterfaces etc).  there is a software limit of 1024
  i believe in
  ios 11 and 2048 in ios 12.  this is a global limit for
  the router.
 
  output:
 
  ctalkb#sh idb
 
  19 SW IDBs allocated (2296 bytes each)
 
  9 HW IDBs allocated (4008 bytes each)
  HWIDB#1   1   FastEthernet0/0 (Ether)
  HWIDB#2   2   Serial2/0:0 (Serial)
  HWIDB#3   3   Ethernet3/0 (Ether)
  HWIDB#4   4   Ethernet3/1 (Ether)
  HWIDB#5   5   Ethernet3/2 (Ether)
  HWIDB#6   6   Ethernet3/3 (Ether)
  HWIDB#7   7   Serial4/0 (Serial)
  HWIDB#8   8   Serial5/0 (Serial)
  HWIDB#9   9   Loopback0
 
  Have fun...
 
  Chris M.
 
  --- Katson PN Yeung [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   Dear all,
  
   When reading Caslow's book, there is a term called
   IDB (Interface Descriptor
   Block). It specifies the max number of interface the
   router can have.
  
   Anyone knows which IOS command can check the IDB
   number of a router?
  
   Thanks.
  
  
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Security: Firewalls setup

2001-01-06 Thread Daniel Boutet

Hi all,

I was brought in a meeting which I am over my head (typical me).
The scenario goes like this: (there is actually two similar setup that needs
to be done
and one of them will have the PIX mentioned and the other setup has nothing
yet)

Web clients (through cable modem) want to access an AS400 behind a firewall
(PIX 506 v5.1).
We would like them to authenticate as securely as possible. We do not have a
Tacacs+/Radius
authentication server or any as a matter of fact, yet.

Any comments welcome (reference to a book also welcome).
I have no experience with firewalling so bare with me and be descriptive.
This is just a discussion. I will not be implementing any design myself
but I would like to have a few ideas on how to come about to do this the
"cheapest" way possible.
This is for a College and we are already over budget (as usual).

Thanks





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Syslog on Catalyst 6509

2001-01-06 Thread J.M. Luo

Dear all,

I am configure syslog function on Cisco Catalyst 6509, the following is the
configuration on Catalyst 6509.

#ip
set interface sc0 1 172.20.3.240/255.255.255.0 172.20.3.255

set ip route 0.0.0.0/0.0.0.0 172.20.3.254
!
#dns
set ip dns server 172.20.10.38 primary
set ip dns domain intranet.stkc.com.tw
!
#syslog
set logging server enable
set logging server 172.20.3.196
set logging server severity 6
!

When I enable/disable one Ethernet Port on Cisco Catalyst 6509, There is no
Syslog messages sent from
Catalyst 6509, but logging on Syslog buffer on 6509 will show this events
(command: sh logging buffer)172.20.3.196 is a Windows NT Server running a
Syslog daemon and work fine with Cisco 2611 router
configured with Syslog function. I don't know why and something wrong ?!

Does any body know how to let Syslog function work correctly on Catalyst
6509 ?

Thanks !


J.M. Luo
01/06/2001


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RE: A question regarding private addressing

2001-01-06 Thread Craig Columbus

OK.  I can accept that Microsoft (or Apple for that matter) would do 
something like this and then expect the world to revolve around 
them.  However, I'm confused as to the benefit.  Why would anyone want a 
non-assigned default IP address to appear on their network?  Do they really 
think that people will implement a non-RFC1918 compliant address space just 
to save configuration time?  (Actually, I can think of several cases where 
people might just go for this.)
How do Internet backbone routers (BGP ASs) deal with this traffic?
Let's say that I want to take the easy way out and I connect a small 
network to the Internet via an ISP.  I'm not running NAT, but I'm running 
the 169.254 addresses inside my network. If I've got a static route to an 
ISP public address, and we're not exchanging routing information, I can't 
see how this traffic would ever get back to my network.  If I'm exchanging 
routes with an ISP (via BGP or some other interior protocol), where and how 
do the 169.254 routes get filtered?  There has to be some mechanism, or 
there would be thousands of summary routes back to 169.254 showing up on 
the Internet table.
Any help in understanding this is appreciated.

Thanks,
Craig

At 03:27 AM 1/6/2001 -0800, you wrote:
On May 28, 10:03am, Priscilla Oppenheimer wrote:
}
} Microsoft stole this from AppleTalk. Ironically, Apple doesn't care and in

  MS made a draft RFC about it, which has expired, and there is a
new draft by Apple (see my previous note).

} fact has been using the Automatic Private IP Addressing scheme for a few
} years. I think Microsoft themselves only started using it pretty recently.
} (Windows 2000, you say?)

  No, Windows 98 does it as well (not sure about Windows 95, but it
would be a good bet).

}-- End of excerpt from Priscilla Oppenheimer

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Re: Looking for 2520 Router - 2901 Switch

2001-01-06 Thread Circusnuts

Ebay is the best place,  search under Cisco or Catalyst ( search
often).  You may find a "great deal" on an actual 5000 (maybe Supervisor I)
may equal what resellers would charge for the actual device you are looking
for... to emulate the actual device you are not looking for.

Does this make any sense ???

Case-in-point- a friend was sooo caught up in finding two ATM modules for
his 4500  4700, that he failed to realize he could purchase (2) 7000's
(with ATM) for the price of 1 outfitted 4700.

Good Luck !!!
Phil

PS- another item to consider...  Cisco has EOL-ed the 5000 (almost a year
ago)  is going to a full IOS switch like the 3524 or 2900XL.  Lane is also
gone from the CCIE.  I would guess in the next 12 to 24 months, we will see
6500  3500 in the lab only...

- Original Message -
From: "Gordon Olson" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, January 05, 2001 11:21 PM
Subject: Looking for 2520 Router - 2901 Switch


 I am looking for a 2520 router and 2901 Switch. I have been watching ebay
 for the last few weeks without success. ebay has 24 pages of stuff, no
2520,
 lots of 2521's.

 Does anyone have any recommedations on where I might look? I have found
 several different resellers but no one returns my emails so I figure they
 are either too busy or don't have one.

 The 2901 switch, I understand has the same IOS as the CAT5000. Is there
any
 other switches that also have the same IOS?

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Yet another CCNP

2001-01-06 Thread Sean O'Connor

Passed CIT today with a 760.  Not a pretty pass, but a
pass none the less.  
Maybe now with a decent certification I can actually
work on a production Router or switch.  It's tough to
get throught these courses without any practical
knowledge.  
Thanks to all in the group and good luck.

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RE: A question regarding private addressing

2001-01-06 Thread Kevin_Cullimore


It's been my experience that when a M$ ip stack assumes this address and
mask, that it is NOT appearing on their network, and can't even talk to
same-subnet hosts in most cases. As far as benefit is concerned, I believe
that it might allow you to determine if a dhcp attempt occurred or not.





Craig Columbus [EMAIL PROTECTED]@groupstudy.com on
01/06/2001 10:49:09 AM

Please respond to Craig Columbus [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sent by:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc:(bcc: Kevin Cullimore)
Subject:  RE: A question regarding private addressing


OK.  I can accept that Microsoft (or Apple for that matter) would do
something like this and then expect the world to revolve around
them.  However, I'm confused as to the benefit.  Why would anyone want a
non-assigned default IP address to appear on their network?  Do they really
think that people will implement a non-RFC1918 compliant address space just
to save configuration time?  (Actually, I can think of several cases where
people might just go for this.)
How do Internet backbone routers (BGP ASs) deal with this traffic?
Let's say that I want to take the easy way out and I connect a small
network to the Internet via an ISP.  I'm not running NAT, but I'm running
the 169.254 addresses inside my network. If I've got a static route to an
ISP public address, and we're not exchanging routing information, I can't
see how this traffic would ever get back to my network.  If I'm exchanging
routes with an ISP (via BGP or some other interior protocol), where and how
do the 169.254 routes get filtered?  There has to be some mechanism, or
there would be thousands of summary routes back to 169.254 showing up on
the Internet table.
Any help in understanding this is appreciated.

Thanks,
Craig

At 03:27 AM 1/6/2001 -0800, you wrote:
On May 28, 10:03am, Priscilla Oppenheimer wrote:
}
} Microsoft stole this from AppleTalk. Ironically, Apple doesn't care and
in

  MS made a draft RFC about it, which has expired, and there is a
new draft by Apple (see my previous note).

} fact has been using the Automatic Private IP Addressing scheme for a few
} years. I think Microsoft themselves only started using it pretty
recently.
} (Windows 2000, you say?)

  No, Windows 98 does it as well (not sure about Windows 95, but it
would be a good bet).

}-- End of excerpt from Priscilla Oppenheimer

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Re: A question regarding private addressing

2001-01-06 Thread D. J. Jones

My limited understanding on these addresses are that they should ONLY be
used on your local
lans.  Communication to the internet via an ISP would have to be dealt with
by using NAT or some
other proxy mechanism such as a firewall in which the outside addresses are
registered.

..dj

"Craig Columbus" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 OK.  I can accept that Microsoft (or Apple for that matter) would do
 something like this and then expect the world to revolve around
 them.  However, I'm confused as to the benefit.  Why would anyone want a
 non-assigned default IP address to appear on their network?  Do they
really
 think that people will implement a non-RFC1918 compliant address space
just
 to save configuration time?  (Actually, I can think of several cases where
 people might just go for this.)
 How do Internet backbone routers (BGP ASs) deal with this traffic?
 Let's say that I want to take the easy way out and I connect a small
 network to the Internet via an ISP.  I'm not running NAT, but I'm running
 the 169.254 addresses inside my network. If I've got a static route to an
 ISP public address, and we're not exchanging routing information, I can't
 see how this traffic would ever get back to my network.  If I'm exchanging
 routes with an ISP (via BGP or some other interior protocol), where and
how
 do the 169.254 routes get filtered?  There has to be some mechanism, or
 there would be thousands of summary routes back to 169.254 showing up on
 the Internet table.
 Any help in understanding this is appreciated.

 Thanks,
 Craig

 At 03:27 AM 1/6/2001 -0800, you wrote:
 On May 28, 10:03am, Priscilla Oppenheimer wrote:
 }
 } Microsoft stole this from AppleTalk. Ironically, Apple doesn't care and
in
 
   MS made a draft RFC about it, which has expired, and there is a
 new draft by Apple (see my previous note).
 
 } fact has been using the Automatic Private IP Addressing scheme for a
few
 } years. I think Microsoft themselves only started using it pretty
recently.
 } (Windows 2000, you say?)
 
   No, Windows 98 does it as well (not sure about Windows 95, but it
 would be a good bet).
 
 }-- End of excerpt from Priscilla Oppenheimer
 
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Re: Asigning ip addresses

2001-01-06 Thread Tom Briscoe

The only other way this configuration would work is if all of the ports were in the 
same
bridge group.

TB

Devrin Gaskin wrote:

 I have a customer that sent me this ip addressing scheme:
 distant-end serial int :207.102.99.132
 their serial int :207.102.99.133
 their ethernet: 207.102.99.134
 host on their side:207.102.99.135
 all using the 255.255.255.192 mask
 When I try to use this addressing scheme on the router I get the error
 message that the subnets overlap. Why can't the lan and wan be on the same
 subnet? What are the ways around this?

 Devrin Gaskin
 E-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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Setting up a DHCP server on a cisco router

2001-01-06 Thread Andrew Larkins

Can anyone give me a sample config. I want the router to give the clienthe
IP addressing information


Thanks in advance
 Andrew

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OT: Nigel Taylor

2001-01-06 Thread Farrell A. Fletcher

Contact me in reference to the Wic-1T.  @home.com is having problems.


Farrell A. Fletcher


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Re: Setting up a DHCP server on a cisco router

2001-01-06 Thread Brian Lodwick

Andrew,
The ip addressing information only? any additional parameters? Also do you 
mean you want ppp to assign IP addresses to the host machines?
You can have a DHCP server specify a pool to the router to give out, you can 
have the router point to a DHCP server and the server will configure the 
hosts adapter, or you can simply have the router configure the host using 
ppp- along with the IP you can also have it assign primary and secondary 
WINs and DNS.
Have you checked the Cisco website? They got lots of good info.
I'd go to Cisco's website and type into the search something like assigning 
ip to clients.

Brian


From: Andrew Larkins [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Andrew Larkins [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Setting up a DHCP server on a cisco router
Date: Sat, 6 Jan 2001 19:04:25 +0200

Can anyone give me a sample config. I want the router to give the clienthe
IP addressing information


Thanks in advance
  Andrew

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Re: Asigning ip addresses

2001-01-06 Thread Brian Lodwick

Tom,
If you say this segment is over here and then on the other interface you say 
this segment is over here too, the router goes, huh? So in other words you 
can't specify the same group of addresses to be in 2 locations or a router 
wouldn't know where to send a packet destined for that group of addresses.
Example:
If you configure the Ethernet with 207.102.99.134/26
you are saying off this Ethernet are these addresses:
207.102.99.128 - 207.102.99.191
Yea I guess you could bridge. Why though?
Why don't you just specify a more accurate mask?
Figure out how many hosts are off of the Ethernet. Then maybe you can cut 
the mask down to say a /28. (14 hosts)
Then configure a /30 on the WAN interfaces? (2 hosts)

Brian


From: Tom Briscoe [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Tom Briscoe [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Asigning ip addresses
Date: Thu, 06 Jan 2000 11:48:27 -0400

The only other way this configuration would work is if all of the ports 
were in the same
bridge group.

TB

Devrin Gaskin wrote:

  I have a customer that sent me this ip addressing scheme:
  distant-end serial int :207.102.99.132
  their serial int :207.102.99.133
  their ethernet: 207.102.99.134
  host on their side:207.102.99.135
  all using the 255.255.255.192 mask
  When I try to use this addressing scheme on the router I get the error
  message that the subnets overlap. Why can't the lan and wan be on the 
same
  subnet? What are the ways around this?
 
  Devrin Gaskin
  E-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
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Re: Setting up a DHCP server on a cisco router

2001-01-06 Thread D. J. Jones

Try this:

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios121/121cgcr/ip_c
/ipcprt1/1cddhcp.htm

..dj

""Brian Lodwick"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Andrew,
 The ip addressing information only? any additional parameters? Also do you
 mean you want ppp to assign IP addresses to the host machines?
 You can have a DHCP server specify a pool to the router to give out, you
can
 have the router point to a DHCP server and the server will configure the
 hosts adapter, or you can simply have the router configure the host using
 ppp- along with the IP you can also have it assign primary and secondary
 WINs and DNS.
 Have you checked the Cisco website? They got lots of good info.
 I'd go to Cisco's website and type into the search something like
assigning
 ip to clients.

 Brian


 From: Andrew Larkins [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reply-To: Andrew Larkins [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: "'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Setting up a DHCP server on a cisco router
 Date: Sat, 6 Jan 2001 19:04:25 +0200
 
 Can anyone give me a sample config. I want the router to give the
clienthe
 IP addressing information
 
 
 Thanks in advance
   Andrew
 
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vsd question

2001-01-06 Thread Gene Park

Hello, everyone.

Actually, I got a vsd file containing lab topology.
Unfortunately, I can't open the file. Anybody there
can tell me how do I download the software and open the 
file?
Thank you so much.

Gene
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

=
Gene Park
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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RE: Setting up a DHCP server on a cisco router

2001-01-06 Thread Leroy Burns

I hope this will help using DHCP

DHCP Relay
DHCP relay typically runs on a router and the relay support is available on
Windows NT Server version 4.0 and Windows 2000 Server. On Cisco 700 series
routers, you can turn on DHCP relay with the set dhcp relay command. You can
turn on DHCP relay on a Cisco IOS router by configuring ip helper-address
with the address of the DHCP server on each interface that will have DHCP
clients. The ip helper-address command forwards many other IP broadcasts,
including DNS, Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP), and NetBIOS name
service packets. To forward only DHCP requests, see the following example
configuration. For more information, see the "Configuring Broadcast
Handling" section in the Network Protocols Configuration Guide, Part I.
no ip forward-protocol udp tftp
no ip forward-protocol udp dns [This command is not listed in IOS! J.R.]
no ip forward-protocol udp time
no ip forward-protocol udp netbios-ns
no ip forward-protocol udp netbios-dgm
no ip forward-protocol udp tacacs
ip forward-protocol udp bootpc
!
interface ethernet 0
ip helper-address 172.16.12.15
interface ethernet 1
ip helper-address 172.16.12.15
Exerpt from: http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/473/winnt_dg.htm#xtocid88299
You must apply the ip helper-address [dhcp server IP] to EVERY interface,
including the serial.
Whew! Makes a man feel mancho to solve such problems.



_



Leroy Burns - LAN Administrator
75 Piedmont Avenue, Suite 1200
Atlanta, GA 30303-2507 

Direct Voice and Fax: 678.365.2661 

mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] - http://www.skylight.net/

-Original Message-
From: Andrew Larkins [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 12:04 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: Setting up a DHCP server on a cisco router 

Can anyone give me a sample config. I want the router to give the clienthe
IP addressing information


Thanks in advance
 Andrew

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RE: Setting up a DHCP server on a cisco router

2001-01-06 Thread Brian Lodwick

Leroy,
He said he wanted the router to give the client the IP addressing 
information. In your example the router is forwarding bootp broadcasts and a 
Windows box is giving the client the IP addressing information.

Brian
It's a brave man who, when things are at their darkest, can kick back and 
party! -- Dennis Quaid, "Inner Space"



From: Leroy Burns [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Leroy Burns [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "'Andrew Larkins'" [EMAIL PROTECTED],
"'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Setting up a DHCP server on a cisco router
Date: Sat, 6 Jan 2001 13:36:21 -0500

I hope this will help using DHCP

DHCP Relay
DHCP relay typically runs on a router and the relay support is available on
Windows NT Server version 4.0 and Windows 2000 Server. On Cisco 700 series
routers, you can turn on DHCP relay with the set dhcp relay command. You 
can
turn on DHCP relay on a Cisco IOS router by configuring ip helper-address
with the address of the DHCP server on each interface that will have DHCP
clients. The ip helper-address command forwards many other IP broadcasts,
including DNS, Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP), and NetBIOS name
service packets. To forward only DHCP requests, see the following example
configuration. For more information, see the "Configuring Broadcast
Handling" section in the Network Protocols Configuration Guide, Part I.
no ip forward-protocol udp tftp
no ip forward-protocol udp dns [This command is not listed in IOS! J.R.]
no ip forward-protocol udp time
no ip forward-protocol udp netbios-ns
no ip forward-protocol udp netbios-dgm
no ip forward-protocol udp tacacs
ip forward-protocol udp bootpc
!
interface ethernet 0
ip helper-address 172.16.12.15
interface ethernet 1
ip helper-address 172.16.12.15
Exerpt from: http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/473/winnt_dg.htm#xtocid88299
You must apply the ip helper-address [dhcp server IP] to EVERY interface,
including the serial.
Whew! Makes a man feel mancho to solve such problems.



_



Leroy Burns - LAN Administrator
75 Piedmont Avenue, Suite 1200
Atlanta, GA 30303-2507

Direct Voice and Fax: 678.365.2661

mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] - http://www.skylight.net/

-Original Message-
From: Andrew Larkins [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 12:04 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: Setting up a DHCP server on a cisco router

Can anyone give me a sample config. I want the router to give the clienthe
IP addressing information


Thanks in advance
  Andrew

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Re: A question regarding private addressing

2001-01-06 Thread Howard C. Berkowitz

Let's try for some perspective on 169.254 and related issues.  Trying 
to remember an IETF hallway discussion, I think with Jeff Schiller of 
MIT (might have been Bill Manning), the convention for using this 
particular block originated at MIT, not either Apple or Microsoft.

Don't confuse this mechanism with more general DHCP intended to let 
the device operate in a general network. It's really intended for 
single subnet operation.

IPv6 has a link-local autoconfiguration mode that also achieves this 
sort of mechanism, but IPv6 autoconfiguration derives from OSI 
protocols, not AppleTalk.

The specific convention is now in the Zeroconf Working Group: 
http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-zeroconf-ipv4-linklocal-01.txt


 From http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/zeroconf-charter.html

The goal of the Zero Configuration Networking (ZEROCONF) Working 
Group is to enable networking in the absence of configuration and 
administration.
Zero configuration networking is required for environments where 
administration is impractical or impossible, such as in the home or 
small office,
embedded systems 'plugged together' as in an automobile, or to allow 
impromptu networks as between the devices of strangers on a train.

ZEROCONF requirements will make networking as easy as possible, but 
no easier. In some cases other considerations may dominate ease of 
use. For
example, network security requires some configuration which may not 
be as easy as the unacceptable alternative of 'no security.'

Networks where ZEROCONF protocols apply can include (but are not 
limited to) environments where no DHCP, MADCAP or DNS servers are 
present.

This working group will address both IPv4 and IPv6.

Many functions which are not of fundamental importance to host and 
application configuration are outside the scope of the working 
group. This is not
because there are no other problems to solve for networking in an 
environment without preexisting configuration. This working group 
will focus on an
achievable subset of these problems. The ZEROCONF WG will precisely 
define the requirements for each of the following functions:

* Interface Configuration (IP address, network prefix, gateway router)

* Name-to-Address Translation

* Service Discovery

* Automatic allocation of Multicast Addresses

* Sufficient security features to prevent networks from being any 
less secure than networks which do not use ZEROCONF protocols

The working group will define the requirements to provide these 
functions on two distinct network topologies:

1. A single network segment, where all hosts are reachable by 
link-layer broadcast or multicast messages.

2. A set of network segments, (on different IP subnetworks) 
interconnected by a single router.

Automatic configuration of an arbitrary topology of routers and 
subnets is out of the scope of the ZEROCONF WG charter.

The working group will also define how such a network may 
automatically transition from 'configured' to 'unconfigured' 
behavior, as well as from
'unconfigured' to 'configured'. That is, the same hosts must be able 
to function on networks with no configuration as well as be capable 
of direct IP
connectivity to the global Internet, including DNS entries supplied 
through standard DNS services. It is also possible that both modes 
(ZEROCONF and
administered) may coexist on the same network; the modes may not be 
exclusive of each other.

When ZEROCONF networks or hosts which are configured using ZEROCONF 
protocols are connected to the big 'I' internet, they should not
automatically become vulnerable to new security threats.

This WG will produce two documents. The first describes the 
requirements for the configuration (and security) services, 
defaults, and mechanisms a node
needs to fully participate on ZEROCONF networks and/or configured 
networks. The second, which follows the first, will detail a 
'profile' specifying which
standards specifically satisfy ZEROCONF requirements.

The WG will also produce two protocol specifications. First, the WG 
will develop a document describing automatic generation and 
assignment of link-local
IPv4 addresses in environments lacking host configuration (static or 
using DHCP). The document will describe existing practice as well as 
define
recommendations for future implementations. Second, the WG will 
develop a profile of the Address Allocation Protocol (AAP) to 
provide Zero
Configuration Multicast Address Allocation support for IPv4 and 
IPv6. No protocol modifications to AAP are expected. Rather, a 
subset of existing feature
will be profiled for use in ZEROCONF environments.

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What is the latest 2924 XL OS ?

2001-01-06 Thread Pradeep Kumar

Any idea what is the latest 2924 XL switch OS ?
Thanks folks.


PS:I did not take the initiative to look up www.cisco.com , so PLEASE dont fume. :-)





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Re: anyone WAN switching CC__

2001-01-06 Thread hal9001

Me too I'm studying this too there is very little specific study material!

Karl
- Original Message -
From: "Brian Lodwick" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 1:55 PM
Subject: anyone WAN switching CC__


 Group,
   Has anyone taken any of the WAN switching tests? I am about halfway
 through the Ciscopress CCNA WAN switching book and I was wondering other
 people's opinions on this test.
   If I were an IP packet my destination would say CCIE RS, but a little
 policy routing has sent me a different way of getting there and I kindof
 figured this will give me a look into the cloud (which I know can be
 dangerous). I do get on Strat switches quite often at work, but never
dealt
 much with ATM. As I read this book I think to myself Oh so that's how that
 works. I also like the fact that I am forced to learn more about the 4th
 dimension- which some people like to call the ATM reference model, which I
 probably could've just briefly gone over LANE for RS.
   If anyone has taken a shot at this test I would love to hear your
 afterthoughts and anything else you might want to throw in about this
track.
 I haven't really met anyone who has done any of these tests, but it seems
 like a good track with a lot of info.

 Brian

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Cisco's MLS Flow categories

2001-01-06 Thread Meagan Margaret-Thomas

Does anyone have any ideas about the results of implementing MLS on CAT 6500
using: Dest. Flow, Srce-Dest Flow or Full flow?  Has anyone done this?  Does
anyone know, from experience, what advantages and disadvantages of
implementing one or the other?  Please, I'm looking for information from
those who have actually implemented one of these and what the results
were

Thanks!

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Topology Services in CiscoWorks2000

2001-01-06 Thread Cisco_whizz

Hello Everyone,

I recently installed CiscoWorks2000 on a network comprising of Catalyst 4908
and 3500XL. However the campus manager is displaying all the Cisco devices in
the unconnected devices view only and in Resource manager essentials as
generic SNMP devices . does anyone have any ideas
Kindly reply to my address.Iis version 3.1 in CW2K and the switch is running
ios ver 12.0

Regards


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Re: What is the latest 2924 XL OS ?

2001-01-06 Thread D. J. Jones

Well, I'm not sure you will not be flamed, but the point to remember is that
if someone does
not know the answer, they should at least try to find the answer first and
if unsuccessful, solicit
help from the group members.  Obviously someone has to look it up if they do
not know; agreed?
It's one thing to have to wade through pages of manuals to find something,
but quite different if you  only have to type in "2924 xl" in the search
window and have the system look it up for you.

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/lan/c2900xl/29_35xw/index.ht
m

This is what I found and it appears to be current.


""Pradeep Kumar"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Any idea what is the latest 2924 XL switch OS ?
 Thanks folks.


 PS:I did not take the initiative to look up www.cisco.com , so PLEASE dont
fume. :-)






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Expect Scripts for Cisco

2001-01-06 Thread info

I obtained Matt Crawford's Expect scripts for Cisco.but I was wondering
if anyone has any good resources for obtaining more Expect scripts written
for Cisco routers/switches.

Thanks!


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Pix Firewall License R or UR ?

2001-01-06 Thread A.C

Hi,  Does anyone know a command on Pix Firewall 520 that shows what kind of
license it has (R -UR license)?

Thank you


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Re: vsd question

2001-01-06 Thread Andy Walden


Its a Visio file, which was bought by Microsoft. There will be no
downloading at this time. Time to pay your MS tax. 

andy

On Sat, 6 Jan 2001, Gene Park wrote:

 Hello, everyone.
 
 Actually, I got a vsd file containing lab topology.
 Unfortunately, I can't open the file. Anybody there
 can tell me how do I download the software and open the 
 file?
 Thank you so much.
 
 Gene
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 =
 Gene Park
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
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Re: Can I Change the Interface Updating Intervals ???

2001-01-06 Thread Circusnuts

We have a winner !!!

The syntax for the keepalive interface subcommand is:=20

keepalive [seconds]
no keepalive=20
If the optional argument seconds is not specified, a default of ten =
seconds is assumed.

Example:
In the following example, the keepalive interval is set to three =
seconds.

interface ethernet 0
keepalive 3

Thanks !!!
Phil

- Original Message -=20
From: "ElephantChild" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Circusnuts" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 7:01 PM
Subject: Re: Can I Change the Interface Updating Intervals ???


 On Sat, 6 Jan 2001, Circusnuts wrote:
=20
  Is there a setting that has a router poll itself more often, say for
  connectivity.  I have a router in my lab, that seems to take a =
minute
  just to change status from UP to Down ( vise versa).  Debug is =
equally
  slow...
=20
 Is "keepalive" what you're looking for?
=20
 --=20
 "Airplane travel is nature's way of making you look like your passport
 photo." --- Al Gore
=20
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No Subject

2001-01-06 Thread Pierre-Alex


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SNMP

2001-01-06 Thread Pierre-Alex

I am looking for a free utility that will allow me to experiment querying
the MIB database of a switch. Is there such a thing?

Pierre-Alex

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RE: vsd question

2001-01-06 Thread nsamuel

I think you might need Visio

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Gene Park
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 1:20 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: vsd question


Hello, everyone.

Actually, I got a vsd file containing lab topology.
Unfortunately, I can't open the file. Anybody there
can tell me how do I download the software and open the
file?
Thank you so much.

Gene
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

=
Gene Park
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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RE: SNMP

2001-01-06 Thread Pierre-Alex

Is it downloadable from Cisco/HP Website or do I have to order the software?

Pierre-Alex

-Original Message-
From: Circusnuts [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 2:08 PM
To: Pierre-Alex
Subject: Re: SNMP 


Demo Cisco works 2000  Demo OpenView

- Original Message -
From: "Pierre-Alex" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Cisco" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 8:38 PM
Subject: SNMP


 I am looking for a free utility that will allow me to experiment querying
 the MIB database of a switch. Is there such a thing?

 Pierre-Alex

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Re: Storm Control

2001-01-06 Thread Chris McCoy


Pierre-Alex,

  You could disable spanning-tree in a looped
topology, or plug in a switch with spanning tree
disabled that has two of its ports connected together.
 The smaller Netgear switches automatically do this
since they don't run spanning tree.  

  Don't do this on an active network!

Chris M.


--- Pierre-Alex [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Is there a tool I can use to create a broadcast
 storm?
 
 Pierre-Alex
 
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RE: Storm Control

2001-01-06 Thread Pierre-Alex

Smart! Thanks

-Original Message-
From: Chris McCoy [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 5:28 PM
To: Pierre-Alex
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Storm Control



Pierre-Alex,

  You could disable spanning-tree in a looped
topology, or plug in a switch with spanning tree
disabled that has two of its ports connected together.
 The smaller Netgear switches automatically do this
since they don't run spanning tree.  

  Don't do this on an active network!

Chris M.


--- Pierre-Alex [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Is there a tool I can use to create a broadcast
 storm?
 
 Pierre-Alex
 
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2501 Problems

2001-01-06 Thread Troy

I have a 2501 router.  There is a password set on the user mode and I don't
have the password.  I went to TAC website and followed the instructions for
recovering password but when I'm in Hyperterminal (version 6.1) on my NT
server 4.0 sp6 I can't boot into Memory monitoring mode.  I get what is
below.  And it just stops.  Any help would be great. Thanks.



System Bootstrap, Version 5.2(8a), RELEASE SOFTWARE
Copyright (c) 1986-1995 by cisco Systems
2500 processor with 4096 Kbytes of main memory

F3: 5773940+168176+415888 at 0x360

  Restricted Rights Legend

Use, duplication, or disclosure by the Government is
subject to restrictions as set forth in subparagraph
(c) of the Commercial Computer Software - Restricted
Rights clause at FAR sec. 52.227-19 and subparagraph
(c) (1) (ii) of the Rights in Technical Data and Computer
Software clause at DFARS sec. 252.227-7013.

   cisco Systems, Inc.
   170 West Tasman Drive
   San Jose, California 95134-1706



Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) 2500 Software (C2500-IO-L), Version 12.0(1), RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc1)
Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Tue 20-Oct-98 15:05 by phanguye
Image text-base: 0x03030258, data-base: 0x1000

cisco 2500 (68030) processor (revision F) with 4096K/2048K bytes of memory.
Processor board ID 05198864, with hardware revision 
Bridging software.
X.25 software, Version 3.0.0.
1 Ethernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
2 Serial network interface(s)
32K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
8192K bytes of processor board System flash (Read ONLY)



Press RETURN to get started!


00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Ethernet0, changed state to up
00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Serial0, changed state to down
00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Serial1, changed state to down
00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Ethernet0, changed
state to down
00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0, changed
state to down
00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial1, changed
state to down
00:00:26: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface Loopback1, changed state to
administratively down
00:00:27: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0.16,
changed state to down
00:00:27: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0.100,
changed state to down
00:00:31: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface Serial1, changed state to
administratively down
00:00:33: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from memory by console
00:00:33: %SYS-5-RESTART: System restarted --
Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) 2500 Software (C2500-IO-L), Version 12.0(1), RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc1)
Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Tue 20-Oct-98 15:05 by phanguye


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Re: Pix Firewall License R or UR ?

2001-01-06 Thread John Hardman

HI

Show Version

Not the number of lic'ed connections near the bottom.

HTH
--
John Hardman CCNP MCSE+I


""A.C"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
9384i4$f0a$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:9384i4$f0a$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi,  Does anyone know a command on Pix Firewall 520 that shows what kind
of
 license it has (R -UR license)?

 Thank you


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Re: 2501 Problems

2001-01-06 Thread Kevin Wigle

Hyperterm is broke.  I've lost count on which versions work and which ones
are broke.  It doesn't pass the "break" sequence properly.

Do yourself a favor and download TeraTerm.

It works great on every Windows platform I've used so far.

Kevin Wigle

- Original Message -
From: "Troy" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Newsgroups: groupstudy.cisco
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, 06 January, 2001 18:53
Subject: 2501 Problems


 I have a 2501 router.  There is a password set on the user mode and I
don't
 have the password.  I went to TAC website and followed the instructions
for
 recovering password but when I'm in Hyperterminal (version 6.1) on my NT
 server 4.0 sp6 I can't boot into Memory monitoring mode.  I get what is
 below.  And it just stops.  Any help would be great. Thanks.



 System Bootstrap, Version 5.2(8a), RELEASE SOFTWARE
 Copyright (c) 1986-1995 by cisco Systems
 2500 processor with 4096 Kbytes of main memory

 F3: 5773940+168176+415888 at 0x360

   Restricted Rights Legend

 Use, duplication, or disclosure by the Government is
 subject to restrictions as set forth in subparagraph
 (c) of the Commercial Computer Software - Restricted
 Rights clause at FAR sec. 52.227-19 and subparagraph
 (c) (1) (ii) of the Rights in Technical Data and Computer
 Software clause at DFARS sec. 252.227-7013.

cisco Systems, Inc.
170 West Tasman Drive
San Jose, California 95134-1706



 Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
 IOS (tm) 2500 Software (C2500-IO-L), Version 12.0(1), RELEASE SOFTWARE
(fc1)
 Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by cisco Systems, Inc.
 Compiled Tue 20-Oct-98 15:05 by phanguye
 Image text-base: 0x03030258, data-base: 0x1000

 cisco 2500 (68030) processor (revision F) with 4096K/2048K bytes of
memory.
 Processor board ID 05198864, with hardware revision 
 Bridging software.
 X.25 software, Version 3.0.0.
 1 Ethernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
 2 Serial network interface(s)
 32K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
 8192K bytes of processor board System flash (Read ONLY)
 


 Press RETURN to get started!


 00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Ethernet0, changed state to up
 00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Serial0, changed state to down
 00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Serial1, changed state to down
 00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Ethernet0,
changed
 state to down
 00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0, changed
 state to down
 00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial1, changed
 state to down
 00:00:26: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface Loopback1, changed state to
 administratively down
 00:00:27: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0.16,
 changed state to down
 00:00:27: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0.100,
 changed state to down
 00:00:31: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface Serial1, changed state to
 administratively down
 00:00:33: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from memory by console
 00:00:33: %SYS-5-RESTART: System restarted --
 Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
 IOS (tm) 2500 Software (C2500-IO-L), Version 12.0(1), RELEASE SOFTWARE
(fc1)
 Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by cisco Systems, Inc.
 Compiled Tue 20-Oct-98 15:05 by phanguye


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2501 Problems

2001-01-06 Thread Circusnuts

Well- first things first...  to break the signal you'll need to do something
a little different.  Turn the router off.  Lower your Hyper Terminal speed
to 1200 (reload Hyper Term for this to take effect).  Power the router on,
holding the space bar for about 5 to 10 seconds.  You should see some garble
@ the top left (you may have to perform this a couple times before it
works).  Move back to 9600 on Hyper Terminal (reload the app)  you should
find yourself @ the  mode in the router.  Type o/r 0x41 (return), b
(return),  now you're in ROMON or boot mode...

Good Luck !!!
Phil

I have a 2501 router.  There is a password set on the user mode and I don't
have the password.  I went to TAC website and followed the instructions for
recovering password but when I'm in Hyperterminal (version 6.1) on my NT
server 4.0 sp6 I can't boot into Memory monitoring mode.  I get what is
below.  And it just stops.  Any help would be great. Thanks.



System Bootstrap, Version 5.2(8a), RELEASE SOFTWARE
Copyright (c) 1986-1995 by cisco Systems
2500 processor with 4096 Kbytes of main memory

F3: 5773940+168176+415888 at 0x360

  Restricted Rights Legend

Use, duplication, or disclosure by the Government is
subject to restrictions as set forth in subparagraph
(c) of the Commercial Computer Software - Restricted
Rights clause at FAR sec. 52.227-19 and subparagraph
(c) (1) (ii) of the Rights in Technical Data and Computer
Software clause at DFARS sec. 252.227-7013.

   cisco Systems, Inc.
   170 West Tasman Drive
   San Jose, California 95134-1706



Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) 2500 Software (C2500-IO-L), Version 12.0(1), RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc1)
Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Tue 20-Oct-98 15:05 by phanguye
Image text-base: 0x03030258, data-base: 0x1000

cisco 2500 (68030) processor (revision F) with 4096K/2048K bytes of memory.
Processor board ID 05198864, with hardware revision 
Bridging software.
X.25 software, Version 3.0.0.
1 Ethernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
2 Serial network interface(s)
32K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
8192K bytes of processor board System flash (Read ONLY)



Press RETURN to get started!


00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Ethernet0, changed state to up
00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Serial0, changed state to down
00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Serial1, changed state to down
00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Ethernet0, changed
state to down
00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0, changed
state to down
00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial1, changed
state to down
00:00:26: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface Loopback1, changed state to
administratively down
00:00:27: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0.16,
changed state to down
00:00:27: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0.100,
changed state to down
00:00:31: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface Serial1, changed state to
administratively down
00:00:33: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from memory by console
00:00:33: %SYS-5-RESTART: System restarted --
Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) 2500 Software (C2500-IO-L), Version 12.0(1), RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc1)
Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Tue 20-Oct-98 15:05 by phanguye


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Re: SNMP

2001-01-06 Thread David C Prall

Use Getif on a Windows Environment to browse the MIB's.
http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Hills/8260/

It's free and works wonderfully for walking the tree.

David C Prall   [EMAIL PROTECTED]   http://dcp.dcptech.com
- Original Message -
From: "Pierre-Alex" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Cisco" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 5:38 PM
Subject: SNMP


 I am looking for a free utility that will allow me to experiment querying
 the MIB database of a switch. Is there such a thing?

 Pierre-Alex

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Re: Storm Control

2001-01-06 Thread David C Prall

 Is there a tool I can use to create a broadcast storm?

 Pierre-Alex

Put a helper address on two ethernet interfaces, pointed to the others
broadcast address. This will cause all local broadcasts to be forwarded to
the other interface, which in turn will forward it back.

David C Prall   [EMAIL PROTECTED]   http://dcp.dcptech.com

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Re: SNMP

2001-01-06 Thread Chris Boyd

Compaq also has a free SNMP utility that will allow you to walk the MIB tree
and only query certain devices and is not very resource intensive at
all.it is called CNMS and it is downloadable or usually comes free on
the Smart Start cd-rom if you have access to onealso might want to think
about MRTG.Good Luck!


Thanks,

Chris Boyd
Network Support, CCNA
Alex Lee, Inc.
120 4th St SW
Hickory NC 28603
828-323-4103
www.alexlee.com
- Original Message -
From: "Pierre-Alex" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Circusnuts" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: "Cisco" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 6:49 PM
Subject: RE: SNMP


 Thanks Phil, I will post the URL when I find them. Pierre-Alex

 -Original Message-
 From: Circusnuts [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 2:38 PM
 To: Pierre-Alex
 Cc: Cisco
 Subject: Re: SNMP


 I downloaded both about 4 or 5 months ago (I didn't save the Hyperlinks).
 Keep in mind, both of these applications are memory hogs.  I know Open
 View's trial software alows up to 200 or so devices.

 Good Luck !!!
 Phil

 - Original Message -
 From: "Pierre-Alex" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: "Circusnuts" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: "Cisco" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 9:06 PM
 Subject: RE: SNMP


  Is it downloadable from Cisco/HP Website or do I have to order the
 software?
 
  Pierre-Alex
 
  -Original Message-
  From: Circusnuts [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
  Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 2:08 PM
  To: Pierre-Alex
  Subject: Re: SNMP
 
 
  Demo Cisco works 2000  Demo OpenView
 
  - Original Message -
  From: "Pierre-Alex" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: "Cisco" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 8:38 PM
  Subject: SNMP
 
 
   I am looking for a free utility that will allow me to experiment
 querying
   the MIB database of a switch. Is there such a thing?
  
   Pierre-Alex
  
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Re: Topology Services in CiscoWorks2000

2001-01-06 Thread David C Prall

 Hello Everyone,

 I recently installed CiscoWorks2000 on a network comprising of Catalyst
4908
 and 3500XL. However the campus manager is displaying all the Cisco devices
in
 the unconnected devices view only and in Resource manager essentials as
 generic SNMP devices . does anyone have any ideas
 Kindly reply to my address.Iis version 3.1 in CW2K and the switch is
running
 ios ver 12.0

 Regards

You'll need to get the latest version of CW2000 CD One Edition 3 and RME 3.2
which was released in October. This is where support for these devices was
added, although support for the 3500XL with Inline Power is still not
included.

David C Prall   [EMAIL PROTECTED]   http://dcp.dcptech.com

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Flash Memory

2001-01-06 Thread Mark Rose

Recently posted was the command to create one memory block in flash after
adding a second memory stick. I can't seem to find it in the archives. It
combines the read-only  read  write into a 16 meg partition.  Could
someone help me out, I am having trouble locating the command.

TIA
Mark

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Re: Pix Firewall License R or UR ?

2001-01-06 Thread ItsMe

Only the PIX 515 has R and UR.

""A.C"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
9384i4$f0a$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:9384i4$f0a$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi,  Does anyone know a command on Pix Firewall 520 that shows what kind
of
 license it has (R -UR license)?

 Thank you


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RE: 2501 Problems

2001-01-06 Thread Fowler, Joey

 What it might be is the Settings for your connection, try turning the flow
control from Hardware(default setting) to off. I found this to be an issue
with my 2501. The setting didn't matter when connecting to my 3640, but when
connecting to my 2501 nothing worked. If you still have problems, check
Cisco's recommended settings for connecting. I think they are 9600, N, 8, 1
and no flow control, but double check. Hope this helps.

Joey

-Original Message-
From: Troy
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 1/6/01 11:53 PM
Subject: 2501 Problems

I have a 2501 router.  There is a password set on the user mode and I
don't
have the password.  I went to TAC website and followed the instructions
for
recovering password but when I'm in Hyperterminal (version 6.1) on my NT
server 4.0 sp6 I can't boot into Memory monitoring mode.  I get what is
below.  And it just stops.  Any help would be great. Thanks.



System Bootstrap, Version 5.2(8a), RELEASE SOFTWARE
Copyright (c) 1986-1995 by cisco Systems
2500 processor with 4096 Kbytes of main memory

F3: 5773940+168176+415888 at 0x360

  Restricted Rights Legend

Use, duplication, or disclosure by the Government is
subject to restrictions as set forth in subparagraph
(c) of the Commercial Computer Software - Restricted
Rights clause at FAR sec. 52.227-19 and subparagraph
(c) (1) (ii) of the Rights in Technical Data and Computer
Software clause at DFARS sec. 252.227-7013.

   cisco Systems, Inc.
   170 West Tasman Drive
   San Jose, California 95134-1706



Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) 2500 Software (C2500-IO-L), Version 12.0(1), RELEASE SOFTWARE
(fc1)
Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Tue 20-Oct-98 15:05 by phanguye
Image text-base: 0x03030258, data-base: 0x1000

cisco 2500 (68030) processor (revision F) with 4096K/2048K bytes of
memory.
Processor board ID 05198864, with hardware revision 
Bridging software.
X.25 software, Version 3.0.0.
1 Ethernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
2 Serial network interface(s)
32K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
8192K bytes of processor board System flash (Read ONLY)



Press RETURN to get started!


00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Ethernet0, changed state to up
00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Serial0, changed state to down
00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Serial1, changed state to down
00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Ethernet0,
changed
state to down
00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0,
changed
state to down
00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial1,
changed
state to down
00:00:26: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface Loopback1, changed state to
administratively down
00:00:27: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0.16,
changed state to down
00:00:27: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0.100,
changed state to down
00:00:31: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface Serial1, changed state to
administratively down
00:00:33: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from memory by console
00:00:33: %SYS-5-RESTART: System restarted --
Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) 2500 Software (C2500-IO-L), Version 12.0(1), RELEASE SOFTWARE
(fc1)
Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Tue 20-Oct-98 15:05 by phanguye


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OSPF/ DR BDR election

2001-01-06 Thread Fowler, Joey

I setup OSPF on between two routers, and Router A was elected as the DR
becuase it had the highest IP address. Router B was elected BDR. I ran debug
ip ospf adj on Router B and unplugged the Ethernet connection between the
two. After 40 seconds Router B showed that it promoted itself to DR. Then I
plugged the connection back in, and Router A was now selected as the BDR.
This didn't make sense to me. I know that each time a router is added, that
a new DRand BDR election does NOT take place, however shouldn't Router A
still considered itself as the DR so when the connection was re-established
it would either 1. remain as the DR or more likely 2. rerun the election
since both routers think that they are the DR. I might could understand if
there were multiple routers on the Ethernet connection. Any elightenment
would be greatly appreciated. Meanwhile I'll go look at RFC 2328.

Joey

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Re: Support exam study material tip

2001-01-06 Thread G.E. Murphy

Zahid, I used the CiscoPress book and passed today. It is an excellent resourse, much
better than Sybex. You could use Ciscopress and Boson #2 and do well. Good Luck!

Zahid Hassan wrote:

 Hi everybody,

 I would really appreciate if anybody could suggest good study
 material for the Support 2 exam.
 How would someone rate the new support book by
 Amir Ranjbar from Cisco press.

 Thanks in advance.

 Zahid

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Re: Flash Memory

2001-01-06 Thread Circusnuts

partition flash  no partion flash are the commands...

Phil

- Original Message -
From: "Mark Rose" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 10:57 PM
Subject: Flash Memory


 Recently posted was the command to create one memory block in flash after
 adding a second memory stick. I can't seem to find it in the archives. It
 combines the read-only  read  write into a 16 meg partition.  Could
 someone help me out, I am having trouble locating the command.

 TIA
 Mark

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Re: 2501 Problems

2001-01-06 Thread Adam Quiggle

Agreed.  I use TeraTerm Pro as well and I like it for three reasons:

1) You can send a Ctrl-break sequence right from the menu (under 
control-send break).

2) If you want to remove a command,(a) do a show config (so you can see 
command), (b) get into the appropriate config mode, (c) type "no", (d) 
highlight the command you want to remove, (e) then right click anywhere (it 
automatically gets copied into the clipboard and pasted into your command 
line).

3) I can use it to telnet as well as connect to my serial port.

In addition, it supports SSH (although I haven't tried it yet).

HTH,
AQ

At 07:24 PM 1/6/01, you wrote:
Hyperterm is broke.  I've lost count on which versions work and which ones
are broke.  It doesn't pass the "break" sequence properly.

Do yourself a favor and download TeraTerm.

It works great on every Windows platform I've used so far.

Kevin Wigle

- Original Message -
From: "Troy" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Newsgroups: groupstudy.cisco
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, 06 January, 2001 18:53
Subject: 2501 Problems


  I have a 2501 router.  There is a password set on the user mode and I
don't
  have the password.  I went to TAC website and followed the instructions
for
  recovering password but when I'm in Hyperterminal (version 6.1) on my NT
  server 4.0 sp6 I can't boot into Memory monitoring mode.  I get what is
  below.  And it just stops.  Any help would be great. Thanks.
 
 
 
  System Bootstrap, Version 5.2(8a), RELEASE SOFTWARE
  Copyright (c) 1986-1995 by cisco Systems
  2500 processor with 4096 Kbytes of main memory
 
  F3: 5773940+168176+415888 at 0x360
 
Restricted Rights Legend
 
  Use, duplication, or disclosure by the Government is
  subject to restrictions as set forth in subparagraph
  (c) of the Commercial Computer Software - Restricted
  Rights clause at FAR sec. 52.227-19 and subparagraph
  (c) (1) (ii) of the Rights in Technical Data and Computer
  Software clause at DFARS sec. 252.227-7013.
 
 cisco Systems, Inc.
 170 West Tasman Drive
 San Jose, California 95134-1706
 
 
 
  Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
  IOS (tm) 2500 Software (C2500-IO-L), Version 12.0(1), RELEASE SOFTWARE
(fc1)
  Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by cisco Systems, Inc.
  Compiled Tue 20-Oct-98 15:05 by phanguye
  Image text-base: 0x03030258, data-base: 0x1000
 
  cisco 2500 (68030) processor (revision F) with 4096K/2048K bytes of
memory.
  Processor board ID 05198864, with hardware revision 
  Bridging software.
  X.25 software, Version 3.0.0.
  1 Ethernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
  2 Serial network interface(s)
  32K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
  8192K bytes of processor board System flash (Read ONLY)
 
 
 
  Press RETURN to get started!
 
 
  00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Ethernet0, changed state to up
  00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Serial0, changed state to down
  00:00:20: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Serial1, changed state to down
  00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Ethernet0,
changed
  state to down
  00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0, changed
  state to down
  00:00:21: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial1, changed
  state to down
  00:00:26: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface Loopback1, changed state to
  administratively down
  00:00:27: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0.16,
  changed state to down
  00:00:27: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial0.100,
  changed state to down
  00:00:31: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface Serial1, changed state to
  administratively down
  00:00:33: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from memory by console
  00:00:33: %SYS-5-RESTART: System restarted --
  Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
  IOS (tm) 2500 Software (C2500-IO-L), Version 12.0(1), RELEASE SOFTWARE
(fc1)
  Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by cisco Systems, Inc.
  Compiled Tue 20-Oct-98 15:05 by phanguye
 
 
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Re: Cisco Certification Digest V2 #927

2001-01-06 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: OSPF/ DR BDR election

2001-01-06 Thread Chuck Larrieu

Nope. This is by design, so as to eliminate unnecessary routing protocol
traffic.

Practically speaking, what matters more than anything else is the order in
which the routers come on line. If you have two routers and boot them at the
same time, all this election stuff happens. If you boot one, then wait until
it is up, then boot another, the first one on line becomes the DR, or at
least this is the common operation in the Cisco world. A number of sours
mention this.

Chuck

-Original Message-
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
Fowler, Joey
Sent:   Saturday, January 06, 2001 5:52 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject:OSPF/ DR  BDR election

I setup OSPF on between two routers, and Router A was elected as the DR
becuase it had the highest IP address. Router B was elected BDR. I ran debug
ip ospf adj on Router B and unplugged the Ethernet connection between the
two. After 40 seconds Router B showed that it promoted itself to DR. Then I
plugged the connection back in, and Router A was now selected as the BDR.
This didn't make sense to me. I know that each time a router is added, that
a new DRand BDR election does NOT take place, however shouldn't Router A
still considered itself as the DR so when the connection was re-established
it would either 1. remain as the DR or more likely 2. rerun the election
since both routers think that they are the DR. I might could understand if
there were multiple routers on the Ethernet connection. Any elightenment
would be greatly appreciated. Meanwhile I'll go look at RFC 2328.

Joey

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what is Superviser Engine and NFFC?

2001-01-06 Thread Zhiping Li

When I study BCMSN,I met these nouns,
I do not know clearly their meaning,
could anyone help me?

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ISDN and other TELCO topics... good source of info!

2001-01-06 Thread Cthulu

Hi, all,

While searching for a supercheap ISDN simulator (haven't found it yet),  I
stumbled across the Adtran website, and found that Adtran has several nice
primers on ISDN, and other telco topics.

Go to: http://www.adtran.com/ and click "Technology Overview".

I was impressed by the simple and elegant diagrams... wish I had had this a
few years ago;)

Enjoy!

Charles



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IS-IS routing domain to look at

2001-01-06 Thread Chuck Larrieu

For those who haven't seen one before, I set up a quick and dirty IS-IS
domain in my home lab. As I will be busy studying some other things the rest
of the weekend, folks on the list here are cordially invited to take a peek.

Telnet to 64.220.150.11  all passwords are cisco

Feel free to poke around

Please play nicely.


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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basic question about proxy ARP

2001-01-06 Thread Nurarif Wibawa

Hi,

Suppose configuration below :

   e0 Ethernet   e0lo0
R1 --- R2 --
 192.168.0.0 / 24  192.168.1.1 / 24

Having proxy-arp disabled on R2's e0 and having a static routing =
configuration for R1 :
ip route 192.168.1.0 255.255.255.0 e0

We know that if we ping from R1 to 192.168.1.1, we will have a request =
time-out.
But what if :

 s0   Serials0   lo0
R1 --- R2 --
 192.168.0.0 / 24  192.168.1.1 / 24

R1's configuration :
ip route 192.168.1.0 255.255.255.0 s0

If we turn off the proxy-arp on R2's s0, we still can reach 192.168.1.0 =
/ 24 from R1.
Since serial interface doesn't have mac address, so what is happenning =
if we point network to the interface instead of next-hop ip address ?=20
Does the R1 still request an ARP to serial interface ? What is the reply =
from R2 or maybe the exact question is how does it work ?
What is the purpose of proxy-arp on serial interface ?

Thank you

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Re: HSRP Groups

2001-01-06 Thread eric^_^

Hi :

I can't use the HSRP in Bay switch . It will active in both route.
So, Now this connect in the HUB only. Any problem in Bay switch ?

Ken Vandenbark wrote:

 Is there an advantage to having more than one HSRP group assigned to an
 interface?
 I don't see an advantage one maybe someone has experienced advantages =
 in
 having multiple HSRP groups. Example of config:
 Router 1
 =20
 router1#sh run=20
 Building configuration...
 =20
 Current configuration:
 !
 version 12.0
 service timestamps debug datetime msec localtime show-timezone
 service timestamps log datetime msec localtime show-timezone
 =20
 service password-encryption
 !
 hostname router1
 !
 logging buffered 16384 debugging
 no logging console
 !
 username xxx privilege 15 password 7 xxx
 username xxx privilege 15 password 7 xxx
 !
 !
 !
 !
 clock timezone cst -6
 clock summer-time cdt recurring
 ip subnet-zero
 no ip finger
 !=20
 no ip bootp server
 !
 !
 !
 interface FastEthernet0/0
  ip address 10.10.192.215 255.255.255.240
  no ip redirects
  no ip directed-broadcast
  speed 100
  full-duplex
  standby 3 timers 5 15
  standby 3 priority 250 preempt
  standby 3 authentication guess
  standby 3 ip 10.10.192.213
  standby 3 track FastEthernet0/1 100
  standby 4 timers 5 15
  standby 4 priority 200 preempt
  standby 4 authentication guess
  standby 4 ip 10.10.192.214
  standby 4 track FastEthernet0/1 100
 !
 interface FastEthernet0/1
  ip address 10.10.192.226 255.255.255.248
  no ip redirects
  no ip directed-broadcast
  duplex full
  speed 100
  standby timers 5 15
  standby priority 250 preempt
  standby authentication related
  standby ip 10.10.192.225
  standby track FastEthernet0/0 100
  standby 1 timer 5 15
  standby 1 priority 200 preempt
  standby 1 authentication guess
  standby 1 ip 10.10.192.228
  standby 1 track FastEthernet0/0 100
 !
 ip classless
 ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 10.10.192.209
 ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 10.10.192.210
 ip route 10.10.192.240 255.255.255.240 10.10.192.230
 ip route 10.10.192.240 255.255.255.240 10.10.192.229
 ip route 10.10.194.0 255.255.255.224 10.10.192.230
 ip route 10.10.194.0 255.255.255.224 10.10.192.229
 no ip http server
 !
 access-list 1 deny   any
 access-list 10 permit 10.10.192.216
 access-list 10 permit xx.xx.xx.xx
 !
 Router 2
 =20
 router2#sh run=20
 Building configuration...
 =20
 Current configuration:
 !
 version 12.0
 service timestamps debug datetime msec localtime show-timezone
 service timestamps log datetime msec localtime show-timezone
 service password-encryption
 !
 hostname router2
 !
 logging buffered 16384 debugging
 no logging console
 !
 username xxx privilege 15 password 7 xxx
 username xxx privilege 15 password 7 xxx
 !
 !
 !
 !
 clock timezone cst -6
 clock summer-time cdt recurring
 ip subnet-zero
 no ip finger
 !=20
 no ip bootp server
 !
 !
 !
 interface FastEthernet0/0
  description Exodus Facing
  ip address 10.10.192.216 255.255.255.240
  no ip redirects
  no ip directed-broadcast
  speed 100
  full-duplex
  standby 3 timers 5 15
  standby 3 priority 200 preempt
  standby 3 authentication payroll
  standby 3 ip 10.10.192.213
  standby 3 track FastEthernet0/1 100
  standby 4 timers 5 15
  standby 4 priority 250 preempt
  standby 4 authentication payroll
  standby 4 ip 10.10.192.214
  standby 4 track FastEthernet0/1 100
 !
 interface FastEthernet0/1
  description Customer Facing
  ip address 10.10.192.227 255.255.255.240
  no ip redirects
  no ip directed-broadcast
  duplex full
  speed 100
  standby timers 5 15
  standby priority 200 preempt
  standby authentication related
  standby ip 10.10.192.225
  standby track FastEthernet0/0 100
  standby 1 timer 5 15
  standby 1 priority 250 preempt
  standby 1 authentication related
  standby 1 ip 10.10.192.228
  standby 1 track FastEthernet0/0 100
 !
 ip classless
 ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 10.10.192.209
 ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 10.10.192.210
 ip route 10.10.192.240 255.255.255.240 10.10.192.230
 ip route 10.10.192.240 255.255.255.240 10.10.192.229
 ip route 10.10.194.0 255.255.255.224 10.10.192.230
 ip route 10.10.194.0 255.255.255.224 10.10.192.229
 no ip http server
 !
 access-list 1 deny   any
 access-list 10 permit 10.10.192.217
 access-list 10 permit xx.xx.xx.xx
 !

 Thanks in Advance
 Ken

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cisco router 2610 HSRP in Bay switch

2001-01-06 Thread eric^_^

Hi :

I can't use the cisco router 2610 HSRP in Bay switch .HSRP  will active
in both route.
So, Now this temp connect in the HUB only. Any problem in Bay switch ?

Thanks
Eric

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basic question about proxy ARP

2001-01-06 Thread Nurarif Wibawa

Hi,

Suppose configuration below :

   e0 Ethernet   e0lo0
R1 --- R2 --
 192.168.0.0 / 24  192.168.1.1 / 24

Having proxy-arp disabled on R2's e0 and having a static routing =
configuration for R1 :
ip route 192.168.1.0 255.255.255.0 e0

We know that if we ping from R1 to 192.168.1.1, we will have a request =
time-out.
But what if :

 s0   Serials0   lo0
R1 --- R2 --
 192.168.0.0 / 24  192.168.1.1 / 24

R1's configuration :
ip route 192.168.1.0 255.255.255.0 s0

If we turn off the proxy-arp on R2's s0, we still can reach 192.168.1.0 =
/ 24 from R1.
Since serial interface doesn't have mac address, so what is happenning =
if we point network to the interface instead of next-hop ip address ?=20
Does the R1 still request an ARP to serial interface ? What is the reply =
from R2 or maybe the exact question is how does it work ?
What is the purpose of proxy-arp on serial interface ?

Thank you

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RE: HSRP Groups

2001-01-06 Thread Chuck Larrieu

HSRP is Cisco proprietary.

There is an open standard called VRRP  virtual redundant routing protocol
published in RFC 2338

Actually I see that Cisco published the HSRP as RFC 2281, but as
informational, and not as a proposed standard.

I know that Nokia, for one, runs VRRP on their hardware platforms.

Chuck

-Original Message-
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
eric^_^
Sent:   Saturday, January 06, 2001 7:55 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:Re: HSRP Groups

Hi :

I can't use the HSRP in Bay switch . It will active in both route.
So, Now this connect in the HUB only. Any problem in Bay switch ?

Ken Vandenbark wrote:

 Is there an advantage to having more than one HSRP group assigned to an
 interface?
 I don't see an advantage one maybe someone has experienced advantages =
 in
 having multiple HSRP groups. Example of config:
 Router 1
 =20
 router1#sh run=20
 Building configuration...
 =20
 Current configuration:
 !
 version 12.0
 service timestamps debug datetime msec localtime show-timezone
 service timestamps log datetime msec localtime show-timezone
 =20
 service password-encryption
 !
 hostname router1
 !
 logging buffered 16384 debugging
 no logging console
 !
 username xxx privilege 15 password 7 xxx
 username xxx privilege 15 password 7 xxx
 !
 !
 !
 !
 clock timezone cst -6
 clock summer-time cdt recurring
 ip subnet-zero
 no ip finger
 !=20
 no ip bootp server
 !
 !
 !
 interface FastEthernet0/0
  ip address 10.10.192.215 255.255.255.240
  no ip redirects
  no ip directed-broadcast
  speed 100
  full-duplex
  standby 3 timers 5 15
  standby 3 priority 250 preempt
  standby 3 authentication guess
  standby 3 ip 10.10.192.213
  standby 3 track FastEthernet0/1 100
  standby 4 timers 5 15
  standby 4 priority 200 preempt
  standby 4 authentication guess
  standby 4 ip 10.10.192.214
  standby 4 track FastEthernet0/1 100
 !
 interface FastEthernet0/1
  ip address 10.10.192.226 255.255.255.248
  no ip redirects
  no ip directed-broadcast
  duplex full
  speed 100
  standby timers 5 15
  standby priority 250 preempt
  standby authentication related
  standby ip 10.10.192.225
  standby track FastEthernet0/0 100
  standby 1 timer 5 15
  standby 1 priority 200 preempt
  standby 1 authentication guess
  standby 1 ip 10.10.192.228
  standby 1 track FastEthernet0/0 100
 !
 ip classless
 ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 10.10.192.209
 ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 10.10.192.210
 ip route 10.10.192.240 255.255.255.240 10.10.192.230
 ip route 10.10.192.240 255.255.255.240 10.10.192.229
 ip route 10.10.194.0 255.255.255.224 10.10.192.230
 ip route 10.10.194.0 255.255.255.224 10.10.192.229
 no ip http server
 !
 access-list 1 deny   any
 access-list 10 permit 10.10.192.216
 access-list 10 permit xx.xx.xx.xx
 !
 Router 2
 =20
 router2#sh run=20
 Building configuration...
 =20
 Current configuration:
 !
 version 12.0
 service timestamps debug datetime msec localtime show-timezone
 service timestamps log datetime msec localtime show-timezone
 service password-encryption
 !
 hostname router2
 !
 logging buffered 16384 debugging
 no logging console
 !
 username xxx privilege 15 password 7 xxx
 username xxx privilege 15 password 7 xxx
 !
 !
 !
 !
 clock timezone cst -6
 clock summer-time cdt recurring
 ip subnet-zero
 no ip finger
 !=20
 no ip bootp server
 !
 !
 !
 interface FastEthernet0/0
  description Exodus Facing
  ip address 10.10.192.216 255.255.255.240
  no ip redirects
  no ip directed-broadcast
  speed 100
  full-duplex
  standby 3 timers 5 15
  standby 3 priority 200 preempt
  standby 3 authentication payroll
  standby 3 ip 10.10.192.213
  standby 3 track FastEthernet0/1 100
  standby 4 timers 5 15
  standby 4 priority 250 preempt
  standby 4 authentication payroll
  standby 4 ip 10.10.192.214
  standby 4 track FastEthernet0/1 100
 !
 interface FastEthernet0/1
  description Customer Facing
  ip address 10.10.192.227 255.255.255.240
  no ip redirects
  no ip directed-broadcast
  duplex full
  speed 100
  standby timers 5 15
  standby priority 200 preempt
  standby authentication related
  standby ip 10.10.192.225
  standby track FastEthernet0/0 100
  standby 1 timer 5 15
  standby 1 priority 250 preempt
  standby 1 authentication related
  standby 1 ip 10.10.192.228
  standby 1 track FastEthernet0/0 100
 !
 ip classless
 ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 10.10.192.209
 ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 10.10.192.210
 ip route 10.10.192.240 255.255.255.240 10.10.192.230
 ip route 10.10.192.240 255.255.255.240 10.10.192.229
 ip route 10.10.194.0 255.255.255.224 10.10.192.230
 ip route 10.10.194.0 255.255.255.224 10.10.192.229
 no ip http server
 !
 access-list 1 deny   any
 access-list 10 permit 10.10.192.217
 access-list 10 permit xx.xx.xx.xx
 !

 Thanks in Advance
 Ken

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Re: Flash Memory

2001-01-06 Thread Mark Rose

Thank you for a possible solution. When I try the command I get the
following error:

Erasure of partition 2 required

I am not sure what I am supposed to do?

TIA
Mark
- Original Message -
From: Circusnuts [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Mark Rose [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 5:17 PM
Subject: Re: Flash Memory


 partition flash  no partion flash are the commands...

 Phil

 - Original Message -
 From: "Mark Rose" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 10:57 PM
 Subject: Flash Memory


  Recently posted was the command to create one memory block in flash
after
  adding a second memory stick. I can't seem to find it in the archives.
It
  combines the read-only  read  write into a 16 meg partition.  Could
  someone help me out, I am having trouble locating the command.
 
  TIA
  Mark
 
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 http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html
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Re: OSPF/ DR BDR election

2001-01-06 Thread Jaeheon Yoo

Hi, Fowler.

I believe when you said "unplugged the Ethernet connection between the
two", what you really did seems to me that you unplugged Router A from
a hub or switch.
That means the Ethernet interface of Router A is DOWN in state, while
the counterpart of Router B is still UP and BDR in the beginning.
Because Router B is still connected to the hub, what Router B is
missing is just a  neighbor(DR: Router A), not its "UP" interface
state. If Router B is disconnected from the hub, the election will be
triggered right after disconnection, you don't have to wait 40
seconds.But in that election no DR or BDR will elected, because
there's no up interface out there including itself..

Hope it helps,

Regards

Jaeheon

On 6 Jan 2001 22:03:59 -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] ("Fowler, Joey")
wrote:

I setup OSPF on between two routers, and Router A was elected as the DR
becuase it had the highest IP address. Router B was elected BDR. I ran debug
ip ospf adj on Router B and unplugged the Ethernet connection between the
two. After 40 seconds Router B showed that it promoted itself to DR. Then I
plugged the connection back in, and Router A was now selected as the BDR.
This didn't make sense to me. I know that each time a router is added, that
a new DRand BDR election does NOT take place, however shouldn't Router A
still considered itself as the DR so when the connection was re-established
it would either 1. remain as the DR or more likely 2. rerun the election
since both routers think that they are the DR. I might could understand if
there were multiple routers on the Ethernet connection. Any elightenment
would be greatly appreciated. Meanwhile I'll go look at RFC 2328.

Joey

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Re: IS-IS routing domain to look at

2001-01-06 Thread Kevin Welch

So Chuck, What turned out to be the problem with enabling IS-IS earlier?

-- Kevin

- Original Message -
From: "Chuck Larrieu" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Cisco Mail List" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 7:38 PM
Subject: IS-IS routing domain to look at


 For those who haven't seen one before, I set up a quick and dirty IS-IS
 domain in my home lab. As I will be busy studying some other things the
rest
 of the weekend, folks on the list here are cordially invited to take a
peek.

 Telnet to 64.220.150.11  all passwords are cisco

 Feel free to poke around

 Please play nicely.


 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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RE: IS-IS routing domain to look at

2001-01-06 Thread Chuck Larrieu

Failure to understand the subtleties of the ISIS net command.

-Original Message-
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
Kevin Welch
Sent:   Saturday, January 06, 2001 8:28 PM
To: Chuck Larrieu; Cisco Mail List
Subject:Re: IS-IS routing domain to look at

So Chuck, What turned out to be the problem with enabling IS-IS earlier?

-- Kevin

- Original Message -
From: "Chuck Larrieu" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Cisco Mail List" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 7:38 PM
Subject: IS-IS routing domain to look at


 For those who haven't seen one before, I set up a quick and dirty IS-IS
 domain in my home lab. As I will be busy studying some other things the
rest
 of the weekend, folks on the list here are cordially invited to take a
peek.

 Telnet to 64.220.150.11  all passwords are cisco

 Feel free to poke around

 Please play nicely.


 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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Re: IS-IS routing domain to look at

2001-01-06 Thread Jaeheon Yoo

Hi, Chuck

How nice of you! I wanted to do some labs based on Jeff's book. But I
failed to get access to your lab. After some thoughts on how many
connections it can afford, I decided to back off because it's like a
lottery for at least hundreads of souls to compete for only 5 or so
connections.( line vty 0 4 in Cisco 2501)

Anyway, good attempt!

Thanks,

Jaeheon


On 6 Jan 2001 23:46:40 -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] ("Chuck Larrieu")
wrote:

For those who haven't seen one before, I set up a quick and dirty IS-IS
domain in my home lab. As I will be busy studying some other things the rest
of the weekend, folks on the list here are cordially invited to take a peek.

Telnet to 64.220.150.11  all passwords are cisco

Feel free to poke around

Please play nicely.


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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RE: Setting up a DHCP server on a cisco router

2001-01-06 Thread Greg Owens



-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Brian
Lodwick
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 1:58 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Setting up a DHCP server on a cisco router

Leroy,
He said he wanted the router to give the client the IP addressing
information. In your example the router is forwarding bootp broadcasts and a
Windows box is giving the client the IP addressing information.

Brian
It's a brave man who, when things are at their darkest, can kick back and
party! -- Dennis Quaid, "Inner Space"



From: Leroy Burns [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Leroy Burns [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "'Andrew Larkins'" [EMAIL PROTECTED],
"'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Setting up a DHCP server on a cisco router
Date: Sat, 6 Jan 2001 13:36:21 -0500

I hope this will help using DHCP

DHCP Relay
DHCP relay typically runs on a router and the relay support is available on
Windows NT Server version 4.0 and Windows 2000 Server. On Cisco 700 series
routers, you can turn on DHCP relay with the set dhcp relay command. You
can
turn on DHCP relay on a Cisco IOS router by configuring ip helper-address
with the address of the DHCP server on each interface that will have DHCP
clients. The ip helper-address command forwards many other IP broadcasts,
including DNS, Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP), and NetBIOS name
service packets. To forward only DHCP requests, see the following example
configuration. For more information, see the "Configuring Broadcast
Handling" section in the Network Protocols Configuration Guide, Part I.
no ip forward-protocol udp tftp
no ip forward-protocol udp dns [This command is not listed in IOS! J.R.]
no ip forward-protocol udp time
no ip forward-protocol udp netbios-ns
no ip forward-protocol udp netbios-dgm
no ip forward-protocol udp tacacs
ip forward-protocol udp bootpc
!
interface ethernet 0
ip helper-address 172.16.12.15
interface ethernet 1
ip helper-address 172.16.12.15
Exerpt from: http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/473/winnt_dg.htm#xtocid88299
You must apply the ip helper-address [dhcp server IP] to EVERY interface,
including the serial.
Whew! Makes a man feel mancho to solve such problems.


___
_
_



Leroy Burns - LAN Administrator
75 Piedmont Avenue, Suite 1200
Atlanta, GA 30303-2507

Direct Voice and Fax: 678.365.2661

mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] - http://www.skylight.net/

-Original Message-
From: Andrew Larkins [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 12:04 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: Setting up a DHCP server on a cisco router

Can anyone give me a sample config. I want the router to give the clienthe
IP addressing information


Thanks in advance
  Andrew

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cisco2501#show running-config

Building configuration...

Current configuration:
!
version 12.1
service timestamps debug uptime
service timestamps log uptime
no service password-encryption
!
hostname cisco2501
!
no logging console
enable secret 5 $1$QAjL$5D.YF.Io57Fr02o5MG23U.
enable password router
!
!
!
!
!
ip subnet-zero
no ip dhcp conflict logging
ip dhcp excluded-address 192.168.0.49 192.168.0.50
!
ip dhcp pool test
   network 192.168.0.48 255.255.255.240
   domain-name Rock.com
   dns-server 204.127.160.2 
   default-router 192.168.0.50 
!
ip dhcp pool tes
!
!
!
!
interface Ethernet0
 ip address 192.168.0.49 255.255.255.240
 ip helper-address 192.168.0.34
 no ip mroute-cache
!
interface Serial0
 bandwidth 56
 ip address 192.168.0.33 255.255.255.240
 ip helper-address 192.168.0.33
 ip helper-address 192.168.0.34
 ip directed-broadcast
 no ip split-horizon
 no ip mroute-cache
 clockrate 56000
!
interface Serial1
 no ip address
 no ip mroute-cache
 shutdown
!
router eigrp 100
 network 192.168.0.0
!
ip classless
no ip http server
!
snmp-server engineID local 000902000C0A109E
snmp-server community public RO
snmp-server packetsize 2048
!
line con 0
 transport input none
line aux 0
line vty 0 4
 password router
 login
!
end



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Re: Yet another CCNP

2001-01-06 Thread G.E. Murphy

Congratulations Sean!, I did the same exact thing today except my score was (get ready)
759  I think you did pretty good... Good Luck on the new adventures

Sean O'Connor wrote:

 Passed CIT today with a 760.  Not a pretty pass, but a
 pass none the less.
 Maybe now with a decent certification I can actually
 work on a production Router or switch.  It's tough to
 get throught these courses without any practical
 knowledge.
 Thanks to all in the group and good luck.

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Another CCNP joins the ranks!

2001-01-06 Thread G.E. Murphy

Passed CIT today with a 759 at about 2:40 pm central time, to become
CCNP..

Lots of brain aching study has paid off. I must go now and kiss my wife
and daughter and tell them how much I appreciate them being patient with
me during my study track. Thanks and good luck to everybody!


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Re: Another CCNP joins the ranks!

2001-01-06 Thread Jaeheon Yoo

Congratulations! Murphy

Now on to CCDP or CCIE written?
For now, why don't you get some rest, I believe you deserve it!!

Regards,

Jaeheon


On 7 Jan 2001 01:23:58 -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] ("G.E. Murphy") wrote:

Passed CIT today with a 759 at about 2:40 pm central time, to become
CCNP..

Lots of brain aching study has paid off. I must go now and kiss my wife
and daughter and tell them how much I appreciate them being patient with
me during my study track. Thanks and good luck to everybody!


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Weekend funnies

2001-01-06 Thread Natasha

Some years ago, the Sultan of Brunei was becoming angry as he had 6
children, all girls, and therefore had no son and heir. 

Imagine his joy when one of his wives finally presented him with his
only son and heir.

 Just before his son's sixth birthday, the Sultan took him to one side
and said, "Son, I am very proud of you. Anything you want, I shall get
for you." His son replied, 
"Daddy, I would like to have my own airplane." Not wanting to do
anything halfway, his father bought him American Airlines.

 Just before his son's seventh birthday, the Sultan took him to one
side.

 "Son, you are my pride and joy. Anything you want, I shall get for
you."
 His son replied, "Daddy, I would like a boat.
" Not wanting to do anything halfway, his father bought him The Princess
Cruise Lines. 
Just before his son's eighth birthday, the Sultan took him to one side. 

"Son, you bring so much happiness into my life. Anything you want, I
shall  get for you."
His son replied, "Daddy, I would like to be able to watch cartoons." Not
 wanting to do anything halfway, his father bought him Disney Studios
and
 their theaters, where he watched all his favorite cartoons.

 Just before his son's ninth birthday, the Sultan took him to one side,
"Son,  you are an inspiration to us all. 

Anything you want, I shall get it for you." His son, who had really
gotten into the Disney cartoons, replied, "Daddy, I would like a Mickey
Mouse outfit." 

Not wanting to do anything halfway, his father went and bought him
Microsoft.
-- 
Natasha Flazynski
http://www.ciscobot.com
My Cisco information site.
http://www.botbuilders.com 
Artificial Intelligence and Linux development 

A bus station is where a bus stops.
A train station is where a train stops.
On my desk, I have a work station...

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RE: A question regarding private addressing

2001-01-06 Thread John Nemeth

On May 29,  5:24am, Craig Columbus wrote:
}
} OK.  I can accept that Microsoft (or Apple for that matter) would do 
} something like this and then expect the world to revolve around 

 Actually, as Howard mentioned, neither of these companies
initiated the protocol, but that's a minor point.

} them.  However, I'm confused as to the benefit.  Why would anyone want a 
} non-assigned default IP address to appear on their network?  Do they really 
} think that people will implement a non-RFC1918 compliant address space just 
} to save configuration time?  (Actually, I can think of several cases where 

 It does save configuration time, since this is for cases where no
configuration at all happens, most likely due to the lack of a real
administrator.

} How do Internet backbone routers (BGP ASs) deal with this traffic?

 They don't.  There is a reason why this address range is called
"link local".  It's only useful within a single network segment that
isn't connected to any other networks.

} Let's say that I want to take the easy way out and I connect a small 
} network to the Internet via an ISP.  I'm not running NAT, but I'm running 
} the 169.254 addresses inside my network. If I've got a static route to an 

 Then, you're SOL.  To connect to the Internet, some kind of
configuration must happen (even, if it is just a box running NAT on the
outside interface and a DHCP server on the inside interface).

} ISP public address, and we're not exchanging routing information, I can't 
} see how this traffic would ever get back to my network.  If I'm exchanging 

 It wouldn't.

} routes with an ISP (via BGP or some other interior protocol), where and how 
} do the 169.254 routes get filtered?  There has to be some mechanism, or 

 It should be filtered at the network ingress point.

} there would be thousands of summary routes back to 169.254 showing up on 
} the Internet table.

 169.254 should never ever show up on the Internet, although I
wouldn't be surprised if it did.  I've seen some pretty large ISP's put
RFC-1918 addresses on the global Internet, which is also a no-no.

} Any help in understanding this is appreciated.

 The purpose of this is to setup small impromptu isolated networks
which often don't have an administrator with no configuration at all
required.

}-- End of excerpt from Craig Columbus

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Why dont I see SNMP discussion on this board ??

2001-01-06 Thread Pradeep Kumar

Folks,

Did you notice - in our forum which claims to be addressing 10,000 Network 
proffessionals , SNMP related discussion does not seem to be too attractive ! not on 
the forum at least.

Why dont I see discussion on Cisco MIB's, SNMP, RMON ?

Is this not a trouble area ? Or is it becoz , there is not much of SNMP topics on any 
of the CCxx exams ?

Is there any exams to prove the mettle of SNMP geeks ?

-Guru






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eigrp, frame relay, and ISDN

2001-01-06 Thread whitaker

So here's the scenario...Numerous routers in a central site connected to
other remote sites via frame-relay with backup ISDN.  Question: What is the
best way to implement EIGRP in this scenario?  My thoughts were to run EIGRP
over the frame, set up the dialer interface / bri as a passive interface,
and use floating static routes (static route with higher administrative
distance for ISDN backup)

Thoughs, comments, suggestions, ridicules? ;-)


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Re: What is the latest 2924 XL OS ?

2001-01-06 Thread Pradeep Kumar

Mr Jones,

That URL still does not lead to the " latest OS od 2924".
It leads  to 

" Document not found".

Thanks for the english typed.

-Guru   



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Re: Flash Memory

2001-01-06 Thread EH

If you want 16MB of flash, you have to erase the second flash partition and 
merge the two 8MB flash modules.  First, set up your tftp server and make a 
back up copy (it's always nice to be able to go back if you need to).

copy flash tftp  (follow the prompts - enter the info requested)

Commands to merge flash partitions:

enable
config terminal
no partition flash (It will ask you if you want to erase the second 
partition.  Confirm this.)
sh ver (you'll see 16,384 --or close--  system flash)

That's it - Your flash partitions will merge into one and you will have 16 
MB flash.  And Life Is Good!

-Eddie




At 10:14 PM 1/6/01 -0600, Mark Rose wrote:
Thank you for a possible solution. When I try the command I get the
following error:

Erasure of partition 2 required

I am not sure what I am supposed to do?

TIA
Mark
- Original Message -
From: Circusnuts [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Mark Rose [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 5:17 PM
Subject: Re: Flash Memory


  partition flash  no partion flash are the commands...
 
  Phil
 
  - Original Message -
  From: "Mark Rose" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 10:57 PM
  Subject: Flash Memory
 
 
   Recently posted was the command to create one memory block in flash
after
   adding a second memory stick. I can't seem to find it in the archives.
It
   combines the read-only  read  write into a 16 meg partition.  Could
   someone help me out, I am having trouble locating the command.
  
   TIA
   Mark
  
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