What does a Dial Shelf Interconnect card do on a 7200 router? [7:15831]

2001-08-13 Thread Frank Kim

Please reply privately.  Thanks.

-Frank




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CCIE Written [7:15832]

2001-08-13 Thread Kenneth Yeung

Hi all,
I have CCNP, ATM and VoIP certified and now preparing for CCIE.  I only have
two weeks to go besides I need to work.
Can anyone suggest the most important material to review before going for
the written exam.
Behind me is:
1) Carlow's 2nd edition
2) Free Token Ring paper from CCprep.com
3) CCNP, ATM and VoIP Cisco press books
4) Routing TCP/IP Vol. I

Is one Carlow's book + Token Ring paper enough for the exam.?  Is Carlow's
book on non-IP material enough to handle all non-IP question in written? 
Please help if you have achieved the written test.  Thx.
Kenneth


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news group [7:15833]

2001-08-13 Thread kaushalenders

hi,
can any body can tell a good news group for unix and solaris
thanxs
kaushalender




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Re: Access Lists On Routers [7:15830]

2001-08-13 Thread Tony van Ree

Hi,

This depends on what you are trying to acheive but under most circumstances
one would tend to block the traffic at the entry point.  For example, if it
was traffic from the WAN the block it coming in on the WAN interface.  If
however you wanted to see the traffic in the router for some reason then you
might apply the same access-list on the ethernet going out.

So it really depends on what the needs of your access-lists are.  Usually on
a 1 WAN port to 1 Ethernet port incoming from the WAN do it as INCOMING on
the WAN port.

Just some long winded thoughts from an older guy.

Teunis,
Hobart, Tasmania
Australia


On Monday, August 13, 2001 at 02:25:48 AM, yusuf ujjainwala wrote:

 I am a network engineer and have been assigned a task of implementing
access
 lists on our routers. I have decided on implementing extended access lists
 permitting specific ports and restricting the other unwanted ports,but I am
 not sure as to where I should apply the access lists ,on the ethernet or
 serial interfaces ,and whether inbound or outbound access lists should be
 applied.
 Can somebody help me . 
--
www.tasmail.com




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catalyst 2900 XL got reset [7:15835]

2001-08-13 Thread a

hi
i was trying to access the 2900XL series switch through hyperterminal and
strange thing happened ,it got reset by it on.did this happened with
somebody else also ,just curious to know.what could be the reason

Regards
Arun Sharma




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RE: CCIE Written [7:15832]

2001-08-13 Thread Chuck Larrieu

consider what happens to PDU's as they traverse networks and media of
various kinds.

device--medium--device--medium--device--medium--device

device = server, workstation, router, switch, hub, repeater, etc
medium = ethernet, token ring, frame-relay, point-to-point, x.25, etc

mix and match all you want. have some fun.

what happens to a PDU as it goes from one end to the other?

a good refresher in the basics of networking, which is something all of us
in this business do need continually drilled into our heads.

best wishes on your test

Chuck

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Kenneth Yeung
Sent: Sunday, August 12, 2001 11:54 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: CCIE Written [7:15832]


Hi all,
I have CCNP, ATM and VoIP certified and now preparing for CCIE.  I only have
two weeks to go besides I need to work.
Can anyone suggest the most important material to review before going for
the written exam.
Behind me is:
1) Carlow's 2nd edition
2) Free Token Ring paper from CCprep.com
3) CCNP, ATM and VoIP Cisco press books
4) Routing TCP/IP Vol. I

Is one Carlow's book + Token Ring paper enough for the exam.?  Is Carlow's
book on non-IP material enough to handle all non-IP question in written?
Please help if you have achieved the written test.  Thx.
Kenneth




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RE: CCIE Written [7:15832]

2001-08-13 Thread Kenneth Yeung

I heard that the CCIE written like CID.  Is it true?


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RE: FW: CAN SOME ONE NO EXPERIMENT CAN PASS CCNP [7:15778]

2001-08-13 Thread Kenneth Yeung

The answer is YES and DEFINITELY.

Remember to read the 4 cisco press books for CCNP.

If you understand and remember these 4 books, you can be certified even
without experiment/experience.

Because you are not ask to build a complete network.  You just need to
demonstrate that you really understand the networking concept and protocols.

Good Luck..and start now.


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RE: CAN SOME ONE NO EXPERMIENT CAN PASS CCNP [7:15717]

2001-08-13 Thread Art

This is more like a chicken egg discussion. Which was first chicken or egg?
Should you have certification first or experience?

Certification is possible without experience but my question is how do you
get experience without certification in this competitive market and IT job
freeze (there are always few exceptions to rule). HR and technical managers
will not even talk to you without some sort of certifications.

It's true that initially the person who have no experience and has only
certifications will not be as productive but it's only matter of time when
this person in real world starts picking up stuff fast.

---Original Message---

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sunday, August 12, 2001 07:13:13 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: CAN SOME ONE NO EXPERMIENT CAN PASS CCNP [7:15717]

a newly minted CCNP could bluff their way into a job but isn't it the
hiring mangers responsibility to say if they keep the job after they
display a lack of expertise. I think the Cisco cert. excluding the CCIE
validate experience for some and provide a foundation to build on for
others.
just my 2 cents.

-Original Message-
From: ext Dennis Bailey [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Sunday, August 12, 2001 10:53 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: CAN SOME ONE NO EXPERMIENT CAN PASS CCNP [7:15717]


The point of certifications is (was) to validate one's experience and/or
knowledge. The CCNA has already gone the way of the MCSE and CNE certs.
CCNP is on its way as well. Memorizing material for a few simple tests
means squat in the real world. You may impress the HR screener into
getting
to the interview with the hiring manager. You may even be able to bluff
your way into a job offer. Then you have to be able to actually do the
work
or explain to the boss why he needs to pay for someone who knows what
they
are doing to come in and fix the problem or worse, why he has people
sitting
around on the payroll twiddling their thumbs while his freshly minted
CCNP
tries to figure out which command will fix the network which is down.

Gareth Hinton wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Why bother studying anything at school/college. It's not real world
 experience.

 If I was interviewing someone who said I didn't bother studying for
any
 Cisco certifications because they are not real world experience,
they'd be
 back out into the real world without finishing their coffee.

 I believe that any relevant knowledge can fill gaps in the future. Its
a
 good base to start from.

 Gaz

 Dennis Bailey wrote in message
 news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Yes but why What would you do with it?
 
 
  PHIMHONGKONG wrote in message
  news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
   Hi
   i have a question
  
   I have no working experiment but i have some router to study at
home
  
   Do i have a chance to pass ccnp?
  
   Thanks
  
   Give me a honest answer
  
   Thanks
com/list/cisco.html
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RE: CCIE Written [7:15832]

2001-08-13 Thread Chuck Larrieu

I sure had that impression. similar approach to protocol behaviour. similar
feel of the questions.

if you passed the CID, and if you have covered the additional material as
several here have recommended, you should be OK.

best wishes

Chuck

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Kenneth Yeung
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 1:08 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: CCIE Written [7:15832]


I heard that the CCIE written like CID.  Is it true?




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FW: SECURITY WIRE DIGEST, VOL. 3, NO. 63, AUGUST 1 [7:15842]

2001-08-13 Thread Chuck Larrieu

This one hit my in-box tonight. I'm forwarding the information about the
crack of the wired equivalent privacy ( WEP ) This is far more serious than
the announcement by the Berkeley folks a few weeks ago. I look forward to
Cisco's response.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Sunday, August 12, 2001 11:50 PM
Subject: SECURITY WIRE DIGEST, VOL. 3, NO. 63, AUGUST 13, 2001


Security Wire Digest is an e-mail newsletter brought to you on Mondays and
Thursdays by Information Security magazine. SWD is written, edited and
produced by:

Shawna McAlearney, editor, mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Andy Briney, mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Anne Saita, mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Christine St. Pierre, mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Lawrence M. Walsh, mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

1. INFOSEC NEWS

*POP GOES THE WEP PROTOCOL
By Shawna McAlearney
Any remaining illusions about the security of 802.11 protocol for wireless
local-area networks (WLAN) were dashed last week when ATT Labs released a
report describing a devastating new attack that acquires a network key in
15 minutes.

Based on the RC4 cipher, the wired-equivalent privacy (WEP) encryption
scheme has weaknesses in the key-scheduling algorithm that allows an
attacker to retrieve a network's key, gaining full user access in less
than 15 minutes, according to the report written by ATT's Adam
Stubblefield, John Ioannidis and Avi Rubin.

University of Maryland computer scientists earlier this year found a way
to sniff cleartext messages containing the name of the network, which is
used as a shared secret for authentication in some 802.11 implementations.
A similar problem was found in the media access-control addresses used on
the WLAN cards, which also broadcast in easy-to-capture cleartext. A third
flaw involved an encryption error that allows an attacker to capture
plaintext and ciphertext of shared keys and leverage them against WEP's
shared-key authentication to join the network.

Earlier, researchers at the University of California at Berkeley found a
number of ways to intercept and modify wireless transmissions and to
access restricted networks.

Previous attacks have taken from eight hours to several days to exploit,
and resulted in the capture of finite amounts of encrypted data--not the
retrieval of the full network key.

It's much worse than the Berkley paper, says Chris Wysopal, @stake's
director of research and development, also known as Weld Pond. Their
attack never recovered the key--only bits and pieces of encrypted
data--and it was fairly difficult to do because you captured the data and
then had to go and crack it. That's not the case with the new exploit.

Another ramification of the new exploit is that it's passive, never giving
the user any indication that he is being monitored.

In this attack, an attacker never has to actually transmit a packet; he
can simply sit on the network and the victim will never even know that he
was attacked, says Stubblefield, the ATT Labs  intern who created the
exploit. So this is a much stronger attack and allows the attacker to
completely recover the key, which means that he can send arbitrary data on
the network.

Though only recently standardized, 802.11 has been incorporated into the
Microsoft Windows OS and WLAN components by several companies. It's also
widely deployed in corporations, hospitals and other locations.

The 802.11 standard is really catching on because it's very cheap and it
replaces the need to completely wire the building, says Stubblefield.
According to the manufacturer, it comes with its own security, but the
fact that it's so easy to completely compromise and undermine the
security, means that there are now many, many vulnerable networks out
there.

In addition to the exploit tool made by ATT Labs, security consultancy
@stake also created one to help in its wireless assessment efforts.

The problem lies in the key-scheduling algorithm of RC4 and allows almost
anyone with a WLAN-enabled laptop to retrieve a network's key in less than
15 minutes, says Wysopal. This is only with the 40-bit key, but the
attack scales linearly to 128 bits so it shouldn't take much longer.

Security experts recommend installing the WLAN outside the firewall using
a VPN in a DMZ with only an access point; changing the key immediately and
often; and conducting WLAN audits regularly to ensure there are no rogue
connections. Others say the entire network would need to be restructured
and IPSec installed on each individual desktop.

Mitigation might be doing network-level security on top of the link wire
IPSec or doing application-level SSH and using the 802.11 simply as a data
link layer for communication and not relying on any security services from
that layer, says Rubin, principal researcher at ATT Labs and author of
White-Hat Security Arsenal.
http://www.cs.rice.edu/~astubble/wep


=
Security Wire Digest and Information Security magazine 

RE: Access Lists On Routers [7:15830]

2001-08-13 Thread Dwayne Saunders

I would agree. It all depends on your network and what you are trying to
achieve with the Acl's.

D'Wayne Saunders
Network Admin

Ph:08 89507742  
Fax:08 89521112 
Mobile: 

www.lasseters.com.au
  
World's First Government Licensed and Regulated Online Casino...


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-Original Message-
From: Tony van Ree [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 16:41
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Access Lists On Routers [7:15830]


Hi,

This depends on what you are trying to acheive but under most circumstances
one would tend to block the traffic at the entry point.  For example, if it
was traffic from the WAN the block it coming in on the WAN interface.  If
however you wanted to see the traffic in the router for some reason then you
might apply the same access-list on the ethernet going out.

So it really depends on what the needs of your access-lists are.  Usually on
a 1 WAN port to 1 Ethernet port incoming from the WAN do it as INCOMING on
the WAN port.

Just some long winded thoughts from an older guy.

Teunis,
Hobart, Tasmania
Australia


On Monday, August 13, 2001 at 02:25:48 AM, yusuf ujjainwala wrote:

 I am a network engineer and have been assigned a task of implementing
access
 lists on our routers. I have decided on implementing extended access lists
 permitting specific ports and restricting the other unwanted ports,but I
am
 not sure as to where I should apply the access lists ,on the ethernet or
 serial interfaces ,and whether inbound or outbound access lists should be
 applied.
 Can somebody help me . 
--
www.tasmail.com




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Re: Off Topic: Routing Protocols and OSI layers [7:15755]

2001-08-13 Thread Mark Morenz

It was posted:

System management protocols such as SNMP definitely are application 
layer. Routing protocols are layer management protocols of the same layer as
the addresses for which they are computing routes. OSPF, ISIS, etc., are
layer 3 management protocols. 802.1d is a layer 2 management protocol. This
is absolutely unambiguous if one reads the correct ISO documents.

And I would add: Or, if you read Cisco's own Networking Academy Program
curriculum, which says the same thing.

:-[)]

Mark A. Morenz, MS Ed, CCNA, CCAI
Regional CCNA Director, CNAP


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Len Lee/CHI/NTRS is out of the office. [7:15846]

2001-08-13 Thread Len Lee

I will be out of the office starting  08/13/2001 and will not return until
08/17/2001.

I will respond to your message when I return.




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callback on 2600 [7:15849]

2001-08-13 Thread Marakalas

Hi guys

Please assist in the configuration of callback on the 2600. For some
reason, it does not work. Underneath please find a copy of my config.
Your assistance will be highly appreciated.

2600#sh run
Building configuration...

Current configuration:
!
version 12.0
service timestamps debug uptime
service timestamps log uptime
no service password-encryption
!
hostname 2600
!
aaa new-model
aaa authentication login default local
aaa authentication login vty local
aaa authentication login dialin local
aaa authentication ppp default local
enable secret 5 $1$2sLc$CE4MJiDYrS4jccjjLCxzh0
enable password networks
!
username cisco password 0 test
username qwerty password 0 123456
username sirpald callback-dialstring  password 0 polo
modem country microcom_hdms south-africa
ip subnet-zero
ip address-pool local
!
!
!
!
!
!
!
interface Ethernet0/0
 ip address 172.20.1.3 255.255.255.0
 ip broadcast-address 255.255.255.0
 no ip directed-broadcast
!
interface Group-Async1
 ip unnumbered Ethernet0/0
 ip broadcast-address 255.255.255.0
 no ip directed-broadcast
 encapsulation ppp
 async mode dedicated
 peer default ip address pool default
 no fair-queue
 ppp callback accept
 ppp authentication pap chap
 group-range 33 48
!
interface Dialer1
 ip unnumbered Ethernet0/0
 no ip directed-broadcast
 encapsulation ppp
 dialer in-band
 dialer-group 1
 ppp callback accept
 ppp authentication pap chap
 ppp multilink
!
ip local pool default 172.20.1.31 172.20.1.46
ip default-gateway 172.20.1.1
ip classless
ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 172.20.1.1
ip http server
ip http access-class 15
!
dialer-list 1 protocol ip permit
dialer-list 1 protocol ipx permit
banner motd ^CC Unauthorised Access will be Prosecuted ^C
!
line con 0
 transport input none
line 33 48
 autoselect ppp
 script callback mod
 modem InOut
 modem autoconfigure discovery
 transport input all
 flowcontrol hardware
line aux 0
line vty 0 4
 password mesh
!
no scheduler allocate
end

___
 http://www.webmail.co.za the South-African free email service




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PIX failover!! [7:15848]

2001-08-13 Thread Magdy H. Ibrahim

Dear All,

Sorry for the stupid question but I want to confirm it.

I have to configure my PIX 515UR bundle...
How can I know the primary unit from the secondary unit??
Is that from the failover cable only OR there is an other thing marked the
unit as primary or secondary???
Please advice me soon,,,

Regards,,,

Magdy




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RE: catalyst 2900 XL got reset [7:15835]

2001-08-13 Thread Tangled Up in Blue

yes, actually, this happened to me w/ out servers switch :( in production. i
never got a clear answer as to why this happened, but i'm never plugging
into a 2900 console port in production w/ a windows box again.


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Static routes [7:15851]

2001-08-13 Thread Hawthorne, Mike MM

Can anyone tell me if you are able to use a loopback address in a static
route. For example
ip route x.x.x.x y.y.y.y 196.8.87.17

x.x.x.x y.y.y.y being the loopback address.

Thanks
Mike



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RE: Static routes [7:15851]

2001-08-13 Thread Wilson, Bradley

Sure, except that you might defeat the purpose of having a loopback address
by doing this.  Say you've got a scenario where you have two routers
connected by three separate connections:

 /-\
O---O
 \_/

If you specify the next hop of the loopback to be just *one* of the
interfaces on the other router, then the loopback will be inaccessable if
that one interface on the other router goes down.  If you're using static
routes, be sure to include all the different paths you can take to get to
the other router - which may be complex enough to warrant just going to RIP
or OSPF. ;-)

BJ


-Original Message-
From: Hawthorne, Mike MM [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 8:09 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Static routes [7:15851]


Can anyone tell me if you are able to use a loopback address in a static
route. For example
ip route x.x.x.x y.y.y.y 196.8.87.17

x.x.x.x y.y.y.y being the loopback address.

Thanks
Mike




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Re: Static routes [7:15851]

2001-08-13 Thread Charles Manafa

Yes, you can.

- Original Message -
From: Hawthorne, Mike MM 
To: 
Sent: Monday, 13 August, 2001 14:08
Subject: Static routes [7:15851]


 Can anyone tell me if you are able to use a loopback address in a static
 route. For example
 ip route x.x.x.x y.y.y.y 196.8.87.17

 x.x.x.x y.y.y.y being the loopback address.

 Thanks
 Mike



 __

 Disclaimer and confidentiality note

 Everything in this e-mail and any attachments relating to the official
 business of Standard Bank Investment Corporation (Stanbic)
 is proprietary to the company. It is confidential, legally privileged and
 protected by law.\
 Stanbic does not own and endorse any other content. Views and opinions are
 those of the sender unless clearly stated as being that of Stanbic.

 The person addressed in the e-mail is the sole authorised recipient.
 Please notify the sender immediately if it has unintentionally reached you
 and do not read, disclose or use the content in any way.

 Stanbic can not assure that the integrity of this communication has been
 maintained
 nor that it is free of errors, virus, interception or interference.


 __




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Re: 2501 router... [7:14553]

2001-08-13 Thread Donald B Johnson jr

Hey there its Mr Mellow. I wasn't talking to you I thought you only got
fired up when provoked. O, and mellow, that spelling thing bounces of me and
sticks to you cause I rubber and you are glue.
hillarious
- Original Message -
From: nrf 
To: 
Sent: Friday, August 10, 2001 2:34 PM
Subject: Re: 2501 router... [7:14553]


 Once again, wonderful brilliant commentary from the esteemed Mr. Johnson.
 We are so graced by the presence of you and your brilliant commentary.
Why
 is it exactly that you feel the need to get off by biting other people's
 heads off (and doing so by using 2nd-grade level spelling skills, if you
 remember our last exchange)?  When are you going to wake up and realize
that
 you, sir, are an ass, always have been an ass, and always will be an ass?



 Donald B Johnson jr  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  If you have been here a year and don't know:
  a. how to research on cco
  b. how to check the archives
  c. how to connect to console
  d. how to change password
  e. that you should read a book you purchased that probably has both
 answers
  f. that there is a ccna group
  g. that this is helpful
  h. that I'm a smart a**
  then are we to believe that you are going to crimp a roll cable. Or are
 you
  going to build that by taking the plastic off.
 
 
 
  - Original Message -
  From: Schmelzer Tim L Contr 12 CPTS/FMS
  To:
  Sent: Wednesday, August 01, 2001 1:30 PM
  Subject: 2501 router... [7:14553]
 
 
   Greetings all.  I'm kinda new to this game, but have been lurking
here
  for
   about a year now.  I have just been given a 2501 series router and now
  have
   a few questions.
  
   How do I build a console cable to connect to it?
  
   How do I clear any passwords that will be present?
  
   Is there somewhere that I can get scenarios / lab situations to
practice
  on
   this router?   I have purchased Todd Lammle's CCNA book and look
forward
  to
   using this router with my studies.
  
   Thanks in advance for any answers, T. Schmelzer




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RE: Friday Follies - IP NAT behaviour [7:15822]

2001-08-13 Thread Mark Monica Baker

Sounds to me like he may have config'd NAT to forward all traffic to his web
server.

Mark

-Original Message-
From:   Brian [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Monday, August 13, 2001 1:46 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:Re: Friday Follies - IP NAT behaviour [7:15822]

why he gets to the server when telnetting to the router, perhaps the router
is forwarding more ports than just 80, perhaps 23, perhaps more..

Bri

- Original Message -
From: Chuck Larrieu 
To: 
Sent: Sunday, August 12, 2001 9:06 PM
Subject: Friday Follies - IP NAT behaviour [7:15822]


 so I'm late. so sue me ;-

 last Friday while I was in the office I got to chatting with one of the
 other SE's. He had a problem with his home setup and wanted some help. It
 was an interesting enough problem that I thought some of you CCNA's, some
of
 your CCNP candidates, might enjoy taking a crack at it.

 this person has a DSL connection to the internet. He has an single
assigned
 IP address. He is using a Cisco router as his firewall, in this fashion:

 internet---DSL_router--Cisco_router--web_server
   E0  E1

 life is good.

 then he starts to fool around with NAT. He puts a private IP on his web
 server, and he runs NAT on the Cisco router. Again, life is good. folks
can
 reach his web server from the net.

 but now he wants to telnet from the net ( i.e. from work ) into the Cisco
 router.. He cannot do so. instead he hits his web server, where telnet is
 not running as a service.

 so he disables NAT. he configures policy routing, and places the policy
 statement on the correct interface. tries to telnet into the cisco router.
 He can do so. however, now he cannot reach the web server from the net. if
 he enables the http server on the Cisco router, he gets the Cisco router
 login screen from his browser.

 now the question is, why? that is, what is the reason that the two
 situations occur? with NAT enabled, he cannot telnet to the router. with
NAT
 disabled, he cannot browse the web server, even with policy routing in
 place.

 you may assume that all configurations are correct, both for NAT and for
 policy routing. At least that's what the two CCIE's who joined the
 discussion told us ;-

 answers late Monday.

 Chuck




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Re: Bad experiences with IQSale aka Grandstore ..... [7:15756]

2001-08-13 Thread Donald B Johnson jr

Agreed, and contact your States Attorney Generals office if they are in a
different state you may also want to contact both your and the originating
states AG's office. Like Jon said these guys like to mobilize.
Worked for me on a third party car warrenty. You may also think about small
claims court in your local area, and have a judgement entered.


- Original Message -
From: Jon Krabbenschmidt 
To: 
Sent: Saturday, August 11, 2001 10:18 AM
Subject: RE: Bad experiences with IQSale aka Grandstore . [7:15756]


 I would also contact the District Attorney's Office in the area that they
 operate. If you have never contacted a DA's office you may be surprised at
 how responsive and aggressive they are.

 Jon

 -Original Message-
 From: Jason [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Saturday, August 11, 2001 8:13 AM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Bad experiences with IQSale aka Grandstore . [7:15756]


 After talking to a couple of other people, I've found that I'm not the
only
 one having problem getting refund from IQSale aka Grandstore , with a
couple
 of other names

 For myself, I was promised a refund way back in late May and after
numerous
 emails, on 4th July, promised to get back to me with details on the refund
 and till today is waiting for the cheque. My emails to them after 4th July
 was ignored.

 I'm planning to set up a web pages with testimonies about  the problems we
 have with this company and also, if it has since been resolved, how long
it
 took and the steps he or she has to take before the company would resolve
 the issue or refund

 I have filed a complaint with BBB and is considering filing a complaint
with
 USPS for mail fraud as well.




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Re: PIX failover!! [7:15848]

2001-08-13 Thread Jan Huizinga

Hi,

It is the cable only that selects the primary or secondary (it is even
written on the cable). You make the configuration on the primary, and this
will be sigronized with the secondary.

Hope this helps,

bye,


Magdy H. Ibrahim  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Dear All,

 Sorry for the stupid question but I want to confirm it.

 I have to configure my PIX 515UR bundle...
 How can I know the primary unit from the secondary unit??
 Is that from the failover cable only OR there is an other thing marked the
 unit as primary or secondary???
 Please advice me soon,,,

 Regards,,,

 Magdy




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BGP and NAT [7:15859]

2001-08-13 Thread mak

Hi,

Simply say, suppose configuring BGP between Router A and B. Router A
makes a neighbor reference to the connected interface of router B. I
would like to know can I configure ip nat outside on that interface on
router B? 
Since once I configure it, after the hold time period, the BGP
connection is lost and stay in Active state.

Thanks a lot


Regards,
mak




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quality of service for h.323 [7:15857]

2001-08-13 Thread george gittins

Hi there does anyone know which  queing implementation is better for  video
over ip
in a atm enviorment




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RE: CCIE Written [7:15832]

2001-08-13 Thread Thompson, Robert D

I took written today and passed, you should do fine with your material

Regards

Rob

CCNP (CCIE one day)



 -Original Message-
 From: Kenneth Yeung [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: 13 August 2001 07:54
 To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject:  CCIE Written [7:15832]
 
 Hi all,
 I have CCNP, ATM and VoIP certified and now preparing for CCIE.  I only
 have
 two weeks to go besides I need to work.
 Can anyone suggest the most important material to review before going for
 the written exam.
 Behind me is:
 1) Carlow's 2nd edition
 2) Free Token Ring paper from CCprep.com
 3) CCNP, ATM and VoIP Cisco press books
 4) Routing TCP/IP Vol. I
 
 Is one Carlow's book + Token Ring paper enough for the exam.?  Is Carlow's
 book on non-IP material enough to handle all non-IP question in written? 
 Please help if you have achieved the written test.  Thx.
 Kenneth




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e0 on 4000-m router [7:15861]

2001-08-13 Thread Vik

I have a Cisco 4000 with 2 serial, 1 token ring and 2 ethernet interface.
However, when a show interfaces command is executed, there is only one
ethernet interface shown.

On the back of the router where the ethernet ports are, one is a typical
10baseT, RJ-45 connection, but the other is AUI which I do not have a
transceiver for; I just have a CAT5 cable from the 10baseT connector going
to my switch.

When I do a show interfaces command, ethernet 0 is up, but the protocol is
down. On my swith I do not see any activity lights for that port, so I am
thinking that my e0 is actually the AUI port.

How do I use the 10baseT interface?

--
Vik Evans - MCSE, CCNA, CCDA
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cell: (602) 677-8214




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Re: Some Study and Preparation Advice [7:15758]

2001-08-13 Thread Donald B Johnson jr

Excellent advice as always Chuck, and if I may be so bold as to add, try it
before you ask. You learn more out of your failures than your successes. You
also learn how to broaden your scope, which will be necessary for your lab,
and I hope that is why we are here.
Password recovery is an example; there is always a question on this list
about it. Anybody that would tell someone how to recover from an unknown
password is not helping the person. You are even stretching it by telling
them about CCO in my opinion.
By not helping people in this way you set the groundwork for that person
learning how to find the answer they need. If this were not an important and
needed skill they would not give you a CD when you sit your lab. Again
learning what doesn't work is equally important to a successful sit at the
lab, reason being that the lab is such a time intensive exercise. So knowing
what doesn't work will save time and will prove invaluable in the
methodology part of the lab not just the mechanics. I feel that if there
weren't such an impetus on time during the lab the first time success rate
would jump dramatically, say 10-15%. Also for those who are one-day'ers
myself included, I think time will factor in even more. Execution, execution
execution..won't be much time to go down the gilded path.




- Original Message -
From: Chuck Larrieu 
To: 
Sent: Saturday, August 11, 2001 8:22 AM
Subject: Some Study and Preparation Advice [7:15758]


 A recommended good practice / good habit all those pursuing certification
 probably should begin to cultivate:

 familiarize yourself with the contents of the Cisco technical documents
 page.

 as you strive for higher and higher levels of certification, you will find
 it invaluable to have read as much of this stuff as you can, and to know
how
 and where to find things about which you are unsure.

 the design guides, the configuration guide, and the command references are
 all there, and should be the first place you look for answers.

 admittedly, this can be difficult on dial up lines. DSL or cable modem is
a
 great help. Another help is access to a laser printer, so you can print
out
 a lot of this stuff. makes general reading a lot easier. one person with
 whom I correspond prints things out on paper with pre-punched holes,
making
 it easier to organize things into binders.

 so bookmark the following link:

 http://www.cisco.com/univercd/home/home.htm

 it will serve you well in your certification and professional pursuits.

 Chuck




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Re: e0 on 4000-m router [7:15861]

2001-08-13 Thread John Hardman

Hi

If the NP has one RJ-45 and one AUI then you do not have 2 ethernet ports,
you have one. The NP-1E has one RJ45 and one AUI, the NP-2E has two each.
You use either the AUI or the RJ45, but not both at the same time. To use
one or the other use the interface command media and follow the options
available.

BTW, you may need a cross over cable to your switch too.

HTH
--
John Hardman CCNP MCSE


Vik  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I have a Cisco 4000 with 2 serial, 1 token ring and 2 ethernet interface.
 However, when a show interfaces command is executed, there is only one
 ethernet interface shown.

 On the back of the router where the ethernet ports are, one is a typical
 10baseT, RJ-45 connection, but the other is AUI which I do not have a
 transceiver for; I just have a CAT5 cable from the 10baseT connector going
 to my switch.

 When I do a show interfaces command, ethernet 0 is up, but the protocol is
 down. On my swith I do not see any activity lights for that port, so I am
 thinking that my e0 is actually the AUI port.

 How do I use the 10baseT interface?

 --
 Vik Evans - MCSE, CCNA, CCDA
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cell: (602) 677-8214




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Re: e0 on 4000-m router [7:15861]

2001-08-13 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

In a message dated 8/13/01 8:33:59 AM Central Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

Installing Network Processor Modules in the 
Cisco 4000 Series 
HTH,
Rob H.



 I have a Cisco 4000 with 2 serial, 1 token ring and 2 ethernet interface.
 However, when a show interfaces command is executed, there is only one
 ethernet interface shown.
 
 On the back of the router where the ethernet ports are, one is a typical
 10baseT, RJ-45 connection, but the other is AUI which I do not have a
 transceiver for; I just have a CAT5 cable from the 10baseT connector going
 to my switch.
 
 When I do a show interfaces command, ethernet 0 is up, but the protocol is
 down. On my swith I do not see any activity lights for that port, so I am
 thinking that my e0 is actually the AUI port.
 
 How do I use the 10baseT interface?
 
 --
 Vik Evans - MCSE, CCNA, CCDA
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cell: (602) 677-8214




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who has purchased Boson test #3 for written CCIE? [7:15864]

2001-08-13 Thread Favio T

how is Boson test 3 i am thinking of buying it
Thanks

Felix da Cat




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RE: e0 on 4000-m router [7:15861]

2001-08-13 Thread guyman

It is only a single port ethernet...

You have a choice of AUI or RJ45..

I do not think the 4000M supports a dual ethernet card..


= Original Message From Vik  =
I have a Cisco 4000 with 2 serial, 1 token ring and 2 ethernet interface.
However, when a show interfaces command is executed, there is only one
ethernet interface shown.

On the back of the router where the ethernet ports are, one is a typical
10baseT, RJ-45 connection, but the other is AUI which I do not have a
transceiver for; I just have a CAT5 cable from the 10baseT connector going
to my switch.

When I do a show interfaces command, ethernet 0 is up, but the protocol is
down. On my swith I do not see any activity lights for that port, so I am
thinking that my e0 is actually the AUI port.

How do I use the 10baseT interface?

--
Vik Evans - MCSE, CCNA, CCDA
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cell: (602) 677-8214




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Re: e0 on 4000-m router [7:15861]

2001-08-13 Thread Donald B Johnson jr

They are the same interface



- Original Message -
From: Vik 
To: 
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 6:35 AM
Subject: e0 on 4000-m router [7:15861]


 I have a Cisco 4000 with 2 serial, 1 token ring and 2 ethernet interface.
 However, when a show interfaces command is executed, there is only one
 ethernet interface shown.

 On the back of the router where the ethernet ports are, one is a typical
 10baseT, RJ-45 connection, but the other is AUI which I do not have a
 transceiver for; I just have a CAT5 cable from the 10baseT connector going
 to my switch.

 When I do a show interfaces command, ethernet 0 is up, but the protocol is
 down. On my swith I do not see any activity lights for that port, so I am
 thinking that my e0 is actually the AUI port.

 How do I use the 10baseT interface?

 --
 Vik Evans - MCSE, CCNA, CCDA
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cell: (602) 677-8214




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RE: e0 on 4000-m router [7:15861]

2001-08-13 Thread Mark Monica Baker

Sounds like a 1 port enet card to me. You have a choice of running either 
the aui port or the rj-45 port, but not both. I believe you can select 
between by using the media-type command on the interface.

Mark

-Original Message-
From:   Vik [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Monday, August 13, 2001 9:36 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:e0 on 4000-m router [7:15861]

I have a Cisco 4000 with 2 serial, 1 token ring and 2 ethernet interface.
However, when a show interfaces command is executed, there is only one
ethernet interface shown.

On the back of the router where the ethernet ports are, one is a typical
10baseT, RJ-45 connection, but the other is AUI which I do not have a
transceiver for; I just have a CAT5 cable from the 10baseT connector going
to my switch.

When I do a show interfaces command, ethernet 0 is up, but the protocol is
down. On my swith I do not see any activity lights for that port, so I am
thinking that my e0 is actually the AUI port.

How do I use the 10baseT interface?

--
Vik Evans - MCSE, CCNA, CCDA
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cell: (602) 677-8214




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e0 on 4000-m router UPDATE [7:15869]

2001-08-13 Thread Vik

Figured it out. I had to use the media-type command.

--
Vik Evans - MCSE, CCNA, CCDA
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cell: (602) 677-8214
Hm: (480) 633-1888




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Re: e0 on 4000-m router [7:15861]

2001-08-13 Thread John Hardman

Hi

The 4000 and 4000M support the NP-1E and NP-2E, the strange part is that the
NP-1E is not supported on the 4500 or 4700 series...

--
John Hardman CCNP MCSE


guyman  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 It is only a single port ethernet...

 You have a choice of AUI or RJ45..

 I do not think the 4000M supports a dual ethernet card..


 = Original Message From Vik  =
 I have a Cisco 4000 with 2 serial, 1 token ring and 2 ethernet interface.
 However, when a show interfaces command is executed, there is only one
 ethernet interface shown.
 
 On the back of the router where the ethernet ports are, one is a typical
 10baseT, RJ-45 connection, but the other is AUI which I do not have a
 transceiver for; I just have a CAT5 cable from the 10baseT connector
going
 to my switch.
 
 When I do a show interfaces command, ethernet 0 is up, but the protocol
is
 down. On my swith I do not see any activity lights for that port, so I am
 thinking that my e0 is actually the AUI port.
 
 How do I use the 10baseT interface?
 
 --
 Vik Evans - MCSE, CCNA, CCDA
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cell: (602) 677-8214




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Re: VLAN interface remains SHUTDOWN ! ! ! ! ! ! ! [7:15742]

2001-08-13 Thread Gerwin

On a 2900XL series catalyst only one vlan interface will be up. The others
will be in administratively shutdown state!

Gerwin
- Original Message -
From: Sundar 
To: 
Sent: Saturday, August 11, 2001 4:00 PM
Subject: Re: VLAN interface remains SHUTDOWN ! ! ! ! ! ! ! [7:15742]


 I am not sure if you can you assign more than 1 IP address to a switch for
 management purposes. This is a layer 2 device and you are using an IP
 address to manage the whole device not the VLANs.

 Try removing the IP address from one of the VLANs and see if it works.

 Cheers,
 Sundar

 Hamid  wrote in message
 news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Hi group,
 
  I have a CATALYST 2900XL switch. All the settings sre set to defualt
 except
  the hostname, IP address,
  I have configured some ports to be on VLAN 2. But the problem is that
VLAN
 2
  remains shutdown In the configuration:
 
  show  int vlan 2
  VLAN2 is administratively down, line protocol is down
Hardware is CPU Interface, address is 0004.9a99.9d80 (bia
 0004.9a99.9d80)
Internet address is 192.168.1.254/24
MTU 1500 bytes, BW 1 Kbit, DLY 1000 usec,
   reliability 255/255, txload 1/255, rxload 1/255
Encapsulation ARPA
ARP type: ARPA, ARP Timeout 04:00:00
 
  !
 
  interface FastEthernet0/9
   switchport multi vlan 1,2
   switchport mode multi
  !
  interface FastEthernet0/10
   switchport access vlan 2
  !
  interface VLAN1
   ip address 192.168.0.254 255.255.255.0
   no ip directed-broadcast
   no ip route-cache
  !
  interface VLAN2
   ip address 192.168.1.254 255.255.255.0
   no ip directed-broadcast
   no ip route-cache
   shutdown
 
  Can anyone tell me what the problem is?
 
  Thanx in advance
 
  Hamid




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RE: catalyst 1200 [7:15701]

2001-08-13 Thread Ross McCormick

Hi

Used one many years (95/96) ago before upgrading to a Cat5000.  It is a 8 x
10BaseT, 1 x FDDI DAS/2 x FDDI SAS switch - designed primarily as a FDDI
concentrator.

This is a CatOS device, but the software I used is of a very low revision of
CatOS (
 has anyone ever used a catalyst 1200.  from what I can
 tell it uses the catos.  are there any differences
 from the regular 5000s?  Im wondering if I can pick
 one of these up and put it into my lab and spend my
 money on isdn instead of a fullblown 5000.
 
 Ben
 
 __
 Do You Yahoo!?
 Send instant messages  get email alerts with Yahoo! Messenger.
 http://im.yahoo.com/
 
 




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IPSec Latency [7:15874]

2001-08-13 Thread Cisco Chic

Hi All,

I was wondering if anyone has any information or sites
which talk about how to tweak (if this can be done)
IPSec tunnls (via keepalives) from a dial up client to
a VPN5008?

We have a latency of around 800 milliseconds on a 
network and we are trying to determine what the
maximum delay can be in the network to keep the tunnel
up via keepalives. How long can the delay be for the
keepalives and who sends the keepalives or  are the
keepalives sent in both directions via remote dial up
access. (we are using static routes)

I know that a keepalive protocol is used by L2TP in
order to allow it to distinguish between a tunnel
outage and prolonged periods of tunnel inactivity. We
are trying to find out if this can be done for IPSec.

We have a open case with cisco tac currently to get
more details and have been looking at third party web
sites and RFCs. Can't find anything about latency but
have found performance issues concerning bw, memory
etc.

Any information or sites you can direct me to would be
great.

Thanks!!



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RE: CAN SOME ONE NO EXPERMIENT CAN PASS CCNP [7:15717]

2001-08-13 Thread Marshal Schoener

That is like saying, Why get your Bachelor's degree in Computer Science?
What would you do with it?
Should everyone need to work for 5 years before going to college???  Of
course not!!!

Just by studying for the CCNP, the person is learning a ton of valuable
information...

There are things that a person without a certification and tons of
'real-world' experience will never know and understand because they haven't
studied the material as closely as a certified person...
There are things a certified person without 'real-world' experience will not
understand, because they don't have hours and hours on the equipment...
Both are important, and both compliment each other.
The certification shows that you have a good grasp on the technology.  It
shows that you are a learner and have the dedication to study and learn
something...



-Original Message-
From: Dennis Bailey [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, August 11, 2001 12:20 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: CAN SOME ONE NO EXPERMIENT CAN PASS CCNP [7:15717]


Yes but why  What would you do with it?


PHIMHONGKONG  wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi
 i have a question

 I have no working experiment but i have some router  to study at home

 Do i have a chance to pass ccnp?

 Thanks

 Give me a honest answer

 Thanks




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RE: CAN SOME ONE NO EXPERMIENT CAN PASS CCNP [7:15717]

2001-08-13 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

I agree.  Also, if you get your foot in the door working for a Cisco 
Gold Partner, you can always count on TAC to help you if you're stuck 
troubleshooting.  So in that case - you won't have to worry about your 
hiring manager letting you go if you can't figure out how to 
troubleshoot a problem.  There are plenty of resources available.  This 
list is one. 

jd 
-Original Message-
From: mschoener [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 9:33 AM
To: cisco
Subject: RE: CAN SOME ONE NO EXPERMIENT CAN PASS CCNP [7:15717]


That is like saying, Why get your Bachelor's degree in Computer 
Science?
What would you do with it?
Should everyone need to work for 5 years before going to college???  Of
course not!!!

Just by studying for the CCNP, the person is learning a ton of valuable
information...

There are things that a person without a certification and tons of
'real-world' experience will never know and understand because they 
haven't
studied the material as closely as a certified person...
There are things a certified person without 'real-world' experience will 
not
understand, because they don't have hours and hours on the equipment...
Both are important, and both compliment each other.
The certification shows that you have a good grasp on the technology.  
It
shows that you are a learner and have the dedication to study and learn
something...



-Original Message-
From: Dennis Bailey [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, August 11, 2001 12:20 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: CAN SOME ONE NO EXPERMIENT CAN PASS CCNP [7:15717]


Yes but why  What would you do with it?


PHIMHONGKONG  wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi
 i have a question

 I have no working experiment but i have some router  to study at home

 Do i have a chance to pass ccnp?

 Thanks

 Give me a honest answer

 Thanks




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CCIe Written : Thank you all [7:15879]

2001-08-13 Thread Thompson, Robert D

HI All,

In my joy of passing the written exam, I forgot to thank all of you who
helped with my questions about study material etc.For all of you who have
not written as yet, go through the mails about CCIE written here on
groupstudy and you will have all you need.It helped me a lot to  home in 
on areas I was weak on.

Thanks once again, 

Regards

Rob




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CCNP Certification Library box set? [7:15878]

2001-08-13 Thread Walzer Jeff

On Cisco Press's web site they are offering a CCNP Certification boxed set.
At the bottom under similiar titles listed are individual books like Cisco
Internetwork Troubleshooting and Building Cisco Remote Access Networks,
etc. Does the books in the new Certification boxed set take the place of the
older books or do these supplement them?

Thanks,
Jeff


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RE: Two CPA2503 questions... [7:14445]

2001-08-13 Thread Daniel Cotts

For those who have a CCO login the utility can be found at:
http://www.cisco.com/cgi-bin/tablebuild.pl/rsl

 -Original Message-
 From: Symon Thurlow [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Sunday, August 12, 2001 12:17 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: RE: Two CPA2503 questions... [7:14445]
 
 
 Yes, I have a CPA2503 too, I ordered some more flash for it 
 as you can't do
 anything with 4mb.
 
 You don;t need a new boot rom for it, there is a utliity you 
 can use to
 change one of the SNMP MIB values, which will then make the 
 CPA2503 report
 itself as being a 2503
 
 Have a look at this
 
 http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios11
 2/fp112rn/25_1
 12rn.htm#xtocid72132
 
 It is a bit old but I think you will get the picture. I am 
 about to do this
 to mine (when my new flash arrives) so will elt you know  the 
 success if you
 are interested.
 
 Symon
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
 James Willard
 Sent: 01 August 2001 05:35
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Two CPA2503 questions... [7:14445]
 
 
 Hello,
 
 I recently convinced my employer to give me a Cisco CPA2503 
 (the white box
 CiscoPro router) whose power supply died. I have two questions.
 
 First of all, before I check into finding a replacement power 
 supply, I read
 on this list a long way back (probably 1999ish) about someone 
 who had made
 an outboard 2500 series power supply from a PC power supply. 
 Unfortunately,
 I can't get a search of the archives to turn up that post 
 that I remembered.
 Does anyone happen to have that link, or perhaps is the 
 original poster
 still lurking?
 
 Secondly, is it true that you can order a replacement boot ROM for the
 CPA2500 series and make them able to load standard 2500 
 series images? If
 so, does Cisco charge for these boot ROMs, or are they like the other
 routers where you pay for shipping only?
 
 Thanks,
 
 James Willard, CCNA
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Report misconduct 
 and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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CASLOW ?? [7:15884]

2001-08-13 Thread Ray Smith

Did anyone get a look at the new edition of Caslow's book Router, Bridges 
and Switches for CCIE's?  If so, is the new information worth buying the new 
edition in addition to the 1st edition that I already own?  Thanks



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High FCS errors on cat5505 [7:15885]

2001-08-13 Thread David Eitel

Hello. I'm experiencing huge amounts of fcs errors on my switch. 
3/1 91521 fcs errors
3/2 28078 fcs errors
These counters were cleared Friday. I understand that these errors are
usually media related. I've swapped cables so far which has not seemed to
help. I can tell you there is a  sun e450 and e250 attached to these ports.
Do you know of any interoperability issues with the cat 5505 and sun NICS? 

Thanks In Advance,
Dave




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CCIE Written [7:15886]

2001-08-13 Thread Mohammed Nabelsi

Beside Boson and ccieprep practice questions, can you tell me where I can
get more practice questions for CCIE written exam?

Thanks in advance!

Danny



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Re: VPN 3000 design and PIX [7:15653]

2001-08-13 Thread Yonkerbonk

Though some Cisco documentation says to put it in
parallel to the PIX, Cisco actually prefers three ways
and they all require you to go through the PIX.
One way is to have the public interface of the VPN to
be in the DMZ. This way the only traffic that hits the
VPN has been through the firewall already. The second
way is to have the private interface of the VPN to be
on the DMZ. This way unecrypted traffic is forced
through the PIX for inspection. The third and best way
is to have both the private and public interface be on
two different DMZs, so that both encrypted and
unencrypted traffic is forced through PIX inspection.
It's all a matter of how many interfaces you have for
DMZs.

Michael Le, CCIE #6811
--- Tom Richs  wrote:
 Can someone tell me if I have a PIX in place, where
 should I install my VPN 
 3000 box (in front of the pix, behind the pix,
 parallel, in the dmz on the 
 pix, etc).  Also, I can't seem to find any
 documentation that has how to do 
 it or how to configure each component.  Any help
 espeically with 
 configuration on both would be greatly appreciated. 
 Thanks.
 
 Tom
 

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Re: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]

2001-08-13 Thread Donald B Johnson jr

Thats impossible or highly not recommended, most of us here work for a
partner and pricing has a lot to do with your partner status. A general
price list could be obtained by Cisco. They will be happy to send someone
out.



- Original Message -
From: Shahir Boshra 
To: 
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 9:17 AM
Subject: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]


 Hello Group,

 Sorry for the Off topic posting, but I desperately need an updated Cisco
 price list. Can anyone please send it offline?
 Thanks in advance
 Shahir




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RE: CASLOW ?? [7:15884]

2001-08-13 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

I have both books.  I would recommend the 2nd edition. The 2nd edition
covers QoS and VoIP along with other topic not covered in the 1st edition.

-Eric Lange

-Original Message-
From: Ray Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 11:23 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: CASLOW ?? [7:15884]


Did anyone get a look at the new edition of Caslow's book Router, Bridges 
and Switches for CCIE's?  If so, is the new information worth buying the new

edition in addition to the 1st edition that I already own?  Thanks



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Re: catalyst 2900 XL got reset [7:15835]

2001-08-13 Thread cisco skin

This is a known bug. I do believe though that the latest IOS fixes it. What
are you running?


a  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 hi
 i was trying to access the 2900XL series switch through hyperterminal and
 strange thing happened ,it got reset by it on.did this happened with
 somebody else also ,just curious to know.what could be the reason

 Regards
 Arun Sharma




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Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]

2001-08-13 Thread Ray Smith

I have been searching high and low on Cisco's website for information on how 
to figure out the hexidecimal values of various Config-Register.  Example, 
0x2141, 0x102, 0x2142, 0x2102 etc.  I would like to know how to figure out 
the bit value and be able to tell what each value is trying to accomplish 
just by looking at them.  If anyone out there can help please do.  Thank you


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RE: High FCS errors on cat5505 [7:15885]

2001-08-13 Thread David Eitel

Thanks Frank. You wouldn't happen to have sun boxes giving you problems?

-Original Message-
From: David Eitel 
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 12:30 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: High FCS errors on cat5505 [7:15885]


Hello. I'm experiencing huge amounts of fcs errors on my switch. 
3/1 91521 fcs errors
3/2 28078 fcs errors
These counters were cleared Friday. I understand that these errors are
usually media related. I've swapped cables so far which has not seemed to
help. I can tell you there is a  sun e450 and e250 attached to these ports.
Do you know of any interoperability issues with the cat 5505 and sun NICS? 

Thanks In Advance,
Dave




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Re: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]

2001-08-13 Thread Shahir Boshra

That's not accurate.
I used to receive from Cisco (as a Cisco end-user) a monthly price list in
my previous job.
The standard price list is not so confidential, the partner's markup / share
is confidential though.
If that's really hard to get, can someone just answer me this simple
question?
If I need to buy an Access Server with 16 E1 PRI connections, which is
cheaper? AS5400 or AS5800? My guess is 5400, but I was told that I'm wrong.
Can anyone please verify this to me?

Thank you once more.
Shahir

Donald B Johnson jr  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Thats impossible or highly not recommended, most of us here work for a
 partner and pricing has a lot to do with your partner status. A general
 price list could be obtained by Cisco. They will be happy to send someone
 out.



 - Original Message -
 From: Shahir Boshra
 To:
 Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 9:17 AM
 Subject: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]


  Hello Group,
 
  Sorry for the Off topic posting, but I desperately need an updated Cisco
  price list. Can anyone please send it offline?
  Thanks in advance
  Shahir




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RE: VPN 3000 design and PIX [7:15653]

2001-08-13 Thread Jon Tucker

Presumably, when traversing through the PIX, you will be translating from a
private DMZ address to a Public address.  This would require the IPSEC
through NAT option enabled on the VPN 3000, correct?

I have seen several writings stating that using IPSEC through NAT can be a
security concern.  I don't remember the specifics of the concerns though.
Would you share that viewpoint or have you seen it to not be a problem?

- JT

-Original Message-
From: Yonkerbonk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 12:43 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: VPN 3000 design and PIX [7:15653]


Though some Cisco documentation says to put it in
parallel to the PIX, Cisco actually prefers three ways
and they all require you to go through the PIX.
One way is to have the public interface of the VPN to
be in the DMZ. This way the only traffic that hits the
VPN has been through the firewall already. The second
way is to have the private interface of the VPN to be
on the DMZ. This way unecrypted traffic is forced
through the PIX for inspection. The third and best way
is to have both the private and public interface be on
two different DMZs, so that both encrypted and
unencrypted traffic is forced through PIX inspection.
It's all a matter of how many interfaces you have for
DMZs.

Michael Le, CCIE #6811
--- Tom Richs  wrote:
 Can someone tell me if I have a PIX in place, where
 should I install my VPN 
 3000 box (in front of the pix, behind the pix,
 parallel, in the dmz on the 
 pix, etc).  Also, I can't seem to find any
 documentation that has how to do 
 it or how to configure each component.  Any help
 espeically with 
 configuration on both would be greatly appreciated. 
 Thanks.
 
 Tom
 

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Used Rack [7:15897]

2001-08-13 Thread Ray Smith

Anyone with a used 19 Network Rack in good condition to unload at a 
reasonable price, preferable in the New York/NJ area for the purpose of 
saving on shipping  handling?  Thanks

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Re: e0 on 4000-m router [7:15861]

2001-08-13 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer

My guess is that there really is only one Ethernet interface, but two 
cabling options: AUI or RJ-45.

Use the media-type {10Baset | aui | auto-select} command to select the one 
you want. Notice that supposedly auto select should figure out which one 
you're using but field experience says that it doesn't sometimes.

Check CCO to make sure on this, but that's probably what's happening.

Priscilla

At 09:35 AM 8/13/01, Vik wrote:
I have a Cisco 4000 with 2 serial, 1 token ring and 2 ethernet interface.
However, when a show interfaces command is executed, there is only one
ethernet interface shown.

On the back of the router where the ethernet ports are, one is a typical
10baseT, RJ-45 connection, but the other is AUI which I do not have a
transceiver for; I just have a CAT5 cable from the 10baseT connector going
to my switch.

When I do a show interfaces command, ethernet 0 is up, but the protocol is
down. On my swith I do not see any activity lights for that port, so I am
thinking that my e0 is actually the AUI port.

How do I use the 10baseT interface?

--
Vik Evans - MCSE, CCNA, CCDA
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cell: (602) 677-8214


Priscilla Oppenheimer
http://www.priscilla.com




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Re: Strange Problem with router... [7:6293]

2001-08-13 Thread Gopal R

If you are running BGP on 3640 you are bound to have
problems. Not that it wont work, but it wont be
consistent. Are you running the complete BGP table?
Are there any other stuff like NAT or debug running?.
What is the memory you have on the router. 

Recommended router for BGP if you are running full BGP
table is 7206 VXR.

Gopal
--- Kiran Kumar M  wrote:
 Hi Peter,
 
 Thanks for your mail.  But I was using the same for
 last 16 months, almost
 with same setup. I never faced this problem.
 
 mtu is default, pps it can support upto 40,000 to
 70,000 (according to
 cisco site), in my case it never reached to that
 point..
 
 Thanks,
 Kiran
 
 On Tue, 29 May 2001, Peter I. Slow, CCNP Voice
 Specialist wrote:
 
  yup.
  thats going to happen when you plug that many
 serial links into the 3640.
  look at the mtu, look at your pps, and look at the
 2640's forwarding
  capabilities.
  i have a cusdtomer who's 2640 freaks out the same
 way with 8 t-1s coming
  into it...
  
  Peter Slow, CCNP Voice Specialist
  Network Engineer
  Planetary Networks
  535 West 34th Street
  New York, NY
  10001
  Cell:(516) 782.1535
  Desk: (646) 792.2395
  Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Fax:(646) 792.2396
  - Original Message -
  From: Kiran Kumar M 
  To: 
  Sent: Tuesday, May 29, 2001 4:19 PM
  Subject: Strange Problem with router... [7:6293]
  
  
   Hi,
  
   I am facing a strange problem from last two
 days. One of my 3640 router
   is behaving in a strange manner.
  
   Sudenly it is becoming 60 - 99 % CPU
 utilization.(Usally 20 - 30 %) at
 the
   same time It is droping the output packets on
 Main Serial link (which is
   using for uplink/downlink) and input packets on
 fastethernet (Used for
   LAN) port. Even these Interfaces are not
 overloading..
  
   On the same router I am having 17 more serial
 links, and 1 more fast
   ethernet, and one ethernet interfaces and all
 are in working. I am using
   wccp v1, and BGP also on the same router.
  
   After Observing the problem I did the following
 things.
  
   1) Increased the hold-queue to 4096
   2) stopped the wccp
  
   and observed the status. But there is no use. It
 behaved in the same
   pasion. So I kept the things back.
  
   I am wondering.. if anybody help me.. The
 traffic is same and not
   varying.. but it is very much flutuating..
  
   Please give me suggestions.. if anybody have any
 idea..
  
   Thanks,
   Kiran
  
   PS: The router is not giving this problem
 continuously.. for 2 mins.. its
   working properly.. next 2 or 3 mins.. dropping
 the packets.. and next 2
   mins.. working properly..
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Re: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]

2001-08-13 Thread EA Louie

my search on 'config reg bit settings' got me this hit on the first try:

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/access/acs_fix/cis2500/2509/
acsvrug/maint.htm#20837 (
To: 
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 10:10 AM
Subject: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]


 I have been searching high and low on Cisco's website for information on
how
 to figure out the hexidecimal values of various Config-Register.  Example,
 0x2141, 0x102, 0x2142, 0x2102 etc.  I would like to know how to figure out
 the bit value and be able to tell what each value is trying to accomplish
 just by looking at them.  If anyone out there can help please do.  Thank
you


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Re: load balance between 4 T1s [7:15692]

2001-08-13 Thread Scott M. Trieste

If your running this implementation with an ISP, chances are they won't use
a technology that has  proved buggy: CEF.  My recommendation would be to use
the load balancing feature of such IGP routing protocols like OSPF or EIGRP.

khramov  wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I am getting 4 T1s but I think I will have only one IP address.  How can
 I load balance 1IP between 4 T1s.
 thanks




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Re: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]

2001-08-13 Thread EA Louie

Bri - that sounds good to me!  :-)  although I find that most people
1.  just don't know WHAT to search for... searching on CCO is an art that
evolves using practice, practice, practice, and weeding out the worthless
hits
2.  don't know how to find what they searched for in the webpages presented

for those who are CCIE bound, it's an imperative to know the basics of the
IOS documentation layout on the CD ROM.  Otherwise, the search engine brings
up way too much information to be sifted through during the Lab.

-e-

- Original Message -
From: Brian 
To: EA Louie 
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 10:37 AM
Subject: Re: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]


 I suggest a new rule for the list.  If I don't know the answer, goto CCO
to
 search and get the answer easily, about a topic I know very little about,
 then I perhaps shouldn't post the results of my arduous search.

 Bri

 - Original Message -
 From: EA Louie 
 To: 
 Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 10:45 AM
 Subject: Re: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]


  my search on 'config reg bit settings' got me this hit on the first try:
 
 

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/access/acs_fix/cis2500/2509/
  acsvrug/maint.htm#20837 (
  To:
  Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 10:10 AM
  Subject: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]
 
 
   I have been searching high and low on Cisco's website for information
on
  how
   to figure out the hexidecimal values of various Config-Register.
 Example,
   0x2141, 0x102, 0x2142, 0x2102 etc.  I would like to know how to figure
 out
   the bit value and be able to tell what each value is trying to
 accomplish
   just by looking at them.  If anyone out there can help please do.
Thank
  you
  
  
   _
   Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at
 http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp
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  Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
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RE: High FCS errors on cat5505 [7:15885]

2001-08-13 Thread Frank Maisano

Yep. On the sun it show some flapping but no errors on the switch side.


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Re: BGP and NAT [7:15859]

2001-08-13 Thread Ralph Fudamak

Are you overloading the nat?  Is the neighbor statement on router A pointing
to the nat address of router B?  let's see your config


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

 Simply say, suppose configuring BGP between Router A and B. Router A
 makes a neighbor reference to the connected interface of router B. I
 would like to know can I configure ip nat outside on that interface on
 router B?
 Since once I configure it, after the hold time period, the BGP
 connection is lost and stay in Active state.

 Thanks a lot


 Regards,
 mak




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Re: load balance between 4 T1s [7:15692]

2001-08-13 Thread James Willard

It will depend on your service provider. CEF has become much more stable in
the latest IOS releases. Sprint uses CEF for load-balancing multiple T1s
where the customer also has Cisco equipment. I don't know about other
providers since I mainly deal with Sprint. Is there anyone else out there
who can share their experiences with other ISPs?

James Willard
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

- Original Message -
From: Scott M. Trieste 
To: 
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 2:10 PM
Subject: Re: load balance between 4 T1s [7:15692]


 If your running this implementation with an ISP, chances are they won't
use
 a technology that has  proved buggy: CEF.  My recommendation would be to
use
 the load balancing feature of such IGP routing protocols like OSPF or
EIGRP.

 khramov  wrote in message
 news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  I am getting 4 T1s but I think I will have only one IP address.  How can
  I load balance 1IP between 4 T1s.
  thanks




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Design Help [7:15907]

2001-08-13 Thread Ole Drews Jensen

I would appreciate some good advice on this from some of you design boys and
girls out there.

I am going to upgrade some of our branch offices from ISDN and DSL to Frame
Relay, and I need to find the best suited devices to do that.

I want to move away from the (now) slow ISDN and unreliable (unfortunately)
DSL.

I have been browsing on Cisco's web site, and looking through my Cisco
Product Quick Reference Guide, but I am not 100% sure I have made the right
selections yet.

I would like to start out connecting my main office with four of our branch
offices - each with a 256 kbps bandwidth as a starter. My thoughts have been
as follows:

Main Office:

 o  Cisco 2610 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

Branch Offices:

 o  Cisco 1604 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

or

 o  Cisco 1720 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

I am not sure if I should go with the 1604 or 1720.

The 1604 has ISDN-U which I could use as a backup connection in case the
Frame Relay goes down. The reason that I have not selected the 1601 with an
option for a ISDN-U WIC later on, is that the T1 doesn't have a build-in
CSU/DSU (why don't they have a 1600 with a fixed T1 with CSU/DCU?).

The 1720 is less expensive than the 1604, and I could then add the ISDN U
WIC later on if I decide that it is necessary. However, the 1700 is a VPN
router, and I don't need that, since it goes directly from one router to
another through the Frame Relay. I assume that this feature can be disabled.

So, back to my question - what would you buy?

Thanks for comments on this,

Ole

~~~
 Ole Drews Jensen
 Systems Network Manager
 CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I
 RWR Enterprises, Inc.
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
~~~ 
 http://www.RouterChief.com
~~~
 NEED A JOB ???
 http://www.oledrews.com/job
~~~




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Re: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]

2001-08-13 Thread Donald B Johnson jr

I believe
2141 will boot from network ignoring nvram
102 will boot from flash using nv
2142 will boot from flash ignoring nv
2102 same as 102 forget what the 2 means



- Original Message -
From: Ray Smith 
To: 
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 10:10 AM
Subject: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]


 I have been searching high and low on Cisco's website for information on
how
 to figure out the hexidecimal values of various Config-Register.  Example,
 0x2141, 0x102, 0x2142, 0x2102 etc.  I would like to know how to figure out
 the bit value and be able to tell what each value is trying to accomplish
 just by looking at them.  If anyone out there can help please do.  Thank
you


 _
 Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp




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RE: load balance between 4 T1s [7:15692]

2001-08-13 Thread Schneider, Matt

are you saying that CEF is buggy?

-Original Message-
From: Scott M. Trieste [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 2:11 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: load balance between 4 T1s [7:15692]


If your running this implementation with an ISP, chances are they won't use
a technology that has  proved buggy: CEF.  My recommendation would be to use
the load balancing feature of such IGP routing protocols like OSPF or EIGRP.

khramov  wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I am getting 4 T1s but I think I will have only one IP address.  How can
 I load balance 1IP between 4 T1s.
 thanks




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RE: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]

2001-08-13 Thread Daniel Cotts

You are correct. 
Instead of posting a URL I've sometimes given directions page by page to
show how I reached a given topic.
Any thoughts on how to teach CCO navigation?

 -Original Message-
 From: EA Louie [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 1:10 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]
 
 
 Bri - that sounds good to me!  :-)  although I find that most people
 1.  just don't know WHAT to search for... searching on CCO is 
 an art that
 evolves using practice, practice, practice, and weeding out 
 the worthless
 hits
 2.  don't know how to find what they searched for in the 
 webpages presented
 
 for those who are CCIE bound, it's an imperative to know the 
 basics of the
 IOS documentation layout on the CD ROM.  Otherwise, the 
 search engine brings
 up way too much information to be sifted through during the Lab.
 
 -e-
 
 - Original Message -
 From: Brian 
 To: EA Louie 
 Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 10:37 AM
 Subject: Re: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]
 
 
  I suggest a new rule for the list.  If I don't know the 
 answer, goto CCO
 to
  search and get the answer easily, about a topic I know very 
 little about,
  then I perhaps shouldn't post the results of my arduous search.
 
  Bri
 
  - Original Message -
  From: EA Louie 
  To: 
  Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 10:45 AM
  Subject: Re: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]
 
 
   my search on 'config reg bit settings' got me this hit on 
 the first try:
  
  
 
 http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/access/acs_fix
 /cis2500/2509/
   acsvrug/maint.htm#20837 (
   To:
   Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 10:10 AM
   Subject: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]
  
  
I have been searching high and low on Cisco's website 
 for information
 on
   how
to figure out the hexidecimal values of various Config-Register.
  Example,
0x2141, 0x102, 0x2142, 0x2102 etc.  I would like to 
 know how to figure
  out
the bit value and be able to tell what each value is trying to
  accomplish
just by looking at them.  If anyone out there can help 
 please do.
 Thank
   you
   
   

 _
Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at
  http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp
   _
   Do You Yahoo!?
   Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
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 Do You Yahoo!?
 Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
 Report misconduct 
 and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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Re: HSRP with 4 MSFC's....Best practice [7:15734]

2001-08-13 Thread Thomas

Hi All,

In my production network, I got kinda the same configuration, but only one
6509 with dual supervisor engines and dual MSFCs configured.  The thing is
that this 6509 also run EIGRP and NAT on its MSFCs and things start to get
complicated.  Please help me out with this configuration:

- On the first MSFC, all VLANs have higher priority and therefore should be
in active mode.
- On the second MSFC, all VLANs have lower priority and therefore in the
standby mode.
- Both MSFCs have the same static NAT and static routes, default route.
- Both of them have EIGRP with same configuration and have default route
redistributed into EIGRP

Since I started configuring EIGRP on both of these cards, duplicating the
NAT, static routes and other global command on the second MSFC so that it
can be redundant to the first, something started to happen.  It seems that:

1. It seems both MSFCs do the routing, even the second MSFC supposes to be
in standby mode.
2. EIGRP does load balancing on both card (I can see multi paths to the
default route
3.  Some IP are NATed to the ip nat outside VLAN on the first MSFC, while
the others NATed to that of the second MSFC (standby one).  Anh some IP are
NATed, but didn't work well because it experiences packet dropping...

Would someone please help me out with this scenario?  What did I configure
wrong?  Is there any way to keep the second MSFC does NOTHING (eigrp, nat,
static) beside listening to the active MSFC, and kick off only if the
first MSFC dies...  Thanks All

Thomas N.


Tony Medeiros  wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Found my answer,

 From:

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/lan/cat6000/sft_6_1/configgd
 /redund.htm#43570

 Quote:
 Layer 2 redundancy for the supervisor engines (one active and one in
 standby)-If the active supervisor engine fails (the MSFC installed on it
 will also fail), both Layer 2 and Layer 3 functions roll over to the
 redundant supervisor engine and MSFC combination.

 So the way I see it:
 For HSRP redundency for the same vlan.  The standby MSFC  Should be the
the
 MSFC in the redundent supervisor.  This will utilize all the replicated
MLS
 information kept in the PFC's (or CEF information on the PFC2)  This will
be
 a faster, cleaner failover than having the standby HSRP router in the
other
 chassis in the event of a supervisor failover.  It will also keep the
Layer
 2 path optimal.  If the whole box fails then that is a different story.
The
 listening HSRP peers will take a little longer to come up as well as
build
 out their MLS/CEF cache.

 Cool, and thanks to Jeff for the pointer.

 Tony M.
 #6172


 - Original Message -
 From: Tony Medeiros
 To:
 Sent: Saturday, August 11, 2001 1:34 AM
 Subject: HSRP with 4 MSFC'sBest practice [7:15734]


  I have a question that really only experience will answer.
 
  I have a customer with a two 6509 core with redundant Sup's and MSFC's
in
  each
  box ( a little over kill if you ask me)  The setup is a typical one with
  access layer switch's uplinked to each core boxes with the typical L2
load
  balancing going on by setting up the root bridges appropriately on the
 core
  boxes.  The active HSRP MSFC's correspond with the root bridges.  Pretty
  vanilla setup. A failure of a whole core box will have the layer 2 STP
and
  layer 3 HSRP's fail over the other core box. They are running a hybrid
 setup
  with IOS and CAT OS.   So far so good.
 
  The redundant MSFC's in each box are set up as the lowest priority's so
 they
  are just in listening mode.
 
  My question is:  In the case of a primary Sup failure in one of the
boxes
 and
  the secondary takes over.  Will the associated primary MSFC fail as
well?
 I
  have never tested this and this is a production network so I obviously
 can't
  test it there.  If the associated MSFC fails with the sup,  It make
sense
 to
  me to make the MSFC in the redundant sup the standby one so the layer 2
 path
  stays optimal and doesn't have to pass over the inter core trunk to hit
 the
  router in the other core switch.  I know this won't be optimal if the
 whole
  box fails because it takes slightly longer for a listening HSRP peer to
  transit to active than it does a standby peer to transit to active.  I
 could
  speed things up be lowering the HSRP hello timers some.  If the MSFC
stays
  alive after a sup failure then I think I'll  just leave things alone.
 
  Has anybody any experience in this type of setup?  I didn't build this
  network
  but I am tasked to fix a bunch of screwups.  I know this would be a moot
  point
  if they were running native IOS cus the 2 MSFC's really act as one.
 
  Any experience or comments are very much welcome    I haven't posted
a
  question in quite a while, but it feels good !!  I'll be scanning CCO
too
 in
  the meantime.
 
  Thanks in advance
  Tony M.
  #6172




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I have Troytec / Transcender W2K, I need Boson W2k [7:15912]

2001-08-13 Thread William

For details, pls email me:

[EMAIL PROTECTED]




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CCO Navigation [7:15913]

2001-08-13 Thread EA Louie

Sure.

1.  start at http://www.cisco.com/univercd/home/home.htm
2.  choose Cisco IOS Software - Release 12.0 (or whatever release you're
interested in - I think the Tables of Contents are close to identical from
11.3 thru 12.2, but I leave this verification as an exercise to the reader)
3.  Click on Configuration Guides and Command References
4.  Review that page - it gives the rundown on how the IOS documentation is
organized by MAJOR TOPIC and TECHNOLOGY
5.  Systematically click on every Configuration Guide link.  Behind it are
two more sets of table of contents links with more specialized topics.
Either commit them to memory or print them out, so that you at least know
where the major topics are located.
6.  When that exercise is complete, realize that the Command Reference
exactly parallels the Configuration Guide

The other way to navigate CCO is to use the Master Indexes.  That's a little
trickier, because it just dumps you into a topic page without any context.
However, the way to work your way backwards from that is to click the
CONTENTS button on the navigation bar, which will back you out into the
context and governing topics.

When searching, read the actual URL that the search engine gives you and it
will indicate what IOS Release the information is pointing to.  I usually
scroll down until I find a URL hit that has my target Release in it, and
then navigate the Configuration Guide or Command Reference from there.

Those are some of the methods I use for navigating CCO.  Does anyone else
have some helpful navigation pointers to share with us?

-e-

- Original Message -
From: Daniel Cotts 
To: 'EA Louie' ; 
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 11:31 AM
Subject: RE: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]


 You are correct.
 Instead of posting a URL I've sometimes given directions page by page to
 show how I reached a given topic.
 Any thoughts on how to teach CCO navigation?




_
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Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com




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RE: Design Help [7:15907]

2001-08-13 Thread Bill Carter

The first question is how many locations are we talking about.  I would
prefer the 1720 routers.  These have the same processor as the 2600's.
Don't worry about the VPN features, just don't configure them and it's not
an issue.  These are marketed as VPN routers because of the processing
power.  I believe the 1700's willl be around longer than the 1600's.  Just
my opinion.  I work on a 300+ node frame relay network.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Ole Drews Jensen
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 1:42 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Design Help [7:15907]


I would appreciate some good advice on this from some of you design boys and
girls out there.

I am going to upgrade some of our branch offices from ISDN and DSL to Frame
Relay, and I need to find the best suited devices to do that.

I want to move away from the (now) slow ISDN and unreliable (unfortunately)
DSL.

I have been browsing on Cisco's web site, and looking through my Cisco
Product Quick Reference Guide, but I am not 100% sure I have made the right
selections yet.

I would like to start out connecting my main office with four of our branch
offices - each with a 256 kbps bandwidth as a starter. My thoughts have been
as follows:

Main Office:

 o  Cisco 2610 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

Branch Offices:

 o  Cisco 1604 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

or

 o  Cisco 1720 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

I am not sure if I should go with the 1604 or 1720.

The 1604 has ISDN-U which I could use as a backup connection in case the
Frame Relay goes down. The reason that I have not selected the 1601 with an
option for a ISDN-U WIC later on, is that the T1 doesn't have a build-in
CSU/DSU (why don't they have a 1600 with a fixed T1 with CSU/DCU?).

The 1720 is less expensive than the 1604, and I could then add the ISDN U
WIC later on if I decide that it is necessary. However, the 1700 is a VPN
router, and I don't need that, since it goes directly from one router to
another through the Frame Relay. I assume that this feature can be disabled.

So, back to my question - what would you buy?

Thanks for comments on this,

Ole

~~~
 Ole Drews Jensen
 Systems Network Manager
 CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I
 RWR Enterprises, Inc.
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
~~~
 http://www.RouterChief.com
~~~
 NEED A JOB ???
 http://www.oledrews.com/job
~~~




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RE: Design Help [7:15907]

2001-08-13 Thread Ole Drews Jensen

Thanks Steve,
 
He he, that was exactly what they told me - however, I have already told
them that I want 50% CIR, and it's not that much difference once you start
looking at the loop prices etc.
 
Thanks for your input,
 
OIe



~~~ 
 Ole Drews Jensen 
 Systems Network Manager 
 CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I 
 RWR Enterprises, Inc. 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
~~~ 
  http://www.RouterChief.com 
~~~ 
 NEED A JOB ??? 
  http://www.oledrews.com/job 
~~~ 

-Original Message-
From: Steve Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 2:10 PM
To: Ole Drews Jensen; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Design Help [7:15907]



Hey Ole, we use all 1720s at the lower end clients. The VPN features are
only there if the right IOS is there. The 2600 should be fine. Look at your
routing protocol, if you are using OSPF or something like that, you may want
and probably will have to bump up the ram DRAM in the 1720 to handle it as
well as the 1600.

IMHO, put at least 50% cir on each line. A lot of carries will tell you if
its local it does not matter but real life will tell you that is crap. 

Good Luck, 
Steve 

-Original Message- 
From: Ole Drews Jensen [ mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 1:42 PM 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Subject: Design Help [7:15907] 


I would appreciate some good advice on this from some of you design boys and

girls out there. 

I am going to upgrade some of our branch offices from ISDN and DSL to Frame 
Relay, and I need to find the best suited devices to do that. 

I want to move away from the (now) slow ISDN and unreliable (unfortunately) 
DSL. 

I have been browsing on Cisco's web site, and looking through my Cisco 
Product Quick Reference Guide, but I am not 100% sure I have made the right 
selections yet. 

I would like to start out connecting my main office with four of our branch 
offices - each with a 256 kbps bandwidth as a starter. My thoughts have been

as follows: 

Main Office: 

 o  Cisco 2610 with a WIC-1DSU-T1= 

Branch Offices: 

 o  Cisco 1604 with a WIC-1DSU-T1= 

or 

 o  Cisco 1720 with a WIC-1DSU-T1= 

I am not sure if I should go with the 1604 or 1720. 

The 1604 has ISDN-U which I could use as a backup connection in case the 
Frame Relay goes down. The reason that I have not selected the 1601 with an 
option for a ISDN-U WIC later on, is that the T1 doesn't have a build-in 
CSU/DSU (why don't they have a 1600 with a fixed T1 with CSU/DCU?). 

The 1720 is less expensive than the 1604, and I could then add the ISDN U 
WIC later on if I decide that it is necessary. However, the 1700 is a VPN 
router, and I don't need that, since it goes directly from one router to 
another through the Frame Relay. I assume that this feature can be disabled.


So, back to my question - what would you buy? 

Thanks for comments on this, 

Ole 

~~~ 
 Ole Drews Jensen 
 Systems Network Manager 
 CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I 
 RWR Enterprises, Inc. 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
~~~ 
  http://www.RouterChief.com 
~~~ 
 NEED A JOB ??? 
  http://www.oledrews.com/job 
~~~




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RE: Design Help [7:15907]

2001-08-13 Thread Steve Smith

Hey Ole, we use all 1720s at the lower end clients. The VPN features are
only there if the right IOS is there. The 2600 should be fine. Look at
your routing protocol, if you are using OSPF or something like that, you
may want and probably will have to bump up the ram DRAM in the 1720 to
handle it as well as the 1600.

IMHO, put at least 50% cir on each line. A lot of carries will tell you
if its local it does not matter but real life will tell you that is
crap.

Good Luck,
Steve

-Original Message-
From: Ole Drews Jensen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 1:42 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Design Help [7:15907]


I would appreciate some good advice on this from some of you design boys
and
girls out there.

I am going to upgrade some of our branch offices from ISDN and DSL to
Frame
Relay, and I need to find the best suited devices to do that.

I want to move away from the (now) slow ISDN and unreliable
(unfortunately)
DSL.

I have been browsing on Cisco's web site, and looking through my Cisco
Product Quick Reference Guide, but I am not 100% sure I have made the
right
selections yet.

I would like to start out connecting my main office with four of our
branch
offices - each with a 256 kbps bandwidth as a starter. My thoughts have
been
as follows:

Main Office:

 o  Cisco 2610 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

Branch Offices:

 o  Cisco 1604 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

or

 o  Cisco 1720 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

I am not sure if I should go with the 1604 or 1720.

The 1604 has ISDN-U which I could use as a backup connection in case the
Frame Relay goes down. The reason that I have not selected the 1601 with
an
option for a ISDN-U WIC later on, is that the T1 doesn't have a build-in
CSU/DSU (why don't they have a 1600 with a fixed T1 with CSU/DCU?).

The 1720 is less expensive than the 1604, and I could then add the ISDN
U
WIC later on if I decide that it is necessary. However, the 1700 is a
VPN
router, and I don't need that, since it goes directly from one router to
another through the Frame Relay. I assume that this feature can be
disabled.

So, back to my question - what would you buy?

Thanks for comments on this,

Ole

~~~
 Ole Drews Jensen
 Systems Network Manager
 CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I
 RWR Enterprises, Inc.
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
~~~
 http://www.RouterChief.com
~~~
 NEED A JOB ???
 http://www.oledrews.com/job
~~~




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Re: I have Troytec / Transcender W2K, I need Boson W2k [7:15918]

2001-08-13 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Don't people lurk anymore before posting?


   

   
William
   
cc:
Sent by: Subject: I have Troytec /
Transcender W2K, I need Boson W2k
nobody@groups   
[7:15912]
   
tudy.com
   

   

   
08/13/2001
03:11
PM
   
Please
respond
to
   
William
   

   





For details, pls email me:

[EMAIL PROTECTED]




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RE: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]

2001-08-13 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer

Cisco research skills are as important as configuration and design skills 
and almost as challenging. When you find something that someone else 
couldn't find, please tell us how you did it. Page-by-page navigation 
instructions are very helpful because they help us learn the structure of 
the documentation.

Your Cisco career will die if you don't get good at finding stuff in the 
documentation, and the only way to get good at this is to spend time with 
it. Here's where I like to start:

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/index.htm

Regarding the search engine, the best advice is not to depend on it too 
much. It is not very effective. It's much better to know where to look in 
the documentation. Also, take some time to learn the search engine's 
caveats for those times when you really want to use it.

For example, the Cisco search engine automatically adds and between the 
words you enter so it only returns those pages that include all of your 
search terms. To restrict a search further, just include more terms.

The search engine does not support the logical or operator. It only 
returns pages that contain all the terms.

You can search for phrases by adding quotation marks. Words enclosed in 
double quotes (like this) will appear together in all returned documents.

Searches are not case sensitive. All letters, regardless of how you type 
them, will be understood as lower case. I discovered this the hard way. I 
did a search on SAID. Big mistake. ;-) But then I changed it to SAID VLAN 
and that was more effective.

There's more info on the search engine here:

http://www.cisco.com/public/extra_search_help.html

Priscilla

At 02:50 PM 8/13/01, Daniel Cotts wrote:
You are correct.
Instead of posting a URL I've sometimes given directions page by page to
show how I reached a given topic.
Any thoughts on how to teach CCO navigation?

  -Original Message-
  From: EA Louie [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
  Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 1:10 PM
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: Re: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]
 
 
  Bri - that sounds good to me!  :-)  although I find that most people
  1.  just don't know WHAT to search for... searching on CCO is
  an art that
  evolves using practice, practice, practice, and weeding out
  the worthless
  hits
  2.  don't know how to find what they searched for in the
  webpages presented
 
  for those who are CCIE bound, it's an imperative to know the
  basics of the
  IOS documentation layout on the CD ROM.  Otherwise, the
  search engine brings
  up way too much information to be sifted through during the Lab.
 
  -e-
 
  - Original Message -
  From: Brian
  To: EA Louie
  Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 10:37 AM
  Subject: Re: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]
 
 
   I suggest a new rule for the list.  If I don't know the
  answer, goto CCO
  to
   search and get the answer easily, about a topic I know very
  little about,
   then I perhaps shouldn't post the results of my arduous search.
  
   Bri
  
   - Original Message -
   From: EA Louie
   To:
   Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 10:45 AM
   Subject: Re: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]
  
  
my search on 'config reg bit settings' got me this hit on
  the first try:
   
   
  
  http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/access/acs_fix
  /cis2500/2509/
acsvrug/maint.htm#20837 (
To:
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 10:10 AM
Subject: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]
   
   
 I have been searching high and low on Cisco's website
  for information
  on
how
 to figure out the hexidecimal values of various Config-Register.
   Example,
 0x2141, 0x102, 0x2142, 0x2102 etc.  I would like to
  know how to figure
   out
 the bit value and be able to tell what each value is trying to
   accomplish
 just by looking at them.  If anyone out there can help
  please do.
  Thank
you



  _
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http://www.priscilla.com




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Re: HSRP [7:14135]

2001-08-13 Thread Thomas

Hi All,

I got kinda the same problem, but it is on the real 6509 w/ 2 sup and 2
MSFCs.  Based on your message below, it seems to resolve the confusion
between priority in groups.  However, beside NAT, I also have EIGRP running.
EIGRP does load balancing on both cards, is there a workaround for this?

Also, let say I have Vlan 10 as the outside NAT interfaces on both MSFCs, so
now with the load balancing of EIGRP, the NATed package still don't know
with VLAN 10 it should go to (VLAN 10 on the first card or the second
card?).  Is it possible that I can have the same VLAN 10 on both cards, but
they are on different group?

Thanks All in advance!  I really need your help here, since whoever setup
the 6509 in our production didn't have it redundancy.  We tried to configure
this 6509 to do its primary job, redundancy while not breaking anything else
(NAT for instant).

Thomas N.


Kevin Wigle  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Correct, but if you use secondary ip addresses and a different group
number
 you can.

 If the original poster wanted 2 HSRP groups where one group was active on
 RouterA on netA and the other was active on RouterB on netB - both groups
 would co-exist and not bother each other.

 If RouterA failed then RouterB would become active on netB as well as
 already active on netA.

 The opposite holds true of course.

 This is also helpful in trying to load balance HSRP by splitting the user
 community manually, half to RouterA and half to RouterB - and maintain
fault
 tolerance.

 Kevin Wigle

 - Original Message -
 From: Erick B.
 To:
 Sent: Monday, 30 July, 2001 06:51
 Subject: Re: HSRP [7:14135]


  I don't quite understand what your asking, but...
 
  IOS will not let you configure the same HSRP/standby
  address or IP subnet on multiple LAN interfaces. You
  would have to use a different IP subnet on each
  Ethernet interface with a HSRP/standby address in that
  subnet.
 
  Were you asking that or ?
 
  --- BASSOLE Rock  wrote:
   Hello group,
  
  
   I want to know if there are problems on doing a
   double HSRP (ethernet1 and
   ethernet0)  with 2 routers (same configuration).
   Have you ever incounter any
   problems (Duplicate addresse, NAT, ...).
  
   Thank you.
  
   Rock BASSOLE
   Til: +33 (0) 1 45 96 22 03
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
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  Make international calls for as low as $.04/minute with Yahoo! Messenger
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RE: High FCS errors on cat5505 [7:15885]

2001-08-13 Thread Thomas Crowe

Check for a duplex mis-match on the interface.  It is a fairly well know
issue that Sun and Cisco's don't auto negotiate well.  Hard code the speed
and duplex on preferably both sides, and you should the FCS errors go away.

__

Thomas Crowe
Senior Systems Engineer / Architect
CTS - Atlanta
Phone: 770-664-3900
Cell: 404-277-4089
__

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
David Eitel
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 1:05 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: High FCS errors on cat5505 [7:15885]


Thanks Frank. You wouldn't happen to have sun boxes giving you problems?

-Original Message-
From: David Eitel
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 12:30 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: High FCS errors on cat5505 [7:15885]


Hello. I'm experiencing huge amounts of fcs errors on my switch.
3/1 91521 fcs errors
3/2 28078 fcs errors
These counters were cleared Friday. I understand that these errors are
usually media related. I've swapped cables so far which has not seemed to
help. I can tell you there is a  sun e450 and e250 attached to these ports.
Do you know of any interoperability issues with the cat 5505 and sun NICS?

Thanks In Advance,
Dave

[GroupStudy.com removed an attachment of type text/x-vcard which had a name
of Thomas Crowe.vcf]




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Sort of Off topic / vpn question [7:15921]

2001-08-13 Thread Marshal Schoener

Hey guys,

My company is using point-to-point frame-relay (64k CIR) between an office
in NY, and an office in Malaysia (Other side of the world).
All of the Malaysian Internet access and email comes through NY first and
then out to the Internet.  It is costing us around 5k/month.
We put some voice over the frame as well...

Anyway, we are looking to get rid of the frame (for performance as well as
cost reasons) and give the other site their own connection to the Internet.
Then we will put a VPN between the two sites.
We are using WorldCom for our T1 to the Internet in the NY office.  WorldCom
does not offer Internet services in Malaysia as of right now.  However they
do offer net access in Singapore which is very close by.  We also have a
small office in Singapore that we can use...

My question is:  Would we be better off going from NY to Singapore with the
VPN because we can both stay with WorldCom and then bring a link from
Singapore into Malaysia...  Or, just go with a Malaysian service provider
for their Internet access and go from NY straight into Malaysia with the
VPN.  I've checked both options out, and both are feasible and more cost
effective than what we are doing right now.

In other words, does staying with the same provider (even on the other side
of the world) give big performance increases when dealing with VPNs?

Thanks a million in advance for any help.




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Re: Cisco Call Manager [7:15402]

2001-08-13 Thread Brad Ellis

Rik,

When you install the latest version of Call Manager it does a bios check.
If you dont have a supported server (hardware), you wont be able to install
CM.  I have heard of a little program floating around Cisco that lets you
install CM on any box (overlooks the BIOS thing).

thanks,
-Brad Ellis
CCIE#5796
Network Learning Inc
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
used Cisco:  www.optsys.net

Rik Guyler  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 If you have a CCO account with the correct permissions, you can download
it.
 Otherwise, talk to your local Cisco Account Manager for a demo or NFR
 version.

 ---
 Rik Guyler

 -Original Message-
 From: Rick Holden [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Wednesday, August 08, 2001 9:04 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Cisco Call Manager [7:15402]


 I am looking to pass the CIPT exam and would like to get a copy of Call
 Manager. Does anyone know where I can get a copy or maybe a shareware
voice
 or an eval? Thanks.
 /Rick




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Help need to find a good reliable datacenter in NY [7:15922]

2001-08-13 Thread Jonathan Chung

Hi everyone.

I would like to know who can provide good reliable datacenter service in NY
city metro area.

Basically, company that I am working for is looking for a datacenter which
we can use it as pickup point for data feed from NYSE and CME (chicago
Merchant Exchange ?) and reroute those data to overseas.

Since I am a novice on this type of project, any info will be appreciated.  

I heard that Exodus is one of the excellent datacenter provider in my area. 
I wish to know if anyone has more detailed info.

Thank you very much.


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Re: Design Help [7:15907]

2001-08-13 Thread nahc

Depending on how many nodes, manageability wise, pick one router, this maybe
overkill for some sites, but in the long run having one model makes life 
easier.

my 2 cent


At 02:42 PM 8/13/01 -0400, Ole Drews Jensen wrote:
I would appreciate some good advice on this from some of you design boys and
girls out there.

I am going to upgrade some of our branch offices from ISDN and DSL to Frame
Relay, and I need to find the best suited devices to do that.

I want to move away from the (now) slow ISDN and unreliable (unfortunately)
DSL.

I have been browsing on Cisco's web site, and looking through my Cisco
Product Quick Reference Guide, but I am not 100% sure I have made the right
selections yet.

I would like to start out connecting my main office with four of our branch
offices - each with a 256 kbps bandwidth as a starter. My thoughts have been
as follows:

Main Office:

  o  Cisco 2610 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

Branch Offices:

  o  Cisco 1604 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

or

  o  Cisco 1720 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

I am not sure if I should go with the 1604 or 1720.

The 1604 has ISDN-U which I could use as a backup connection in case the
Frame Relay goes down. The reason that I have not selected the 1601 with an
option for a ISDN-U WIC later on, is that the T1 doesn't have a build-in
CSU/DSU (why don't they have a 1600 with a fixed T1 with CSU/DCU?).

The 1720 is less expensive than the 1604, and I could then add the ISDN U
WIC later on if I decide that it is necessary. However, the 1700 is a VPN
router, and I don't need that, since it goes directly from one router to
another through the Frame Relay. I assume that this feature can be disabled.

So, back to my question - what would you buy?

Thanks for comments on this,

Ole

~~~
  Ole Drews Jensen
  Systems Network Manager
  CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I
  RWR Enterprises, Inc.
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
~~~
  http://www.RouterChief.com
~~~
  NEED A JOB ???
  http://www.oledrews.com/job
~~~




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RE: IPSec Latency [7:15874]

2001-08-13 Thread Winchester, Derek


The maximum delay for keepalives really depend on your phase one and phase
two lifetimes. And if you have an idle timer set for your tunnels and
whatever that value may be. Keepalives are mostly supported by your router
or vpn box. I haven't ran across a client that supported keepalives.
Although there may be one. It only takes one direct for keepalives to keep
the tunnel up. As for documentation, I haven't seen any. I have been working
with IPSEC for a little over a year now and I have yet to see alot of vender
specific documentation, only because IPSEC is still new and being tweaked. 



-Original Message-
From: Cisco Chic [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 10:32 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: IPSec Latency [7:15874]


Hi All,

I was wondering if anyone has any information or sites
which talk about how to tweak (if this can be done)
IPSec tunnls (via keepalives) from a dial up client to
a VPN5008?

We have a latency of around 800 milliseconds on a 
network and we are trying to determine what the
maximum delay can be in the network to keep the tunnel
up via keepalives. How long can the delay be for the
keepalives and who sends the keepalives or  are the
keepalives sent in both directions via remote dial up
access. (we are using static routes)

I know that a keepalive protocol is used by L2TP in
order to allow it to distinguish between a tunnel
outage and prolonged periods of tunnel inactivity. We
are trying to find out if this can be done for IPSec.

We have a open case with cisco tac currently to get
more details and have been looking at third party web
sites and RFCs. Can't find anything about latency but
have found performance issues concerning bw, memory
etc.

Any information or sites you can direct me to would be
great.

Thanks!!



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Send instant messages  get email alerts with Yahoo! Messenger.
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RE: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]

2001-08-13 Thread Chuck Larrieu

list pricing is pretty much readily available. true, the public tools on CCO
do not provide list pricing. instead they refer you to a Cisco reseller. But
all anyone has to do is ask, and most places I have dealt with have never
had a problem divulging list.

Chuck

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Donald B Johnson jr
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 9:55 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]


Thats impossible or highly not recommended, most of us here work for a
partner and pricing has a lot to do with your partner status. A general
price list could be obtained by Cisco. They will be happy to send someone
out.



- Original Message -
From: Shahir Boshra
To:
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 9:17 AM
Subject: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]


 Hello Group,

 Sorry for the Off topic posting, but I desperately need an updated Cisco
 price list. Can anyone please send it offline?
 Thanks in advance
 Shahir




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RE: load balance between 4 T1s [7:15692]

2001-08-13 Thread Chuck Larrieu

I've seen comments along those lines over on the NANOG group, if that means
anything ;-

Chuck

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Schneider, Matt
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 11:43 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: load balance between 4 T1s [7:15692]


are you saying that CEF is buggy?

-Original Message-
From: Scott M. Trieste [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 2:11 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: load balance between 4 T1s [7:15692]


If your running this implementation with an ISP, chances are they won't use
a technology that has  proved buggy: CEF.  My recommendation would be to use
the load balancing feature of such IGP routing protocols like OSPF or EIGRP.

khramov  wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I am getting 4 T1s but I think I will have only one IP address.  How can
 I load balance 1IP between 4 T1s.
 thanks




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RE: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]

2001-08-13 Thread Ole Drews Jensen

These guys have good prices on Cisco equipment...

http://www.lanblvd.com

I have bought 3 x 3548's and 1 x 2924 there so far, and I haven't had
anything to complain about.

They are (should you search on http://www.cnet.com) most often the cheapest
Cisco on-line store out there.

I am fixing to buy a bunch more this week.

Hth,

Ole

~~~
 Ole Drews Jensen
 Systems Network Manager
 CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I
 RWR Enterprises, Inc.
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
~~~ 
 http://www.RouterChief.com
~~~
 NEED A JOB ???
 http://www.oledrews.com/job
~~~


-Original Message-
From: Chuck Larrieu [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 3:57 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]


list pricing is pretty much readily available. true, the public tools on CCO
do not provide list pricing. instead they refer you to a Cisco reseller. But
all anyone has to do is ask, and most places I have dealt with have never
had a problem divulging list.

Chuck

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Donald B Johnson jr
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 9:55 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]


Thats impossible or highly not recommended, most of us here work for a
partner and pricing has a lot to do with your partner status. A general
price list could be obtained by Cisco. They will be happy to send someone
out.



- Original Message -
From: Shahir Boshra
To:
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 9:17 AM
Subject: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]


 Hello Group,

 Sorry for the Off topic posting, but I desperately need an updated Cisco
 price list. Can anyone please send it offline?
 Thanks in advance
 Shahir




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Re: CCIE Written [7:15870]

2001-08-13 Thread Oliver Nadalin

Well done!! Good luck with the lab!

OSN

Ola Shusi  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi Alll,

 I passed my ccie written on saturday. Thanks for all your contribution.


 Ola Shusi




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Re: CCIE Written [7:15886]

2001-08-13 Thread Oliver Nadalin

The Boson's are really all you'll need .

OSN

Mohammed Nabelsi  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Beside Boson and ccieprep practice questions, can you tell me where I can
 get more practice questions for CCIE written exam?

 Thanks in advance!

 Danny



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7200 and Memory [7:15928]

2001-08-13 Thread Paulo Roque

Hi All,

I have here a Cisco 7204VXR with voice capability, which is having memory
problems.

I have 64Mbytes off memory e the show memory reports:
-
#show version
Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) 7200 Software (C7200-IS-M), Version 12.1(3a)T3,  RELEASE
SOFTWARE (fc1)
. . . . .
ROM: System Bootstrap, Version 12.0(19990210:195103) [12.0XE 105],
DEVELOPMENT SOFTWARE
BOOTFLASH: 7200 Software (C7200-BOOT-M), Version 12.0(10)S, EARLY
DEPLOYMENT RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc1)
. . . . .
System image file is slot0:c7200-is-mz.121-3a.T3

    cisco 7204VXR (NPE300) processor (revision D) with 40960K/24576K
bytes of memory.
Processor board ID 20405135
R7000 CPU at 262Mhz, Implementation 39, Rev 2.1, 256KB L2, 2048KB L3
Cache
4 slot VXR midplane, Version 2.0


As you can see there are 40960K for system memory.
But the command show process memory reports:


#show process memory
Total: 13976896, Used: 13688808, Free: 288088
PID TTY  Allocated  FreedHoldingGetbufsRetbufs Process
   0   0  93804   18089857992  0  0 *Init*
   . . . . . .


As you can see there are ONLY 13,976,896 of memory.
Any ideas about this??

Thanks in advance.

-
Eng. Paulo Roque
Network Engineer
Cisco Certified Network Associate
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




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RE: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]

2001-08-13 Thread Symon Thurlow

if in the uk, www.action.com gives a reasonable price

Symon

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Ole Drews Jensen
Sent: 13 August 2001 22:19
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]


These guys have good prices on Cisco equipment...

http://www.lanblvd.com

I have bought 3 x 3548's and 1 x 2924 there so far, and I haven't had
anything to complain about.

They are (should you search on http://www.cnet.com) most often the cheapest
Cisco on-line store out there.

I am fixing to buy a bunch more this week.

Hth,

Ole

~~~
 Ole Drews Jensen
 Systems Network Manager
 CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I
 RWR Enterprises, Inc.
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
~~~
 http://www.RouterChief.com
~~~
 NEED A JOB ???
 http://www.oledrews.com/job
~~~


-Original Message-
From: Chuck Larrieu [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 3:57 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]


list pricing is pretty much readily available. true, the public tools on CCO
do not provide list pricing. instead they refer you to a Cisco reseller. But
all anyone has to do is ask, and most places I have dealt with have never
had a problem divulging list.

Chuck

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Donald B Johnson jr
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 9:55 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]


Thats impossible or highly not recommended, most of us here work for a
partner and pricing has a lot to do with your partner status. A general
price list could be obtained by Cisco. They will be happy to send someone
out.



- Original Message -
From: Shahir Boshra
To:
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 9:17 AM
Subject: Off Topic: Cisco Price List [7:15883]


 Hello Group,

 Sorry for the Off topic posting, but I desperately need an updated Cisco
 price list. Can anyone please send it offline?
 Thanks in advance
 Shahir




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RE: CCO Navigation [7:15913]

2001-08-13 Thread Daniel Cotts

An addition to the following.
From the CCO Home Page - under Service  Support go to Technical Support
Help - Cisco TAC. From there go to Top Issues and scroll down. Every major
area is covered. 

 -Original Message-
 From: EA Louie [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 2:17 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: CCO Navigation [7:15913]
 
 
 Sure.
 
 1.  start at http://www.cisco.com/univercd/home/home.htm
 2.  choose Cisco IOS Software - Release 12.0 (or whatever 
 release you're
 interested in - I think the Tables of Contents are close to 
 identical from
 11.3 thru 12.2, but I leave this verification as an exercise 
 to the reader)
 3.  Click on Configuration Guides and Command References
 4.  Review that page - it gives the rundown on how the IOS 
 documentation is
 organized by MAJOR TOPIC and TECHNOLOGY
 5.  Systematically click on every Configuration Guide link.  
 Behind it are
 two more sets of table of contents links with more specialized topics.
 Either commit them to memory or print them out, so that you 
 at least know
 where the major topics are located.
 6.  When that exercise is complete, realize that the Command Reference
 exactly parallels the Configuration Guide
 
 The other way to navigate CCO is to use the Master Indexes.  
 That's a little
 trickier, because it just dumps you into a topic page without 
 any context.
 However, the way to work your way backwards from that is to click the
 CONTENTS button on the navigation bar, which will back you 
 out into the
 context and governing topics.
 
 When searching, read the actual URL that the search engine 
 gives you and it
 will indicate what IOS Release the information is pointing 
 to.  I usually
 scroll down until I find a URL hit that has my target Release 
 in it, and
 then navigate the Configuration Guide or Command Reference from there.
 
 Those are some of the methods I use for navigating CCO.  Does 
 anyone else
 have some helpful navigation pointers to share with us?
 
 -e-
 
 - Original Message -
 From: Daniel Cotts 
 To: 'EA Louie' ; 
 Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 11:31 AM
 Subject: RE: Figuring out Config Register Values [7:15894]
 
 
  You are correct.
  Instead of posting a URL I've sometimes given directions 
 page by page to
  show how I reached a given topic.
  Any thoughts on how to teach CCO navigation?
 
 
 
 
 _
 Do You Yahoo!?
 Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
 Report misconduct 
 and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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Cisco 776 M question [7:15932]

2001-08-13 Thread Allen May

Does anyone have a working config for a 776 or something in that series for
routing?  The config on cisco.com stinks.  It has PAT enabledI have a
/29 so I don't want PAT.  PAT disables all inbound traffic at the router so
I have no clue why their only example for routing includes PAT.

If anyone has one in working order I would love to see the upload
configuration.

Thanks

Allen




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RE: Design Help [7:15907]

2001-08-13 Thread Symon Thurlow

Yes, I am working on a 40 node Frame implementation shortly, we are going to
use 3640's at the head office and the 'backup' head office (mainly for
future expansion capability) and 1750's with WIC-1T's. We are going 1750 in
case we move to VoIP at some time in the future (probably not, but hey).

Symon

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 13 August 2001 20:28
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Design Help [7:15907]


The first question is how many locations are we talking about.  I would
prefer the 1720 routers.  These have the same processor as the 2600's.
Don't worry about the VPN features, just don't configure them and it's not
an issue.  These are marketed as VPN routers because of the processing
power.  I believe the 1700's willl be around longer than the 1600's.  Just
my opinion.  I work on a 300+ node frame relay network.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Ole Drews Jensen
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 1:42 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Design Help [7:15907]


I would appreciate some good advice on this from some of you design boys and
girls out there.

I am going to upgrade some of our branch offices from ISDN and DSL to Frame
Relay, and I need to find the best suited devices to do that.

I want to move away from the (now) slow ISDN and unreliable (unfortunately)
DSL.

I have been browsing on Cisco's web site, and looking through my Cisco
Product Quick Reference Guide, but I am not 100% sure I have made the right
selections yet.

I would like to start out connecting my main office with four of our branch
offices - each with a 256 kbps bandwidth as a starter. My thoughts have been
as follows:

Main Office:

 o  Cisco 2610 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

Branch Offices:

 o  Cisco 1604 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

or

 o  Cisco 1720 with a WIC-1DSU-T1=

I am not sure if I should go with the 1604 or 1720.

The 1604 has ISDN-U which I could use as a backup connection in case the
Frame Relay goes down. The reason that I have not selected the 1601 with an
option for a ISDN-U WIC later on, is that the T1 doesn't have a build-in
CSU/DSU (why don't they have a 1600 with a fixed T1 with CSU/DCU?).

The 1720 is less expensive than the 1604, and I could then add the ISDN U
WIC later on if I decide that it is necessary. However, the 1700 is a VPN
router, and I don't need that, since it goes directly from one router to
another through the Frame Relay. I assume that this feature can be disabled.

So, back to my question - what would you buy?

Thanks for comments on this,

Ole

~~~
 Ole Drews Jensen
 Systems Network Manager
 CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I
 RWR Enterprises, Inc.
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
~~~
 http://www.RouterChief.com
~~~
 NEED A JOB ???
 http://www.oledrews.com/job
~~~




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Lightstream 100 Password Recovery [7:15937]

2001-08-13 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

I've seen a few posts in the archives about performing password recovery on
a Lightstream 100, but no answers... Does anyone have a link or instructions
on how to recover the password on one of these?

-chris




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Re: 2501 router... [7:14553]

2001-08-13 Thread Donald B Johnson jr

If we sit the lab the same day please beat me up afterwards, I dont want to
bleed on the routers.


- Original Message -
From: nrf 
To: Donald B Johnson jr 
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 12:42 PM
Subject: Re: 2501 router... [7:14553]



 One other thing.  You shouldn't go around talking like you want to start a
 fight, and then be surprised when somebody actually takes you  up on the
 offer.  I know your title, where you work, and your work phone number.
I'm
 not saying I'm going to peel on over, but I'm just warning you that if you
 continue to flame people like that, one day you're going to get your ass
 seriously kicked; if not by me, then by somebody else.




 - Original Message -
 From: Donald B Johnson jr 
 To: nrf ; 
 Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 8:32 AM
 Subject: Re: 2501 router... [7:14553]


  Hey there its Mr Mellow. I wasn't talking to you I thought you only got
  fired up when provoked. O, and mellow, that spelling thing bounces of me
 and
  sticks to you cause I rubber and you are glue.
  hillarious
  - Original Message -
  From: nrf 
  To: 
  Sent: Friday, August 10, 2001 2:34 PM
  Subject: Re: 2501 router... [7:14553]
 
 
   Once again, wonderful brilliant commentary from the esteemed Mr.
 Johnson.
   We are so graced by the presence of you and your brilliant commentary.
  Why
   is it exactly that you feel the need to get off by biting other
people's
   heads off (and doing so by using 2nd-grade level spelling skills, if
you
   remember our last exchange)?  When are you going to wake up and
realize
  that
   you, sir, are an ass, always have been an ass, and always will be an
 ass?
  
  
  
   Donald B Johnson jr  wrote in message
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
If you have been here a year and don't know:
a. how to research on cco
b. how to check the archives
c. how to connect to console
d. how to change password
e. that you should read a book you purchased that probably has both
   answers
f. that there is a ccna group
g. that this is helpful
h. that I'm a smart a**
then are we to believe that you are going to crimp a roll cable. Or
 are
   you
going to build that by taking the plastic off.
   
   
   
- Original Message -
From: Schmelzer Tim L Contr 12 CPTS/FMS
To:
Sent: Wednesday, August 01, 2001 1:30 PM
Subject: 2501 router... [7:14553]
   
   
 Greetings all.  I'm kinda new to this game, but have been
lurking
  here
for
 about a year now.  I have just been given a 2501 series router and
 now
have
 a few questions.

 How do I build a console cable to connect to it?

 How do I clear any passwords that will be present?

 Is there somewhere that I can get scenarios / lab situations to
  practice
on
 this router?   I have purchased Todd Lammle's CCNA book and look
  forward
to
 using this router with my studies.

 Thanks in advance for any answers, T. Schmelzer




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show ip bgp summary [7:15938]

2001-08-13 Thread Erik Groves

Question that has been killing me...

On IOS versions after 12.0, the command #show ip bgp summary gives the
following output:

show ip bgp summary 
BGP router identifier 5.5.5.6, local AS number 107
BGP table version is 174, main routing table version 174
13 network entries and 15 paths using 1861 bytes of memory
3 BGP path attribute entries using 180 bytes of memory
1 BGP AS-PATH entries using 24 bytes of memory
0 BGP route-map cache entries using 0 bytes of memory
0 BGP filter-list cache entries using 0 bytes of memory
BGP activity 173/1013 prefixes, 205/190 paths, scan interval 15 secs

NeighborVAS MsgRcvd MsgSent   TblVer  InQ OutQ Up/Down 
State/PfxRcd
192.168.12.53   4   107   0   0000 neverActive
192.168.14.13   4   113   33653   33411  17400 1w6d   10


The thing that is killing me is the line BGP activity 173/1013 prefixes,
205/190 paths, scan interval 15 secs.  What exactly do these fields
indicate?  I do not think that they are send/receive on the BGP activity
because the fields are populated on a router which I cleared the BGP process
and the session never left Active state, so no routes were sent/received. 
As for the scan interval, I think it has something to do with the BGP
command #bgp scan-time , but I am not sure what changes in this field will
do?  Any help please!?!?

Thanks!



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Installs [7:15941]

2001-08-13 Thread newbie newbie

Hello all, 

I am new to this forum and i have a question. 

I have a server, a hub, a cisco core switch, and another cisco switch which
i want to use as a switching agent.

My question is this how do i connect them all? So far i have figured out how
to connect the core switch to the other cisco switch (in port x) from which
i connected the DHCP server to the switch (non-core)(in port Y). Can i
connect the hub to the switch (non core) in slot z?

Any help will be greatly appreciated. 

thanks

newbie :(


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Re: bleeding 2501 router... [7:14553]

2001-08-13 Thread EA Louie

you won't be able to bleed on the routers - the proctor won't let you.  You
may, however, bleed on the keyboard and mouse of your workstation.

;-)

- Original Message -
From: Donald B Johnson jr 
To: 
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 3:56 PM
Subject: Re: 2501 router... [7:14553]


 If we sit the lab the same day please beat me up afterwards, I dont want
to
 bleed on the routers.


 - Original Message -
 From: nrf
 To: Donald B Johnson jr
 Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 12:42 PM
 Subject: Re: 2501 router... [7:14553]


 
  One other thing.  You shouldn't go around talking like you want to start
a
  fight, and then be surprised when somebody actually takes you  up on the
  offer.  I know your title, where you work, and your work phone number.
 I'm
  not saying I'm going to peel on over, but I'm just warning you that if
you
  continue to flame people like that, one day you're going to get your ass
  seriously kicked; if not by me, then by somebody else.
 
 
 
 
  - Original Message -
  From: Donald B Johnson jr
  To: nrf ;
  Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 8:32 AM
  Subject: Re: 2501 router... [7:14553]
 
 
   Hey there its Mr Mellow. I wasn't talking to you I thought you only
got
   fired up when provoked. O, and mellow, that spelling thing bounces of
me
  and
   sticks to you cause I rubber and you are glue.
   hillarious
   - Original Message -
   From: nrf
   To:
   Sent: Friday, August 10, 2001 2:34 PM
   Subject: Re: 2501 router... [7:14553]
  
  
Once again, wonderful brilliant commentary from the esteemed Mr.
  Johnson.
We are so graced by the presence of you and your brilliant
commentary.
   Why
is it exactly that you feel the need to get off by biting other
 people's
heads off (and doing so by using 2nd-grade level spelling skills, if
 you
remember our last exchange)?  When are you going to wake up and
 realize
   that
you, sir, are an ass, always have been an ass, and always will be an
  ass?
   
   
   
Donald B Johnson jr  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 If you have been here a year and don't know:
 a. how to research on cco
 b. how to check the archives
 c. how to connect to console
 d. how to change password
 e. that you should read a book you purchased that probably has
both
answers
 f. that there is a ccna group
 g. that this is helpful
 h. that I'm a smart a**
 then are we to believe that you are going to crimp a roll cable.
Or
  are
you
 going to build that by taking the plastic off.



 - Original Message -
 From: Schmelzer Tim L Contr 12 CPTS/FMS
 To:
 Sent: Wednesday, August 01, 2001 1:30 PM
 Subject: 2501 router... [7:14553]


  Greetings all.  I'm kinda new to this game, but have been
 lurking
   here
 for
  about a year now.  I have just been given a 2501 series router
and
  now
 have
  a few questions.
 
  How do I build a console cable to connect to it?
 
  How do I clear any passwords that will be present?
 
  Is there somewhere that I can get scenarios / lab situations to
   practice
 on
  this router?   I have purchased Todd Lammle's CCNA book and look
   forward
 to
  using this router with my studies.
 
  Thanks in advance for any answers, T. Schmelzer
_
Do You Yahoo!?
Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com




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IPSec FTP [7:15943]

2001-08-13 Thread Andre Fecteau

Hello Everyone,

I have a question regarding the use of FTP over IPSec.  I have IPSec running
from a 3640 router to a 7206.  I can do just about every IP service with no
problem except FTP.  I say just about because I haven't tested SSH  a
couple others yet.  Here's the problem when I run FTP client from a Unix box
it works, but it takes a l time to log in.  I can't use FTP
client on a windows box, cause it times out.  Is there some special setting
I'm leaving out or do I just need to buy a card to do the job.  I know a
card will obviously be alot faster, but I figured with no traffic crossing
the network except one FTP client, I should be able to connect with windows
or whatever(This is in a test environment)!!!  Could someone point me in the
right direction?

Thank You,
Andre




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