Re: Problems [7:30079]

2001-12-25 Thread Scottie @ PacBell

FastEther Channel will support 4 interfaces
- Original Message -
From: "Ellis Lam" 
To: 
Sent: Tuesday, December 25, 2001 4:55 AM
Subject: Problems [7:30079]


> What is the feature that NOT included in Fastether Channel ?
>
> A. Up to 6 interfaces can be bundled into one prot-channel
> B. Support of HSRP
>
> My ans is A cos' Fastether channel should support up to 4 int ? Right?
>
>
> In TACAS+, pls advise if the entire packet is encrypted ?




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E1 Terms [7:30100]

2001-12-25 Thread amarjeet singh

Dear group,
 I am confused for some of the terms related to E1 lines. Can some
one tell me the differences between these  terms.

a)  Multichannel E1 & Normal E1
b)  Fractional E1  & Channelized E1
c)  Clear Channel & unchannelized E1



Thanx in advance

Amar




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RE: Problems [7:30079]

2001-12-25 Thread Michael Williams

I could be mistaken, but I think I've seen somethings that support up to 8
interfaces in an etherchannel bundle. From URL: (watch for wrap)

http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/793/lan_switching/6.html

"Some cards and platforms also support Gigabit EtherChannel and have the
ability to use from two to eight ports in an EtherChannel"

>From URL:  (watch for wrap)

http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/cc/techno/media/lan/ether/channel/tech/fetec_wp.htm

"Compatible with Cisco IOS---Fast EtherChannel connections are fully
compatible with Cisco IOS virtual LAN and routing technologies. The
Inter-Switch Link (ISL) VLAN trunking protocol can carry multiple VLANs
across a Fast EtherChannel, and routers attached to Fast EtherChannel trunks
can provide full multiprotocol routing with support for hot standby using
HSRP"

So it would appear both answers A. and B. are incorrect (i.e. they are both
supported by EtherChannel)

As far as TACACS, I read through RFC 1492 (watch for wrap)

http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1492.html

and didn't see where it told about encryption, so I can't offer any help
there.

HTH,
Mike W.




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Re: Passed CCNP Exams [7:30080]

2001-12-25 Thread Yatou Wu

there is also a Routing TCP/IP Volume II by Jeff Doyle. which book is 
better? Volume I or II?

>From: "Stanton" 
>Reply-To: "Stanton" 
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Re: Passed CCNP Exams [7:30080]
>Date: Tue, 25 Dec 2001 14:39:45 -0500
>
>Thanks guys, those 2 books I memetioned above are
>
>1. Routing TCP/IP Volume I (CCIE Professional Development) by Jeff Doyle
>
>2. Internet Routing Architectures -- by Sam Halabi,
>
>
>
>""Yatou Wu""  wrote in message
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > congratulations!
> >
> > would you please tell me the exact titles of the two bibles you 
>mentioned?
> >
> > thanks! Merry chrismas and happy new year!
> >
> > yatou
> >
> >
> > >From: "Stanton"
> > >Reply-To: "Stanton"
> > >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > >Subject: Passed CCNP Exams [7:30080]
> > >Date: Tue, 25 Dec 2001 11:59:10 -0500
> > >
> > >Hi,
> > >
> > >Passed CIT yesterday with 942 and got my CCNP as a gift of X'mas for
> > >myself.
> > >
> > >I spent about 2 months to pass all the CCNP exams with good scores:
> > >Switching 946, Remote 920 and Routing 962.
> > >
> > >The books I used for preparation are focus on Cisco's Study Guide, and 
>I
> > >think Lammle's book for CCNA is perfect, but the others are not good 
>for
> > >CCNP.
> > >
> > >Boson's test questions are very good and cover almost all the topics
> > >reauired by the examinations.
> > >
> > >Furthermore, those 2 bibles from  Doyle and Halabi are good for 
>in-depth
> > >study.
> > >
> > >Merry Christmas and Happy New Year !
> > >
> > >Shengtao
> > >CCNP
> > _
> > Join the worlds largest e-mail service with MSN Hotmail.
> > http://www.hotmail.com
_
MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos: 
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RE: IP classless command [7:30056]

2001-12-25 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Brilliant!

Pierre-Alex

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Bernard Omrani
Sent: Tuesday, December 25, 2001 7:21 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: IP classless command [7:30056]


For a simple explanation if IP classless, see:

http://www.networkking.net/out/ipclassless.htm


Bernard


> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, December 25, 2001 12:41 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: IP classless command [7:30056]
>
> IP CLASSLESS is a little hard to understand.  Even Cisco is very vague
on
> this.  Once a
> TAC engineer just told me that the command just makes routing better.
> Here
> is what I
> believe happens.
>
> If  you don't have the "IP CLASSLESS" command defined in a Cisco
router
> then
> the router
> will not forward any packets towards a default route for any subnets
of a
> classfull
> network that the router thinks are local.  For instance.
>
> Rtr A  local net 10.1.0.0/24.
> 192.168.1.0 interconnects routers a and b
> RTR B  (sends default network only to RTR A and RTR C)
> 192.168.2.0  interconnects routers b and C
> RTR C local net 10.2.0.0/24
> Note how 10.0.0.0 is split by the 192.168.1.0 and 192.168.2.0
networks.
>
> In the above example if RTR A gets a packet destined for 10.2.0.1, but
it
> does not have
> the "IP CLASSLESS" command defined then RTR A will drop the packets.
>
> If you include the IP CLASSLESS command then the packets will be
forwarded
> to the
> default router b.
>
> I hope this helps
> Mike Paulson
> Network Architect
> Infrastructure Design Systems LLP
>
>
> Hunt Lee wrote:
>
> > Can anyone please explain to me what is "ip classless" used for?  I
> looked
> > it up on the Caslow book, and it states that by enabling IP
classless,
> it
> > allows one to override the contiguous subnet rule and allow the
router
> to
> > look for the longest match beyond the listed subnets.
> >
> > But I still don't understand what it means?  Can anyone give me some
> > examples?
> >
> > Thanks in advance.
> >
> > Best Regards,
> > Hunt Lee
> > IP Solution Analyst
> > Cable & Wireless
>
> [GroupStudy.com removed an attachment of type text/x-vcard which had a
> name
> of michael.paulson.vcf]




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RE: any utility tools for Cisco ACS (Unix) ? [7:30094]

2001-12-25 Thread Elijah Savage

I am not sure what you are trying to accomplish here. But I also use
unix and Cisco ACS for access controll and accounting to our network
equipment and only individuals in our department have logins, whay would
you want to give your entire NT domain access to your network equipment
or am I missing something here?
Maybe I have had to much eggnog?

  ,   ,
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For Late Breaking Tech News and OpenSource HowTO's
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-Original Message-
From: fmxiao [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, December 25, 2001 9:16 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: any utility tools for Cisco ACS (Unix) ? [7:30094]


hi group

i have a unix server with Cisco ACS for our company, but some of users
are
windows NT's users, which have oneself account on windows PDC server. Is
there any utility tools for Cisco ACS to extract windows NT accounts
from NT
server and import to Cisco ACS DB?


thx in adv. for person who can help me,
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all in group.




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any utility tools for Cisco ACS (Unix) ? [7:30094]

2001-12-25 Thread fmxiao

hi group

i have a unix server with Cisco ACS for our company, but some of users are
windows NT's users, which have oneself account on windows PDC server. Is
there any utility tools for Cisco ACS to extract windows NT accounts from NT
server and import to Cisco ACS DB?


thx in adv. for person who can help me,
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all in group.




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RE: IP classless command [7:30056]

2001-12-25 Thread Bernard Omrani

For a simple explanation if IP classless, see:

http://www.networkking.net/out/ipclassless.htm


Bernard 
 

> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, December 25, 2001 12:41 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: IP classless command [7:30056]
> 
> IP CLASSLESS is a little hard to understand.  Even Cisco is very vague
on
> this.  Once a
> TAC engineer just told me that the command just makes routing better.
> Here
> is what I
> believe happens.
> 
> If  you don't have the "IP CLASSLESS" command defined in a Cisco
router
> then
> the router
> will not forward any packets towards a default route for any subnets
of a
> classfull
> network that the router thinks are local.  For instance.
> 
> Rtr A  local net 10.1.0.0/24.
> 192.168.1.0 interconnects routers a and b
> RTR B  (sends default network only to RTR A and RTR C)
> 192.168.2.0  interconnects routers b and C
> RTR C local net 10.2.0.0/24
> Note how 10.0.0.0 is split by the 192.168.1.0 and 192.168.2.0
networks.
> 
> In the above example if RTR A gets a packet destined for 10.2.0.1, but
it
> does not have
> the "IP CLASSLESS" command defined then RTR A will drop the packets.
> 
> If you include the IP CLASSLESS command then the packets will be
forwarded
> to the
> default router b.
> 
> I hope this helps
> Mike Paulson
> Network Architect
> Infrastructure Design Systems LLP
> 
> 
> Hunt Lee wrote:
> 
> > Can anyone please explain to me what is "ip classless" used for?  I
> looked
> > it up on the Caslow book, and it states that by enabling IP
classless,
> it
> > allows one to override the contiguous subnet rule and allow the
router
> to
> > look for the longest match beyond the listed subnets.
> >
> > But I still don't understand what it means?  Can anyone give me some
> > examples?
> >
> > Thanks in advance.
> >
> > Best Regards,
> > Hunt Lee
> > IP Solution Analyst
> > Cable & Wireless
> 
> [GroupStudy.com removed an attachment of type text/x-vcard which had a
> name
> of michael.paulson.vcf]




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Re: Problems [7:30079]

2001-12-25 Thread c1sc0k1d

AFAIK, you are correct.  The models I have worked with only support up to 4
ports per group.

The k1d


""Ellis Lam""  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> What is the feature that NOT included in Fastether Channel ?
>
> A. Up to 6 interfaces can be bundled into one prot-channel
> B. Support of HSRP
>
> My ans is A cos' Fastether channel should support up to 4 int ? Right?
>
>
> In TACAS+, pls advise if the entire packet is encrypted ?




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RE: IP classless command [7:30056]

2001-12-25 Thread Dave

Hunt,

With "no ip classless" configured, the router assumes classful behavior.  If
it has any route at all to a network it assumes that it has routing to all
of that major network (this is why RIP has such problems with discontiginous
networks).  If it receives a packet destined for a major network for which
it has routing but for a subnet that it does not have a route to it presumes
that there is no route available to the subnet and black holes it.

If a classful router receives a packet for a major network that it does not
have a route to, it sensibly forwards it to the default route.

This type of behavior only makes sense from the point of view of a classful
routing protocol (RIP, IGRP, etc) where there is an underlying presumption
of knowledge of an entire major network if the router has any routes to that
major network.

"No ip classless" can cause some very weird behavior and should be
configured in modern networks only very cautiously.

Dave

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Hunt Lee
Sent: Tuesday, December 25, 2001 5:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: IP classless command [7:30056]


Hello Mike.  thanks so much for your detailed explanation.  However, I'm
still confused about how the ip classless works.  I understand that
"classful" rules (if no ip classless is configured), with the 10.1.1.0/24
static route, it would forward anything from 10.1.1.1 to 10.1.1.254, but why
would it worked for 11.x.x.x?

Also, with the "ip classless", will it just forward anything like 10.x.x.x?

Thanks again.

Hunt



""Mike""  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> The best way to explain IP classless is to explain how a router works with
> "no ip classless".  Suppose you have a router with a static route
configured
> to 10.1.1.0/24 out some interface and you also have a default gateway
> configured.  Again,  ip classless is disabled, "no ip classless".
>
> A packet comes into the router destined for 10.1.1.2, the router looks at
> the routing table, sees the static route and forwards as expected.
>
> A packet comes into the router destined for 11.x.x.x, the router looks at
> the routing table, sees the default gateway and forwards as expected.
>
> A packet comes into the router destined for 10.10.10.1, you would expect
the
> router to forward the packet via the default gateway.  However, because
the
> router is operting in "classful mode", the router drops the packet rather
> then using the default gateway.  This is because the router is in the same
> classful network as the 10.1.1.0/24 network used for the static route.
>
> If the "ip classless" command was used, the dropped packet would actually
be
> forwarded via the default gateway.  There really is no reason not to use
"ip
> classless" on all router configurations.
>
> Mike
>
>
>
> ""Hunt Lee""  wrote in message
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > Can anyone please explain to me what is "ip classless" used for?  I
looked
> > it up on the Caslow book, and it states that by enabling IP classless,
it
> > allows one to override the contiguous subnet rule and allow the router
to
> > look for the longest match beyond the listed subnets.
> >
> > But I still don't understand what it means?  Can anyone give me some
> > examples?
> >
> > Thanks in advance.
> >
> > Best Regards,
> > Hunt Lee
> > IP Solution Analyst
> > Cable & Wireless




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Re: IP classless command [7:30056]

2001-12-25 Thread Hunt Lee

Hello Mike.  thanks so much for your detailed explanation.  However, I'm
still confused about how the ip classless works.  I understand that
"classful" rules (if no ip classless is configured), with the 10.1.1.0/24
static route, it would forward anything from 10.1.1.1 to 10.1.1.254, but why
would it worked for 11.x.x.x?

Also, with the "ip classless", will it just forward anything like 10.x.x.x?

Thanks again.

Hunt



""Mike""  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> The best way to explain IP classless is to explain how a router works with
> "no ip classless".  Suppose you have a router with a static route
configured
> to 10.1.1.0/24 out some interface and you also have a default gateway
> configured.  Again,  ip classless is disabled, "no ip classless".
>
> A packet comes into the router destined for 10.1.1.2, the router looks at
> the routing table, sees the static route and forwards as expected.
>
> A packet comes into the router destined for 11.x.x.x, the router looks at
> the routing table, sees the default gateway and forwards as expected.
>
> A packet comes into the router destined for 10.10.10.1, you would expect
the
> router to forward the packet via the default gateway.  However, because
the
> router is operting in "classful mode", the router drops the packet rather
> then using the default gateway.  This is because the router is in the same
> classful network as the 10.1.1.0/24 network used for the static route.
>
> If the "ip classless" command was used, the dropped packet would actually
be
> forwarded via the default gateway.  There really is no reason not to use
"ip
> classless" on all router configurations.
>
> Mike
>
>
>
> ""Hunt Lee""  wrote in message
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > Can anyone please explain to me what is "ip classless" used for?  I
looked
> > it up on the Caslow book, and it states that by enabling IP classless,
it
> > allows one to override the contiguous subnet rule and allow the router
to
> > look for the longest match beyond the listed subnets.
> >
> > But I still don't understand what it means?  Can anyone give me some
> > examples?
> >
> > Thanks in advance.
> >
> > Best Regards,
> > Hunt Lee
> > IP Solution Analyst
> > Cable & Wireless




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Re: Passed CCNP Exams [7:30080]

2001-12-25 Thread Suranjith Ariyapperuma

Hi Stanton
Congratulations. It's amazing 2 months brillient.
All the best
Suranjith


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Re: IP classless command [7:30056]

2001-12-25 Thread Michael Paulson

IP CLASSLESS is a little hard to understand.  Even Cisco is very vague on
this.  Once a
TAC engineer just told me that the command just makes routing better.  Here
is what I
believe happens.

If  you don't have the "IP CLASSLESS" command defined in a Cisco router then
the router
will not forward any packets towards a default route for any subnets of a
classfull
network that the router thinks are local.  For instance.

Rtr A  local net 10.1.0.0/24.
192.168.1.0 interconnects routers a and b
RTR B  (sends default network only to RTR A and RTR C)
192.168.2.0  interconnects routers b and C
RTR C local net 10.2.0.0/24
Note how 10.0.0.0 is split by the 192.168.1.0 and 192.168.2.0 networks.

In the above example if RTR A gets a packet destined for 10.2.0.1, but it
does not have
the "IP CLASSLESS" command defined then RTR A will drop the packets.

If you include the IP CLASSLESS command then the packets will be forwarded
to the
default router b.

I hope this helps
Mike Paulson
Network Architect
Infrastructure Design Systems LLP


Hunt Lee wrote:

> Can anyone please explain to me what is "ip classless" used for?  I looked
> it up on the Caslow book, and it states that by enabling IP classless, it
> allows one to override the contiguous subnet rule and allow the router to
> look for the longest match beyond the listed subnets.
>
> But I still don't understand what it means?  Can anyone give me some
> examples?
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> Best Regards,
> Hunt Lee
> IP Solution Analyst
> Cable & Wireless

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




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Re: ICMP Error [7:30030]

2001-12-25 Thread AMR

Check your subnet masks.  Your Linux server is sending to a broadcast
address which would indicate that there is a machine configured with the
broadcast address of a subnet - not a host address.  And yes - some OSs
allow that.

""Cisco Breaker""  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hi All,
>
> I have a client that installed a Linux NIS server which is working with
> broadcasts. That server is connected to cisco 4908. Server IP is
> 192.168.5.2. He is saying that when NIS server starts to work all clients
> and NIS server is receiving a message at below,
>
> " 192.168.5.2 sent an invalid ICMP error to broadcast"
>
> What is the meaning of this message, I searched on cisco but didnt find
> anything. Can it be because of  "no ip directed-broadcast" command on the
> interface.
>
> Any help will be appreciated?
>
> Best regards,




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Re: IP addressing Subnetting [7:24712]

2001-12-25 Thread Michael Paulson

- You can use all 4 subnets on your example of 10.60.0.0/24 range.
There are times when you need the "ip subnet-zero" command.  In your case
you should not
need.  If you you had chosen the range 10.0.0.0 /24, then the command ip
subnet-zero
command would be relevant.

- You should not use 10.60.0.63 as a host IP address and a broadcast address
at the same
time.  In other words if you subnet mask is 255.255.255.192, 224, 240, 248
or 252 then
do not use the .[63] address for a host.

However if in the above example your subnet mask was 255.255.255.128 or .0
then the
[.63] address can be used for a host.

Mike

Tribavan Raina wrote:

> Hi..
>
> I was going through some subnetting scenarios and came across this stuf
> which is confusing for me.We have been given a network range of
>
> 10.60.0.0/24.
> We have 3 routers which are connected back to back and they all have 3
> ethernet ports for 3 ethernet networks.Each subnet will have max. hosts 60
> and we also need to design IP addressing for serial links with max.2 IP
> addresses to conserve IP addresses.
> In the solution it says,
> For
> 60 hosts we need minimum 6 bits ,2^6-2=62 hosts per subnet.
> By subnetting 10.60.0.0/24
> we get 4 subnets with 26 bit mask.
> 10.60.0.0/26
> 10.60.0.64/26
> 10.60.0.128/26
> 10.60.0.192/26
> NOw my question is that can we use 1st and 4th subnet as the rule says that
> u cant use subnet with all 0's and all 1's.
> Same way for the network
> 10.60.0.0/26 the first host would be
> 10.60.0.1/26 and the broadcast address would be
> 10.60.0.63/26
> Can I use 10.60.0.63 as an IP address ,and If not what will happen if I
ping
> this broadcast address.
> I tried this on Win2k and it allows me to use broadcast ip for a network
> interface
> .What is the effect of using broadcast IP as a IP address on a network
card?
>
> Thanks in advance
>
> Tribavan Raina

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Re: Passed CCNP Exams [7:30080]

2001-12-25 Thread Stanton

Thanks guys, those 2 books I memetioned above are

1. Routing TCP/IP Volume I (CCIE Professional Development) by Jeff Doyle

2. Internet Routing Architectures -- by Sam Halabi,



""Yatou Wu""  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> congratulations!
>
> would you please tell me the exact titles of the two bibles you mentioned?
>
> thanks! Merry chrismas and happy new year!
>
> yatou
>
>
> >From: "Stanton"
> >Reply-To: "Stanton"
> >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >Subject: Passed CCNP Exams [7:30080]
> >Date: Tue, 25 Dec 2001 11:59:10 -0500
> >
> >Hi,
> >
> >Passed CIT yesterday with 942 and got my CCNP as a gift of X'mas for
> >myself.
> >
> >I spent about 2 months to pass all the CCNP exams with good scores:
> >Switching 946, Remote 920 and Routing 962.
> >
> >The books I used for preparation are focus on Cisco's Study Guide, and I
> >think Lammle's book for CCNA is perfect, but the others are not good for
> >CCNP.
> >
> >Boson's test questions are very good and cover almost all the topics
> >reauired by the examinations.
> >
> >Furthermore, those 2 bibles from  Doyle and Halabi are good for in-depth
> >study.
> >
> >Merry Christmas and Happy New Year !
> >
> >Shengtao
> >CCNP
> _
> Join the worlds largest e-mail service with MSN Hotmail.
> http://www.hotmail.com




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Re: Passed CCNP Exams [7:30080]

2001-12-25 Thread Yatou Wu

congratulations!

would you please tell me the exact titles of the two bibles you mentioned?

thanks! Merry chrismas and happy new year!

yatou


>From: "Stanton" 
>Reply-To: "Stanton" 
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Passed CCNP Exams [7:30080]
>Date: Tue, 25 Dec 2001 11:59:10 -0500
>
>Hi,
>
>Passed CIT yesterday with 942 and got my CCNP as a gift of X'mas for 
>myself.
>
>I spent about 2 months to pass all the CCNP exams with good scores:
>Switching 946, Remote 920 and Routing 962.
>
>The books I used for preparation are focus on Cisco's Study Guide, and I
>think Lammle's book for CCNA is perfect, but the others are not good for
>CCNP.
>
>Boson's test questions are very good and cover almost all the topics
>reauired by the examinations.
>
>Furthermore, those 2 bibles from  Doyle and Halabi are good for in-depth
>study.
>
>Merry Christmas and Happy New Year !
>
>Shengtao
>CCNP
_
Join the worlds largest e-mail service with MSN Hotmail. 
http://www.hotmail.com




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Re: how do I add the vpn dial network adapter in win98 ? [7:30082]

2001-12-25 Thread isross

Follow these steps to add the virtual private network (VPN) component of
Windows 98:

Double-click My Computer, then Control Panel, and finally Add/Remove
Programs.


Select the Windows Setup tab, then double-click Communications.


Check the box next to Virtual Private Networking.


Click OK. Insert your Windows CD if you are prompted for it.
To create a VPN connection, follow these steps:

Double-click My Computer, then Dial-Up Networking, and finally Make New
Connection.


Type a name for your connection.


In the "Select a Device:" field, choose Microsoft VPN Adapter. Click the
Next button.


Type the name or IP address of the VPN server. Click Next.





Click the Finish button.


Right-click the new connection and, from the menu that appears, select
Properties.


Click the Server Types tab.


Uncheck the NetBEUI and IPX/SPX Compatible protocols.


Click the OK button.

Double-click My Computer, then Control Panel, and finally Network.


In the list of installed components, select Client for Microsoft Networks
and click the Properties button.


In the "Windows NT domain:" field, enter the domain names.


Click OK twice.


Restart your computer if you are prompted to do so.
To establish the VPN connection, follow these steps below:
Double-click My Computer, then Dial-Up Networking.


Double-click the connection with the name you created above. You will be
prompted for a username and password.

Click the Connect button.


When the connection is established, you should see a new icon in the system
tray. (This icon is the same as the icon for dial-up connections.)


To disconnect and terminate the connection, double-click the icon and choose
Disconnect.

- Original Message -
From: chenyan 
To: 
Sent: Tuesday, December 25, 2001 2:15 AM
Subject: how do I add the vpn dial network adapter in win98 ? [7:30072]


> qwe




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Re: Passed CCNP Exams [7:30080]

2001-12-25 Thread Ocsic

The greatest Christmas Gift.
Congratulations!
Bravo!  Well Done!


""Stanton""   Hi,
>
> Passed CIT yesterday with 942 and got my CCNP as a gift of X'mas for
myself.
>
> I spent about 2 months to pass all the CCNP exams with good scores:
> Switching 946, Remote 920 and Routing 962.
>
> The books I used for preparation are focus on Cisco's Study Guide, and I
> think Lammle's book for CCNA is perfect, but the others are not good for
> CCNP.
>
> Boson's test questions are very good and cover almost all the topics
> reauired by the examinations.
>
> Furthermore, those 2 bibles from  Doyle and Halabi are good for in-depth
> study.
>
> Merry Christmas and Happy New Year !
>
> Shengtao
> CCNP




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Passed CCNP Exams [7:30080]

2001-12-25 Thread Stanton

Hi,

Passed CIT yesterday with 942 and got my CCNP as a gift of X'mas for myself.

I spent about 2 months to pass all the CCNP exams with good scores:
Switching 946, Remote 920 and Routing 962.

The books I used for preparation are focus on Cisco's Study Guide, and I
think Lammle's book for CCNA is perfect, but the others are not good for
CCNP.

Boson's test questions are very good and cover almost all the topics
reauired by the examinations.

Furthermore, those 2 bibles from  Doyle and Halabi are good for in-depth
study.

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year !

Shengtao
CCNP




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Problems [7:30079]

2001-12-25 Thread Ellis Lam

What is the feature that NOT included in Fastether Channel ?

A. Up to 6 interfaces can be bundled into one prot-channel
B. Support of HSRP

My ans is A cos' Fastether channel should support up to 4 int ? Right?


In TACAS+, pls advise if the entire packet is encrypted ?


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Re: E1 bandwidth question [7:30077]

2001-12-25 Thread Theo

Hi,

E1 provides 2048 Kbps only when using an E1 controller in the UNFRAMED mode
(channel-group 0 unframed); otherwise, when configuring channel-group 0
timeslots 1-31 you get only 1984 Kbps (timeslot 0 is used for frame
delineation). Note that you cannot set Unframed mode on all Cisco E1
controllers.
Yes, it is full-duplex (you can have 2 megs on both directions at the same
time).

Hope this will help,

Theo


""Cezar Fistik""  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hello all,
>
> Can someone help me understand how E1 bandwidth is calculated? I know that
> it is 2048Kbps, but I don't know if this means that it is 2Mbps in both
> directions, (which will be 4Mbps, something like when we're talking about
> full duplex fastethernet and we say that it is 200Mbps), or only up to
2Mbps
> for transmit and recieve.
>
> Thank you very much,
>
> Cezar




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E1 bandwidth question [7:30077]

2001-12-25 Thread Cezar Fistik

Hello all,

Can someone help me understand how E1 bandwidth is calculated? I know that
it is 2048Kbps, but I don't know if this means that it is 2Mbps in both
directions, (which will be 4Mbps, something like when we're talking about
full duplex fastethernet and we say that it is 200Mbps), or only up to 2Mbps
for transmit and recieve.

Thank you very much,

Cezar




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Re: Subinterface P-2-P [7:30070]

2001-12-25 Thread Scottie @ PacBell

Are you trying to create a point-to-point frame relay subinterface?  If so
make sure you have the "encapsulation frame-relay" command under the major
physical interface.
- Original Message -
From: "Mohammed Nabelsi" 
To: 
Sent: Monday, December 24, 2001 11:52 PM
Subject: Re: Subinterface P-2-P [7:30070]


> Can you do a "sh ru" and post it!
> Thanks
> - Original Message -
> From: "Ash Aslam"
> To:
> Sent: Monday, December 24, 2001 10:24 PM
> Subject: Subinterface P-2-P [7:30070]
>
>
> > Hello group,
> >
> > I am trying to set-up a point-to-point subinterface but I do not see the
> > point-to-point or multipoint options under the physical interface as
> > follows:
> >
> > r5-s(config)#interface serial 0.1 ?
> >
> >
> > I am having problems creating the point-to-point subinterface on both
the
> > 2500 and 2600 router platforms.  2503 has IOS Version 12.1(5) and 2612
has
> > IOS Version 12.1(4).  I am not sure if this is IOS bug related.
> >
> > I have tried various things but to no avail.  Can anyone shed some light
> > with a brief example?
> >
> > Thanks in adv,
> > Ash




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Re: Data [7:30074]

2001-12-25 Thread Scottie @ PacBell

If you have NICs in the PC, you can plug into a hub or use a cross over
cable between the two and that should work.  Of course you'll have to assign
them ip address also.
- Original Message -
From: "A Makinde" 
To: 
Sent: Tuesday, December 25, 2001 1:20 AM
Subject: Data [7:30074]


> Please is need i help in relation to above subject. Is there any other way
> that i can transfer data from one pc to another,without using Dial up
modem?
> My company is in the business of data transering & am looking into this
> issue.
> Kind regards,
>
>
> Mike.




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