Distribute-list with Extended ACL [7:47920]

2002-07-02 Thread Hunt Lee

Hi,

I have an e.g. on neighbor distribute list with Extended ACL (2 lines in
total) but I'm not too sure whether I'm heading the right way...

access-list 101 permit ip 131.108.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 0.0.0.0

In this line, I understand that since the wildcard mask for both network 
mask are 0.0.0.0, it means that it will permit only 131.108.0.0 /24

access-list 101 deny ip 131.108.0.0 0.0.255.255 255.255.0.0 0.0.255.255

So does this mean it will deny 131.108.0.1 to 131.108.255.254, while the
prefix being deny is between /16 - /32.

Am I correct??

Thanks for your help again.

Best Regards,
Hunt Lee




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RE: OT - Networkers, Orlando [7:47921]

2002-07-02 Thread Philip Jache

I will be there and would like to meet up with any members.

Phil

= Original Message From R. Benjamin Kessler 
 =
Anyone from the list going?  Is there going to be a GroupStudy
gathering?
_
Commercial lab list: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/commercial.html
Please discuss commercial lab solutions on this list.




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Re: Confusion: Channelized and Unchannelized T1 [7:47844]

2002-07-02 Thread Wesley

I think the main thing to note about cT1s is bit robbed signalling i.e
channel asscociated signalling normally used to transport voice. Therefore,
we've got 7 bits of payload, 1 bit for signalling for every timeslot and 1
bit for framing. Bit robbed signalling would effectively yield a 56 kbps
pipe as opposed to 64 kbps offered by ISDN PRI. However, 64 kbps (1
timeslot) of the 24 timeslots is used for signalling. This is also known as
common channel signalling. As I understand it, there are three major types
of services riding on T1 links:

1. Pure data T1 i.e. unchannelized T1
2. Channelized T1 and
3. ISDN PRI

Wes


Steven A. Ridder  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I think a channelized T1 sends 193 bit frames as well.  8 for each channel
 plus 1 for timing = 193.

 All T1's are channelized, otherwise it would have to be some sort of
 byte-synch communication, which isn't plausible.

 I think the tech you spoke to is incorrect as well.


 John Neiberger  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Just when I thought I understood the T1 world pretty well we've run into
   a situation that is thoroughly confusing me.
 
  I was under the impression that channelized T1 services used 24
  timeslots.  I call that 'channelized' because it has 24 distinct
  'channels'.  It's my understanding that unchannelized T1 doesn't use the
  24 timeslots and instead sends one giant 192-bit frame.
 
  At one of our locations we are muxing voice and data traffic onto a
  single T1.  At each end we split off certain channels to a router and
  other channels over to the PBX.  To do this, wouldn't the T1 *have* to
  be channelized, since we're separating the channels at the CSU/DSU?
  According to our provider, that circuit is unchannelized.  If a circuit
  is truly unchannelized, how would the CSU/DSU be able to accurately
  split the T1 into two separate streams based on channel information?
 
  To be more clear, let's say we have the CSU/DSU configured to split
  channels 1-12 to the router and 13-24 to the PBX.  This splitting
  function is based on the assumption that channels exist on the incoming
  T1.  If they don't exist and we have one giant frame instead of 24
  smaller frames, how could this possibly be working??
 
  Yowza...my head hurts.
 
  John




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CCNA Exam [7:47925]

2002-07-02 Thread Joupin

Hi all

Im going to sit for CCNA soon ,
would you give me the address of some usefull sites




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CCNA Exam [7:47923]

2002-07-02 Thread Joupin

Hi all

Im going to sit for CCNA soon ,
would you give me the address of some usefull sites




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CCNA Exam [7:47924]

2002-07-02 Thread Joupin

Hi all

Im going to sit for CCNA soon ,
would you give me the address of some usefull sites




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Re: unity question [7:47917]

2002-07-02 Thread Steven A. Ridder

the Message waiting thing is the lamp on a phone that lights up indicating
you have voicemail.  I have no idea what a dual phones system is.

--

RFC 1149 Compliant.



supernet  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 What means dual phone system? Is it traditional phone system and IP
 phone system in the same environment?

 What are MessageWaitingOffDN and MessageWaitingOnDN used for? I
 understand when dial those DNs, the LED on IP phone will light up or
 off, but why do we want this function?

 Thanks.
 Yoshi




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Re: Confusion: Channelized and Unchannelized T1 [7:47844]

2002-07-02 Thread Steven A. Ridder

I think even a pure data T1 is channelized.  Even the PRI is as well.

--

RFC 1149 Compliant.



Wesley  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I think the main thing to note about cT1s is bit robbed signalling i.e
 channel asscociated signalling normally used to transport voice.
Therefore,
 we've got 7 bits of payload, 1 bit for signalling for every timeslot and 1
 bit for framing. Bit robbed signalling would effectively yield a 56 kbps
 pipe as opposed to 64 kbps offered by ISDN PRI. However, 64 kbps (1
 timeslot) of the 24 timeslots is used for signalling. This is also known
as
 common channel signalling. As I understand it, there are three major types
 of services riding on T1 links:

 1. Pure data T1 i.e. unchannelized T1
 2. Channelized T1 and
 3. ISDN PRI

 Wes


 Steven A. Ridder  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  I think a channelized T1 sends 193 bit frames as well.  8 for each
channel
  plus 1 for timing = 193.
 
  All T1's are channelized, otherwise it would have to be some sort of
  byte-synch communication, which isn't plausible.
 
  I think the tech you spoke to is incorrect as well.
 
 
  John Neiberger  wrote in message
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
   Just when I thought I understood the T1 world pretty well we've run
into
a situation that is thoroughly confusing me.
  
   I was under the impression that channelized T1 services used 24
   timeslots.  I call that 'channelized' because it has 24 distinct
   'channels'.  It's my understanding that unchannelized T1 doesn't use
the
   24 timeslots and instead sends one giant 192-bit frame.
  
   At one of our locations we are muxing voice and data traffic onto a
   single T1.  At each end we split off certain channels to a router and
   other channels over to the PBX.  To do this, wouldn't the T1 *have* to
   be channelized, since we're separating the channels at the CSU/DSU?
   According to our provider, that circuit is unchannelized.  If a
circuit
   is truly unchannelized, how would the CSU/DSU be able to accurately
   split the T1 into two separate streams based on channel information?
  
   To be more clear, let's say we have the CSU/DSU configured to split
   channels 1-12 to the router and 13-24 to the PBX.  This splitting
   function is based on the assumption that channels exist on the
incoming
   T1.  If they don't exist and we have one giant frame instead of 24
   smaller frames, how could this possibly be working??
  
   Yowza...my head hurts.
  
   John




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RE: Confusion: Channelized and Unchannelized T1 [7:47844]

2002-07-02 Thread Matthew Crane

Hi John

Thought I would just add a few words from 'T1 A survival guide' from
O'Reilly.

T1 = DS1 delivered over a 4 wire copper interface
DS1 = Digital Stream level 1 - 24 DS0's combined into a DS1 which supplies
1536 kbps connectivity plus 8 kbps framing and signalling overhead for a
total of 1544kbps.
DS0 = A single 64kbps channel.

p149 - Each time slot in the T1 has the capacity to support one traditional
telephone call. Channelised T1 does exactly this - each of the 24 time slots
can be treated as a digital telephone line. Each line has a 64kbps raw
capacity, but since a byte must be used for signalling the maximum thoughput
of a cT1 channel is 56kbps. On ther otherhand unchannelised T1 simply views
each time slot as the opporunity to send another 8bits of data to the remote
end and the enite capacity is one big pipe.

p163 - Configuring cT1...Individual DS0's may be configured for different
purposes. Some may be used for voice, some for data and different time slots
may use different types of signalling.

The book itself concentrates on unchannelised T1 and has been a great help
to me over the past months working in the States, since in Europe we have
simple E1

Regards

MFC




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Re: Dual Link redundancy .... [7:47854]

2002-07-02 Thread Paul

Can't I use the port group 1 distribution destination on both switches ???

I tried using set trunk ... but the switch did'nt understand the command ...
the switch is running Version 12.0(5.3) and it is a WS-C3524-XL. I tried
running the set trunk command from global config and int config mode  do
I assume that this will only run on a router  and not a switch ??? and
if so .. do I need to use the port group 1 distribution destination on both
switches ???

Thankx

Paul ...

- Original Message -
From: Chris Harshman 
To: 
Sent: Monday, July 01, 2002 7:58 PM
Subject: RE: Dual Link redundancy  [7:47854]


 Configure both links as trunks then form an ether-channel.  Both links
will
 pass traffic but a failure of one will not affect the other.

 Cisco Example:
 set trunk 1/1 dot1q on
 set trunk 1/2 dot1q on

 set port channel 1/1-2 on




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RE: Dual Link redundancy .... [7:47854]

2002-07-02 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Hi Paul,

The 3524-XL is not a set based switch. It is an IOS based switch. The
commands would be different. Don't have access to internet / documentation
right now but it would be done under each 'interface' ie. Fastethernet 0/2
etc

Thanks
Manish
-Original Message-
From: Paul [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: 02 July 2002 12:20 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Dual Link redundancy  [7:47854]


Can't I use the port group 1 distribution destination on both switches ???

I tried using set trunk ... but the switch did'nt understand the command ...
the switch is running Version 12.0(5.3) and it is a WS-C3524-XL. I tried
running the set trunk command from global config and int config mode  do
I assume that this will only run on a router  and not a switch ??? and
if so .. do I need to use the port group 1 distribution destination on both
switches ???

Thankx

Paul ...

- Original Message -
From: Chris Harshman 
To: 
Sent: Monday, July 01, 2002 7:58 PM
Subject: RE: Dual Link redundancy  [7:47854]


 Configure both links as trunks then form an ether-channel.  Both links
will
 pass traffic but a failure of one will not affect the other.

 Cisco Example:
 set trunk 1/1 dot1q on
 set trunk 1/2 dot1q on

 set port channel 1/1-2 on




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RE: Dual Link redundancy .... [7:47854]

2002-07-02 Thread Michael Williams

Off of the top of my head, I'd say something like this:

interface FastEthernet 0/1
 channel-group 1 mode [auto | desirable | on]

interface FastEthernet 0/2
 channel-group 1 mode [auto | desirable | on]

interface Port-Channel 1
 

HTH,
Mike W.




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Re: CCNA Exam [7:47925]

2002-07-02 Thread Johnny Routin

www.HowToPostOnlyOnce.com





Joupin  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi all

 Im going to sit for CCNA soon ,
 would you give me the address of some usefull sites




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VTP (core 6509 Access 3548's) [7:47934]

2002-07-02 Thread A N

Version 12.0(5)WC3b

When I add new 3548's running the code version above it takes the addition or
deletion of a VLAN to get them to receive the update.  They would go for
weeks
without seeing an update and not have correct VLAN information until there is
a change in the VTP domain.  All I need to know now is how to FORCE a VTP
advertisement from the core, since it only seems to flood them when a VLAN
change occurs. In the VTP status of the 3548s showed it hadn't received an
update since like 3 months ago, it was all correct and there have been NO
changes in 3 months. As soon as I added a test VLAN all switches were set to
the current date. So all I need to do is be able to force VTP advertisements
with out having to delete or create a VLAN. Any ideas?  (This is NOT a
problem
with my Cat 4006's)

Thanks,

Anthony




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Re: CCNA Exam [7:47925]

2002-07-02 Thread John Kelley

muhahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha


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Authentication with RSA ACE Server [7:47936]

2002-07-02 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Hi Folks,

Quick question

 A simple yes / no is all I require. I'll do the research later :)

Can we configure a Cisco Router (3620-Mbundle) to use an RSA ACE Server for
authentication. The users will have Key Fob devices? 

Thanks
Manish




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RE: Looking for CCIE lab partner in Chicago (Plainfiel [7:47845]

2002-07-02 Thread Kage Roc

HEY I LIVE IN PLAINFIELD I was going for the lab July 24th in SJ but I
pushed the panic button.  I have a seat for Dec.  but I am planning to swap
for a Sept.  I have lots of stuff and I could use a partner too.  Give me a
ring if you would like at 630-616-5141.  BTW Where in Plainfiel;d do you
live?  IM near caton farm/59


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Re: Authentication with RSA ACE Server [7:47936]

2002-07-02 Thread A N

yes
- Original Message -
From: 
To: 
Sent: Tuesday, July 02, 2002 8:23 AM
Subject: Authentication with RSA ACE Server [7:47936]


 Hi Folks,

 Quick question

  A simple yes / no is all I require. I'll do the research later :)

 Can we configure a Cisco Router (3620-Mbundle) to use an RSA ACE Server
for
 authentication. The users will have Key Fob devices?

 Thanks
 Manish




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Re: Authentication with RSA ACE Server [7:47936]

2002-07-02 Thread Marcin Strzyzewski

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Hi Folks,

 A simple yes / no is all I require. I'll do the research later :)

Can we configure a Cisco Router (3620-Mbundle) to use an RSA ACE Server for
authentication. The users will have Key Fob devices? 

  


yes. we use it on 7200

marcin




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Re: Took the MPLS exam and flunked [7:47830]

2002-07-02 Thread Tom Scott

Mike Bernico wrote:

 To prepare I used MPLS and VPN architectures by Ivan Pepelnjak and also

 Advanced MPLS Design and Implementation by Vivek Alwayn.  The second book

 was much more pertinent to the test and I believe is being revised for
test,

 but check ciscopress.com for that.

There's a new edition of the Pepelnjak book advertised on the
ciscopress.com website: MPLS and VPN Architectures, CCIP Edition.
How does it differ from the original? I hope I won't have to buy the
CCIP Edition, but if it's a significant boost in preparing for the
MPLS exam, I'll do it.

-- TT




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Re: Networkers Power Slides [7:47900]

2002-07-02 Thread Steven A. Ridder

Found the link finally.

pad
pad

http://www.cisco.com/networkers/nw02/update/index.html



Steven A. Ridder  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 What are the power slides?  But they are publically available, I just have
 to find the link

 --

 RFC 1149 Compliant.



 JohnZ  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Does any one have the link to the Power Slides from San Diego Networkers
 02.
  Are these even available yet.
  Thanks




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Re: new CIT [7:47777]

2002-07-02 Thread Tom Scott

Historically, T1 and E1 are different from HDSL. However, they now use
HDSL in the US to provide 24-channel circuits on a single pair of
copper, as compared to the two pairs used for the traditional T1. I
wouldn't be surprised if a similar situation occurs with HDSL and E1.
Unfortunately, it's been four years since I worked with loop
technologies, so I can't guarantee accuracy. Anyone else out there
who's currently supporting HDSL?

-- TT


Mark Odette II wrote:

 Ashir, I could be wrong, but I think an E1 circuit and an HDSL circuit
 are two different things!
[snip]



 -Original Message-
 From: Ashir73 (CubeXSPlanet.com) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
 Sent: Monday, July 01, 2002 2:18 AM
 To: Mark Odette II; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: new CIT [7:4]
 
 guide me which is the best hdsl modems to carry E1 on a single copper
 pair




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Re: Flash init failed (permission denied). [7:47825]

2002-07-02 Thread Matt Mullins

You are in ROM MON mode on the switch.  You need to run the suggested
commands

flash_init
load_helper
boot

once you do a flash_init and load_helper you can use the ? to see what
command are available.  You will probably need to load an image onto your
switch using xmodem before it will boot properly.


Marian Iordanescu  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi group,

 I have the folowing problem. have Found You the solution for this
 problem yet?

 C2950 Boot Loader (CALHOUN-HBOOT-M) Version 12.0(5.3)WC(1), MAINTENANCE
 INTERIM
 SOFTWARE
 Compiled Mon 30-Apr-01 07:56 by devgoyal
 WS-C2950-24 starting...
 Base ethernet MAC Address: 00:07:84:f9:09:40
 Unable to initialize flash device at 0xBF00 -- device not found.
 Xmodem file system is available.
 Initializing Flash...
 ...no flash filesystems found.

 The system has been interrupted, or encountered an error
 during initializion of the flash filesystem.  The following
 commands will initialize the flash filesystem, and finish
 loading the operating system software:

 flash_init
 load_helper
 boot

 switch: dir flash:
 unable to stat flash:/: permission denied
 switch: flash_init
 Initializing Flash...
 ...no flash filesystems found.
 switch: copy xmodem: flash:c2950-c3h2s-mz.120-5.3.WC.1.bin
 Begin the Xmodem or Xmodem-1K transfer now...
 CCBB0flash:c2950-c3h2s-mz.120-5.3.WC.1.bin: permission denied
 switch:


 Thank you in advance ,

 Marian




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multiple Individual T1 termination --urgent [7:47944]

2002-07-02 Thread Vajira Wijesinghe

Hi Group,

I have a client who needs 188 T1 (all 1.544Mb serial lines) terminations
to be done on the central site.
Network is hub and spoke fashion.
Pls advise the suitable Cisco router/routers on the central site, for
this purpose.

Thanks.
- (on postoffice)

The information contained in this email is confidential and is meant to be
read only by the person to whom it is addressed.Please visit
http://www.millenniumit.com/legal/email.htm to read the entire
confidentiality clause.

-




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RE: OT - Networkers, Orlando (Tennis, anyone?) [7:47846]

2002-07-02 Thread Ngan Nguyen

I am in Orlando, and would like to play if anyone is interested.


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Re: VIC 2 BRI S/T TE: Unexpected indication (18) in f3 code [7:47947]

2002-07-02 Thread TP

Steven,
was a telco problem.
Now I've a different problem.
I'm in able to make voip call (with a bad quality) to pstn, but I'm not in
able to make pstn call to voip.

This is the disconnect cause:
02:26:37: ISDN BR1/0: TX - DISCONNECT pd = 8  callref = 0x8C
02:26:37: Cause i = 0x809C - Invalid number format (incomplete
number)

do you have any suggestion?
Teresa

  - Original Message -
  From: Steven A. Ridder
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Monday, July 01, 2002 2:34 PM
  Subject: Re: VIC 2 BRI S/T TE: Unexpected indication (18) in f3 code
[7:47833]


  Is their circuit up and active?  Also, check the wiring.

  --

  RFC 1149 Compliant.



  TP  wrote in message
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
   Dear group,
   I have a cisco 2621 configured as voip/isdn gateway.
   I'm not in able to configure properly vic 2BRI S/T TE interface.
  
   I've followed  suggestion from this link
   http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/129/bri-layer1.html#first
  
   (shut, no shut, clear interface and isdn-tei-negotiation first-call)
   But still remain the layer 1 deactivated.
   Any suggestion?
  
   Thanks a lot,
   Teresa
  
   From sh isdn status
   0:49:13: BRI1/1 : Unexpected indication (18) in f3 code
  
   SDN BRI1/0 interface
   dsl 0, interface ISDN Switchtype = basic-net3
   Layer 1 Status:
   DEACTIVATED
   Layer 2 Status:
   Layer 2 NOT Activated
   Layer 3 Status:
   0 Active Layer 3 Call(s)
   Active dsl 0 CCBs = 0
   The Free Channel Mask:  0x8003
   Number of L2 Discards = 0, L2 Session ID = 0




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Re: Networkers Power Slides [7:47900]

2002-07-02 Thread Clayton Dukes

I didn't see the power slides there, where are they?


Clayton Dukes
CCNA, CCDA, CCDP, CCNP, NCC

- Original Message -
From: Steven A. Ridder 
To: 
Sent: Tuesday, July 02, 2002 10:09 AM
Subject: Re: Networkers Power Slides [7:47900]


 Found the link finally.

 pad
 pad

 http://www.cisco.com/networkers/nw02/update/index.html



 Steven A. Ridder  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  What are the power slides?  But they are publically available, I just
have
  to find the link
 
  --
 
  RFC 1149 Compliant.
 
 
 
  JohnZ  wrote in message
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
   Does any one have the link to the Power Slides from San Diego
Networkers
  02.
   Are these even available yet.
   Thanks




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Re: Networkers Power Slides [7:47900]

2002-07-02 Thread Steven A. Ridder

Oops, wrong link.

pad
pad
pad

http://www.cisco.com/networkers/nw02/presos.html


--
RFC 1149 Compliant




Clayton Dukes  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I didn't see the power slides there, where are they?


 Clayton Dukes
 CCNA, CCDA, CCDP, CCNP, NCC

 - Original Message -
 From: Steven A. Ridder
 To:
 Sent: Tuesday, July 02, 2002 10:09 AM
 Subject: Re: Networkers Power Slides [7:47900]


  Found the link finally.
 
  pad
  pad
 
  http://www.cisco.com/networkers/nw02/update/index.html
 
 
 
  Steven A. Ridder  wrote in message
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
   What are the power slides?  But they are publically available, I just
 have
   to find the link
  
   --
  
   RFC 1149 Compliant.
  
  
  
   JohnZ  wrote in message
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Does any one have the link to the Power Slides from San Diego
 Networkers
   02.
Are these even available yet.
Thanks




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Re: Confusion: Channelized and Unchannelized T1 [7:47949]

2002-07-02 Thread Benjamin Pierce

I am assuming that this is refering to a
Point-to-Point T1 Circuit.  If so, the telco refers
to
the circuit as unchanelized because they are not
breaking off any channels for you, You are doing
this
yourself with a mux.

Thanks,
Benjamin Pierce
 --- Steven A. Ridder  wrote:
  I think a channelized T1 sends 193 bit frames as
  well.  8 for each channel
  plus 1 for timing = 193.
  
  All T1's are channelized, otherwise it would have
 to
  be some sort of
  byte-synch communication, which isn't plausible.
  
  I think the tech you spoke to is incorrect as
 well.
  
  
  John Neiberger  wrote in message
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
   Just when I thought I understood the T1 world
  pretty well we've run into
a situation that is thoroughly confusing me.
  
   I was under the impression that channelized T1
  services used 24
   timeslots.  I call that 'channelized' because it
  has 24 distinct
   'channels'.  It's my understanding that
  unchannelized T1 doesn't use the
   24 timeslots and instead sends one giant 192-bit
  frame.
  
   At one of our locations we are muxing voice and
  data traffic onto a
   single T1.  At each end we split off certain
  channels to a router and
   other channels over to the PBX.  To do this,
  wouldn't the T1 *have* to
   be channelized, since we're separating the
  channels at the CSU/DSU?
   According to our provider, that circuit is
  unchannelized.  If a circuit
   is truly unchannelized, how would the CSU/DSU be
  able to accurately
   split the T1 into two separate streams based on
  channel information?
  
   To be more clear, let's say we have the CSU/DSU
  configured to split
   channels 1-12 to the router and 13-24 to the
 PBX. 
  This splitting
   function is based on the assumption that
 channels
  exist on the incoming
   T1.  If they don't exist and we have one giant
  frame instead of 24
   smaller frames, how could this possibly be
  working??
  
   Yowza...my head hurts.
  
   John
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
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Strange 6500/IPX Issue!! HELP!! [7:47951]

2002-07-02 Thread Michael Williams

Okay we have two 6509s with Sup2/MSFC2 running Native IOS 12.1(8b)E7,
and a Cat5513 running CatOS 4.5(2) with RSM running IOS 11.3(3a)WA4(5).  We
have 6509A connected via a Gig trunk (ISL) to 6509B and 6509B connects to
the 5513 via a 4-link FastEtherchannel trunk (ISL).  Most of our Novell
servers are connected to the 5513 and ALL Novell servers reside in VLAN1. 
All VLANs are trunked between all 3 switches.  The RSM in the 5500 handles
all IPX routing for all VLANs and the two 6500s do no IPX routing.  IP
Routing for the various VLANs are spread around the 6500s/5513 with HSRP. 
Our standard PC image has Win95 with Netware Client 3.2 (I believe)
installed. IPX frame type under Windows is set to 802.3. Under normal
circumstances, the PC boots, and comes up to the Novell login.

Issue:

* If the PC is connected to 6509B in any other VLAN except 1, you get a
Novell login and IPX works fine.

* If you connect a PC to 6509B in VLAN1, and boot, you get no Novell login.
  You can, from the RSM in the 5513, so an IPX ping with standard Novell
Echos and it is successful.
  But I also have a utility that runs in a DOS window under Windows called
SPXping.  Using SPXping, I cannot ping to or from said PC.

* If I move that PC to either 6509A or 5513, and reboot, it comes up fine
and SPXping works fine. (remember that 6509A has to go through 6509B to
reach the Novell servers on the 5513)
* If the PC is connected to either 6509A or 5513, boots up and you login to
Novell, you can then move the connection to 6509B and it works fine until
the PC is rebooted.

* IP is not affected in any way no matter which switch the PC connects to
(which seems to imply a L3 IPX issue, but 6509B isn't running any L3 IPX and
should, from an IPX perspective, act as a L2 switch only for PCs connected
to it)

Any input is appreciated!!  I about to tear my hair out over this (and
so is the TAC engr)

Thanks!
Mike W.



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RE: new CIT [7:47777]

2002-07-02 Thread Dan Penn

At my old job we had pairgain HDSL stuff.  They would do anything from
64k on up to 4096 (2 loops on 2 pair).  So, yes, you could have 24 ds0's
on one pair of copper.

Dan

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
Tom Scott
Sent: Tuesday, July 02, 2002 8:27 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: new CIT [7:4]

Historically, T1 and E1 are different from HDSL. However, they now use
HDSL in the US to provide 24-channel circuits on a single pair of
copper, as compared to the two pairs used for the traditional T1. I
wouldn't be surprised if a similar situation occurs with HDSL and E1.
Unfortunately, it's been four years since I worked with loop
technologies, so I can't guarantee accuracy. Anyone else out there
who's currently supporting HDSL?

-- TT


Mark Odette II wrote:

 Ashir, I could be wrong, but I think an E1 circuit and an HDSL circuit
 are two different things!
[snip]



 -Original Message-
 From: Ashir73 (CubeXSPlanet.com) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
 Sent: Monday, July 01, 2002 2:18 AM
 To: Mark Odette II; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: new CIT [7:4]
 
 guide me which is the best hdsl modems to carry E1 on a single copper
 pair




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Re: Confusion: Channelized and Unchannelized T1 [7:47844]

2002-07-02 Thread Wesley

Hey Matt,

That's exactly where I got my info from. BTW, that's a really good book to
learn about T1, unchannelized or otherwise. And it goes into HDLC, PPP and
Frame Relay as well. The reindeer on the front cover rocks! hehe

Wes


Matthew Crane  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi John

 Thought I would just add a few words from 'T1 A survival guide' from
 O'Reilly.

 T1 = DS1 delivered over a 4 wire copper interface
 DS1 = Digital Stream level 1 - 24 DS0's combined into a DS1 which supplies
 1536 kbps connectivity plus 8 kbps framing and signalling overhead for a
 total of 1544kbps.
 DS0 = A single 64kbps channel.

 p149 - Each time slot in the T1 has the capacity to support one
traditional
 telephone call. Channelised T1 does exactly this - each of the 24 time
slots
 can be treated as a digital telephone line. Each line has a 64kbps raw
 capacity, but since a byte must be used for signalling the maximum
thoughput
 of a cT1 channel is 56kbps. On ther otherhand unchannelised T1 simply
views
 each time slot as the opporunity to send another 8bits of data to the
remote
 end and the enite capacity is one big pipe.

 p163 - Configuring cT1...Individual DS0's may be configured for different
 purposes. Some may be used for voice, some for data and different time
slots
 may use different types of signalling.

 The book itself concentrates on unchannelised T1 and has been a great help
 to me over the past months working in the States, since in Europe we have
 simple E1

 Regards

 MFC




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Re: Please tell me it isnt so :( [7:47863]

2002-07-02 Thread Phil Barker

Morgan,
 The 'enable password' command is the original
command that allows you to go to 'priviliged EXEC'
mode and configure the router/switch. Although the
password can be encrypted, it isn't a very robust
technique and can be cracked by putting the password
back into the algorithm.

 The 'enable secret' came later and uses 128 bit
key to encrypt the password, which cannot easily be
cracked.

Phil.
 

--- Morgan Hansen  wrote:  Hi,
and once again Helo :-)
  
 Ive just received this note at my inbox:
  
 Isn't enable password just the older form of enable
 secret?
  
 Reading this allmost made me go into shock! Is this
 true??! Cause if it
 is im out of werdz(?)
  
 For allmost a year now I have with 30 something
 other youngsters studied
 at my school (name whatever) for the CCNA and the
 CNAP program. Our 2
 teachers (name irrelevant) have told us this about
 the passwords:
  
 enable password (when logging on to the router you
 should use this)
  
 enable secret (the password you must use to be able
 to make
 configuration changes in your router)
  
 So my question is:
  
 ARE WE BEING LIED TO?! (let me tell you, this school
 costs $$$, so
 im hoping for an answer like; NO)
 Oh, and one other thing. If this turnes out to be
 the truth, im having
 mixed emotions about paying huge amounts of $ to be
 able to use their
 curriculum during my CNAP studying time, just to
 find out that what they
 ask of you on their CCNA exam filters things not
 even MENTIONED in the
 Curriculum they provide! It's the sadest thing.
  
 Morgan Hansen
 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

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RE: unity question [7:47917]

2002-07-02 Thread supernet

But why do we have to dial thoese DNs to turn on and off the lamp?
Doesn't the lamp always light up when you get a message? I don't
understand their (MessageWaitingOffDN and MessageWaitingOnDN)
purpose.

Thanks.
Yoshi

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
Steven A. Ridder
Sent: Tuesday, July 02, 2002 2:01 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: unity question [7:47917]

the Message waiting thing is the lamp on a phone that lights up
indicating
you have voicemail.  I have no idea what a dual phones system is.

--

RFC 1149 Compliant.



supernet  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 What means dual phone system? Is it traditional phone system and IP
 phone system in the same environment?

 What are MessageWaitingOffDN and MessageWaitingOnDN used for? I
 understand when dial those DNs, the LED on IP phone will light up or
 off, but why do we want this function?

 Thanks.
 Yoshi




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RE: CCIE Written [7:47835]

2002-07-02 Thread Lopez, Robert

Congratulations to you.  I passed the written yesterday.  What a great
exam...the NLI book and Boson #3 along with CCO were excellent prep
materials.  The journey has really just begun.  A thank you to all who
contribute to and keep this list moving along.  Have a great day!!

Robert


-Original Message-
From: Reza [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, July 01, 2002 11:20 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: CCIE Written [7:47835]


Hi Group,
I passed the CCIE written last week.
I like to thank every body in this group for your input.
This is a great group.
I have to say that Boson #3 by Dennis is excellent.

Thanks
Reza




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Re: multiple Individual T1 termination --urgent [7:47944]

2002-07-02 Thread Chuck

must be nice to have so much money. these all data lines? why in the world
would they not use channelized DS3 at the center? hell of a LOT
cheaper Your telco account manager bying a new boat this summer?


density will be a problem. 7206's with the PA-MC-8T1 cards - that will give
you 64xT1 per box. you do the math.

HTH

Chuck







Vajira Wijesinghe  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi Group,

 I have a client who needs 188 T1 (all 1.544Mb serial lines) terminations
 to be done on the central site.
 Network is hub and spoke fashion.
 Pls advise the suitable Cisco router/routers on the central site, for
 this purpose.

 Thanks.
 - (on postoffice)

 The information contained in this email is confidential and is meant to be
 read only by the person to whom it is addressed.Please visit
 http://www.millenniumit.com/legal/email.htm to read the entire
 confidentiality clause.

 -




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Re: Authentication with RSA ACE Server [7:47936]

2002-07-02 Thread John Kelley

yes you can


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Re: multiple Individual T1 termination --urgent [7:47944]

2002-07-02 Thread Chuck

Chuck  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 must be nice to have so much money. these all data lines? why in the world
 would they not use channelized DS3 at the center? hell of a LOT
 cheaper Your telco account manager bying a new boat this summer?


 density will be a problem. 7206's with the PA-MC-8T1 cards - that will
give
 you 64xT1 per box. you do the math.

CL: because obviously I can't  :-  make that 48 T1's per box I would
suggest a 7509 or so, but then you run into issues with too much on one box
and all the additinal overhead cost to provision those suckers.


 HTH

 Chuck







 Vajira Wijesinghe  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Hi Group,
 
  I have a client who needs 188 T1 (all 1.544Mb serial lines) terminations
  to be done on the central site.
  Network is hub and spoke fashion.
  Pls advise the suitable Cisco router/routers on the central site, for
  this purpose.
 
  Thanks.
  - (on postoffice)
 
  The information contained in this email is confidential and is meant to
be
  read only by the person to whom it is addressed.Please visit
  http://www.millenniumit.com/legal/email.htm to read the entire
  confidentiality clause.
 
  -




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RE: Strange 6500/IPX Issue!! HELP!! [7:47951]

2002-07-02 Thread Frank Merrill

Did you enable portfast or use the 'host' macro to set the user ports on
this switch?  I have seen this, but it was in a situation where the user
machines had there IPX frame type set to auto.  In that case the users
machine would boot up, try and autodetect the IPX frame type in use on the
segment, but since the interface wasn't forwarding yet, he wouldn't see any
IPX frames, and hence it would default to a frame type other than what was
actually being used on the network.
These machiones also had the classic DHCP problems for the same reason.
But, since you have hardcoded the IPX frame type, I'd suspect that maybe he
does his GNS, and if the port isn't forwarding, he just doesn't get a
response, and on a Windows95 machine, it will then go to a secondary login
(if there is one) or just go straight to the desktop.  If IP isn't a
problem, are they using static IP addresses?

Good Luck!



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Re: Strange 6500/IPX Issue!! HELP!! [7:47951]

2002-07-02 Thread Michael Williams

Cisco Breaker wrote:
 Did you disable spanning tree or used portfast on the ports
 which are connected to clients.

Yes.  In my original post, I tried to be as informative as possible, there's
always something that gets left out.  Being a Novell shop (but not much
longer!) we put portfast on all ports going to servers/clients.

Here is the config of one of the ports on the 6509B that's having the issue:

interface FastEthernet6/4
 no ip address
 duplex half
 speed 10
 switchport
 switchport mode access
 spanning-tree portfase

I've toyed with speed/duplex, etc and nothing makes a difference...

However, I did find out something interesting.  While using the SPXping
utility, I found that I can *not* ping from the affected machine and get a
response, but if I use SPXping on another machine, I can indeed get a ping
response from the affected machine.

Strange. Thanks for your input!

Mike W.


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RE: Strange 6500/IPX Issue!! HELP!! [7:47951]

2002-07-02 Thread Michael Williams

The two PCs I'm experienting with are using hard-coded IPs, however the
results are the same with a DHCP machine.  Portfast is indeed enabled (A
while ago, I learned the hard way about spanning-tree and DHCP/Novell).

Well, and I find myself trying to get more into the Novell process to
understand where the breakdown could be happening.  I know when the PC
boots, it does a GNS and I also know routers will keep a GNS table and can
respond to the GNS requests, but in this case the PCs are in the same VLAN
with the Novell servers.  The Cisco TAC Engr said that if there are Type 4
servers in the subnet (or on that ethernet segment) that the router won't
respond to the GNS requests.

I connected a sniffer and when the PC boots you see 4 GNS requests go out
and never a single response.  Strange since it's in the same VLAN with 30+
Novell servers!!  Like I said tho, the strangest part is that if I connect
the PC to VLAN1 on 6509A (which would have to be L2 switched over 6509B
which would then L2 switch over to the 5513 where the Novell servers are
physically connected) it works like it should.

I've dug around on Novell's website, and found a document saying that not
only Spanning Tree, but also Trunk negotiation (which is 'auto' by default)
and PAgP (which is only active if you have the link set as a member of an
etherchannel, so it doesn't apply here) can all interfere with Novell's
login process.

Again, thanks for your comments, and keep 'em coming...

Mike W.


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Re: multiple Individual T1 termination --urgent [7:47944]

2002-07-02 Thread nrf

My question is - why does it have to be Cisco?  If you want edge density,
Cisco doesn't have the best solution.  Try a Juniper/Unisphere ERX1440.

Oh whoops -  I forgot, I'm not allowed to mention the evil 'J' on this
NG



Chuck  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Chuck  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  must be nice to have so much money. these all data lines? why in the
world
  would they not use channelized DS3 at the center? hell of a LOT
  cheaper Your telco account manager bying a new boat this summer?
 
 
  density will be a problem. 7206's with the PA-MC-8T1 cards - that will
 give
  you 64xT1 per box. you do the math.

 CL: because obviously I can't  :-  make that 48 T1's per box I would
 suggest a 7509 or so, but then you run into issues with too much on one
box
 and all the additinal overhead cost to provision those suckers.

 
  HTH
 
  Chuck
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Vajira Wijesinghe  wrote in message
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
   Hi Group,
  
   I have a client who needs 188 T1 (all 1.544Mb serial lines)
terminations
   to be done on the central site.
   Network is hub and spoke fashion.
   Pls advise the suitable Cisco router/routers on the central site, for
   this purpose.
  
   Thanks.
   - (on postoffice)
  
   The information contained in this email is confidential and is meant
to
 be
   read only by the person to whom it is addressed.Please visit
   http://www.millenniumit.com/legal/email.htm to read the entire
   confidentiality clause.
  
   -




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RE: Strange 6500/IPX Issue!! HELP!! [7:47951]

2002-07-02 Thread Michael Williams

I found I was mis-typing a MAC address portion of the IPX address.  So, I
have a PC in VLAN1 that can't communicate with Novell, but it can send *and*
receive pings with the SPXping utility.

My bad.

Mike W.


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Re: Strange 6500/IPX Issue!! HELP!! [7:47951]

2002-07-02 Thread Cisco Breaker

Did you disable spanning tree or used portfast on the ports which are
connected to clients. We have a customer that had the same issue and we
changed the client ports on the 6500's to portfast.
Here is the link.

http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/473/12.html

Best regards,

Cisco Breaker

Michael Williams  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Okay we have two 6509s with Sup2/MSFC2 running Native IOS 12.1(8b)E7,
 and a Cat5513 running CatOS 4.5(2) with RSM running IOS 11.3(3a)WA4(5).
We
 have 6509A connected via a Gig trunk (ISL) to 6509B and 6509B connects to
 the 5513 via a 4-link FastEtherchannel trunk (ISL).  Most of our Novell
 servers are connected to the 5513 and ALL Novell servers reside in VLAN1.
 All VLANs are trunked between all 3 switches.  The RSM in the 5500 handles
 all IPX routing for all VLANs and the two 6500s do no IPX routing.  IP
 Routing for the various VLANs are spread around the 6500s/5513 with HSRP.
 Our standard PC image has Win95 with Netware Client 3.2 (I believe)
 installed. IPX frame type under Windows is set to 802.3. Under normal
 circumstances, the PC boots, and comes up to the Novell login.

 Issue:

 * If the PC is connected to 6509B in any other VLAN except 1, you get a
 Novell login and IPX works fine.

 * If you connect a PC to 6509B in VLAN1, and boot, you get no Novell
login.
   You can, from the RSM in the 5513, so an IPX ping with standard Novell
 Echos and it is successful.
   But I also have a utility that runs in a DOS window under Windows called
 SPXping.  Using SPXping, I cannot ping to or from said PC.

 * If I move that PC to either 6509A or 5513, and reboot, it comes up fine
 and SPXping works fine. (remember that 6509A has to go through 6509B to
 reach the Novell servers on the 5513)
 * If the PC is connected to either 6509A or 5513, boots up and you login
to
 Novell, you can then move the connection to 6509B and it works fine until
 the PC is rebooted.

 * IP is not affected in any way no matter which switch the PC connects to
 (which seems to imply a L3 IPX issue, but 6509B isn't running any L3 IPX
and
 should, from an IPX perspective, act as a L2 switch only for PCs connected
 to it)

 Any input is appreciated!!  I about to tear my hair out over this (and
 so is the TAC engr)

 Thanks!
 Mike W.




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RE: Strange 6500/IPX Issue!! HELP!! [7:47951]

2002-07-02 Thread Wes

Michael,

  Shot in the dark - I've seen very strange issues like this with trunk
mismatches.  You've probably got a trunk between the two switches.  Make
sure your native VLANs match, make sure that every VLAN permitted on the
trunk is permitted on both sides.  On a similar vein, all trunk ports should
have similar characteristics (I go with 100, full, desirable trunking,
desirable channeling; regardless, just make sure it's the same both sides)

  Also, if you've got links bundled, try bringing down one of the links for
a bit, then try the other(s).  Switches load balance via MACs, if you've got
a uni-directional link or something, packets from the same machine will
usually transit the same wire every time - physical port/cable problems
might appear to be associated with only certain machines because of this.

  Best guess for now.  Good luck!
  --Wes


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Re: Networkers Power Slides [7:47900]

2002-07-02 Thread Alex Lei

Thanks Steve. The slides are very helpful.

Alex


Steven A. Ridder wrote:
 
 Oops, wrong link.
 
 pad
 pad
 pad
 
 http://www.cisco.com/networkers/nw02/presos.html
 
 
 --
 RFC 1149 Compliant
 
 
 
 
 Clayton Dukes  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  I didn't see the power slides there, where are they?
 
 
  Clayton Dukes
  CCNA, CCDA, CCDP, CCNP, NCC
 
  - Original Message -
  From: Steven A. Ridder
  To:
  Sent: Tuesday, July 02, 2002 10:09 AM
  Subject: Re: Networkers Power Slides [7:47900]
 
 
   Found the link finally.
  
   pad
   pad
  
   http://www.cisco.com/networkers/nw02/update/index.html
  
  
  
   Steven A. Ridder  wrote in message
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
What are the power slides?  But they are publically
 available, I just
  have
to find the link
   
--
   
RFC 1149 Compliant.
   
   
   
JohnZ  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Does any one have the link to the Power Slides from San
 Diego
  Networkers
02.
 Are these even available yet.
 Thanks
 
 




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CCIE Power Sessions [7:47966]

2002-07-02 Thread Sandra Carr

Does anyone have a copy of the slides used at the 2002 CCIE power sessions
at Networkers?  If so, is there a link to it?  If not, can I get a copy?


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Re: Strange 6500/IPX Issue!! HELP!! [7:47951]

2002-07-02 Thread Michael L. Williams

Wes,

Thanks for your reply.  As you can imagine I've been through the ringer so
far with this one =)

We checked all of the trunks for native VLAN, speed, duplex, etc...  All
checks out.  This is also supported by the fact that IP works fine (all IP
routing for VLAN1 is handled by the RSM in the 5513, which means anything
plugged into 6509A or 6509B that leaves the IP subnet must travel those
trunk links to hit the RSM and get routed.

One interesting note:  In an attempt to find out anything new, I took a Dell
desktop with integrated NIC, etc (my test machines and the machines having
the problem so far have been IBM 300PL with integrated NIC), and when the
Dell is connected to 6509B (the one with the problem) it boots and gets
the Novell login, which automatically points to the hardware or the image on
that IBM.  However, that same IBM, when connected to 6509A works fine, which
kinda discounts that theory.

I'm going crazy here!!

Another interesting thing to note:  If I connect the PC (the IBM) to a 2900,
then connect the 2900 to 6509B, the client still doesn't receive the Novell
login.  However, if I connect the PC to a hub and connect the hub to 6509B
then the PC boots and gets the Novell login everytime.

I gotta be missing something..  I watched the 'sho mac int fas'
closely and upon booting the IBM's MAC address isn't seen by the switch for
12-15 seconds after you see Starting Windows 95.  The MAC address on the
Dell becomes visible within about 3 seconds after Starting Windows 95.
However I'm sure part of that can be attributed to the fact the IBM is a
200MHz -vs- 900MHz on the Dell (and the Dell I'm sure has newer faster
drives, etc)

But everytime I start to form a theory about something to do with the PC, my
co-worker goes Yeah, but it works on the other 6509 and everytime I
form a theory that it could be something wrong with 6509B he goes, Yeah,
but the Dell works on it.. I can't win!!!

Thanks again to all who have replied...

Mike W.

Wes   wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Michael,

   Shot in the dark - I've seen very strange issues like this with trunk
 mismatches.  You've probably got a trunk between the two switches.  Make
 sure your native VLANs match, make sure that every VLAN permitted on the
 trunk is permitted on both sides.  On a similar vein, all trunk ports
should
 have similar characteristics (I go with 100, full, desirable trunking,
 desirable channeling; regardless, just make sure it's the same both sides)

   Also, if you've got links bundled, try bringing down one of the links
for
 a bit, then try the other(s).  Switches load balance via MACs, if you've
got
 a uni-directional link or something, packets from the same machine will
 usually transit the same wire every time - physical port/cable problems
 might appear to be associated with only certain machines because of this.

   Best guess for now.  Good luck!
   --Wes




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Re: multiple Individual T1 termination --urgent [7:47944]

2002-07-02 Thread Chuck

the only reason I lead with Cisco is that I'm just a Cisco jock. When your
only tool is a hammer, all your problems look like nails.

Howard - don't start ;-

Chuck


nrf  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 My question is - why does it have to be Cisco?  If you want edge density,
 Cisco doesn't have the best solution.  Try a Juniper/Unisphere ERX1440.

 Oh whoops -  I forgot, I'm not allowed to mention the evil 'J' on this
 NG



 Chuck  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Chuck  wrote in message
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
   must be nice to have so much money. these all data lines? why in the
 world
   would they not use channelized DS3 at the center? hell of a LOT
   cheaper Your telco account manager bying a new boat this
summer?
  
  
   density will be a problem. 7206's with the PA-MC-8T1 cards - that will
  give
   you 64xT1 per box. you do the math.
 
  CL: because obviously I can't  :-  make that 48 T1's per box I would
  suggest a 7509 or so, but then you run into issues with too much on one
 box
  and all the additinal overhead cost to provision those suckers.
 
  
   HTH
  
   Chuck
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
   Vajira Wijesinghe  wrote in message
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Hi Group,
   
I have a client who needs 188 T1 (all 1.544Mb serial lines)
 terminations
to be done on the central site.
Network is hub and spoke fashion.
Pls advise the suitable Cisco router/routers on the central site,
for
this purpose.
   
Thanks.
- (on postoffice)
   
The information contained in this email is confidential and is meant
 to
  be
read only by the person to whom it is addressed.Please visit
http://www.millenniumit.com/legal/email.htm to read the entire
confidentiality clause.
   
-




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Re: unity question [7:47917]

2002-07-02 Thread nrf

You have to ask yourself how the voicemail system knows to turn on or off
the light on the phone, and which phone (as opposed to everybody's phone,
which would obviously not be very cool).

Basically, what happens is if you get voicemail, the voicemail system
basically has to contact the PBX (the CM) and say which box (which phone)
has waiting mail.  The voicemail system does this by basically itself
dialing a number (the MessagewaitingonDN) and then relaying the appropriate
information (turn on the light of the phone at number X).  .  The
voicemail system than dials another number when it wants to turn the light
off.


supernet  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 But why do we have to dial thoese DNs to turn on and off the lamp?
 Doesn't the lamp always light up when you get a message? I don't
 understand their (MessageWaitingOffDN and MessageWaitingOnDN)
 purpose.

 Thanks.
 Yoshi

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
 Steven A. Ridder
 Sent: Tuesday, July 02, 2002 2:01 AM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: unity question [7:47917]

 the Message waiting thing is the lamp on a phone that lights up
 indicating
 you have voicemail.  I have no idea what a dual phones system is.

 --

 RFC 1149 Compliant.



 supernet  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  What means dual phone system? Is it traditional phone system and IP
  phone system in the same environment?
 
  What are MessageWaitingOffDN and MessageWaitingOnDN used for? I
  understand when dial those DNs, the LED on IP phone will light up or
  off, but why do we want this function?
 
  Thanks.
  Yoshi




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Re: multiple Individual T1 termination --urgent [7:47944]

2002-07-02 Thread Chuck

hey, if they can afford that many T1's, instead of going to DS3 or frame DS3
( with all the failover protection that could be built in ) then they sure
can afford to pay for Cisco's lack of port density. :-


nrf  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 My question is - why does it have to be Cisco?  If you want edge density,
 Cisco doesn't have the best solution.  Try a Juniper/Unisphere ERX1440.

 Oh whoops -  I forgot, I'm not allowed to mention the evil 'J' on this
 NG



 Chuck  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Chuck  wrote in message
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
   must be nice to have so much money. these all data lines? why in the
 world
   would they not use channelized DS3 at the center? hell of a LOT
   cheaper Your telco account manager bying a new boat this
summer?
  
  
   density will be a problem. 7206's with the PA-MC-8T1 cards - that will
  give
   you 64xT1 per box. you do the math.
 
  CL: because obviously I can't  :-  make that 48 T1's per box I would
  suggest a 7509 or so, but then you run into issues with too much on one
 box
  and all the additinal overhead cost to provision those suckers.
 
  
   HTH
  
   Chuck
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
   Vajira Wijesinghe  wrote in message
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Hi Group,
   
I have a client who needs 188 T1 (all 1.544Mb serial lines)
 terminations
to be done on the central site.
Network is hub and spoke fashion.
Pls advise the suitable Cisco router/routers on the central site,
for
this purpose.
   
Thanks.
- (on postoffice)
   
The information contained in this email is confidential and is meant
 to
  be
read only by the person to whom it is addressed.Please visit
http://www.millenniumit.com/legal/email.htm to read the entire
confidentiality clause.
   
-




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RE: CCIE Power Sessions [7:47966]

2002-07-02 Thread Frank Merrill

Sandra Carr wrote:
 
 Does anyone have a copy of the slides used at the 2002 CCIE
 power sessions at Networkers?  If so, is there a link to it? 
 If not, can I get a copy?

In case you missed it in the other thread:

http://www.cisco.com/networkers/nw02/presos.html





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OT: CCIE Lab Intelligence [7:47973]

2002-07-02 Thread Chuck

I've started reading the documentation for the Cat 3550 EMI L3 switch that
will be making its appearance in the CCIE lab in October, and will become
THE L2 device in November.

It does NOT route BGP, according to the docs. Good to know.  Does do CEF.
Does do a s**t load of QoS.

In fact, from the look of the documentation, some folks may just want to
move their labs up a bit. Bet it's going to get REAL hard, REAL fast, with
this new box in place. :-0

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/lan/c3550/1219ea1/3550scg/sw
iprout.htm


Chuck




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Passed with room to spare - CSVPN [7:47972]

2002-07-02 Thread Kim Graham

After all is said and done the test was good.  Some of the questions were
strangely worded.  Those ones I used the gut feeling, close the eyes, click
the mouse approach to answering.  Either I did not have many of those or
scored correctly on the ones I did come across.

The course I took really helped lay down the foundation of what I studied. 
It turned out to be a great resource.  The information can all be found on
CCO but you will need to sit down with the outline then pick and choose. 
Sorry I have not seen any Boson tests or study guides for any subject so I
could not compare it to those.

I can see this being one of those tests that you will dread to take in the
future.  My best advice for anyone thinking about taking the exam is to
follow the outline.

Kim :) 

Now onto the next test.


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RE: VTP (core 6509 Access 3548's) [7:47934]

2002-07-02 Thread Kris Keen

Hi ,

We are running 3548's with 6509's and had the exact same issue on VTP
Version 2 with authentication. So we just created and deleted dummy test
Vlan's and this seemed to trigger it, I'm still unsure as to why the updates
dont proprgate every 5minutes (apparently thats the default)


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VOIP dialer-peer question [7:47976]

2002-07-02 Thread Firesox

I am in need of a quick help.
I am configuring VOIP between two site over the internet.  Each site has
it's own PBX and 2620.
The 2620 has HDV module with T1 interface directly connected the PBX via EM
winkstart.
The connection between PBX and Router is fine at both sites.
At site 1, they have 5-digit dialing plan and site 2, they have 4-digit dial
plan.
The following config was taken from the site 2 with 4-digit dial plan.
Their extensions are 79xx.  The site 1's extensions are 370xx.
The PBXs at both sites seem to be configured correctly with trunk-group and
all other neccessary configs.
My question here is should I be configuring the voice-port 1/0:1 as a
connection trunk with connection trunk  command?
the router connects to the remote router when the extension from one site to
another is dialed, but it keeps ringing and never seems to ring the actual
extension.
Any help would be appreciate it.


controller T1 1/0
framing esf

 linecode b8zs

 ds0-group 1 timeslots 1-24 type em-wink-start

 cas-custom 1

!

!

voice-port 1/0:1

 operation 4-wire

!

!

dial-peer voice 1 pots

 destination-pattern 79..

 port 1/0:1

!

dial-peer voice 10 voip

 destination-pattern 370..

 session target ipv4:x.x.x.x




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Re: VOIP dialer-peer question [7:47976]

2002-07-02 Thread Vance Krier

I think the non-wildcard digits on POTS dial peers get stripped before they
are outpulsed.  So you might need a 'prefix 79' under the 'dial-peer voice 1
pots' .

Good Luck,
Vance



Firesox  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I am in need of a quick help.
 I am configuring VOIP between two site over the internet.  Each site has
 it's own PBX and 2620.
 The 2620 has HDV module with T1 interface directly connected the PBX via
EM
 winkstart.
 The connection between PBX and Router is fine at both sites.
 At site 1, they have 5-digit dialing plan and site 2, they have 4-digit
dial
 plan.
 The following config was taken from the site 2 with 4-digit dial plan.
 Their extensions are 79xx.  The site 1's extensions are 370xx.
 The PBXs at both sites seem to be configured correctly with trunk-group
and
 all other neccessary configs.
 My question here is should I be configuring the voice-port 1/0:1 as a
 connection trunk with connection trunk  command?
 the router connects to the remote router when the extension from one site
to
 another is dialed, but it keeps ringing and never seems to ring the actual
 extension.
 Any help would be appreciate it.


 controller T1 1/0
 framing esf

  linecode b8zs

  ds0-group 1 timeslots 1-24 type em-wink-start

  cas-custom 1

 !

 !

 voice-port 1/0:1

  operation 4-wire

 !

 !

 dial-peer voice 1 pots

  destination-pattern 79..

  port 1/0:1

 !

 dial-peer voice 10 voip

  destination-pattern 370..

  session target ipv4:x.x.x.x




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Re: VOIP dialer-peer question [7:47976]

2002-07-02 Thread Michael L. Williams

Voice Gurus:  I'm going to take a stab on this because I just went through
some of this myself (with 2610s but hey same deal)... feel free to point
out my mistakes


If you are doing an EM trunk between the two PBXs (with the VoIP link
acting as the router), then the dialing information you configure is local
to those VoIP peers and doesn't affect the actual dial digits that are
passed between the two PBXs.  So as long as their PBXs  have dialing plans
that are setup to talk to each other, the digits you use to establish the
trunk calls between the VoIP peer routers is arbitrary.

For instance, here would be configs for each end of a VoIP trunk:

Side A

controller T1 1/0
 framing esf
 linecode b8zs
 cablelength short 133
 ds0-group 1 timeslots 1-24 type em-wink-start
!
interface Ethernet0/0
 ip address 10.1.1.1 255.255.255.0
 full-duplex
!
voice-port 1/0:1
 output attenuation 3
 connection trunk 
!
dial-peer cor custom
!
dial-peer voice 1 voip
 destination-pattern 
 session target ipv4:10.1.2.1
 dtmf-relay cisco-rtp
 codec g729br8
!
dial-peer voice 2 pots
 destination-pattern 9998
 port 1/0:1

Side B

controller T1 1/0
 framing esf
 linecode b8zs
 cablelength short 133
 ds0-group 1 timeslots 1-24 type em-wink-start
!
interface Ethernet0/0
 ip address 10.1.2.1 255.255.255.0
 full-duplex
!
voice-port 1/0:1
 output attenuation 3
 connection trunk 9998 answer-mode
!
dial-peer cor custom
!
dial-peer voice 1 voip
 destination-pattern 9998
 session target ipv4:10.1.1.1
 dtmf-relay cisco-rtp
 codec g729br8
!
dial-peer voice 2 pots
 destination-pattern 
 port 1/0:1



Basically, on a given router you:
1. Assign the DS0s to a DS0 group
2. Under the Voice port (created when you create the DS0 group), configure
'connection trunk' with phone number of the other end (something you make
up, not part of the PBX dial-plan)
3. Create a 'voip' dial peer where you give the phone number (from step 2)
and the IP of the peer (and I suggest using DTMF Relay if you're using
compression)
4. Create a second dial peer that is 'pots' that maps the incoming phone
number to the local voice-port

Note:  Cisco recommends putting answer-mode on one end of the trunk links.
Note:  Cisco does *not* recommend or support putting all 24 DS0s into a
single DS0 group unless you are using IOS 12.2T or higher (some problem with
individual DS0s getting hung).
I have a sample config I created that makes 24 separate DS0 groups each
mapped with their own phone number and pots peer.  If you need I can
forward cuz it will sure save alot of typing.

HTH,
Mike W.

Firesox  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I am in need of a quick help.
 I am configuring VOIP between two site over the internet.  Each site has
 it's own PBX and 2620.
 The 2620 has HDV module with T1 interface directly connected the PBX via
EM
 winkstart.
 The connection between PBX and Router is fine at both sites.
 At site 1, they have 5-digit dialing plan and site 2, they have 4-digit
dial
 plan.
 The following config was taken from the site 2 with 4-digit dial plan.
 Their extensions are 79xx.  The site 1's extensions are 370xx.
 The PBXs at both sites seem to be configured correctly with trunk-group
and
 all other neccessary configs.
 My question here is should I be configuring the voice-port 1/0:1 as a
 connection trunk with connection trunk  command?
 the router connects to the remote router when the extension from one site
to
 another is dialed, but it keeps ringing and never seems to ring the actual
 extension.
 Any help would be appreciate it.


 controller T1 1/0
 framing esf

  linecode b8zs

  ds0-group 1 timeslots 1-24 type em-wink-start

  cas-custom 1

 !

 !

 voice-port 1/0:1

  operation 4-wire

 !

 !

 dial-peer voice 1 pots

  destination-pattern 79..

  port 1/0:1

 !

 dial-peer voice 10 voip

  destination-pattern 370..

  session target ipv4:x.x.x.x




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Re: VOIP dialer-peer question [7:47976]

2002-07-02 Thread Michael L. Williams

My previous post and this URL are strictly for permanent voip trunks between
PBXs.

Sorry... I meant to include an URL..  One thing I did NOT like about this
example tho, is that they are doing as I mentioned and configured a separate
DS0 group for every DS0 and therefore they end up with multiple 'pots'
dial-peers and voice ports (one for each DS0 group).  The result of this is
that when they have a config line like destination-pattern 111.  is
misleading because it appears your accepting the dial digits from the PBX,
but you're not you're only matching the dial-digits that you configured
locally.

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios120/120newft/120
t/120t7/t1_vo_t6.htm#xtocid1960937

Mike W.

Firesox  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I am in need of a quick help.
 I am configuring VOIP between two site over the internet.  Each site has
 it's own PBX and 2620.
 The 2620 has HDV module with T1 interface directly connected the PBX via
EM
 winkstart.
 The connection between PBX and Router is fine at both sites.
 At site 1, they have 5-digit dialing plan and site 2, they have 4-digit
dial
 plan.
 The following config was taken from the site 2 with 4-digit dial plan.
 Their extensions are 79xx.  The site 1's extensions are 370xx.
 The PBXs at both sites seem to be configured correctly with trunk-group
and
 all other neccessary configs.
 My question here is should I be configuring the voice-port 1/0:1 as a
 connection trunk with connection trunk  command?
 the router connects to the remote router when the extension from one site
to
 another is dialed, but it keeps ringing and never seems to ring the actual
 extension.
 Any help would be appreciate it.


 controller T1 1/0
 framing esf

  linecode b8zs

  ds0-group 1 timeslots 1-24 type em-wink-start

  cas-custom 1

 !

 !

 voice-port 1/0:1

  operation 4-wire

 !

 !

 dial-peer voice 1 pots

  destination-pattern 79..

  port 1/0:1

 !

 dial-peer voice 10 voip

  destination-pattern 370..

  session target ipv4:x.x.x.x




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RE: OT: CCIE Lab Intelligence [7:47973]

2002-07-02 Thread Kris Keen

What makes you think it doesnt do BGP? I have one right next to me.. Sure
has hell does bgp


Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) C3550 Software (C3550-I5Q3L2-M), Version 12.1(8)EA1c, RELEASE
SOFTWARE
(fc1)
Copyright (c) 1986-2002 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Fri 15-Feb-02 10:50 by antonino
Image text-base: 0x3000, data-base: 0x006675E0

ROM: Bootstrap program is C3550 boot loader

WS-C3550-12T_A uptime is 1 week, 2 hours, 24 minutes
System returned to ROM by power-on
System image file is
flash:/c3550-i5q3l2-mz.121-8.EA1c/c3550-i5q3l2-mz.121-8.E
1c.bin

cisco WS-C3550-12T (PowerPC) processor (revision G0) with 65526K/8192K bytes
of
memory.


WS-C3550-12T_A#conf t
Enter configuration commands, one per line.  End with CNTL/Z.
WS-C3550-12T_A(config)#router bgp ?
Autonomous system number

WS-C3550-12T_A(config)#router bgp


Looks BGPish to me :)
I'm trying to get one for my Lab at home..






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