Changes in CCNP Courses?? [7:55085]

2002-10-08 Thread ccnp ccnp2002

Hi All, 

Below is a statement made by one of the members: 

..One caveat though, all the exams are changing in the near future,
with Switching and CIT undergoing the greatest change, so what I said above
may not be valid in the future...

Do you have any idea what the changes are to be and when... so that I can
hurry up my CCNP studies?

Thanks!


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Enable Secret of AS5300 [7:55086]

2002-10-08 Thread Danial Morison

Hi group

I lost the enable secret password of my Cisco AS5300.I have the 
configuration showing.

enable secret 5 $1$6YRM$nzNXQuv4h24C3AlB8N3rp.
enable password 7 110A1016141D5A

Any idea to decrypt this password.

Thanks in advance



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RE: Outlets England [7:53864]

2002-10-08 Thread Pierre-Alex Guanel

Great Britain Wiring 


I got to England after a long 15-hour trip ...

On my arrival I immediately went to a Electric shop to buy British Power
Cord.

Those are relatively cheap about 2 pounds something each, but I needed 12 of
those for my equipment.

The lad other there was very kind, he told me that I could make my own cord
from my American Power cord

using a socket that only cost half a pound. Here how it goes in England:

Green or Yellow is grown
Blue or Blank is neutral
Brown or Red is live

The process is pretty simple but quite time consumming: with a sharp knife
to strip the wires, a flat screw driver
and a Philips screw driver I made a plug every 10 minutes)

I also bought surge protectors at the store.  They are not cheap out there
(about 8 pounds for a 4-plugs surge protector
and 12 pounds for 6-plugs). 

Basically my total cost of conversion was: 6 pounds for the plugs + 48
pounds for the surge protectors (less than $100) ...

Pierre-Alex


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Re: Enable Secret of AS5300 [7:55086]

2002-10-08 Thread Tim Metz

there are tools for this all over the web.

your enable password is cisco1

Tim

Danial Morison  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi group

 I lost the enable secret password of my Cisco AS5300.I have the
 configuration showing.

 enable secret 5 $1$6YRM$nzNXQuv4h24C3AlB8N3rp.
 enable password 7 110A1016141D5A

 Any idea to decrypt this password.

 Thanks in advance



 _
 Chat with friends online, try MSN Messenger: http://messenger.msn.com




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Re: Enable Secret of AS5300 [7:55086]

2002-10-08 Thread Danial Morison

Yeah thanks..but I cant reboot this router for password recovery at the 
moment.

thx

DA'


From: richard bosire 
To: Danial Morison 
Subject: Re: Enable Secret of AS5300 [7:55086]
Date: Tue, 8 Oct 2002 13:04:43 +0300


Not sure about the decrypting part,  But  you can recover the password

http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/474/index.shtml


regards

./bosire

On Tuesday 08 October 2002 12:56 pm, you wrote:
  Hi group
 
  I lost the enable secret password of my Cisco AS5300.I have the
  configuration showing.
 
  enable secret 5 $1$6YRM$nzNXQuv4h24C3AlB8N3rp.
  enable password 7 110A1016141D5A
 
  Any idea to decrypt this password.
 
  Thanks in advance
 
 
 
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  Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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Re: Enable Secret of AS5300 [7:55086]

2002-10-08 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

If you have phisical access to the box, just do a password recovery.

On Tue, Oct 08, 2002 at 09:56:01AM +, Danial Morison wrote:
 Hi group
 
 I lost the enable secret password of my Cisco AS5300.I have the 
 configuration showing.
 
 enable secret 5 $1$6YRM$nzNXQuv4h24C3AlB8N3rp.
 enable password 7 110A1016141D5A
 
 Any idea to decrypt this password.
 
 Thanks in advance
 
 
 
 _
 Chat with friends online, try MSN Messenger: http://messenger.msn.com
-- 
HoraPe
---
Horacio J. Peqa
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




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CCDP Recert Exam #640-529 [7:55091]

2002-10-08 Thread John Gesualdi

Has  anyone taken the  CCDP Recert Exam yet?  If so then I was wondering what
you used to prepare for it. Thanks.

-


John A. Gesualdi,CCNP, CCDP, MCSE 2000
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
The Providence Journal Company
Phone (401)277-8133
Pager (401)785-6938




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Bonding of Multiple ISDN B-Channels [7:55092]

2002-10-08 Thread \\Kerpal.Abdar\\

Hi.  Could anyone tell me what router / interface to use and what I would
need
to configure in order to bond up to 4 ISDN B-channels based on bandwidth
needs?


Sample configuration?


Thanks

Kerpal




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RE: Bonding of Multiple ISDN B-Channels [7:55092]

2002-10-08 Thread David C Prall

Dialer

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

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
 Kerpal.Abdar
 Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 9:08 AM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Bonding of Multiple ISDN B-Channels [7:55092]
 
 
 Hi.  Could anyone tell me what router / interface to use and what I would
 need
 to configure in order to bond up to 4 ISDN B-channels based on bandwidth
 needs?
 
 
 Sample configuration?
 
 
 Thanks
 
 Kerpal




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Re: Inside Interface accepts DHCP lease...but it has a static [7:55094]

2002-10-08 Thread Dain Deutschman

There is a router/modem connecting to the ISP using PPoA. This router was in
place and works...the customer just wanted some packet filtering as well (
which the router in place does not provide ). So I am using a Cisco SOHO 71.
E1 is the outside interface which connects to the inside interface of the
existing router. E1 has a static ip of 172.16.0.2 ( there is no ip address
dhcp it is ip address 172.16.0.2 255.255.255.0

E0 has ip address 192.168.0.9 255.255.255.0

There is a static route on the existing ( non Cisco ) router pointing all
192.168.0.0/24 destined traffic back to 172.16.0.2 ( E1 of Cisco ). There is
also a default route on the cisco pointing to 172.16.0.1 ( the inside
interface of the non-cisco router )

The non-cisco router does NAT

INTERNET-WANinterface(non-Cisco Router)172.16.0.1(inside)

|

|
  Win2000Server(DHCP)--|--192.168.0.9(E0)(Cisco SOHO71)172.16.0.2(E1)
  |
  |
LAN

Every few days ( there doesn't seem to be an exact regularity yet),
interface E0's ip address will change. So far it has always changed to
192.168.0.16. If I view the DHCP Manager in Windows 2000 Server, it
indicates that IP address associated with the router.

The config of e0 ( when working normal) looks like this:

Interface Ethernet 0
ip address 192.168.0.9 255.255.255.0

Any ideas???

I think I will configure syslog debugging level and turn on dhcp debugging.
With that I should get at very least the moment that the address
changes...and hopefully some dhcp debug output. I suppose I could also put a
sniffer in and try to detect it.

Thanks


Erick B.  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 That is strange. What type of router and IOS version?

 Just to clarify, the interface has 'ip address x.x.x.x
 y.y.y.y' config and not 'ip address dhcp' with a
 static DHCP assigned address. Being DSL, is it PPPoE
 by chance?

 Does e0 connect to DSL/Internet and e1 to their
 network or vice versa?

 --- Dain Deutschman  wrote:
  Hi all,
 
  I have a problem with a client on a dsl connection.
  Ethernet 0 and 1 both
  have statically assigned IP addresses. I leave the
  customer site and 3 days
  later they call and have no internet. I check the
  router config and E0 has
  the wrong IP address. I check the Win2000 DHCP
  server and that address is
  listed as leased to the router.
 
  Any ideas why the router is allowing this to happen?
 
  --
  Dain Deutschman
  CNA, MCP, CCNA
  Data Communications Manager
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Re: Bonding of Multiple ISDN B-Channels [7:55092]

2002-10-08 Thread MADMAN

here is a starter:

interface BRI3/0
 description ISDN CKT#__ ISDN backup to Bristol's BRI3/0
 bandwidth 128
 no ip address
 ip load-sharing per-packet
 encapsulation ppp
 dialer pool-member 1
 isdn switch-type basic-ni
 isdn spid1 509 xxx
 isdn spid2 509 xxx
 no fair-queue
 ppp authentication chap
!
interface BRI3/1
 description ISDN CKT#__ ISDN backup to Bristol's BRI3/1
 bandwidth 128
 no ip address
 ip load-sharing per-packet
 encapsulation ppp
 dialer pool-member 1
 isdn switch-type basic-ni
 isdn spid1 509xxx xxx
 isdn spid2 509xxx xxx
 no fair-queue
 ppp authentication chap
!
interface BRI3/2
 description ISDN CKT#__ ISDN backup to Bristol's BRI3/2
 bandwidth 128
 no ip address
 ip load-sharing per-packet
 encapsulation ppp
 no ip mroute-cache
 dialer pool-member 1
 isdn switch-type basic-ni
 isdn spid1 509xxx xxx
 isdn spid2 509xxx xxx
 no fair-queue
 ppp authentication chap
!
interface BRI3/3
 no ip address
 shutdown
 isdn switch-type basic-ni
!
interface Dialer1
 ip address 10.100.200.1 255.255.255.0
 ip load-sharing per-packet
 encapsulation ppp
 no ip mroute-cache
 dialer remote-name CL_Bristol
 dialer pool 1
 dialer idle-timeout 60
 dialer string 1215xxx
 dialer string 1215xxx
 dialer string 1215xxx
 dialer string 1215xxx
 dialer string 1215xxx
 dialer string 121xxx
 dialer load-threshold 3 either
 dialer max-call 6
 dialer-group 1
 ipx network FBEEF
 ppp authentication chap
 ppp multilink

  Dave

\\Kerpal.Abdar\\ wrote:
 
 Hi.  Could anyone tell me what router / interface to use and what I would
 need
 to configure in order to bond up to 4 ISDN B-channels based on bandwidth
 needs?
 
 Sample configuration?
 
 Thanks
 
 Kerpal
-- 
David Madland
CCIE# 2016
Sr. Network Engineer
Qwest Communications
612-664-3367

You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer. --Winston
Churchill




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Re: how to interpret lab score [7:55081]

2002-10-08 Thread Brad

Interpret your lab score?  You'll either pass, or you'll fail.  If you pass,
you wont get a score, just the fact that you passed.  If you fail, you will
get a score.  Here's my interpretation of the scoring if you fail (please
note, sarcasm to follow)

70-80 Close, but close only counts in horse shoes and hand grenades.  Take
it again asap
50-70 Doh!  Guess you havent used much BGP, eh?
30-50 You're not the sharpest pencil in the box.  Better hit the rack.
10-30 Have a few too many the night before?  ISPF, OIGRP, same difference.
 0-10 Maybe you should apply for the honorary CCIE cert instead...

thanks,
-Brad Ellis
CCIE#5796 (RS / Security)
Network Learning Inc
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.optsys.net (Cisco hardware)

Edward Sohn  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hello, all

 I'll be taking my lab in a few weeks, and I want to make sure I
 understand how the scoring system works.  I've seen a lot of differing
 opinions and reports on the subject, and I was wondering if there was an
 accurate way to interpret the score.

 For example, I understand that there is a percentage breakdown.  How
 does this translate into a passing/failing grade?  I don't *think* I am
 violating any NDA rules in asking this question.  Obviously, please
 respond within that context.

 Thanks in advance,

 Ed




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RE: E-books [7:55001]

2002-10-08 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Over here in South Africa, Cisco books are sold at a minimum of a R1000.00
although some of them reach R1600.00 each That is a lot of money for us. For
example, our exchange rate is R10.52 to $1.00 so even if the book RRP is
$50.00, we will pay R900.00 for it. Then we still have to pay shipping which
sometimes is nearly equivalent to price of the book itself. Reading most of
the Cisco Press books, I've realised how much of the same stuff is sometimes
regurgitated amongst them. 
Now I have a huge cisco press library, that was bought from a CCIE, and I
still buy books (the real kind), but I don't see the sense in buying some
cisco press book for the high price of R1000.00 when I know I will only read
them once. For those books, I would prefer to have them in PDF format, at a
reasonable price. I understand the piracy thing, it's just to easy to email
a pdf of the book. But for me to pay $50.00 for a virtual copy of the book
does not make sense. In that case, I'll would rather pay for the shipping
and get the real thing ... After all a bookshelf full of cisco press books
in their trademark green looks very sexy, and initimidates the sh!t out of
everyone else, when you tell them you've read them all! (obviously, it's
even better if you remember it all!)

The other thing also affect us, is the shipping, after paying a huge amount
for a book, custom's get's hold of it, charges us more, and hopefully, then
our postal system delivers the book (if they don't steal it). I bought
Doyle' TCP Vol2, and the first one got missing, after which amazon had to
send another copy ... Life is sometimes just not fair for those of us not in
the U.S.A !

BTW, Adobe has a lot of sexy 'rights management technologies'. If you create
e-books, you can lock it to a specific user. The e-book will be unreadable
anywhere else. Although this has already probably been cracked! :-(

Just my take on it.
Manish

-Original Message-
From: Priscilla Oppenheimer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: 08 October 2002 04:57 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: E-books [7:55001]


I haven't looked into how Cisco Press is doing their online books. I think
you have to subscribe or something.

The publishers are interested in technical feedback on what works for
people. They know they need to address the need for electronic access at a
reasonable price. Most of them are kind of fumbling around trying to figure
this out. If there's legitimate reasons for liking PDF, I think that's good
feedback.

I doubt they'll use PDF, though, because it's too easy to share. The
publishers will definitely need to make money on the electronic products and
they will want to minimize easy access to the products by people who want to
get something for nothing, or, worse, people who want to sell the
publisher's property without the publisher's consent.

Hey, I'm beginning to sound like a lawyer. Seriously, there's lots of room
for innovation here with results that please the customer and make business
sense for the publisher. Now I sound like a marketer. From an author's point
of view, I want people to see all that content I worked so hard on. The
money is nice but so small, it's secondary.

___

Priscilla Oppenheimer
www.troubleshootingnetworks.com
www.priscilla.com

Ken Chipps wrote:
 
 I like pdf format myself. I often print out a few pages or a chapter 
 to study from. Then I can highlight different parts for different
 areas of
 study. This avoids messing up the original book. I have done
 this may times
 with the Lanmmle books, all of which I paid for myself. In
 fact, I am doing
 this right now as I leave for class. I need to brush up on VLAN
 configuration. While the students are doing a lab on their own,
 I will be
 reviewing VLAN information so I can create a new lab for VLANs
 in a CAN. I
 wish all books came hardcover and pdf.
 
 Ben W  wrote in message 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Yes you can, and you can also read it on your laptop which
 weighs a lot
 less
  than lugging around Caslow and Doyle's books.  Give the guy a
 break.  He
 did
  ask in his email of any website that SELLS pdf formats of
 books.
 
  Michael Linehan wrote:
  
   You can't read a book on a plane???
  
   - Original Message -
   From: Ellis, Andrew
   To: 'Michael Linehan' ;
  
   Sent: Monday, October 07, 2002 2:53 PM
   Subject: RE: E-books [7:55001]
  
  
or maybe he wants to read it on his laptop while
 commuting.
   
-Drew :^)
   
-Original Message-
From: Michael Linehan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, October 07, 2002 3:17 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: E-books [7:55001]
   
   
I know you know this already but the only logical
 conclusion
   is that he
wants PDF format so its easily illegally copied and
   distributed.
   
This of course places him directly in what I like to call
 the
   get it for
free, society.
   
- Original Message -

Re: $1000.00 a Day for the Practise Labs now?? Wh [7:55082]

2002-10-08 Thread Brad

wow, that's kind of high.  with remote rack prices so cheap, what's the
point???

thanks,
-Brad Ellis
CCIE#5796 (RS / Security)
Network Learning Inc
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.optsys.net (Cisco hardware)

Cisco Nuts  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hello, BTW: Looks like Cisc has  bumped up the fees for the CCIE Practice
 Labs to $1000.00 per day!! I thought it was something like $250.00 a day
 before. What's up with Cisco? Q: How much does it cost to use the CCIE
 Practice Labs?

 A: Contact the University CCIE Practice Labs for fees, refund and
 scheduling policies. Cisco CCIE Lab facilities may be scheduled for a
 cost of $1000 per day. Come'on Cisco.Are you kidding?? For that kind
 of money, I would attempt the Lab once every month till I pass it?? Anyone
 ??

 

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Cables [7:55096]

2002-10-08 Thread maine dude

Hi,

Can someone please tell me if there is any difference between a cross-over
cable and a roll-over cable?

Thanks,




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Route-map questions [7:55098]

2002-10-08 Thread Stefan Razeshu

Hello Group,

I try to create a simple configuration for a company that have two internet
connections, and also i want some users to use one internet provider and
others the second ISP. I created a route-map as following.

access-list 5 permit 172.16.1.0 0.0.0.255
access-list 6 permit 172.16.2.0 0.0.0.255

route-map internet permit 10
match ip address 5
set ip next-hop address_ISP_1 address_ISP_2
route-map internet permit 20
match ip address 6
set ip next-hop address_ISP_2 address_ISP_1

All thinks are working but I have problem when the link on one interface is
going down but the interface is still up.
How I can resolve this? it is somethink like HSRP tracking that i can use?
Regards 
Stefan



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RE: Migration Plan (6509) [7:55064]

2002-10-08 Thread Paul Jin

Sounds like you might want to check this seminar out.
I guess you can contact your local Cisco Sales team
to gain access info to the seminar.

- Paul


http://www.ciscopep.com/reglogin.lasso?event_id=PE9606457
---

Register now for the Cisco Catalyst 5000 Migration Program E-seminar at:
ciscopep.com/reglogin.lasso?event_id=PE9606457

Now is the time to migrate your customers from the Catalyst 5000 to a
Catalyst 4000/4500 or 6500. To assist you with this migration process Cisco
has created a comprehensive program to provide you with the tools needed to
identify, prepare, and migrate your customer base. Learn how you can
successfully migrate your customers by attending the Catalyst 5000 E-Seminar.

At this live E-seminar you will: 
Understand the details of the Catalyst 5000 migration program 
Hear about sales tools to prepare you to migrate your customers 
Learn how you can resolve your customers business issues by migrating their
infrastructure
Pose questions about the program directly to the Cisco Catalyst Switching
product teams
Broadcast Details:

Date: Thursday, October 10

Time:10:00 a.m. Pacific Time 

Registration URL: ciscopep.com/reglogin.lasso?event_id=PE9606457 




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ISP vpn configuration [7:55099]

2002-10-08 Thread Arni V. Skarphedinsson

I have been trying to get an answer to this question with out luck,

the question is, If I am running an ISP and a company has a connection to
me, now someone from that company wants to use a vpn connection from the
internet to connect to his company through me, and I have a PIX to accept
his VPN connection, how can I tell my PIX to only send that user to his
company and not the rest of my network.

please let me know if anyone knows somthing about this.

Best regards,
Arni


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Re: Cables [7:55096]

2002-10-08 Thread rau ren

Cross-over =1  3roll-over =  1  8

2  62 - 7

3  13 - 6

4  54 - 5

5  45 - 4

6  26 - 3

7  87 - 2

8- 7  8 - 1


 maine dude wrote:
Hi,

Can someone please tell me if there is any difference between a cross-over
cable and a roll-over cable?

Thanks,




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Get a bigger mailbox -- choose a size that fits your needs.
Raul Renteria (CCNA,CCDA,CCNP)
DJ1Integration. NY,NY. 10016


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Re: Cables [7:55096]

2002-10-08 Thread MADMAN

In my mind a rollover is a mirror image, i.e. 1-8, 2-7, 3-6, etc... 
whereas a crossover crosses over specific wires for a specific purpose,
T1 crossover is not the same as a 56K xover is not the same as an
ethernet crossover etc...

  Dave

maine dude wrote:
 
 Hi,
 
 Can someone please tell me if there is any difference between a cross-over
 cable and a roll-over cable?
 
 Thanks,
 
 -
 Get a bigger mailbox -- choose a size that fits your needs.
-- 
David Madland
CCIE# 2016
Sr. Network Engineer
Qwest Communications
612-664-3367

You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer. --Winston
Churchill




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Which IOS version has the DHCP server software? [7:55102]

2002-10-08 Thread r34rv13wm1rr0r

Which IOS release has the DHCP server software?  It is for a 25xx router.

IP
IP PLUS
IP ENTERPRISE
IP SP

Thanks...




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Re: Cisco Certification Digest V2 #2284 (Out of the Office) [7:55104]

2002-10-08 Thread Daniel Cevallos

I will on vacation starting October 5 and will be returning to the office on
October 15, 2002.



Thanks,
Danny




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Re: Cisco Certification Digest V2 #2284 [7:55105]

2002-10-08 Thread Kevin Jackson

does that mean I'm a CCNA?


--- Cisco Certification Digest 
wrote:
 
 Cisco Certification Digest  Tuesday, October 8 2002 
 Volume 02 : Number 2284
 
 
 
 In this issue of the Cisco Certification Mailing
 List Digest:
 RE: E-books [7:55001]
 Re: E-books [7:55001]
 DQoS Course Book [7:55054]
 Re: Even more confused: Was: New CCIE Lab
 Policy?? [7:55046]
 RE: NAT question? [7:55043]
 Re: E-books [7:55001]
 Re: Cisco Certification Digest V2 #2283 (Out of
 the Office) [7:55058]
 Re: NAT question? [7:55043]
 Re: Even more confused: Was: New CCIE Lab
 Policy?? [7:55046]
 Re: E-books [7:55001]
 Re: Even more confused: Was: New CCIE Lab
 Policy?? Why?? [7:55062]
 Re: Upgrade memory in Native mode [7:55063]
 Migration Plan (6509) [7:55064]
 Re: Route-map question (urgent) [7:54910]
 Re: Inside Interface accepts DHCP lease...but it
 has a static [7:55066]
 Message for [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jim) [7:55067]
 Recall: Message for [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jim)
 [7:55068]
 Re: CCIE written revised [7:53972]
 Re: E-books [7:55001]
 RE: Tech Tips [7:55015]
 Network security on Frame Relay, ATM and IP
 netwoks [7:55073]
 Re: E-books [7:55001]
 Re: OT: CSCO stock [7:54957]
 Re: Flash Memory and DRAM [7:55009]
 Security inside TPIPS cloud [7:55074]
 RE: redundant power feed for 3548 XL [7:54988]
 Re: IDS Sensor action [7:54762]
 Re: Migration Plan (6509) [7:55064]
 Re: How to restrict hubs in a LAN [7:54937]
 RE: Tech Tips [7:55080]
 how to interpret lab score [7:55081]
 Changes in CCNP Courses?? [7:55085]
 Enable Secret of AS5300 [7:55086]
 RE: Outlets England [7:53864]
 Re: Enable Secret of AS5300 [7:55086]
 Re: Enable Secret of AS5300 [7:55086]
 Re: Enable Secret of AS5300 [7:55086]
 CCDP Recert Exam #640-529 [7:55091]
 Bonding of Multiple ISDN B-Channels [7:55092]
 RE: Bonding of Multiple ISDN B-Channels
 [7:55092]
 Re: Inside Interface accepts DHCP lease...but it
 has a static [7:55094]
 Re: Bonding of Multiple ISDN B-Channels
 [7:55092]
 Re: how to interpret lab score [7:55081]
 Re: $1000.00 a Day for the Practise  Labs now??
 Wh [7:55082]
 RE: E-books [7:55001]
 Cables [7:55096]
 RE: Migration Plan (6509) [7:55064]
 Route-map questions [7:55098]
 ISP vpn configuration [7:55099]
 Re: Cables [7:55096]
 Re: Cables [7:55096]
 Which IOS version has the DHCP server software?
 [7:55102]
 

--
 
 Date: Mon, 7 Oct 2002 19:53:33 GMT
 From: Ellis, Andrew 
 Subject: RE: E-books [7:55001]
 
 or maybe he wants to read it on his laptop while
 commuting.
 
 - -Drew :^)
 
 - -Original Message-
 From: Michael Linehan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Monday, October 07, 2002 3:17 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: E-books [7:55001]
 
 
 I know you know this already but the only logical
 conclusion is that he
 wants PDF format so its easily illegally copied and
 distributed.
 
 This of course places him directly in what I like to
 call the get it for
 free, society.
 
 - - Original Message -
 From: Priscilla Oppenheimer 
 To: 
 Sent: Monday, October 07, 2002 1:42 PM
 Subject: Re: E-books [7:55001]
 
 
  WHY do you want PDF format?
 
  Aser Anani wrote:
  
   yes
   Priscilla Oppenheimer  wrote in
   message
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
   Why do you want PDF format?
  
   Aser Anani wrote:
   
nothing in PDF format
Priscilla Oppenheimer  wrote in
message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Aser Anani wrote:

 Hi there ,

 does anybody know a website that sell PDF
 format cisco
   books ,
 i am looking
 for Caslow Bridging book  Routing TCP/IP by
 Doyle Vol I

 Thanks
   
Go to www.ciscopress.com and click on the
 Online Books tab.
   
Priscilla
 Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
 Checked by AVG anti-virus system
 (http://www.grisoft.com).
 Version: 6.0.393 / Virus Database: 223 - Release
 Date: 10/3/2002
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 --
 
 Date: Mon, 7 Oct 2002 19:59:20 GMT
 From: Michael Linehan 
 Subject: Re: E-books [7:55001]
 
 You can't read a book on a plane???
 
 - - Original Message - 
 From: Ellis, Andrew 
 To: 'Michael Linehan' ; 
 Sent: Monday, October 07, 2002 2:53 PM
 Subject: RE: E-books [7:55001]
 
 
  or maybe he wants to read it on his laptop while
 commuting.
  
  -Drew :^)
  
  -Original Message-
  From: Michael Linehan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
  Sent: Monday, October 07, 2002 3:17 PM
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: Re: E-books [7:55001]
  
  
  I know you know this already but the only logical
 conclusion is that he
  wants PDF format so its easily illegally copied
 and distributed.
  
  This of course places him directly in what I like
 to call the get it for
  free, society.
  
  - Original 

Re: how to interpret lab score [7:55081]

2002-10-08 Thread Peter van Oene

I would focus more on getting 80 points then worrying about how the score 
breaks down.

At 05:36 AM 10/8/2002 +, Edward Sohn wrote:
Hello, all

I'll be taking my lab in a few weeks, and I want to make sure I
understand how the scoring system works.  I've seen a lot of differing
opinions and reports on the subject, and I was wondering if there was an
accurate way to interpret the score.

For example, I understand that there is a percentage breakdown.  How
does this translate into a passing/failing grade?  I don't *think* I am
violating any NDA rules in asking this question.  Obviously, please
respond within that context.

Thanks in advance,

Ed




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RE: Cables [7:55096]

2002-10-08 Thread Ellis, Andrew

Ditto!

-ALE

check out the sites:

http://www.lanshack.com/highlights/makepatch.htm

http://www.lanshack.com/highlights/cat5notes.htm

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





-Original Message-
From: MADMAN [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 11:50 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Cables [7:55096]


In my mind a rollover is a mirror image, i.e. 1-8, 2-7, 3-6, etc... 
whereas a crossover crosses over specific wires for a specific purpose,
T1 crossover is not the same as a 56K xover is not the same as an
ethernet crossover etc...

  Dave

maine dude wrote:
 
 Hi,
 
 Can someone please tell me if there is any difference between a cross-over
 cable and a roll-over cable?
 
 Thanks,
 
 -
 Get a bigger mailbox -- choose a size that fits your needs.
-- 
David Madland
CCIE# 2016
Sr. Network Engineer
Qwest Communications
612-664-3367

You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer. --Winston
Churchill




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RE: Cables [7:55096]

2002-10-08 Thread Ellis, Andrew

also look at:

http://www.gcom.com/home/support/t1crossover.html

ALE

-Original Message-
From: MADMAN [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 11:50 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Cables [7:55096]


In my mind a rollover is a mirror image, i.e. 1-8, 2-7, 3-6, etc... 
whereas a crossover crosses over specific wires for a specific purpose,
T1 crossover is not the same as a 56K xover is not the same as an
ethernet crossover etc...

  Dave

maine dude wrote:
 
 Hi,
 
 Can someone please tell me if there is any difference between a cross-over
 cable and a roll-over cable?
 
 Thanks,
 
 -
 Get a bigger mailbox -- choose a size that fits your needs.
-- 
David Madland
CCIE# 2016
Sr. Network Engineer
Qwest Communications
612-664-3367

You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer. --Winston
Churchill




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RE: Which IOS version has the DHCP server software? [7:55102]

2002-10-08 Thread Ben W

I'm pretty sure its the enterprise version, I was looking for the same thing
on my 2500s and couldn't find an IOS with it enabled.  I didn't have enough
RAM/Flash for enterprise so I'm assuming it is enterprise that has it.

r34rv13wm1rr0r wrote:
 
 Which IOS release has the DHCP server software?  It is for a
 25xx router.
 
 IP
 IP PLUS
 IP ENTERPRISE
 IP SP
 
 Thanks...
 
 




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Re: Anyone know how to tell the difference? [7:54972]

2002-10-08 Thread Brad

other than the listed model number on the outside of the router, I don't
think there are any differences in physical appearance.  The 1721 comes
w/16MB of nonupgradable flash, the 1720 comes w/8MB.  I've pasted the
comparison below-Hope this helps.

Cisco 1721 and 1720 Product Comparison

Feature
Cisco 1721  Cisco 1720
Routing Performance(based on 64-byte packet)12,000 packets per second
8,400 packets per second
DRAM (default/maximum)32 MB/96 MB
32 MB/48 MB
Flash (default/maximum)   16 MB/16 MB
(Nonupgradable) 8 MB/16 MB
IEEE 802.1Q VLAN Routing   Yes
No
Encryption Module LED Indicator Yes
No




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protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

2002-10-08 Thread sam sneed

Hello,

  I am looking for software that will monitor what kind of traffic is going
through my network and report it.I am only concerned with what is going
through my firewall so I will place the monitoring station on a hub with the
firewall or use SPAN port. Here are requirements:

Doesn't use netflow to collect data, want to use libpcap to capture data.
Want breakdown of what type of traffice by bytes and %'s ie. HTTP, FTP, SMTP
etc.
Do not want to use NTOP, too much of a pain in the ass to get it to work
longer than 20 minutes without a seg fault.
Would like the output in graphical form preferbably embeded in a web page.

If anyone has come across this please let me know. I'm contemplating writing
my own software but would rather not.

Thanks.




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Re: Anyone know how to tell the difference? [7:54972]

2002-10-08 Thread Brad

Sorry, my last post's allignment got messed up-here it is again:

 Cisco 1721 and 1720 Product Comparison

 Cisco 1720   Cisco 1721
 Routing Performance(based on 64-byte packet)
 8,400 packets per second 12,000 packets per second
 DRAM (default/maximum)
 32 MB/48 MB  32 MB/96 MB
 Flash (default/maximum)
 8 MB/16 MB(Nonupgradable)  16 MB/16 MB
 IEEE 802.1Q VLAN Routing
 YES   NO
 Encryption Module LED Indicator
 YES   NO




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RE: Which IOS version has the DHCP server software? [7:55102]

2002-10-08 Thread John Golovich

Try http://www.cisco.com/go/fn

The feature navigator is a blessing when looking for
certain things in an IOS.

--- Ben W  wrote:
 I'm pretty sure its the enterprise version, I was
 looking for the same thing
 on my 2500s and couldn't find an IOS with it
 enabled.  I didn't have enough
 RAM/Flash for enterprise so I'm assuming it is
 enterprise that has it.
 
 r34rv13wm1rr0r wrote:
  
  Which IOS release has the DHCP server software? 
 It is for a
  25xx router.
  
  IP
  IP PLUS
  IP ENTERPRISE
  IP SP
  
  Thanks...
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 


__
Do you Yahoo!?
Faith Hill - Exclusive Performances, Videos  More
http://faith.yahoo.com




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Re: FS: AGS+, good lab router [7:54721]

2002-10-08 Thread Don Queen

I have one that 8 serial ports, and since I'll be moving shortly, I'll sell
mine for the same price.
- Original Message -
From: Priscilla Oppenheimer 
To: 
Sent: Wednesday, October 02, 2002 11:58 AM
Subject: RE: FS: AGS+, good lab router [7:54721]


 I'm suprised it doesn't have any serial ports. Then it would be better.

 Also, the AGS doesn't run modern versions of IOS. I think the latest you
can
 put on it is version 11.0. This could make it hard to do labs that use new
 commands.

 It's very noisy and generates lots of heat and requires lots of power.

 But the price is good! It's quite bulky, but not too heavy, so shippnig
 shouldn't be too bad.

 ___

 Priscilla Oppenheimer
 www.troubleshootingnetworks.com
 www.priscilla.com


 Ben Hockenhull wrote:
 
  Cisco AGS+
  CSC/4
  16 meg of dram
  4 meg flash
  CBUS controller,
  Environmental controller
  12 ethernet interfaces
  2 token ring interfaces,
  1 FDDI interface
 
  Runs perfectly.
 
  $100.00 plus shipping




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how to monitor ciscosecure service? [7:55114]

2002-10-08 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Hi Guys,

We use CiscoSecure NT 2.6 to authenticate RAS users. It 
happened several times that CiscoSecure stopped 
responding but csauth and cstacacs services were 
still up. I know there are softwares monitoring 
services, but it won't solve our problem. Is there a 
software that can check to see if CiscoSecure is 
responding? For example to telnet to port 49 to see if 
cstacacs is working? 

Thanks.
Zhen Cai




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RE: Which IOS version has the DHCP server software? [7:55102]

2002-10-08 Thread David C Prall

Have a look at the Software Advisor and search by Feature:
http://www.cisco.com/cgi-bin/Support/CompNav/Index.pl

Search on DHCP Server-Easy IP Phase 2 which is first available in 12.0T,
platform specific to some releases. They show it first on the 2500 in
12.0(1)T, and it is available in all feature sets therefore IP should have
it.

http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios120/120newft/120
t/120t1/easyip2.htm#xtocid138

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

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 12:59 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: RE: Which IOS version has the DHCP server software? [7:55102]


 I'm pretty sure its the enterprise version, I was looking for the
 same thing
 on my 2500s and couldn't find an IOS with it enabled.  I didn't
 have enough
 RAM/Flash for enterprise so I'm assuming it is enterprise that has it.

 r34rv13wm1rr0r wrote:
 
  Which IOS release has the DHCP server software?  It is for a
  25xx router.
 
  IP
  IP PLUS
  IP ENTERPRISE
  IP SP
 
  Thanks...




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RE: how to monitor ciscosecure service? [7:55114]

2002-10-08 Thread jeff sicuranza

In Cisco Secure there is a section to configure what to do if the service
stops, is not responsive or hangs. Based on these conditions you can have
the service restart etc. I believe the menu path is
Systems Configuration then click the ACS Service Management link and you
will be presented with options on checking the logging in and service
handling options. In the ACS Service Management section there is a sub
section with a drop down box to test the login process every x minutes.
Based on the test outcome you can select the test to respond in the
following ways:
Restart All
Restart Radius/Tacacs
Reboot
No action

There is an event logging subsection also to add your email address and SMTP
server to send you an email when issues occur.


I remember using even earlier options of Cisco Secure and this option was
not available. The service would hang periodically and the only way to
restart it was in NT or 2k services utility. I believe Cisco added this
option as a kludge to get around customer having to do it manually whenever
Cisco Secure would lock up. It works. I do not know if they fixed those
types of problems in 3.X or the Service Management link is still included..

/JS


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Re: How to restrict hubs in a LAN [7:54937]

2002-10-08 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer

Thanks for the details, Chuck. The number of MAC addresses that a switch can
learn can indeed be an issue, although the number tends to be pretty big
these days. It's helpful to know that the actual number depends on features
that are enabled, amount of memory, etc.

It's worth giving some thought to what happens if a switch can't remember
all the addresses that it sees...

Thought.

Thought.

and doesn't store all the addresses in a bridging table that says which port
to use

Thought.

Thought.

The switch floods! When frames arrive with a destiation MAC address that is
not in the bridging table, the switch must flood the packet out all
interfaces. Needless to say, this wastes bandwidth.

Here's a story from Troubleshooting Campus Networks:

One of the authors was called in to troubleshoot a hospital campus network
consisting of several buildings, star-connected back to a central data
center. Each remote building had an edge switch with a fiber connection back
to the data center. In the data center it was found that entire
bidirectional conversations between clients in remote buildings and servers
in the same remote building were visible on the data center backbone. At
first it was thought that the forwarding path between a client and server
was extending through the data center somehow, which was not the intent of
the network design. Upon further analysis, it was discovered that the
switches used in the remote buildings only supported 256 MAC addresses in
the bridging tables. Consequently, with over 500 users in each remote
building, it was common for many addresses to become unknown. The
recommendation was made to replace the remote building switches with ones
having greater capacity, thereby eliminating the unnecessary traffic on the
data center backbone.


___

Priscilla Oppenheimer
www.troubleshootingnetworks.com
www.priscilla.com



Chuck's Long Road wrote:
 
 Priscilla Oppenheimer  wrote in
 message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  Daren Presbitero wrote:
  
   Isn't there a limitation on the number of MACs that a port
 will
   handle?
 
  Probably, but I bet the number is way bigger than he needs to
 worry about.
  There's probably a max number of addresses for generic
 learning purposes
 
 
 CL: in case anyone is interested, the max number of macs
 supported on any of
 the Cisco switches is fluid, depending on other features turned
 on, amount
 of memory, etc. . The 3550 documentation states that depending
 upon the SDM
 template that is active, one may have anywhere from 2,000 to
 12,000 unicast
 MAC's in the CAM table. I am assuming this means that if you
 have lots of
 hubs and switches daisy chanined down the line, that the MAC's
 of end
 stations will show up in the root switch CAM. Obviously, if all
 you have are
 end stations in a single switch, that number is smaller.
 
 CL: this does bring up a good point about size ( number of
 devices -
 servers, PC's, and other switches ) in a bridged network.
 
 
 and
  a max number related to port security, which appears to be
 132 from an
  earlier post.
 
  There's also the issue of how many MACs can eat up all of the
 available
 100
  Mbps, but once again, that's the user's problem.
 
   Won't hubs share all those macs with each port, and possibly
   cause the max
   limit to be reached?
 
  All the MAC addressess behind the hub will be visible to all
 the switched
  ports. Is that what you're getting at? It's a good point. The
 learning
  process will need to know about all the MACs. But the max
 number of MAC
  addresses that a switch can learn is large and not something
 he needs to
  worry about.
 
  ___
 
  Priscilla Oppenheimer
  www.troubleshootingnetworks.com
  www.priscilla.com
  
   -Original Message-
   From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
   Sent: Monday, October 07, 2002 8:20 AM
   To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Subject: Re: How to restrict hubs in a LAN [7:54937]
  
  
   David j wrote:
   
See inline..
Chuck's Long Road wrote:

 as much of a rulemeister as I am, I still have to look
 at
   this
 from the user
 standpoint. Why are users throwing their own hubs onto
 the
 network? Is there
 a business case to be made? Is facilities too slow
 getting
 requested cable
 pulls done?

 what is the concern with a user plugging a hub in at the
   desk
 and then
 connected a couple of extra PC's? if the problem is one
 of
dual
 homing by
 accident or otherwise, I can see the issue with spanning
   tree
 recalculations. But in a single home situation,  what
 do you
 see as the
 issues?

   
I see one issue: collisions, if you have a switched
 network
   you
don't want to deal with collisions that hubs normally
 produce.
I have to recognize, though, that hubs sometimes are very
convenient and I'm the first on using them.
  
   Collisions 

Re: OT: CSCO stock [7:54957]

2002-10-08 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer

Yes, we'll need strong business skills and an understanding of the business
applications that ride on the networks and actually make some money. Or
maybe better muscles. I saw on the news that the Pacific Maritime
Association offered the longshoremen a raise for the highest paying job to
$137,000. The longshoremen turned it down. Unbelievable. Hey, I'm generally
a bleeding liberal, but this port closure thing p!sses me off.

Priscilla

nrf wrote:
 
 
 
  Sorry to be so pessimistic. NRF - got anything to add?
 
 Oh, I got lots to add.  But let me try to keep it short by
 couching things
 in the following bullet points:
 
 *If you want money, somebody has to be ultimately paying. 
 Money in, money
 out.
 
 Cisco is not a mint.  No vendor is a mint.  Cisco can only earn
 money
 sustainably if their customers are making money.  And not just
 making money,
 but making money by using Cisco gear.  You can only get money
 out if there
 is money coming in. Is that really happening?
 
 Let me explain.  Let's look at the Internet.  Many studies have
 shown a boom
 in Internet usage.  A boom in traffic.  A boom in users. A boom
 in time
 spent on the Internet.  In all categories there is a boom,
 except for the
 one category that matters - a boom in profits.  How many
 dotcoms actually
 make money?  Few, very few.  How many service-providers
 actually make profit
 from providing Internet access?  Again, few, very few.   If you
 tally the
 aggregate of all the profit and losses derived from Internet
 operations, you
 will see that the Internet has been nothing but a financial
 debacle of the
 first order.  A business model where you, as a vendor, are
 making record
 profits while many of your customers are unprofitable is a
 business model
 that is unsustainable.
 
 True, Cisco is not just all about the Internet.  So let's look
 at Cisco's
 bread-and-butter - the enterprise customer.  Enterprises will
 continue to
 invest in their network only to the degree that it is
 profitable to do so.
 Has Cisco, or any other networking vendor, been able to
 demonstrate a solid
 ROI from upgrading the network?In many cases, no. 
 Companies don't just
 build out networks 'for fun', they do so because there is a
 clear business
 reason to do so.   What are these reasons?
 
 Now don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that there are no good
 reasons to do
 a network buildout.  Indeed there are often many good reasons. 
 But my point
 is that we need engineers who are not only technically strong,
 but can also
 articulate a strong business case as to why money should be
 spent.  In
 short, we engineers need to know more about the business and
 financial side
 of things.
 
 *How many people really care about the network?
 
 By that, I mean how many regular (non-technical) people really
 care about a
 network at all?  Are they going to be dazzled with mentions of
 BGP and VoIP
 and all that crap?  Hardly.  Regular people care about the
 services that a
 network can provide.  It is the services that people are
 willing to pay for,
 not the network itself.  But that begs the question - are there
 really all
 these jazzy services out there that regular people are willing
 to pay for?
 Before you answer, you may wish to consider the following
 snippet from the
 Hart-Winston study:
 
 The bottom line is that among people who are most likely to
 subscribe to
 high-speed Internet access, the obstacles are price and lack of
 appeal,
 said Hart, CEO of Hart Research. Forty-eight percent have no
 interest
 regardless of price and another 21 percent are willing to pay
 at most $20
 per month. If you cannot win over the people who are currently
 using the
 Internet, consumer acceptance of high-speed access will be slow
 and
 limited...Findings about consumer interest in subscribing to
 high-speed
 service also apply to those who use it at work, the poll found,
 indicating
 that even those exposed to the service find little reason to
 subscribe at
 home
 http://www.comptel.org/press/nov29_2001_voices.html
 
 Then of course there was that incident in Oregon where a whole
 town was
 offered free broadband for a year, and only half the households
 signed up
 (can't find the article unfortunately, but you may wish to talk
 to Steven
 Ridder if you want to see it).  The point is, at this time,
 very few regular
 people actually care about the Internet because there are no
 truly
 compelling services out there, and especially not much that
 people are
 willing to pay serious money for.
 
 * Cisco isn't going anywhere.
 
 All the nasty invective aside, the fact is that Cisco holds
 more of a
 premier position in the industry than perhaps at any other
 time.  They got
 billions of dollars in the bank, and very importantly, no
 debt.  The
 disaster of the service-provider market was something of a
 godsend to Cisco
 in the sense that it has crushed its competitors like Nortel
 and Lucent.
 Just a few years ago there was talk of how Cisco was going to
 have 

Re: Which IOS version has the DHCP server software? [7:55102]

2002-10-08 Thread Igor Zozulya

Hi,

For DHCP on 25xx you'll need at least 12.x IP.

Regards
Igor

r34rv13wm1rr0r  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Which IOS release has the DHCP server software?  It is for a 25xx router.

 IP
 IP PLUS
 IP ENTERPRISE
 IP SP

 Thanks...




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Frame LMI [7:55120]

2002-10-08 Thread Black Jack

Any way I can get a more complete look at my Frame LMI than debug gives me?
I would take the complete frame and manually decode it if I could figure out
how to capure it. This is on a production router  but it is lightly loaded
so reasonable debugs are possible. If only I had a Sniffer... but I just
have my trusty Cisco.


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Re: Anyone know how to tell the difference? [7:54972]

2002-10-08 Thread Paul B. Watson

After checking  my routers I found that the show version does differentiate
between the 1720 and 1721. Hope this helps.

Paul

Daren Presbitero  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Group Studiers,

 Anyone know how to tell the difference between a 1720 and 1721
 router?  Will it show up on a show ver that it is a 1721 vice 1720?
 Is there something different as far as visually?

 Thanks in advance,
 Daren




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PIX 515E Mem [7:55122]

2002-10-08 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

The default memory in the 515E is 32Mb, supposedly upgradable to 64Mb.

Looking in the Hardware Installation Guide it says you cannot install a
64 Mb DIMM in the PIX 515 due to height restraints.  But I've seen a couple
posts on this list stating a PIX 515E with 128Mb

Is it possible to use Simpletech's (# SCS-PIX5/64) 64Mb chip in the PIX
515E?

Thanx,
mkj

~~~
Michael Jablonski
ABN AMRO Asset Management Holdings, Inc.
161 North Clark St.
9th Flr
Chicago, IL  60601-2468
PH: 312.884.2996 
FAX: 312.278.5550
~~~




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RE: Cables [7:55096]

2002-10-08 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Would this work for a T1 WIC to T1 WIC virtual circuit?  Or could you use
a standard x-over?

-Original Message-
From: Ellis, Andrew [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 11:51 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Cables [7:55096]


also look at:

http://www.gcom.com/home/support/t1crossover.html

ALE

-Original Message-
From: MADMAN [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 11:50 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Cables [7:55096]


In my mind a rollover is a mirror image, i.e. 1-8, 2-7, 3-6, etc... 
whereas a crossover crosses over specific wires for a specific purpose,
T1 crossover is not the same as a 56K xover is not the same as an
ethernet crossover etc...

  Dave

maine dude wrote:
 
 Hi,
 
 Can someone please tell me if there is any difference between a cross-over
 cable and a roll-over cable?
 
 Thanks,
 
 -
 Get a bigger mailbox -- choose a size that fits your needs.
-- 
David Madland
CCIE# 2016
Sr. Network Engineer
Qwest Communications
612-664-3367

You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer. --Winston
Churchill




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Re: Cables [7:55096]

2002-10-08 Thread MADMAN

a standard T1 xover would work just fine, 1-4, 2-5.

  Dave

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
 Would this work for a T1 WIC to T1 WIC virtual circuit?  Or could you use
 a standard x-over?
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Ellis, Andrew [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 11:51 AM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: RE: Cables [7:55096]
 
 also look at:
 
 http://www.gcom.com/home/support/t1crossover.html
 
 ALE
 
 -Original Message-
 From: MADMAN [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 11:50 AM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Cables [7:55096]
 
 In my mind a rollover is a mirror image, i.e. 1-8, 2-7, 3-6, etc...
 whereas a crossover crosses over specific wires for a specific purpose,
 T1 crossover is not the same as a 56K xover is not the same as an
 ethernet crossover etc...
 
   Dave
 
 maine dude wrote:
 
  Hi,
 
  Can someone please tell me if there is any difference between a
cross-over
  cable and a roll-over cable?
 
  Thanks,
 
  -
  Get a bigger mailbox -- choose a size that fits your needs.
 --
 David Madland
 CCIE# 2016
 Sr. Network Engineer
 Qwest Communications
 612-664-3367
 
 You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer. --Winston
 Churchill
-- 
David Madland
CCIE# 2016
Sr. Network Engineer
Qwest Communications
612-664-3367

You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer. --Winston
Churchill




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I need any 5.x firmware for a Catalyst 1900 [7:55125]

2002-10-08 Thread Colin Weaver

Please!!!

Thanks.

-Colin




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Re: PIX 515E Mem [7:55122]

2002-10-08 Thread mike greenberg

any PC100 memory chip will work on Cisco 515E
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:The default memory in the 515E is
32Mb, supposedly upgradable to 64Mb.

Looking in the Hardware Installation Guide it says you cannot install a
64 Mb DIMM in the PIX 515 due to height restraints. But I've seen a couple
posts on this list stating a PIX 515E with 128Mb

Is it possible to use Simpletech's (# SCS-PIX5/64) 64Mb chip in the PIX
515E?

Thanx,
mkj

~~~
Michael Jablonski
ABN AMRO Asset Management Holdings, Inc.
161 North Clark St.
9th Flr
Chicago, IL 60601-2468
PH: 312.884.2996 
FAX: 312.278.5550
~~~
Do you Yahoo!?
Faith Hill - Exclusive Performances, Videos,  more
faith.yahoo.com




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Re: I need any 5.x firmware for a Catalyst 1900 [7:55125]

2002-10-08 Thread Shawn Heisey

You need to go to this URL, and click on the Catalyst 1900 original
link:

http://www.cisco.com/kobayashi/sw-center/lan/cat1900.shtml

You will need a CCO login to get to it.  If you don't have a login, you
can only get the version 9 software for the newer models.

Thanks,
Shawn

Colin Weaver wrote:
 
 Please!!!




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RE: PIX 515E Mem [7:55122]

2002-10-08 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Would it max out at 128 (2 X 64MB) or could you go with 256?

-Original Message-
From: mike greenberg [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 4:56 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: PIX 515E Mem [7:55122]



any PC100 memory chip will work on Cisco 515E 


 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 


The default memory in the 515E is 32Mb, supposedly upgradable to 64Mb.

Looking in the Hardware Installation Guide it says you cannot install a
64 Mb DIMM in the PIX 515 due to height restraints. But I've seen a couple
posts on this list stating a PIX 515E with 128Mb

Is it possible to use Simpletech's (# SCS-PIX5/64) 64Mb chip in the PIX
515E?

Thanx,
mkj

~~~
Michael Jablonski
ABN AMRO Asset Management Holdings, Inc.
161 North Clark St.
9th Flr
Chicago, IL 60601-2468
PH: 312.884.2996 
FAX: 312.278.5550
~~~
  _  

Do you Yahoo!?
Faith Hill   - Exclusive Performances, Videos, 
more
faith.yahoo.com 




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RE: Off topic - Cisco's jazzy web site [7:54966]

2002-10-08 Thread Gaz

I think the idea is that when you look for a 2600 for example, 
everything is there together (the sales gumpf, the tech specs, etc etc)
Not sure whether that's a good idea or not. As an engineer you're fairly 
regularly going to certain areas, and it's handy to have the info for 
all the routers there, rather than going to a different place for each 
router (if that's the way it's going).

Gaz


In article , 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
 I'm seeing more integration between the marketing materials and the
 technical materials. As expected, the marketing seems to be prominent.
 I'll keep an open mind as to its improved/not improved logic.
 
  -Original Message-
  From: John Neiberger [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 
  Ugh...I just took a look.  Am I the only one who thinks this 
  is horrid?
  Perhaps I'm too used to the old layout but this seems to be much more
  difficult to follow.  
  
  Oh well, in a few months I'm sure it will be old-hat.




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RE: Tech Tips [7:55015]

2002-10-08 Thread Gaz

What about Software Bug Toolkit!

Where do you reckon that belongs?

Ahhh - Troubleshooting Tools!

Nope!

Configuration Tools. 

Wot?


In article , [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
says...
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
 Persio Pucci
 Sent: Monday, October 07, 2002 1:38 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Tech Tips [7:55015]
 
 Hey folks,
 
 where did the Tech Tips go that I cannot find it anywhere in the new
 Cisco
 site? Did anybody find it already? :(
 
 Regards,
 
 Persio




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Re: Enable Secret of AS5300 [7:55086]

2002-10-08 Thread YASSER ALY

What I will say might sound silly but here it is

You just pasted the enable secret line in encrypted form, did you got it
from a backup file for the configuration or you can login to the router
using sort of a script where the password is saved but you can't retreive
it. If it is the case where you can login intp the priviliged mode then
why don't you change the password instead of trying recovering it .

Anyway, your enable password is: cisco1

Try it or passwords similar to it maybe it will work for you

 

 On Tuesday 08 October 2002 12:56 pm, you wrote:

   Hi group   I lost the enable secret password of my Cisco
AS5300.I have theconfiguration showing.   enable secret
5 $1$6YRM$nzNXQuv4h24C3AlB8N3rp.enable password 7 110A1016141D5A 
 Any idea to decrypt this password.   Thanks in
advance
_   
Chat with friends online, try MSN Messenger: http://messenger.msn.com  
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with friends online, try MSN Messenger: http://messenger.msn.com
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good alt. to a catalyst 3550 [7:55132]

2002-10-08 Thread Vic Dmon

Hi, does anyone know what would be a good (and cheap) alternate for a 3550
switch. Please let me know. Thanks


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RE: good alt. to a catalyst 3550 [7:55132]

2002-10-08 Thread Vic Dmon

I would also appreciate if you could specify any places to get it from that
are good.


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RE: Tech Tips [7:55015]

2002-10-08 Thread John Neiberger

For this reason, among many other, let me reiterate how much I dislike
the new site.  It's painful to navigate.  As an example, when I used to
want to check for a new IOS release I'd go to the Software Center,
select the major release number and then look at what images were
available.  IIRC, this took four clicks.  

To get to the same screen now takes _eight_ clicks.  I'm sure there are
shorter paths to get where I was going but that's ridiculous!

John

 Gaz  10/8/02 4:13:15 PM 
What about Software Bug Toolkit!

Where do you reckon that belongs?

Ahhh - Troubleshooting Tools!

Nope!

Configuration Tools. 

Wot?


In article , [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
says...
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf
Of
 Persio Pucci
 Sent: Monday, October 07, 2002 1:38 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 Subject: Tech Tips [7:55015]
 
 Hey folks,
 
 where did the Tech Tips go that I cannot find it anywhere in the
new
 Cisco
 site? Did anybody find it already? :(
 
 Regards,
 
 Persio




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Re: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

2002-10-08 Thread dre

sam sneed  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 I am looking for software that will monitor what kind of traffic is going
 through my network and report it.I am only concerned with what is going
 through my firewall so I will place the monitoring station on a hub with
the
 firewall or use SPAN port. Here are requirements:

 Doesn't use netflow to collect data, want to use libpcap to capture data.
 Want breakdown of what type of traffice by bytes and %'s ie. HTTP, FTP,
SMTP
 etc.
 Do not want to use NTOP, too much of a pain in the ass to get it to work
 longer than 20 minutes without a seg fault.
 Would like the output in graphical form preferbably embeded in a web page.

http://members.optushome.com.au/emikulic/net/darkstat/
http://www.tcptrace.org/
http://www.tcpdump.org/related.html
http://packetstorm.decepticons.org/sniffers/
http://pastmon.sourceforge.net/
http://dingetje.homeip.net/iptotal/

Or commercial:
http://www.niksun.com/
http://www.unispeed.com/

-dre




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Re: good alt. to a catalyst 3550 [7:55132]

2002-10-08 Thread Chuck's Long Road

Vic Dmon  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi, does anyone know what would be a good (and cheap) alternate for a 3550
 switch. Please let me know. Thanks


CL: good for what? the 2950 series is L2 only and advertises that it does
not have all of the QoS funtionality of the 3550. You'd have to check the
documentation for both to figure out what those shortcomings may be.
CL: For an L3 Cisco switch, the 3550 with the EMI image is about the lowest
price device you can get.

CL: check out http://www.nextag.com/ for price comparisons. also, if you
visit a certain auction site, you can get lucky and get a good price
sometimes.

CL: The rest of Cisco's low end line - the 19xx, the 29xx, and the 35xx are
pretty much history. If you are asking in terms of CCIE lab preparation, you
are probably better off investing in a real 3550, or making friends with
someone who has one, or renting rack time from an establishment that has
them available.




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Re: OT: CSCO stock [7:54957]

2002-10-08 Thread Chuck's Long Road

Priscilla Oppenheimer  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Yes, we'll need strong business skills and an understanding of the
business
 applications that ride on the networks and actually make some money. Or
 maybe better muscles. I saw on the news that the Pacific Maritime
 Association offered the longshoremen a raise for the highest paying job to
 $137,000. The longshoremen turned it down. Unbelievable.


CL: yeah, but it's outdoor work, and involves heavy lifting. ;-


Hey, I'm generally
 a bleeding liberal, but this port closure thing p!sses me off.

 Priscilla

 nrf wrote:
 
 
  
   Sorry to be so pessimistic. NRF - got anything to add?
 
  Oh, I got lots to add.  But let me try to keep it short by
  couching things
  in the following bullet points:
 
  *If you want money, somebody has to be ultimately paying.
  Money in, money
  out.
 
  Cisco is not a mint.  No vendor is a mint.  Cisco can only earn
  money
  sustainably if their customers are making money.  And not just
  making money,
  but making money by using Cisco gear.  You can only get money
  out if there
  is money coming in. Is that really happening?
 
  Let me explain.  Let's look at the Internet.  Many studies have
  shown a boom
  in Internet usage.  A boom in traffic.  A boom in users. A boom
  in time
  spent on the Internet.  In all categories there is a boom,
  except for the
  one category that matters - a boom in profits.  How many
  dotcoms actually
  make money?  Few, very few.  How many service-providers
  actually make profit
  from providing Internet access?  Again, few, very few.   If you
  tally the
  aggregate of all the profit and losses derived from Internet
  operations, you
  will see that the Internet has been nothing but a financial
  debacle of the
  first order.  A business model where you, as a vendor, are
  making record
  profits while many of your customers are unprofitable is a
  business model
  that is unsustainable.
 
  True, Cisco is not just all about the Internet.  So let's look
  at Cisco's
  bread-and-butter - the enterprise customer.  Enterprises will
  continue to
  invest in their network only to the degree that it is
  profitable to do so.
  Has Cisco, or any other networking vendor, been able to
  demonstrate a solid
  ROI from upgrading the network?In many cases, no.
  Companies don't just
  build out networks 'for fun', they do so because there is a
  clear business
  reason to do so.   What are these reasons?
 
  Now don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that there are no good
  reasons to do
  a network buildout.  Indeed there are often many good reasons.
  But my point
  is that we need engineers who are not only technically strong,
  but can also
  articulate a strong business case as to why money should be
  spent.  In
  short, we engineers need to know more about the business and
  financial side
  of things.
 
  *How many people really care about the network?
 
  By that, I mean how many regular (non-technical) people really
  care about a
  network at all?  Are they going to be dazzled with mentions of
  BGP and VoIP
  and all that crap?  Hardly.  Regular people care about the
  services that a
  network can provide.  It is the services that people are
  willing to pay for,
  not the network itself.  But that begs the question - are there
  really all
  these jazzy services out there that regular people are willing
  to pay for?
  Before you answer, you may wish to consider the following
  snippet from the
  Hart-Winston study:
 
  The bottom line is that among people who are most likely to
  subscribe to
  high-speed Internet access, the obstacles are price and lack of
  appeal,
  said Hart, CEO of Hart Research. Forty-eight percent have no
  interest
  regardless of price and another 21 percent are willing to pay
  at most $20
  per month. If you cannot win over the people who are currently
  using the
  Internet, consumer acceptance of high-speed access will be slow
  and
  limited...Findings about consumer interest in subscribing to
  high-speed
  service also apply to those who use it at work, the poll found,
  indicating
  that even those exposed to the service find little reason to
  subscribe at
  home
  http://www.comptel.org/press/nov29_2001_voices.html
 
  Then of course there was that incident in Oregon where a whole
  town was
  offered free broadband for a year, and only half the households
  signed up
  (can't find the article unfortunately, but you may wish to talk
  to Steven
  Ridder if you want to see it).  The point is, at this time,
  very few regular
  people actually care about the Internet because there are no
  truly
  compelling services out there, and especially not much that
  people are
  willing to pay serious money for.
 
  * Cisco isn't going anywhere.
 
  All the nasty invective aside, the fact is that Cisco holds
  more of a
  premier position in the industry than perhaps at any other
  time.  They got
  billions of dollars 

RE: PIX 515E Mem [7:55122]

2002-10-08 Thread mike greenberg

I am not 100% certain but I am pretty sure that the motherboard does not
support
256MB of RAM.  You can go with 1 128MB chip or 2 64MB chip
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:Would it max out at 128 (2 X 64MB) or
could you go with 256?-Original Message-
From: mike greenberg [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 4:56 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: PIX 515E Mem [7:55122]


any PC100 memory chip will work on Cisco 515E 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: The default memory in the 515E is
32Mb, supposedly upgradable to 64Mb.

Looking in the Hardware Installation Guide it says you cannot install a
64 Mb DIMM in the PIX 515 due to height restraints. But I've seen a couple
posts on this list stating a PIX 515E with 128Mb

Is it possible to use Simpletech's (# SCS-PIX5/64) 64Mb chip in the PIX
515E?

Thanx,
mkj

~~~
Michael Jablonski
ABN AMRO Asset Management Holdings, Inc.
161 North Clark St.
9th Flr
Chicago, IL 60601-2468
PH: 312.884.2996 
FAX: 312.278.5550
~~~
Do you Yahoo!?
Faith Hill - Exclusive Performances, Videos,  more
faith.yahoo.com


-
Do you Yahoo!?
Faith Hill - Exclusive Performances, Videos,  more
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IOS Port range command [7:55139]

2002-10-08 Thread Ken Diliberto

I remember reading about this here a while back but couldn't find it in
my archives.

I really like CatOS for its ability to change a group of ports all at
once.  The feature is now available in IOS (well, it's probably been
there for a while).  Who knows... it may save a little time in the lab.

I did this on a 3550-24:

Switch(config)#int range f0/1 -24
Switch(config-if-range)#no shut
Switch(config-if-range)#
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/1,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/2,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/3,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/4,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/5,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/6,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/7,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/8,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/9,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/10,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/11,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/12,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/13,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/14,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/15,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/16,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/17,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/18,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/19,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/20,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/21,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/22,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/23,
changed state to down
1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface FastEthernet0/24,
changed state to down
Switch(config-if-range)#
Switch(config-if-range)#
Switch(config-if-range)#exit
Switch(config)#exit
Switch#

I found this information at:

http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/hw/switches/ps700/products_tech_note09186a00800a93ed.shtml

Way too much fun.

Ken




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Re: Tech Tips [7:55015]

2002-10-08 Thread Chuck's Long Road

I just now wanted to check something regarding the CCIE lab. Guess what I
can't find on the new site? The what's new section.

It looks like we will have to dig high and low to find the announcements -
what kind of cra* is that?

--

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John Neiberger  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 For this reason, among many other, let me reiterate how much I dislike
 the new site.  It's painful to navigate.  As an example, when I used to
 want to check for a new IOS release I'd go to the Software Center,
 select the major release number and then look at what images were
 available.  IIRC, this took four clicks.

 To get to the same screen now takes _eight_ clicks.  I'm sure there are
 shorter paths to get where I was going but that's ridiculous!

 John

  Gaz  10/8/02 4:13:15 PM 
 What about Software Bug Toolkit!

 Where do you reckon that belongs?

 Ahhh - Troubleshooting Tools!

 Nope!

 Configuration Tools.

 Wot?


 In article , [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 says...
  -Original Message-
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf
 Of
  Persio Pucci
  Sent: Monday, October 07, 2002 1:38 PM
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: Tech Tips [7:55015]
 
  Hey folks,
 
  where did the Tech Tips go that I cannot find it anywhere in the
 new
  Cisco
  site? Did anybody find it already? :(
 
  Regards,
 
  Persio




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RE: Enable Secret of AS5300 [7:55086]

2002-10-08 Thread Frank Merrill

 I lost the enable secret password of my Cisco AS5300.I have the 
 configuration showing.
 
 enable secret 5 $1$6YRM$nzNXQuv4h24C3AlB8N3rp.
 enable password 7 110A1016141D5A
 
One more point, since you have an 'enable secret' configured, the 'enable
password' serves no purpose.
When you type 'enable' to go to exec mode, it will only work with the
'enable secret' at the password prompt.
If a secret is configured, the enable password is never utilized.

You can safely remove the 'enable password'.

Good Luck!
fgm





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RE: IOS Port range command [7:55139]

2002-10-08 Thread Frank Merrill

 I did this on a 3550-24:
 
 Switch(config)#int range f0/1 -24
 Switch(config-if-range)#no shut
 Switch(config-if-range)#
 1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface
 FastEthernet0/1,
 changed state to down
 1w0d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface
 FastEthernet0/2,
 changed state to down
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RE: [nsp] Bonding of Multiple ISDN B-Channels [7:55143]

2002-10-08 Thread Thomas Renzy

Kerpal,

Here is a configuration that I use with a 4 port BRI router on a Cisco 3640.

1) Create a dialer interface like the one below. This is where you will
actually put all the parameters for the BRI interfaces.  indicates where
you should fill in the information

interface Dialer1
 description 
 ip address  
 encapsulation ppp
 dialer in-band
 dialer map ip  name 
broadcast 
 dialer hold-queue 10
 dialer load-threshold 10 outbound
 dialer-group 1
 ppp authentication chap

The dialer load-threshold command tells the router that when it reaches
10/255 (3% traffic load if my math is correct) it will bring up the other
channel and the other BRI interfaces if configured on them. This is really
aggressive, but you can configure it to whatever you like. 

2) Now map the dial interface across your BRI interfaces

interface BRI1/0
 dialer rotary-group 1

interface BRI1/1
 dialer rotary-group 1

interface BRI1/3
 dialer rotary-group 1

interface BRI1/3
 dialer rotary-group 1

Hope this helps.

Thanks,
Thomas Renzy 
IST Global Network Services
VERITAS Software
Office: +650-527-4734
Mobile: +650-996-7048
Fax: +650-527-2034

Some people drink from the fountain of knowledge, others just gargle. -
Author Robert Anthony


-Original Message-
From: Kerpal.Abdar [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 6:08 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [nsp] Bonding of Multiple ISDN B-Channels


Hi.  Could anyone tell me what router / interface to use and what I would
need
to configure in order to bond up to 4 ISDN B-channels based on bandwidth
needs?


Sample configuration?


Thanks

Kerpal

___
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RE: Frame LMI [7:55120]

2002-10-08 Thread Frank Merrill

I have to admit that that is one nice thing about Wellfleet/Bay/Nortel
routers.  They built in pcap (Packet Capture) years ago, and it's actually
exportable/convertible to a sniffer format for analysis.

Alas, not on a cisco...
But I'm sure someone here will provide a more useful answer than the one
that I haven't provided.

Good Luck!
fgm



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protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

2002-10-08 Thread Cliff Stewart

Sam,

Have you taken a look at NBAR? Take a look at the
Cisco IOS Quality of Service Solutions Configuration Guide
it should work for you.

-Cliff

-Original Message-
From: sam sneed
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue Oct 08 10:19:08 PDT 2002
Subject: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

Hello,

  I am looking for software that will monitor what kind of traffic is going
through my network and report it.I am only concerned with what is going
through my firewall so I will place the monitoring station on a hub with the
firewall or use SPAN port. Here are requirements:

Doesn't use netflow to collect data, want to use libpcap to capture data.
Want breakdown of what type of traffice by bytes and %'s ie. HTTP, FTP, SMTP
etc.
Do not want to use NTOP, too much of a pain in the ass to get it to work
longer than 20 minutes without a seg fault.
Would like the output in graphical form preferbably embeded in a web page.

If anyone has come across this please let me know. I'm contemplating writing
my own software but would rather not.

Thanks.
___
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Re: Tech Tips [7:55015]

2002-10-08 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Nemeth)

On Feb 28,  8:57pm, Chuck's Long Road wrote:
}
} I just now wanted to check something regarding the CCIE lab. Guess what I
} can't find on the new site? The what's new section.

 - http://www.cisco.com/go/ccie/
 - in the blue buttons on the left, it is the third one down

} It looks like we will have to dig high and low to find the announcements -
} what kind of cra* is that?

 I tend to make a lot of use of the go shortcuts.  That way, I
don't have to remember long URLs and I don't have to worry about the
organisation of the site (I rarely see the homepage).

}-- End of excerpt from Chuck's Long Road




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Re: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

2002-10-08 Thread Greg Reaume

Sam,

OVER HERE!  LOOK HERE!  PICK ME!

:)  Seriously though, take a look at NetFlow.  Nice flow based accounting
exported at flow conclusion by the router to a 'collector'.  It records, on
a per-flow basis, src AS, src IP, src port, dst AS, dst IP, dst port, pkts
in flow, B in flow, start time, stop time, etc, etc, etc.  I'm sure you get
the idea; this is pretty powerful stuff!

You can have your collector aggregate all the flow exports over a given time
period, or you can have your router do it before it sends the info to the
collector.  Cisco sells their own commercial products to collect and analyze
and they also partner with 3rd party commercial vendors to provide you with
collectors and analyzers.  The best stuff though, IMHO, are the tools from
the open source community.  Cisco acknowledges these tools and even lists
where you can get them on their website, however, they are obviously not
supported.

Start here:

http://www.cisco.com/go/netflow

http://net.doit.wisc.edu/~plonka/FlowScan/

http://www.splintered.net/sw/flow-tools/

http://www.columbia.edu/acis/networks/advanced/CUFlow/


There are good examples of implementations here:

http://wwwstats.net.wisc.edu/

http://www.canet3.net/stats/map.html


And of course, although they have no relation to NetFlow, no disscussion of
network monitoring tools is complete without Tobi's Tools:

http://www.smokeping.org

http://www.mrtg.org

http://www.rrdtool.org


HTH,

Greg Reaume


Cliff Stewart  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Sam,

Have you taken a look at NBAR? Take a look at the
Cisco IOS Quality of Service Solutions Configuration Guide
it should work for you.

-Cliff

-Original Message-
From: sam sneed
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue Oct 08 10:19:08 PDT 2002
Subject: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

Hello,

  I am looking for software that will monitor what kind of traffic is going
through my network and report it.I am only concerned with what is going
through my firewall so I will place the monitoring station on a hub with
the
firewall or use SPAN port. Here are requirements:

Doesn't use netflow to collect data, want to use libpcap to capture data.
Want breakdown of what type of traffice by bytes and %'s ie. HTTP, FTP,
SMTP
etc.
Do not want to use NTOP, too much of a pain in the ass to get it to work
longer than 20 minutes without a seg fault.
Would like the output in graphical form preferbably embeded in a web page.

If anyone has come across this please let me know. I'm contemplating
writing
my own software but would rather not.

Thanks.
___
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Get Your Free, Private E-mail at http://mail.go.com




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RE: good alt. to a catalyst 3550 [7:55132]

2002-10-08 Thread Kaminski, Shawn G

I don't know of any alternative for the 3550. While you can purchase a less
expensive switch to practice your IOS-based commands (such as a 2912XL,
2924XL, or 3524XL, for example), you will be losing a lot of features that
will most likely show up on the CCIE Lab exam, such as advanced Quality of
Service (QoS) and Layer 3 functionality.
You're best off biting the bullet and purchasing a 3550 or renting 3550 rack
time.
Shawn K.


 -Original Message-
 From: Vic Dmon [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 6:19 PM
 To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject:  good alt. to a catalyst 3550 [7:55132]
 
 Hi, does anyone know what would be a good (and cheap) alternate for a 3550
 switch. Please let me know. Thanks




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RE: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

2002-10-08 Thread Mark W. Odette II

Is there something similar to this NetFlow for the PIX??

I could use a tool that monitors each flow of traffic, perhaps even with
the ability to specify a specific host to monitor its flows across the
IPSec tunnel of two PIXen.

Any suggestions appreciated.

Mark

-Original Message-
From: Greg Reaume [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 11:50 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

Sam,

OVER HERE!  LOOK HERE!  PICK ME!

:)  Seriously though, take a look at NetFlow.  Nice flow based
accounting
exported at flow conclusion by the router to a 'collector'.  It records,
on
a per-flow basis, src AS, src IP, src port, dst AS, dst IP, dst port,
pkts
in flow, B in flow, start time, stop time, etc, etc, etc.  I'm sure you
get
the idea; this is pretty powerful stuff!

You can have your collector aggregate all the flow exports over a given
time
period, or you can have your router do it before it sends the info to
the
collector.  Cisco sells their own commercial products to collect and
analyze
and they also partner with 3rd party commercial vendors to provide you
with
collectors and analyzers.  The best stuff though, IMHO, are the tools
from
the open source community.  Cisco acknowledges these tools and even
lists
where you can get them on their website, however, they are obviously not
supported.

Start here:

http://www.cisco.com/go/netflow

http://net.doit.wisc.edu/~plonka/FlowScan/

http://www.splintered.net/sw/flow-tools/

http://www.columbia.edu/acis/networks/advanced/CUFlow/


There are good examples of implementations here:

http://wwwstats.net.wisc.edu/

http://www.canet3.net/stats/map.html


And of course, although they have no relation to NetFlow, no disscussion
of
network monitoring tools is complete without Tobi's Tools:

http://www.smokeping.org

http://www.mrtg.org

http://www.rrdtool.org


HTH,

Greg Reaume


Cliff Stewart  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Sam,

Have you taken a look at NBAR? Take a look at the
Cisco IOS Quality of Service Solutions Configuration Guide
it should work for you.

-Cliff

-Original Message-
From: sam sneed
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue Oct 08 10:19:08 PDT 2002
Subject: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

Hello,

  I am looking for software that will monitor what kind of traffic is
going
through my network and report it.I am only concerned with what is going
through my firewall so I will place the monitoring station on a hub
with
the
firewall or use SPAN port. Here are requirements:

Doesn't use netflow to collect data, want to use libpcap to capture
data.
Want breakdown of what type of traffice by bytes and %'s ie. HTTP, FTP,
SMTP
etc.
Do not want to use NTOP, too much of a pain in the ass to get it to
work
longer than 20 minutes without a seg fault.
Would like the output in graphical form preferbably embeded in a web
page.

If anyone has come across this please let me know. I'm contemplating
writing
my own software but would rather not.

Thanks.
___
GO.com Mail
Get Your Free, Private E-mail at http://mail.go.com




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Re: Migration Plan (6509) [7:55064]

2002-10-08 Thread Ken Diliberto

Our parent company had the idea of letting a TelCo do the same for us.
 The TelCo was/is contracted to set up a gateway between the old
network and the new network.  Lucky for us we're smarter than they are
(at least we think we are...) and are having things our way.  :-)

It's difficult to try keeping a hands-off approach to letting a
vendor install a major piece of equipment in the core of MY network. 
Maybe you know how it is... watching an engineer (CCNP with some
experience) who is supposed to know what he's doing but brings down the
network instead.  Add a CCIE with a few years experience to the mix,
three more tries with two of them resulting in network outages.

The suggested configuration for our first 6500 (a 6513 with dual
Sup2/MSFC2/PFC2) was to run in HSRP between the two MSFCs. (For those
who don't know, an MSFC - Multiservice Switch Feature Card or something
like that, is a routing module on the switch supervisor).  We are
running IP, IPX and AppleTalk.  What they didn't tell us was we had to
keep the configurations sync'ed between the two MSFCs otherwise there
would be problems.  Config Sync doesn't support AppleTalk.  Guess
what... we had problems.  We're now running SRM.

I guess I should get to the point here.  My experience says forklift
upgrades are bad.  Way too much room for things to go bad.  Considering
the problems introducing a single new core box, I'd take it slow.  make
sure everything runs as planned while you upgrade.  Make sure
Spamming-Tree (did I say that??) is working properly, VTP is
communicating and the hardware has burned in.  That brings up another
thing: after the first few weeks, one of the lights on the switch fabric
module stopped showing green (looked burned out).  While tempted to say
it's just a light, you have no idea what the root problem causing the
light not to function is.  We had the vendor replace the card.

It seems our vendor keeps shooting itself in the foot.  Their engineers
keep doing things that prevents them from earning any respect from us. 
On a positive note,  I know one engineer with that company who I do
respect.  Too bad they keep him in design.  :-)

Ken

 Chuck's Long Road  10/07/02
09:45PM 
interesting.

The following may or may not be feasible, depending upon space in
closets,
and cost of implementation. It is something my employer is supposed to
be
doing for the various branch offices of a major customer we have
during a
major network forklift upgrade. It has tended not to happen this way
for a
lot of reasons, political and practical.

1) Place all new switches into the various closets. Connect them up

2) set up a gateway ( single link ) between the new core switch(s) and
the
old core switch(s)

3) test connectivity by taking a laptop with as many user applications
as
practical, and go from closet to closet testing connectivity to the
various
servers, services, etc.

4) assuming point three results in connectivity everywhere, do a closet
by
closet migration of users from the old switches to the new switches.

5) migrate all devices ( servers, internet, etc ) onto the new core
switches.

6) assuming all remains well, unplug the old stuff  and if Cisco is
not
offering you a generous trade in, sell it on one of the auction sites.

Like I said, sometimes time, space, and cost does not permit this.

Chuck

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RE: Changes in CCNP Courses?? [7:55085]

2002-10-08 Thread Kaminski, Shawn G

The only thing I could think of that would change would be to possibly add
some simulations to these particular exams. Also, with the addition of the
3550 switch in the lab, the SWTCH exam may soon be asking questions
regarding some of the features of this switch. However, who the hell knows
anymore what Cisco is going to do. And who the hell knows when! :-) But I
wouldn't expect any changes for a while since Cisco just updated the SWTCH
and SUPRT exams to the 6xx series not to long ago. That's just my guess.

Shawn K.

 -Original Message-
 From: ccnp ccnp2002 [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 4:56 AM
 To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject:  Changes in CCNP Courses?? [7:55085]
 
 Hi All, 
 
 Below is a statement made by one of the members: 
 
 ..One caveat though, all the exams are changing in the near future,
 with Switching and CIT undergoing the greatest change, so what I said
 above
 may not be valid in the future...
 
 Do you have any idea what the changes are to be and when... so that I can
 hurry up my CCNP studies?
 
 Thanks!




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Re: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

2002-10-08 Thread Greg Reaume

Mark,

No, unfortunately NetFlow isn't supported on the PIX, like many other
things.

Really though, you don't want to run it there.  Because NetFlow exports the
level of detail that it does, you can gather all your stats for your entire
network just by running it on all your edge routers.  All you need to make
sure of is that a flow originates behind a NetFlow enabled router, and that
it is destined for a prefix that either resides on a subnet of another
NetFlow enabled router in your AS, or a prefix which is beyond your AS (in
which case you catch that too because you're running NetFlow at your
ASBR(s)).  You don't want to run this in your core or anywhere else there
are not hosts.

If you want to single out a /32 (or a particular port on a host or group of
hosts) and view the activity as perceived by NetFlow, you can use the
'flow-tools'.  The flow-tools is a package I listed a link to below and it
includes a number of handy little tools.  'flow-filter' will allow you to
filter on any attribute in the flow record and output the info to stdio.

HTH,

Greg Reaume


Mark W. Odette II  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Is there something similar to this NetFlow for the PIX??

I could use a tool that monitors each flow of traffic, perhaps even with
the ability to specify a specific host to monitor its flows across the
IPSec tunnel of two PIXen.

Any suggestions appreciated.

Mark

-Original Message-
From: Greg Reaume [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 11:50 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

Sam,

OVER HERE!  LOOK HERE!  PICK ME!

:)  Seriously though, take a look at NetFlow.  Nice flow based
accounting
exported at flow conclusion by the router to a 'collector'.  It records,
on
a per-flow basis, src AS, src IP, src port, dst AS, dst IP, dst port,
pkts
in flow, B in flow, start time, stop time, etc, etc, etc.  I'm sure you
get
the idea; this is pretty powerful stuff!

You can have your collector aggregate all the flow exports over a given
time
period, or you can have your router do it before it sends the info to
the
collector.  Cisco sells their own commercial products to collect and
analyze
and they also partner with 3rd party commercial vendors to provide you
with
collectors and analyzers.  The best stuff though, IMHO, are the tools
from
the open source community.  Cisco acknowledges these tools and even
lists
where you can get them on their website, however, they are obviously not
supported.

Start here:

http://www.cisco.com/go/netflow

http://net.doit.wisc.edu/~plonka/FlowScan/

http://www.splintered.net/sw/flow-tools/

http://www.columbia.edu/acis/networks/advanced/CUFlow/


There are good examples of implementations here:

http://wwwstats.net.wisc.edu/

http://www.canet3.net/stats/map.html


And of course, although they have no relation to NetFlow, no disscussion
of
network monitoring tools is complete without Tobi's Tools:

http://www.smokeping.org

http://www.mrtg.org

http://www.rrdtool.org


HTH,

Greg Reaume


Cliff Stewart  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Sam,

Have you taken a look at NBAR? Take a look at the
Cisco IOS Quality of Service Solutions Configuration Guide
it should work for you.

-Cliff

-Original Message-
From: sam sneed
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue Oct 08 10:19:08 PDT 2002
Subject: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

Hello,

  I am looking for software that will monitor what kind of traffic is
going
through my network and report it.I am only concerned with what is going
through my firewall so I will place the monitoring station on a hub
with
the
firewall or use SPAN port. Here are requirements:

Doesn't use netflow to collect data, want to use libpcap to capture
data.
Want breakdown of what type of traffice by bytes and %'s ie. HTTP, FTP,
SMTP
etc.
Do not want to use NTOP, too much of a pain in the ass to get it to
work
longer than 20 minutes without a seg fault.
Would like the output in graphical form preferbably embeded in a web
page.

If anyone has come across this please let me know. I'm contemplating
writing
my own software but would rather not.

Thanks.
___
GO.com Mail
Get Your Free, Private E-mail at http://mail.go.com




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Re: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

2002-10-08 Thread Greg Reaume

Here's the 'man' page on flow-tools.  It gives a good overview of NetFlow,
the different versions and their assoc export fields, and what 'goodies'
flow-tools includes.

http://www.splintered.net/sw/flow-tools/docs/flow-tools.html

Read this.

Greg Reaume


Greg Reaume  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Mark,

No, unfortunately NetFlow isn't supported on the PIX, like many other
things.

Really though, you don't want to run it there.  Because NetFlow exports the
level of detail that it does, you can gather all your stats for your entire
network just by running it on all your edge routers.  All you need to make
sure of is that a flow originates behind a NetFlow enabled router, and that
it is destined for a prefix that either resides on a subnet of another
NetFlow enabled router in your AS, or a prefix which is beyond your AS (in
which case you catch that too because you're running NetFlow at your
ASBR(s)).  You don't want to run this in your core or anywhere else there
are not hosts.

If you want to single out a /32 (or a particular port on a host or group of
hosts) and view the activity as perceived by NetFlow, you can use the
'flow-tools'.  The flow-tools is a package I listed a link to below and it
includes a number of handy little tools.  'flow-filter' will allow you to
filter on any attribute in the flow record and output the info to stdio.

HTH,

Greg Reaume


Mark W. Odette II  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Is there something similar to this NetFlow for the PIX??

I could use a tool that monitors each flow of traffic, perhaps even with
the ability to specify a specific host to monitor its flows across the
IPSec tunnel of two PIXen.

Any suggestions appreciated.

Mark

-Original Message-
From: Greg Reaume [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 11:50 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

Sam,

OVER HERE!  LOOK HERE!  PICK ME!

:)  Seriously though, take a look at NetFlow.  Nice flow based
accounting
exported at flow conclusion by the router to a 'collector'.  It records,
on
a per-flow basis, src AS, src IP, src port, dst AS, dst IP, dst port,
pkts
in flow, B in flow, start time, stop time, etc, etc, etc.  I'm sure you
get
the idea; this is pretty powerful stuff!

You can have your collector aggregate all the flow exports over a given
time
period, or you can have your router do it before it sends the info to
the
collector.  Cisco sells their own commercial products to collect and
analyze
and they also partner with 3rd party commercial vendors to provide you
with
collectors and analyzers.  The best stuff though, IMHO, are the tools
from
the open source community.  Cisco acknowledges these tools and even
lists
where you can get them on their website, however, they are obviously not
supported.

Start here:

http://www.cisco.com/go/netflow

http://net.doit.wisc.edu/~plonka/FlowScan/

http://www.splintered.net/sw/flow-tools/

http://www.columbia.edu/acis/networks/advanced/CUFlow/


There are good examples of implementations here:

http://wwwstats.net.wisc.edu/

http://www.canet3.net/stats/map.html


And of course, although they have no relation to NetFlow, no disscussion
of
network monitoring tools is complete without Tobi's Tools:

http://www.smokeping.org

http://www.mrtg.org

http://www.rrdtool.org


HTH,

Greg Reaume


Cliff Stewart  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Sam,

Have you taken a look at NBAR? Take a look at the
Cisco IOS Quality of Service Solutions Configuration Guide
it should work for you.

-Cliff

-Original Message-
From: sam sneed
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue Oct 08 10:19:08 PDT 2002
Subject: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

Hello,

  I am looking for software that will monitor what kind of traffic is
going
through my network and report it.I am only concerned with what is going
through my firewall so I will place the monitoring station on a hub
with
the
firewall or use SPAN port. Here are requirements:

Doesn't use netflow to collect data, want to use libpcap to capture
data.
Want breakdown of what type of traffice by bytes and %'s ie. HTTP, FTP,
SMTP
etc.
Do not want to use NTOP, too much of a pain in the ass to get it to
work
longer than 20 minutes without a seg fault.
Would like the output in graphical form preferbably embeded in a web
page.

If anyone has come across this please let me know. I'm contemplating
writing
my own software but would rather not.

Thanks.
___
GO.com Mail
Get Your Free, Private E-mail at http://mail.go.com




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http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7i=55153t=55110
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Re: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

2002-10-08 Thread Greg Reaume

I sent this and then it showed up in my newsreader as removed from server.
?  My apologies if I double post.

Greg

Greg Reaume  wrote in message news:...
Here's the 'man' page on flow-tools.  It gives a good overview of NetFlow,
the different versions and their assoc export fields, and what 'goodies'
flow-tools includes.

http://www.splintered.net/sw/flow-tools/docs/flow-tools.html

Read this.

Greg Reaume


Greg Reaume  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Mark,

No, unfortunately NetFlow isn't supported on the PIX, like many other
things.

Really though, you don't want to run it there.  Because NetFlow exports the
level of detail that it does, you can gather all your stats for your entire
network just by running it on all your edge routers.  All you need to make
sure of is that a flow originates behind a NetFlow enabled router, and that
it is destined for a prefix that either resides on a subnet of another
NetFlow enabled router in your AS, or a prefix which is beyond your AS (in
which case you catch that too because you're running NetFlow at your
ASBR(s)).  You don't want to run this in your core or anywhere else there
are not hosts.

If you want to single out a /32 (or a particular port on a host or group of
hosts) and view the activity as perceived by NetFlow, you can use the
'flow-tools'.  The flow-tools is a package I listed a link to below and it
includes a number of handy little tools.  'flow-filter' will allow you to
filter on any attribute in the flow record and output the info to stdio.

HTH,

Greg Reaume


Mark W. Odette II  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Is there something similar to this NetFlow for the PIX??

I could use a tool that monitors each flow of traffic, perhaps even with
the ability to specify a specific host to monitor its flows across the
IPSec tunnel of two PIXen.

Any suggestions appreciated.

Mark

-Original Message-
From: Greg Reaume [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 11:50 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

Sam,

OVER HERE!  LOOK HERE!  PICK ME!

:)  Seriously though, take a look at NetFlow.  Nice flow based
accounting
exported at flow conclusion by the router to a 'collector'.  It records,
on
a per-flow basis, src AS, src IP, src port, dst AS, dst IP, dst port,
pkts
in flow, B in flow, start time, stop time, etc, etc, etc.  I'm sure you
get
the idea; this is pretty powerful stuff!

You can have your collector aggregate all the flow exports over a given
time
period, or you can have your router do it before it sends the info to
the
collector.  Cisco sells their own commercial products to collect and
analyze
and they also partner with 3rd party commercial vendors to provide you
with
collectors and analyzers.  The best stuff though, IMHO, are the tools
from
the open source community.  Cisco acknowledges these tools and even
lists
where you can get them on their website, however, they are obviously not
supported.

Start here:

http://www.cisco.com/go/netflow

http://net.doit.wisc.edu/~plonka/FlowScan/

http://www.splintered.net/sw/flow-tools/

http://www.columbia.edu/acis/networks/advanced/CUFlow/


There are good examples of implementations here:

http://wwwstats.net.wisc.edu/

http://www.canet3.net/stats/map.html


And of course, although they have no relation to NetFlow, no disscussion
of
network monitoring tools is complete without Tobi's Tools:

http://www.smokeping.org

http://www.mrtg.org

http://www.rrdtool.org


HTH,

Greg Reaume


Cliff Stewart  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Sam,

Have you taken a look at NBAR? Take a look at the
Cisco IOS Quality of Service Solutions Configuration Guide
it should work for you.

-Cliff

-Original Message-
From: sam sneed
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue Oct 08 10:19:08 PDT 2002
Subject: protocol monitoring software [7:55110]

Hello,

  I am looking for software that will monitor what kind of traffic is
going
through my network and report it.I am only concerned with what is going
through my firewall so I will place the monitoring station on a hub
with
the
firewall or use SPAN port. Here are requirements:

Doesn't use netflow to collect data, want to use libpcap to capture
data.
Want breakdown of what type of traffice by bytes and %'s ie. HTTP, FTP,
SMTP
etc.
Do not want to use NTOP, too much of a pain in the ass to get it to
work
longer than 20 minutes without a seg fault.
Would like the output in graphical form preferbably embeded in a web
page.

If anyone has come across this please let me know. I'm contemplating
writing
my own software but would rather not.

Thanks.
___
GO.com Mail
Get Your Free, Private E-mail at http://mail.go.com




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http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7i=55154t=55110
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Re: Cisco Certification Digest V2 #2285 (Out of the Office) [7:55155]

2002-10-08 Thread Daniel Cevallos

I will on vacation starting October 5 and will be returning to the office on
October 15, 2002.



Thanks,
Danny




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CCNP dumps????????????? [7:55156]

2002-10-08 Thread Vinod Raju

Could someone please tell me where to avail latest CCNP dumps especially for
BSCI (routing) and BSCSN (switching)?

Please reply fast 

Thanx in advance,

Raj


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