Routing Beta Exam [7:45404]

2002-05-29 Thread John Danner

I came home today to find my score report for the routing beta I took in
March in the mail.
I passed with a 846.

I hope all find their beta score reports soon!

-John


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RE: SNMP Packet question [7:38824]

2002-03-19 Thread John Danner

You should take a look at Cricket. 
http://cricket.sourceforge.net/

We use it to monitor traffic on links, router memory/cpu usage.

Here's an example of what it can create:
http://cricket.sourceforge.net/support/talks/cricket-examples/route-flap/

It uses the RddTool that someone already mentioned.

-John


sam sneed wrote:
 
 Hello group,
 
 I am trying to write a script in perl to monitor interface
 errors and total
 traffic during work hours. I'm doing an snmpwalk to get the
 info. I want the
 total amount of packets in and out of an interface so I can
 calculate the %
 of errors on the line.
 
 Cisco says on their site :
 http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/477/SNMP/5.html
 
 that
   ifInNUcastPkts (.1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.12) are counts of
 inbound broadcast
 and multicast packets
 
   ifOutUcastPkts (.1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.17) are counts of
 outbound
 broadcast and multicast packets
 
 
 besides In and Out whats the difference? I thought Ucast meant
 unicast and
 NUcast meant broadcast and multicast.
 When queried, every int gives NUcast and Ucast which are
 different values.
 How could Cisco define them as the same.
 
 Is this a misprint?
 Lastly I'm assuming that total packets would be the sum of the
 2(unicast +
 multicast/broadcast).
 Is this assumption correct?
 
 
 ps i don't want ifOutOctets  because i want the # of packets
 not bytes.
 
 thankd
 
 




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BSCN Routing Beta Exam [7:38426]

2002-03-15 Thread John Danner

I took the beta exam this morning. I would liken it to being kicked in the
groin for 3 hours.

Are all the CCNP exams this long? Or was this just an added feature of the
beta exam?

Well, anyways, here is to the next 8-12 weeks while I wait for the score and
study for the BCMSN exam!


-John


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Re: CCNP At last!!!!!!!!!!!!!! [7:9853]

2001-06-25 Thread John Danner

Do you not have to take the 3 CCDP tests if you have passed their CCNP
counterparts?  Or is it just the same information?

Thanks,
John

- Original Message -
From: Brian 
To: 
Sent: Monday, June 25, 2001 6:32 PM
Subject: Re: CCNP At last!! [7:9853]


 I would reg now for the written, then after hopefully succeeding at that,
 use the several months it takes to get a lab to strengthen skills and get
 your ccdp.  3/4 of the ccnp tests are good for the ccdp.

 Brian Sonic Whalen
 Success = Preparation + Opportunity


 On Mon, 25 Jun 2001, Oletu Hosea Godswill, CCNA. wrote:

  It was not easy but it is over, I wrote my four exams like this:
 
  Routing 2.0 ==20/4/2001
  Switching  2.0 ==04/6/2001
  Support 2.0  ==12/6/2001
  Remote Access2.0 ==23/6/2001
 
  I almost went to sleep after Routing 2.0, but it is easy. Which next
Design
  track or Security track or CCIE written??
 
  Please write to advice me.
 
  Regards.
  Oletu H. G.




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Re: TCP Slow Start ? [7:9795]

2001-06-25 Thread John Danner

Correct me if I'm wrong but TCP Slow Start is that TCP starts sending slowly
and increases it's transfer rate until it gets dropped packets.
It is inherit to TCP and you always use it.  You can kinda see this when you
start a large download off the web.  My ADSL connection starts at around 40
kb/s and increases the speed until it gets to it's max.

-John

- Original Message -
From: 
To: 
Sent: Monday, June 25, 2001 11:29 AM
Subject: TCP Slow Start ? [7:9795]


 What is TCP Slow Start? Is it only applicable to SNA? Is it inherit to
TCP?
 When do you use this?




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Re: Use of terminal server in home lab [7:9686]

2001-06-24 Thread John Danner

That will work if you already have the IP addresses setup on the ethernet
interfaces.
One of the benefits of the terminal server is that you don't rely on the
ethernet port or IP configuration.


- Original Message -
From: Ajay Pandey 
To: 
Sent: Sunday, June 24, 2001 6:13 PM
Subject: Re: Use of terminal server in home lab [7:9686]


 Thanks for the explanation.  Another quick question,
 couldn't you use a hub with the ethernet ports of all routers connected to
 it to configure the individual routers.
 Thanks again.

 kevin jones  wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  I work for a company that is quite laid-back.  Therefore, when I am not
  busy at work, which
 
  is about 50% of the time, I usually telnet back to my home lab and work
  on the scenario
 
  whether it is Cisco or Juniper.  I put the terminal server behind the
  firewall and redirect any
 
  telnet traffic that hit the firewall to the terminal server so that I
can
  have console access to any
 
  of the Cisco devices that is connected to the Terminal server.  The only
  thing that you can
 
  NOT do with the terminal server is to PHYSICALLY power off the router.
  Company uses
 
  terminal server because they don't want to spend lot of money sending
  people to remote
 
  site unless it is absolutely necessary.
 
  Does that answer your questions?
 
  Kevin
 
  From: Dennis Laganiere Reply-To: Dennis Laganiere To:
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Use of terminal server in home lab
  [7:9686] Date: Sun, 24 Jun 2001 12:34:19 -0400  1) Carpel tunnel
  syndrome on your cable lock securing finger 2) It's on the lab  ---
  Dennis  -Original Message- From: Ajay Pandey
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Sunday, June 24, 2001 8:47 AM
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Use of terminal server in home lab
  [7:9686]   Hi, Can anyone briefly explain the benefit of a terminal
  misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
  
 
  Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com




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