RE: hsrp & isl trunking [7:57896]

2002-11-26 Thread dennis cherry
The way we have it is 2 routers connected to the 4000 switch with 4 vlans on
the switch. Have set up 4 subinterfaces on each router, 1 for each van. Each
with a separate ip address corresponding to the vlan number. We have 2 HSRP
groups set up with 2 vlans in each group. 1 router will be the active for 1
group (2 of the vlans) and the other router will be the active for the other
group (2 vlans). On each subinterface for each router for each vlan, it has
a unique virtual HSRP IP address. I originally thought that all would use
the same virtual HSRP IP address. You are saying that there should be 4
groups (1 for each vlan) instead of the 2 groups that we have?? Or is it OK
with 2 groups and the 4 unique virtual HSRP IP addresses on each router??

This type of setup wasn't covered together in our class, just vlans and HSRP
seperately. But in this lab we have Vlans running thru HSRP router doing ISL
trunking and the routers are also running BGP and EIGRP to connect to a
remote router. AHHH!

Thanks for your help.


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RE: hsrp & isl trunking [7:57896]

2002-11-25 Thread dennis cherry
Come on, anyone??


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hsrp & isl trunking [7:57896]

2002-11-22 Thread dennis cherry
In my Cisco Academy class, we are doing an lab with a lot of different
topics rolled into one lab. We have 2 routers set up with hsrp and has a
virtual ip address. Now a 4000 switch has 4 vlans configured on it and to
use isl trunking to the hsrp routers. These routers have 4 subinterfaces on
the fastethernet port going to the switch (one subinterface per vlan on each
router). On the 4000 switch we set up a default gateway to the hsrp virtual
ip address. But on the hsrp routers when we set up the subinterfaces and
enter the standby command for the virtual ip address, I thought that we use
the hsrp virtual ip address but the instructor says no. She says we need to
put in the vlan number as part of the virtual ip address. Example:
subinterface number for vlan 20...Fa0/0.20, ip address...10.200.20.2,
standby ip address...10.200.20.1. And for vlan 30 it would be 10.200.30.1
for the virtual ip address. I thought that all subinterfaces would use the
same hsrp virtual ip address. I tried to find more info on the Cisco site,
but could not. Is this actually correct?? Why would the virtual ip address
be different for each vlan??


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RE: Switching VTP [7:55438]

2002-10-11 Thread dennis cherry
A correction. The command SHOW SPANNING-TREE is issued a IOS based switch
such as the 2900, not 4000.


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Switching VTP [7:55438]

2002-10-11 Thread dennis cherry
I'm in semester 7 of the Cisco Academy program and one subject is not clear.
This is the VTP revision number that is sent out between switches. Normally
the number increments to indicate the most current information to that
switch. And when you are introducing a used switch into your network you
have to reset the number to 0.

That's the sticking point, how to reset it. The official academy text say to
power cycle the switch to reset the revision number. A student who works
with these says the same. But on the Cisco web site it says to change the
domain name and then change it back to reset the number. The Cisco Press
certification guide says to change the mode to transparent then to server.
Or it says to change the domain name and change it back. Or it says to issue
the CLEAR CONFIG ALL command (on set based switches) to clear the VTP info
and the revision number.

Also, when you issue the command SHOW SPANNING-TREE on a 4000 series switch
it gives a listing of the different ports and information about those ports.

EXAMPLE:  INTERFACE FA0/1 (port 13) in spanning tree 1 is FORWARDING

My question is, what is the (port 13) to mean?? The actual port on the
switch is port 1, not 13. Each interface has a number that seems to
increment but INT FA0/12 is (port 25) where if they incremented correctly it
would be (port 24). The info says it's a designated port. What??


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RE: simulations questions [7:53662]

2002-09-20 Thread dennis cherry

It depends on the pool of questions that you get. On my BCRAN exam, I had 1
drag and drop, several that gave a list of commands and you had to pick from
those to answe the question and 1 where I had to cofigure frame relay on the
fly. Others have said that they had more of the drag and drop type and less
of the others. Some say they had more of the configure type questions. Best
to be prepared for all situations. If you know the material, it will be easy.


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Re: CCNP exam [7:53668]

2002-09-20 Thread dennis cherry

You're right about the IS-IS part. Our instructor in my BCMSN class brought
that up just last week. Also for the new exams, there are simulation and
drag and drop type questions. On my BCRAN exam, there was even a question
where I had to enter the commands to configure frame relay. Some questions
give you a list and you have to pick the command, some you just have to know
as you get no list.


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