What voice ports are the phones plugged into
physically? Maybe you have phone in port x/y/1 instead
of x/y/0. 'show voice port port#' will give details on
voice port status too.
You may want to do a 'csim start ' or 'csim start
' to see if the router with that phone actually
rings (don't
john,
Under the port, add 'switchport mode access' as well.
By default the switchports can automatically become
trunks if both sides agree, etc. If trunk isn't
negotiated then the port is in access vlan 11 in your
config below. The 'switchport mode access' command
forces port to be in access
ip default-gateway in IOS is only used when the device
is acting as a host (not routing, etc).
If it has IP routing enabled, then you probably want
to use a default route (0.0.0.0/0) and/or other routes
for your networks (static, RIP, EIGRP, etc).
Erick
--- Reimer, Fred wrote:
I'm not
Do you have the Local LAN access option checked under
properties?
Erick
--- johnman johnman wrote:
I have a cisco vpn client tunnel from my computer
to a PIX Firewall. I
had set a pool of IP addresses in the PIX for all
the remote vpn clients.
I would like to Print to my local
Multiple-VLANs per port can be configured on certain
models, but if you do multiple VLANs then you can't do
dot1q or ISL trunks anywhere on the box. one or the
other... thats the limitation.
I wonder why cisco doesn't do protocol-based VLANs,
etc like some other vendors. It's a sweet feature that
This works fine. Use 802.1q as the VLAN trunking/tag
protocol if you're doing a VLAN trunk between the
switches. The native/default VLAN on both switch ports
has to be the same VLAN.
If it's not a VLAN trunk, then you can just use a
cross over cable between the two.
I don't think
route-map isn't listed as a command in the
documentation so it's probably something from full IOS
that isn't supported. They may add support in the
future.
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/lan/c3550/12112cea/3550scg/swuncli.htm#xtocid24
Unsupported route map commands on 3550
Edwin,
Here's the Cisco URL explaining this and how to
troubleshoot. Probably a software bug/issue of some
sort. What version of code are you running?
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/122/crashes_segv.html
Erick
--- Edwin Gonzalez wrote:
By the way I did reload the router and it fix it
comments inline.
--- Jens Neelsen wrote:
Hi,
a layer3 switch (e.g.3550-EMI) does not have layer3
interfaces.
All interfaces (Fastethernet and GigabitEthernet)
are layer2
interfaces. They can not have IP addresses.
On the 3550, you can have IP addresses on the actual
interface if you do
Offhand (without research and verification), I would
say the native VLAN wouldn't have the 802.1p info
since the native VLAN is not tagged at all. Correct me
if I'm wrong.
This is an area I need to look into... I had a similar
issue last week with a 6509 to 3600 router 1q trunk
where LLQ wasn't
The ATM connection (provider) is probably limiting
payload size to 1500. They may doing some form of
traffic policing - common these days. Ethernet LAN MTU
is 1500 so there really isn't a need to send greater
than that across ATM in this case.
--- Sean Kim wrote:
Hello,
My company has this
, when I am
sitting on my router pinging the other router's
interface and vice-versa...
Sean
Erick B. wrote:
The ATM connection (provider) is probably limiting
payload size to 1500. They may doing some form of
traffic policing - common these days. Ethernet LAN
MTU
is 1500 so
no service config
--- Chris Penrose wrote:
I have a router that takes about 10 minutes to start
up, I can see that it
is sending out a broadcast
http://255.255.255.255/adsl-config.txt trying to
find a tftp server and load a configuration file
which I don't need, how do
I switch this off
comments inline...
Anyone have a link to a good technical document
about the worm?
Thanks,
Priscilla
Below is from bugtraq:
SQL Sapphire Worm Analysis
Release Date:
1/25/03
Severity:
High
Systems Affected:
Microsoft SQL Server 2000 pre SP 2
Description:
Late Friday, January 24, 2003
I use bnfs95 still but it was always an unsupported
tool. Not aware of anything for 3com NetBuilders
though. Old NB's had a floppy drive. Another cool
BayRS tool is the PCAP tool to do captures right on
the router. I like BayRS.
--- Andrew Larkins
wrote:
I know that there was a utility a long
* In-Lost - Packets which could not be received since
the input buffers are full. Reason: Excessive input
rate of traffic.
* Delay Exceed - This is an indication of the number
of frames discarded because of excessive delay in the
switching process. Reason/Cause: Severe problem with
the switch.
Sounds like a possible carrier frame-relay switch
mapping mishap. Maybe they added/changed some DLCIs
to their switches and mucked up your PVC/DLCI
mappings. Do you see CDP neighbor info over this DLCI
(sub-interface) if CDP is enabled? That would indicate
broadcast traffic is getting across the
Dave,
Priv. level 1 gives you basic show commands, etc.
level 15 is full access like you mentioned.
levels 2-14 don't have any special commands , but you
re-assign commands to these levels for different users
for example.
Theres also a priv level 0 which gives you close to no
commands on
Comments inline...
--- The Long and Winding Road
wrote:
Waleed Sami wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
My client, a telco., has two network logically and
physically seperated.
One
that handle the business aspect of the operation:
Customer services,
Agreed. They do have a way to map additional ports to
the pre-defined services though. So for telnet for
example you can add port 233, 2333, etc so when you
specify 'telnet' in an ACL (or similar list) it
matches port 23, 233, and 2333.
Whats weird is I was looking at this yesterday, and
for
Wolfgang,
Are these cisco routers on both sides ? do you have
control of both or not? It appears as this is an
async connection on this end (modem).
We get a input packet with CONFREJ (reject) but it
appears to get further later and rejects on IPCP. Then
theres a protocol reject (PROTREJ)
I would second Chuck on this. I have seen some folk
with DSL backup when the backup didn't work. Always
was something with the provider. If you go this route,
make sure to test/use the DSL connection on a weekly
or bi-weekly basis. Same could be said for ISDN
though. I guess it all depends on how
Perhaps the router isn't seeing the CONFREQ from the
other router so is sending it's own. I've seen this
kind of activity when troubleshooting PPP problems.
Could be a line issue of some sort, code issue,
misconfiguration perhaps, etc.
What type of connection is this (Point to point, ISDN,
etc)?
From RFC 1305.
0 - unspecified
1 - symmetric active
2 - symmetric passive
3 - client
4 - server
5 - broadcast
6 - reserved for NTP control message
7 - reserved for private use
Symmetric Active (1): A host operating in this mode
sends periodic
messages regardless of the reachability state or
Comments inline...
--- Eric W wrote:
Dear Cisco Fans and Professionals,
I need some friendly advice. There are different
opinions about
Cat6500(High availibility with Single Router Mode)
and (High availibility
with Dual MSFC Redundancy)
Imagine you had 3 Cat65007s with Dual MSFC1
Scott,
Normal HSRP rules would be in effect in this scenario
I would say (haven't done this yet). If the failed
unit had a higher HSRP priority and was configured to
preempt then when it came back online it would become
active HSRP router.
--- s vermill wrote:
This is very closely related to
Consider the following topology:
area_0---ABR_1area_1-ABR_2area_0
There are two area 0's.
Use a virtual link to connect the area 0s.
__
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Mail Plus ^V Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now.
Your going to have to have CSUs between the routers
most likely w/crossover between the CSUs.
Back-to-back with Nortels requires internal clocking
be set on both sides (this is w/v.35 cables). cisco's
work fine w/internal on 1 side. Friends of mine tried
several custom v.35 dte/dce crossovers
binh,
Heres my notes on 2500 memory... hopefully there
should be some stickers or wording on the chips/pcb
that help out finding out what you have.
2500 DRAM use ONLY:
- 1x36 70ns(or faster) TIN SIMMS 4 meg
- 4x36 70ns(or faster) TIN SIMM 16 meg
PARITY, not Nx32. And they must be
I've been doing 6500 upgrades recently to and found
out the same thing, but haven't been able to find a
doc saying so.
--- Patrick Donlon wrote:
I eventually worked it out. It seems that you can't
see a flash card on a RP
on a 6000. I'd done a lot of testing with a loaned
6500 for upgrading
Does anyone else use this feature and have feedback on
the different modes? I tend to run bidirectional mode.
Also, with FREEK when the keepalives are missed FREEK
will force the interface/subinterface down causing the
backup or floating static to kick in. If your frame
provider or PVC doesn't
dot1q on ethernet was added in IOS 12.0(1)T and the
native keyword was added in 12.1(3)T. Before that, had
to put the native VLAN cfg on the main/physical
interface.
--- Doug Oh wrote:
On the 2611 platform, VLAN encapsulation is
supported for Ethernet as of
12.1. Bridging on a subinterface
Hi,
Starting in IOS 12.2(4)T they added a dialer
persistent feature that does this (ignores the idle
time basically). If you don't have that IOS or higher,
you set the idle-time high and make sure theres some
form of traffic that is considered interesting by the
dialer-list defined so the idle
I don't know if it is available in IOS yet. It's not
listed on feature navigator and I've been looking to
play with it but haven't seen it as a new feature in
recent releases.
--- HulaJoe wrote:
Hi - Has anyone out there had a chance to put
Gateway Load Balancing
Protocol through its paces
All the 2500 series router ISDN interaces are S/T I
believe. Haven't ran into a U interface yet on a 2500.
Need a NT1.
--- Binh Ma wrote:
Hi everybody,
I recently bought an ISDN simulator with S/T
interfaces. I would like to
know if Cisco's 2500 series routers have S/T isdn
interface
Hi,
Route-maps and ACLs are the only way to set the tag
for all routes, except when redistributing BGP into
OSPF which isn't recommended. With that, the default
tag would be comprised of the BGP AS_PATH but it can
be over-riden with a route-map.
Your idea is good though, maybe ask your Cisco SE
You are correct. The only side-effects would be that
if another area needs to get to that network that
isn't advertised by the NSSA ABR they won't be able
unless static route is used, etc.
More detail... by default on NSSA External (type 7)
routes the P-bit is set which permits the Type7 to
Comments inline...
--- The Long and Winding Road
wrote:
Larry Letterman wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Pris,
In our 6509's we used to make the native vlan and
the data vlan
the same and it was something other than 1...if a
blade fails and
we put in
Hi,
The New site has 2 ATM PVCs defined, with a ip entry
mapped to site A and C. Site C has a typo under it's
map-list for the new site, going to 192.58.135.68
instead of 192.68.135.68. New site has no PVCs for
site B yet configured.
Also, this is multipoint non-broadcast interface so
under
assistance..
-Original Message-
From: Erick B. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, October 09, 2002 7:58 PM
To: Bill Smith; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: ATM Problem [7:55238]
Hi,
The New site has 2 ATM PVCs defined, with a ip entry
mapped to site A and C. Site C has
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?
As well as plenty of other stocks...
--- Eric R wrote:
Just curious if anyone else noticed that Cisco is
below $10 and Lucent is a
now penny stock!
__
Do you Yahoo!?
Faith Hill - Exclusive Performances, Videos More
http://faith.yahoo.com
Greg,
Windows XP does this by default in some situations. If
you have a PC with a Ethernet NIC and firewire
adapter, it will bridge the 2 interfaces together and
create a logical L3 interface that the protocols are
bound to all by default.
--- Greg Reaume wrote:
John,
If WindowsXP is
You can use sniffer with appropiate POD to tap a
Serial line (PPP, HDLC, Frame, etc). This costs $
though. Theres other vendors with similar products
(agilent, etc).
If your looking to monitor terminal (reverse telnet
like traffic) theres a async monitor command starting
with 12.2(4)T or 8T if
What type of router and IOS? There are/were
limitations depending on those, but data is possible.
You would set up a channel-group on the controller t1
interface and define the used timeslots. This creates
a logical/virtual serial interface which you can
configure like any other serial interface
What type of router and IOS? There are/were
limitations depending on those, but data is possible.
You would set up a channel-group on the controller t1
interface and define the used timeslots. This creates
a logical/virtual serial interface which you can
configure like any other serial interface
Well, if you only have one Ethernet then you'll need
to NAT-on-a-stick. But, any router w/Ethernet will be
able to plug into a cable modem w/Ethernet connection.
Config:
interface Loopback1
ip address 172.16.2.10 255.255.255.0
no ip directed-broadcast
ip nat inside
ip policy route-map nat
Comments inline...
--- Chuck's Long Road wrote:
Lupi, Guy wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
I would think about going with a 6509, the 5500
series has been eol'd, but
the last support dates are a while away yet.
CL: Lorda mercy!!! you sound like almost
issues with that,
so we re-engineered the traffic to keep as much as
possible on individual
cards, as the bus on the 4006 is only 2GB, as
opposed to the 64 the
marketing department claims.
Erick B. wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Comment
True chuck, comments below...
--- Chuck's Long Road wrote:
Good points, Erik - some thoughts below:
snipp for brevety
CL: according to the specs, the 4006 has a 64 gig
backplane, superior to the
65xx's advertised 32 gig out of the box.
Also, take the Mpps numbers into consideration. I
Chuck,
Have you tried to shorten the DHCP lease time?
--- Larry Letterman wrote:
why is that ? we have segmented avvid network across
our campus. The
laptops are all W2K and they work just
fine without any issues on DHCP...The routers are
all running hsrp and
work correctly..
You would type
delete flash:c1700-sv3y-mz.121-5.YB4
then the file will be flagged as deleted.
To regain the space, you do
squeeze flash:
The squeeze command doesn't work on all model routers
however and sometimes depends on flash type. Offhand,
I can't recall if 1700 can squeeze. If it
YOu need to bridge IPX and AT. They call it fallback
bridging but it's configured the same as regular
bridging was...
--- Robert Edmonds
wrote:
Diego,
I don't think the 3550 supports IPX at all. I have
checked Cisco's web
site, plus I have a 3550-12G on my network and I
can't find any IPX
Not that I know of. The timestamp of the file but it
might not be accurate. You could set up a proxy on
your PC that logs HTTP traffic I guess. You could also
sniff HTTP, etc all the time... be really out of
control but...
It seems like internet access is becoming more like a
police/big-brother
Hi John,
The VLAN Interfaces on the 3500/2900 XL series are
management VLANs only and there can only be one up at
a time.
--- John Brandis wrote:
HI All,
Got a strange problem on a 3524xl switch.
Problem: Need to create 2 VLANS . I issue the
statements
interface vlan 1
ip
Is this for a lab or production environment?
OSPF can authenticate per-area or on a interface
basis. You'll have to put this spoke on it's own
sub-interface or run a tunnel to it and do auth on the
tunnel.
--- Robert Massiache wrote:
Hi,
I got a strange question for you guys! How do I
It will work fine for any destination other then
210.210.210.x/24 which is the classful network for
your IP subnet.
A better real-world internet example with no ip
classless and internet connections would be, if you
had a 64.x.x.x subnet on the serial and similar on LAN
side. In this case,
Well, 12.2.1 is the first revision of 12.2 mainline
code; they just released 12.2.12 so that may be better
for you. Keep in mind that there is no 12.2 GD release
yet. The T, X, etc trains add features so are likely
to be more problem prone.
Perhaps, look at 12.1 GD if you don't need any
If it's the only route to that destination, then it
doesn't really matter what the admin distance (or
cost) is for the route.
Perhaps, he was saying this because you may have a
dynamic routing protocol (RIP, EIGRP, OSPF, etc) that
advertises a default route that uses another next-hop.
In this
This commands advertises a 0.0.0.0/0 route via OSPF
with the advertising router as the next-hop. The
next-hop would be the IP address of the interface
connecting to adjancent routers part of the OSPF
domain.
--- Gil Shulman wrote:
Hi all,
I have been wondering whether someone can help me
Well, for the authentication part you can use the aut
proxy feature (both router IOS and PIX) coupled with a
RADIUS/TACACS server. Local user db will work to.
As far as blocking porn, etc there are other products
like WebSense but thats the only one that works with
the PIX at the moment. You
The only thing I know of right now about this release
is that it fixes a Spanning tree bug. CSCdy21905.
http://www.cisco.com/cgi-bin/bugtool/onebug.pl?bugid=CSCdy21905
--- Eric Rogers wrote:
A new IOS has just been released for the 3550 -
12.1.11.EA1. Looks like it
came just in time for
Where does the 10.258.52.x network reside in your
network? I'm guessing it also uses a 255.255.255.0
mask.
If there is a PC or PC's on one of the 1605 ethernet
segments with a 10.258.52.x address then you will need
to add a secondary IP address to the interface those
devices are off of. This is
Is the PC's default gateway set to 10.128.52.1?
Also, check the PCs routing table to see if everything
is ok. netstat -r
--- Craig Robertson wrote:
Sorry guys, the address of the PC is 10.128.52.101,
not 258. Nice typo
hey :-)
Thanks
Vance Krier wrote in message
[EMAIL
Was the 2500 working fine then just started doing
this, or is this 2500 new to you and first time using
it?
Turn off the router, use a electrostatic strap, and
take the cover off and try reseating the memory and
flash and make sure all chips are seated well on the
mainboard. Power on and see if
Try putting 'no ip address' on the serial interfaces.
You don't need a ip unnumbered or ip address on them
if they are part of a multilink-group.
Have you tried removing the NAT? Don't see a complete
config for NAT so can't see if it may be a issue.
Erick
--- Beckwith Rod wrote:
Hello,
Hi,
Try 'no ip domain-lookup nsap' globally.
--- Raul F. Fernandez wrote:
Its also happening with 12.2 code.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
cebuano
Sent: Wednesday, August 21, 2002 11:42 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:
Looks to be new to 12.2(8)T and possibly some test
builds. The output below is from a Development test
version of 12.1 so maybe a future release of 12.1
mainline will have it to.
On my 804 here, 12.2(4)T didn't have it but 12.2(8)T
does.
--- Moffett, Ryan wrote:
What code rev is this in?
This is supported on the 7500/7000 series routers
starting with 11.1 CA.
Under the fast ethernet interface, do a 'channel-group
#' which ties the fast Ethernet interface to a
port-channel interface.
Example:
interface fast Ethernet 1/0/0
no ip address
channel-group 1
interface fast
Comments inline...
--- Howard C. Berkowitz wrote:
I don't know the specifics of the Nokia case. Cisco
has, however,
both supplied router blades running IOS on an OEM
basis to vendors
including Cabletron, and licensed a software port to
DEC (IOS on DEC
hardware -- Brouter 500)
It should work just fine. Haven't tested DHCP in 6.2
but have set up PIX outside interface up as DHCP
client in past. The only minor problem I see is that I
don't think there is a way to change the MAC address
if they restrict DHCP via MAC address, but that might
not effect you.
--- Wayne Jang
Just add another dialer string (or dialer map)... they
will be used in the order they are entered.
--- Michalis Palis wrote:
Hello all.
I have a customer who wants a router to dial (ISDN)
to another destination in case the fist destination
fails to answer ( no answer, busy etc). How can
Hi,
Having passive for the ISDN int would stop OSPF
multicast hellos from going across the ISDN interface.
You could still do a neighbor statement though which
is unicast however.
If the ISDN is bouncing, it's probably due to a
route-redistribution problem or some form of IP
traffic going out
The config is good for the pieces you posted. Is it
working or? If it's not, perhaps theres a extra space
after one of the passwords.
--- Mirza, Timur
wrote:
PAP Using Different Passwords On Two Different
Routers
on r1:
username r2 password 0 timur
!
int BRI0
ppp authentication pap
Yes there is, it's called GVRP which is part/extension
of 802.1q. Not all vendors support this though so
YMMV.
VTP, DTP are Cisco propiertary.
--- TP wrote:
Dear Group,
I'm confused.
In a multi-vendor enviroment I've to design a VLANs
scenario.
So I can prefer 802.1Q tagging (standard)
The interface-dlci command can be used on a multipoint
interface as well, and exist with a map statement.
Using it this way lets you specify QoS for a DLCI.
Example:
frame map ip x.x.x.x 101
frame map ip x.x.x.x 102
frame interface-dlci 101
class dlci101
frame interface-dlci 102
Hi,
When using DECnet, the MAC address is changed
depending on the DECnet address. You need to use the
HSRP use-bia feature with DECnet. HSRP then uses the
DECNet MAC address.
From
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/cisintwk/ito_doc/decnet.htm
DECnet hosts do not use
Why doesn't he just telnet/console into the PIX and do
a 'ip address dhcp ...' instead of rebooting? This
should renew it - at least this was working for me in
a PIX class I attended last week. I did ask the
instructor if you could change the MAC address on the
PIX due to ISPs locking DHCP down
Hello,
The switches use the VTP database with the highest
config-revision. IE: You can be playing with a switch
not attached to the network and then attach it to the
network and if it's config-revision is higher it will
wipe out the other switches. Changing the VTP domain
makes the
The bandwidth command in IOS is used by some routing
protocols (part of metric calc) and other router
functions/services. This command on the switch, being
IOS is probably the same and I'm not sure how
effective it would be unless the switch had L3
functions, etc.
--- sam sneed wrote:
I never
Hi,
Look at the advertise-map function.
--- Larry Whitfill wrote:
I need some help on conditional advertisements in
BGP.
I can have a condition where route A is advertised
by RTR-X only when route
B disappears from RTR-X's routing table. Is it
possible to set up a
condition where
Hi,
I just did this up in my lab and got the same results
using the metric-type option. Always was a N2. I
checked the 12.1 and 12.2 command reference for 'area
nssa' and metric-type and metric aren't listed as
options for this command in the docs. That might not
mean anything though.
I also
be the
default route to 172.16.1.2.
HTH. Also, this effects all router vendors (not just
cisco) but most have classless enabled by default
these days (BayRS doesn't though).
Erick B.
Matt Saunders wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Hi Group,
I
, Erick B.
--- bergenpeak wrote:
I'm looking at an design where there's a hub-spoke
network
based on 802.1q. Specifically, there will be a
number of routers
connect back via FE/GE into a central router through
an 802.1q
trunked interface. Each remote router will run OSPF
and thus
should
I think SLiRP was the program used for making a
console connection into a SLIP connection. Trumpet may
have done this also...
--- Ken Diliberto wrote:
Wasn't Trumpet used to convert a shell account into
a SLIP line? That was
way cool at the time.
Ken
Erick B. 03/16/02 12:48AM
SC
I did some google searches and some site mentioned the
A-version is the same module but the components used
to make it were different and the cost was cheaper
then the original.
--- Daniel Cotts wrote:
Here's the output of a show port capabilities on
both a 5213 and a 5213A.
No difference.
SC = Serial Console
SL = SLIP (from before PPP days - anyone remember
Trumpet? those were the days!).
Erick B.
--- TALBOT, WILLIAM P (SWBT) wrote:
Probably switch console or system console
Good question though, I am curious to see what it
really means.
Pat
-Original Message
to get to it if they decide
to pull the cable on the trunk port :)
Erick B.
--- R. Benjamin Kessler
wrote:
I think Cisco generally recommends that your switch
mgmt interface is on a
different VLAN than your regular (read:
end-user/server) devices. This
helps isolate broadcast/multicast
Hi,
The term layer 3 switch is used to describe a switch
that has routing capabilities. In the 6509, routing is
handled by the MSFC daughtercard on the Sup module.
If you do a 'show module' the MSFC is in slot 15
and/or 16. If you do a 'session 15' you
reverse-telnet/console into the router
I've done plenty of TFTP transfers in Win XP with
Pumpkin with no problem. It's all I use for TFTP.
Their website is www.klever.net/kin but it appears to
be down at the moment. It's been awhile since I've
been there... The stories they had about the programs
were funny.
Hi,
Is there already a s0.1 interface defined?
Try creating a s0.2 or something that doesn't exist.
Once you create a sub-interface you can't change it
from multipoint to point-to-point and vice versa.
Also, if you remove sub interfaces they aren't
completely removed from memory until the
Hi,
I believe there is a new major-name hotel open now
down the street at the end of the Cisco campus that
looked walking distance to bldg C. Forgot the name...
can someone help? Since it's one of the bigger hotel
names, probably a bit pricy then the cheap motels/inns
in the area.
When I've
Hi,
The bandwidth assigned to the main interface will be
used on the subinterfaces, unless theres a bandwidth
command on the subinterface which will override the
bandwidth defined on the main.
Example:
int s0/0
band 1000
int s0/0.1 point
ip address ...
int s0/0.2 point
ip
.
Erick B.
--- Washington Rico wrote:
Cisco people I would like to know your impression of
Foundry Networks. Are
they something to worry about?
Regards,
Eric Washington
__
Do You Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Sports - Coverage of the 2002 Olympic Games
http
Hi,
From rommon you can use TFTP (tftpdnld command) after
setting 4-5 variables listed by the tftpdnld command
if they aren't all set.
However, for the tftpdnld to work the bootstrap/rommon
version has to support a interface you have installed.
IE: A newer FastEthernet Net Mod may not be
You could also use Frame-Relay End-To-End keepalives
(FREEK). This works best if a subinterface is used.
--- Nick S. wrote:
Ok, The PVC status would never go down till the
switch reports it as down,
and only then will the line protocol go down.
I have come across this scenario a couple of
802.1q (dot1q) works on 10meg interfaces. I'm doing it
on a 2600 here...
--- Nisus wrote:
Ok so I understand the trunk feature now after
talking to a good CCIE friend
of mine.
(he runs http://www.IPexpert.net shameless plug)
And he explained the trunking feature.
Here is my dilemma.
Maybe with the use of the 'transmit-interface'
command. I haven't tried this myself.
--- Tauseef Nagi wrote:
Cisco states that their PA-4E module (four port
10BaseT) for 7500 Series
routers is capable of being configured for full
duplex operation.
Under the ethernet interface, no
Hi,
This usually happens when a router has 2 routes to the
same destination net but one of the next-hops doesn't
have a route back to the source.
Whats your routing table look like, how about the
destination routers routing table?
Is the IP address space on your LAN side public space
your
Circus,
You need to put 'encaps isl/dot1q (VLAN-#)' on the
subinterface before defining the ip address.
If this isn't a VLAN-trunk link then to assign
multiple IPs, use the secondary keyword at the end of
the ip address command on the major interface.
Circusnuts wrote:
Man- any idea on
1 - 100 of 336 matches
Mail list logo