RE: Proper network design? [7:49536]

2002-07-25 Thread Frank H
to talk to our network guy to see if he can make the Linux box do the same job so I can take my Cisco router back home. Thanks to all for your help. Frank Priscilla Oppenheimer wrote: Frank H wrote: Proper network design? I have a few questions for the group that maybe someone can

RE: Proper network design? [7:49536]

2002-07-24 Thread Frank H
No subinterfaces are used. Here's the Cisco 2514 config: Router#show startup-config Using 940 out of 32762 bytes ! version 12.1 service timestamps debug uptime service timestamps log uptime no service password-encryption ! hostname Router ip subnet-zero ! interface Ethernet0 description outside

RE: Proper network design? [7:49536]

2002-07-24 Thread Frank H
Now I understand. I read a few articles on the Cisco site after searching for the term router on a stick and found a good explanation. Thanks for your help. Frank Message Posted at: http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7i=49558t=49536 --

Re: Proper network design? [7:49536]

2002-07-24 Thread Frank H
Yes, I am using a 2514. It does have 2 10BaseT interfaces (through AUI adapters). I am not using subinterfaces. Both ports are used - one port goes to the Internet (for hosts that require Internet access) and the other connects directly to the 24 port hub which resides within the internal LAN.

RE: flash is read-only [7:49568]

2002-07-24 Thread Frank H
Copied directly from Cisco: On these platforms, the Cisco IOS software image is actually running directly from the Flash memory (flash in read-only mode). Therefore, you cannot copy the Cisco IOS software image from the TFTP server to the Flash if you are in user privileged EXEC mode (router#).

Re: Proper network design? [7:49536]

2002-07-24 Thread Frank H
No, just one IP address on each interface. Check my earlier post for the full configuration. Message Posted at: http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7i=49578t=49536 -- FAQ, list archives, and subscription info:

Re: Proper network design? [7:49536]

2002-07-24 Thread Frank H
The router on a stick effect comes from this: ip route 192.168.2.0 255.255.255.0 192.168.0.100 All traffic destined to any network not on 192.168.0.0 goes to the gateway (192.168.0.1) on interface ethernet 1. The router then re-routes 192.168.2.0 traffic back on the 192.168.0.0 network to

RE: Earth and grounding for CISCO products [7:44558]

2002-05-21 Thread Frank H
If you want a quick test to see if the earth is good or not, your voltmeter will do (on AC mode). Just stick one lead into the live socket and the other into the ground socket. If it reads the same as when measured between live and neutral, then your ground is good. Alternatively, if you measure