This information is very interesting ...
May I know where you get this information ? Is it reliable
Regards,
Ronny
- Original Message -
From: cheekin
To:
Sent: Tuesday, July 24, 2001 5:32 PM
Subject: Certification Statistics [7:13477]
FYI. Breakdown by certification through May
The first CCIE get #1024 not #1.
That might explain why yours is #6969
Regards,
Ronny
- Original Message -
From: Allen May
To:
Sent: Wednesday, July 25, 2001 4:35 AM
Subject: Re: CCIE Expertises [7:13545]
I'm holding out for #6969
- Original Message -
From: Justin Emilio
Hi Chris,
The ICMP code 13 means communication administratively prohibited (e.g.
firewall blocked)
For your case I think it was due to the access list.
Other ICMP code:
0 - network unreachable
1 - host unreachable
2 - protocol unreachable
3 - fragmentation needed and the do=not-fragment bit set
Hi Andrew,
Congratulation for you success. I am going to go for CIT next week.
Do you have any tips and suggestion about the exam ?
Regards,
Ronny
- Original Message -
From: Andrew Larkins
To:
Sent: Friday, June 01, 2001 3:14 PM
Subject: Passed CIT - Now a CCNP!! [7:6725]
I passed
Today I passed my CCIE written, score 95%.
Thanks to the group and to boson test.
Let's go for the lab
Stefano Andrello
CCIE written, CCNA
Wow ! what a score ...
Can you share with us what tips and book you use to prepare for
CCIE written ?
Regards,
Ronny
Message Posted at:
Group,
Is the dialer-group command on the BRI interface optional. In other words
will the router dial if no dialer-group is configured on the bri
interface?
It depend on how you want to configure your BRI interface. Say you want to
configure it as a DDR (Dial on Demand Routing), than the
Group,
Is the dialer-group command on the BRI interface optional. In other words
will the router dial if no dialer-group is configured on the bri
interface?
It depend on how you want to configure your BRI interface. Say you want to
configure it as a DDR (Dial on Demand Routing), than the
Group,
I got concrete information that if you have multiple bri interfaces on the
router, all of them must be connected to
the same ISDN switch type. How about if you have a router with multiple
PRI
interfaces? Should I connect all the PRI interfaces to the same ISDN
switch
type?
It is
Hi,
I'm not a guru, but try show logging buffer
Regards,
Ronny
--- Cisco Newbie wrote:
All Guru,
I would like to know is there any similiar command
in Cisco switch(C4006)
that allow us to show log? Just like the one in
router...
If not, is there a way to retreive history log in a
- Original Message -
From: Mr. Oletu Hosea Godswill, CCNA
To: Ronny Jonathan
Sent: Monday, May 07, 2001 6:18 PM
Subject: Re: Layer 3 Switching Flow Mask [7:3360]
Me think since MLS has to do with layer 2 up to layer 4. We know that
layer
4 has ports numbers and all that. Ordinary
Hi All,
In BCMSN course book (Cisco Press) p233, it is stated that:
Most Cisco documentation explains flow masks as a way to determine how
packets are compared to entries in the MLS cache. This is inaccurate. Flow
masks are actually used to determine how much information about the packet is
First, thanks for your answer Drew ... but I'm still
confused ...
It determines what information
is stored in the mls entry and enforces all packets
coming through the mls
switch to be compared with the entry according to
the flow mask specified
with set mls flow.
How about the note in the
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