Priscilla is absolutely right, its a fuzzy question. I have just two
things to add.
If the network is "mainly LAN" that suggests that there are some wide
area links. Because wide area links are usually slower than local area
media and are used by lots of users, congestion on them is definitely
Its possible on many platforms to tftp download from the rom monitor. If
you have physical access and a laptop with ether, you are be back on the
air pretty fast.
Sounds like you talked with the TAC, and they should have told you if
this was an option on your platform, but
Jason
Michael
1. Thanks for the GRE tunnel with keys suggestion, but can you configure
this without specifying the remote endpoint?
Any idea where I could find this on CCO ... the logical interface
configuration guide seems to say that the endpoints _must_ be specified
and that keys just provide weak protec
Unless the pix is really cheap, this might be a tough sell. We could do
it fairly cheaply already -- a 1720 at work with (free) Cisco vpn
clients to take home. But then they start saying at work, well, we need
a spare, and of course there is maintenance .
the problem, frankly, is that thi
CCO says you can use IPSEC on a 7513 (and I've seen, if memory servers,
DES56 secure shell, so the encryption itself should not be a problem)
if the image is intended for a 7513 (i.e., rsp) and it includes
IPSEC, nothing should crash and/or burn (i.e., a 7200 image won't load
on a 7500).
. wrote:
> If I get this correctly you can use dynamic-map feature
> as seen in the example here:
>
> http://www.cisco.com/warp/customer/707/ios_804.html
>
> ""the-other-jason"" wrote in message
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
>
&g
Help, I can't think of a way to do this . :-(
We have two IPSec "appliances" at work that require known, routable
addresses on their "non-secure" ethernet interfaces.
We want to create a kit engineers can take home for remote IPSec access
into the network from personal cable/dsl connection
JP wrote:
> It is a lot saver and easy to manage if you just use a PC, I do
> not see why
> you would want to use your router as tftp server.
Your PC might not be in the appropriate location to act as the tftp server.
For example, at an ISP, the routers are internet connected and the PCs are
on
The basic analysis here seems to make sense. But there is an implied
assumption that doesn't. There will always be some people that take
advantage of a situation, but the majority of people do not. Our society and
economy, to say nothing of complex organizations in general, could not
possibly func
Zapeta -
Suggest you use "debug ppp" (particularly, "debug ppp authentication")
to determine what is going on. My ignorant hunch would be an
authentication problem (the callback connection is established, then
dropped). In particular, don't you need the command "authentication
chap" on R9?
J
www.fatkid.com is a good place to start with some intermediate level labs.
Bob Wilson wrote:
> Does anyone have suggestions on setting up a eigrp lab??? I have some
> equipment already bought but need some suggestions and a direction to go..
--
Jason
Boson BCMSN1 BSCN2 BSCI2 practice tests
JJohn Tafasi wrote:
> Does it affect IPX tick?
IPX assumes 6 ticks for a serial interface unless you run IPXWAN, which
actually measures the delay.
> Does it affect OSPF cost? (assuming subinterfaces are used)
No, OSPF will not know the CIR.
--
Jason
Boson BCMSN1 BSCN2 BSCI2 practice t
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