- realizing what I don't know.
I feel pretty stupid - I've just passed the CCNA this past Friday
and am trying to get a simple 4000M 10baseT router to pass
traffic from one segment to another. I just got this router to play
with - yes, I passed the CCNA with out any real hands-on...(I know,
I
PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, July 06, 2000 3:53 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: New CCNA - realizing what I don't know.
I feel pretty stupid - I've just passed the CCNA this past Friday
and am trying to get a simple 4000M 10baseT router to pass
traffic from one segment to another. I
Does the device at 10.0.0.115 have a route to 10.0.10.0 ?
-Original Message-
From: Becky [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, July 06, 2000 3:53 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: New CCNA - realizing what I don't know.
I feel pretty stupid - I've just passed the CCNA
I didn't see anything wrong with your config, I would suggest you
checking the routing table on host 10.0.0.115 . Make sure it knows how
to get back your network 10.0.10.0 via 10.0.0.250. It's very likely that
your ping is getting to the host, but the reply is not getting back to
your router.
- realizing what I don't know.
I feel pretty stupid - I've just passed the CCNA this past Friday
and am trying to get a simple 4000M 10baseT router to pass
traffic from one segment to another. I just got this router to play
with - yes, I passed the CCNA with out any real hands-on...(I
On Thu, 6 Jul 2000, Becky wrote:
I feel pretty stupid - I've just passed the CCNA this past Friday
and am trying to get a simple 4000M 10baseT router to pass
traffic from one segment to another. I just got this router to play
with - yes, I passed the CCNA with out any real hands-on...(I
Howdy all,
First, I would like to say a huge thank you to Jay Hennigan, John Neiberger
and
Dusty Harper for their immediate responses and follow-ups to my initial
posting.
Also, many thanks to the other folks who replied in the group and also to my
personal email address.
I (most regrettably)
Becky,
I'm not even sure if this would come into play with just one router and
not using routing protocols, but did you enable ip routing? Ping uses ICMP
which is part of IP so that might be the issue. Hope I helped...and hope I
wasn't wrong in my assumption ;) If someone see's that I was
If a regular ping works but a ping sourced from the 10.0.0 network does not
work, I would check the default gateway setting in the host 10.0.0.115. It
will automatically know how to reply to a ping from 10.0.0.250 since they
are on the same subnet. It may not, however, know where to send
assuming some flavor of Windows here) winipcfg or ipconfig and see if it's
referring back to the router's e0 interface.
-Original Message-
From: Becky [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, July 06, 2000 2:53 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: New CCNA - realizing what I don't know
I feel pretty stupid - I've just passed the CCNA this past Friday
and am trying to get a simple 4000M 10baseT router to pass
traffic from one segment to another. I just got this router to play
with - yes, I passed the CCNA with out any real hands-on...(I know,
I know - let the paper-cert debates
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