I'd like to have a few expert opinions regarding the use of the native ios
vs. hybrid ios.
I've been told by a cisco engineer not to use it unless the hardware or
software feature is
ONLY supported in that code train. The concern is that native IOS has less
field exposure and he and others
We are running Native IOS in our digital imaging network. We were told by
our integrator that because we were just doing basic IP routing, we would be
fine. I have been told by Cisco that there are a few bugs with the web
server portion of the code as well as the SNMP management on older versions
I've tried on two occasions and it sucks, the box re-booted intermittently
and had to revert to the hybrid code.
It also has some new commands like port ranges, I guess it's just
front-ending the switch CLI
Ged Bowey
Lopez, Robert wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
I currently have Version 12.1(8a)E4, running on my 6509. I have had no
problems, except for a little bit of a headache in the intial config,
setting up the vlans, and such(the vlan has to be avtive in a database,
before using). We opted for the native so that we can run SLB on the switch
as
I have a 6509 in the lab running native and a couple of customers also
running native without troubles. The bottom line is Cisco is going in
the native mode direction and my understanding is that eventually there
will be no CATOS as Cisco would rather not support both. If your
comfortable with
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Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2001 10:26 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: native ios [7:24924]
I have a 6509 in the lab running native and a couple of customers also
running native without troubles. The bottom line is Cisco is going in
the native mode direction and my
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