RE: Building Lab

From: Rahmlow, Howard F. (howard.rahmlow@xxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Sep 28 2000 - 19:53:38 GMT-3


   
You can use the All-in-One CCIE Lab Study Guide starting point, but dont use
it as a bible. Also I would check out \\www.fatkid.com Derek has been in the
past a great contributer to the list and has some realy good labs, they are
also free.

Howard

-----Original Message-----
From: Christopher M. Heffner [mailto:cheffner@attglobal.net]
Sent: Thursday, September 28, 2000 5:59 PM
To: Lampron, George; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: Building Lab

George:
        Look at www.ccbootcamp.com for labs to run on your routers and
switches.
You can also look at the All-in-One CCIE Lab Study Guide by McGraw-Hill -
ISBN number 0-07-135108-6.

Good Luck in your journey.

Chris "The Bulldog" Heffner
Strategic Network Solutions, Inc.
IMCR Course Director
Certified Cisco Systems Instructor
CCSI, CCNA, CCDA, MCT, MCSE, MCNI, MCNE, CLI, CLP, CTT, ASE, A+
cheffner@attglobal.net

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Lampron, George
Sent: Thursday, September 28, 2000 4:27 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Building Lab

Okay folks,
Maybe someone can provide some guidance.

I've gotten to the point that I have out together some equipment for a Lab
I have the following:

5500 Switch with RSM, 24 port ethernet and GBIC uplink module
5505 Switch, 24 port ethernet and GBIC uplink module
3640 router
3620 router
4 - 2620 routers
as 5300
pix 520

I would like some suggestions as to books or resources with practice labs
and if there are any other piece of equipment I shoul add to my CCIE lab.

George

-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Lewis [mailto:markl11@hotmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, September 28, 2000 1:15 PM
To: jheneyccie@hotmail.com; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: While we're on the subject of ATM....!

Hi,

Yep,you're right.I wasn't thinking.

The issue is the old half bridge issue - you've got to have a bridge at both

ends...

Mark

>From: "Jack Heney" <jheneyccie@hotmail.com>
>To: markl11@hotmail.com, ccielab@groupstudy.com
>Subject: Re: While we're on the subject of ATM....!
>Date: Thu, 28 Sep 2000 18:47:05 GMT
>
>
>Actually, it won't work if the IP address is right on the router
>interface...I ran into this problem a few weeks ago (I had the address
>right on the ATM interface)...Both ends of the point-to-point vc must be
>performing the same operation (routing or bridging)...Since the CAT is
>bridging traffic from the backplane to the virtual circuit, the other end
>of the VC (the router interface) must be bridged as well.
>
>Jack Heney
>
>>From: "Mark Lewis" <markl11@hotmail.com>
>>Reply-To: "Mark Lewis" <markl11@hotmail.com>
>>To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
>>Subject: While we're on the subject of ATM....!
>>Date: Thu, 28 Sep 2000 17:25:55 GMT
>>
>>
>>MAY be useful (or maybe not!).
>>
>>How to configure ATM on the cat LANE module without LANE (!!)
>>
>>Take a simple topology like this:
>>
>> R-----LS-----Cat
>>
>>
>>Config the router as per usual for a pvc to the cat (lane module) (having
>>set up the pvc on the ls first of course).
>>
>>Then config you cat LANE module like this:
>>
>>int atm0
>>
>>atm VCD VPI VCI aal5snap
>>atm bind pvc vlan VCD VLAN#
>>
>>(replacing the VCD,VPI,VCI, and VLAN#) with the appropriate numbers.
>>
>>Put an ip addr. on the router, put the cat sc0 int into the vlan as
>>indicated by the VLAN# above, and ta-dah... you are now able to ping the
>>cat
>>from the router & visa-versa!
>>
>>(By the way, when I did it, I bridged through the atm int on the router to
>>an ip addr on a bvi (irb), but I don't see any reason it won't work if
>>you
>>put the ip address directly on the atm int).
>>
>>Interesting, huh?
>>
>>
>>Mark
>>
>>
>>



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