From: David H. Brown (DHBrown@xxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Tue Dec 26 2000 - 21:32:43 GMT-3
I'll agree and add part of the sh ver from a 4000-M:
cisco 4000 (68030) processor (revision 0xB0) with 16384K/4096K bytes of
memory.
Processor board ID 5029575
G.703/E1 software, Version 1.0.
Bridging software.
X.25 software, Version 3.0.0.
Check the revision, B0 - this is an older 4000-M, but it says M on it. If
someone can post a 4000 with the revision A0, that might prove it
conclusively.
David
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Bernard Dunn
Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2000 6:51 PM
To: Hull, Scot
Cc: 'Kevin Baumgartner'; GroupStudy
Subject: RE: Cisco 4000
Scott,
cisco 4000 original never supported more than 16Mb DRAM.
One sure way is the serial number check..
Another is the revision of the motherboards. Rev A0 is the original
4000. Rev B0 onwards is the 4000-M.
Regards
Bernard.
On Tue, 26 Dec 2000, Hull, Scot wrote:
> Yes, but ... well, take a look.
>
> Anyway, the following is a show hardware and show ver from a 4000M
> (supposedly).
>
>
> Router>sh hard
> Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
> IOS (tm) 4000 Software (C4000-JS56I-M), Version 12.0(8), RELEASE SOFTWARE
> (fc1)
> Copyright (c) 1986-1999 by cisco Systems, Inc.
> Compiled Mon 29-Nov-99 22:03 by kpma
> Image text-base: 0x00012000, data-base: 0x00A14FA0
>
> ROM: System Bootstrap, Version 5.2(11a), RELEASE SOFTWARE
> ROM: 4000 Bootstrap Software (XX-RXBOOT), Version 10.2(11a), RELEASE
> SOFTWARE (fc1)
>
> Router uptime is 52 minutes
> System restarted by power-on
> System image file is "flash:c4000-js56i-mz.120-8.bin"
>
> cisco 4000 (68030) processor (revision 0xC0) with 32768K/4096K bytes of
> memory.
> Processor board ID 5037405
> G.703/E1 software, Version 1.0.
> Bridging software.
> X.25 software, Version 3.0.0.
> SuperLAT software (copyright 1990 by Meridian Technology Corp).
> TN3270 Emulation software.
> 2 Ethernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
> 2 Serial network interface(s)
> 128K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
> 8192K bytes of processor board System flash (Read/Write)
>
> Configuration register is 0x2102
>
> Router>
> Router>sh ver
> Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
> IOS (tm) 4000 Software (C4000-JS56I-M), Version 12.0(8), RELEASE SOFTWARE
> (fc1)
> Copyright (c) 1986-1999 by cisco Systems, Inc.
> Compiled Mon 29-Nov-99 22:03 by kpma
> Image text-base: 0x00012000, data-base: 0x00A14FA0
>
> ROM: System Bootstrap, Version 5.2(11a), RELEASE SOFTWARE
> ROM: 4000 Bootstrap Software (XX-RXBOOT), Version 10.2(11a), RELEASE
> SOFTWARE (fc1)
>
> Router uptime is 53 minutes
> System restarted by power-on
> System image file is "flash:c4000-js56i-mz.120-8.bin"
>
> cisco 4000 (68030) processor (revision 0xC0) with 32768K/4096K bytes of
> memory.
> Processor board ID 5037405
> G.703/E1 software, Version 1.0.
> Bridging software.
> X.25 software, Version 3.0.0.
> SuperLAT software (copyright 1990 by Meridian Technology Corp).
> TN3270 Emulation software.
> 2 Ethernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
> 2 Serial network interface(s)
> 128K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
> 8192K bytes of processor board System flash (Read/Write)
>
> Configuration register is 0x2102
>
> Thoughts?
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Kevin Baumgartner [mailto:kbaumgar@cisco.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2000 3:25 PM
> To: Hull, Scot; GroupStudy
> Subject: Re: Cisco 4000
>
>
> Have you tried show hardware or show version?
>
> At 03:15 PM 12/26/00 -0800, Hull, Scot wrote:
> >Is there any quick and easy way to tell what type of Cisco 4000 router
> >you've consoled into (i.e., 4000 v. 4000M)?
> >
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