From: Les Hardin (hardinl@xxxxxxx)
Date: Sun Feb 11 2001 - 21:48:06 GMT-3
Actually, you can hold down the cntrl+shift and just type 66. Same thing, a
bit quicker.
Les
At 07:16 PM 2/11/2001 -0500, Rob Webber wrote:
>This same sequence can be really handy to break a router from a traceroute
>or extended ping. If you are using a term server to console into r1, and r1
>either is doing an extended ping (like 500 pings for troubleshooting) or its
>doing a traceroute that you thought (or hoped) would finish, but its not,
>hit
>
>ctrl-shift-6 ctrl-shift-6
>
>This will stop r1 from whatever its doing. If you do the ctrl-shift-6 x it
>sends you all the way back to the term server (and if you go back to r1's
>session its still doing whatever it was doing). As well all know those 29
>hops for a traceroute take a looooong time to finish.
>
>Rob.
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
>Bernard Dunn
>Sent: Sunday, February 11, 2001 5:32 AM
>To: Chris Mott
>Cc: CCIE
>Subject: Re: Ctrl-shft commands .. a question
>
>
>
>
>The only 'trick' that is known, is to break telnet to the 'middle' router:
>
>ie:
>
> router1 ---- router2 ----- router3
>
> --->>>>>telnet
> to here
> ---->>>>> telnet to here
>
> <ctrl-shift-^-^>6
> back to <<<<------
> router2
>
>
>
>
>
>On Sat, 10 Feb 2001, Chris Mott wrote:
>
> > I understand from a CCIE buddy of mine that there are actually many
> > Ctrl-Shft commands aside from the ubiquitous Ctrl-Shft-6-x ... one he
> > mentioned was Ctrl-Shft-4, which supposedly send a remote BREAK sequence,
> > although I cannot imagine a situation for using it ... has anyone else
>heard
> > of such a thing, and if so, can you send a link or post them for us?
> >
> > 4 days and counting!
> >
> > Chris Mott
> > CCDP, CCNP+Voice
> > Solarcom, www.solarcom.net
> >
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