From: Darek Kuzma (darekk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Fri May 25 2001 - 19:34:56 GMT-3
>Don't forget the memory requirements for soft inbound.
.... unless you use 12.0(6)T or higher
check:
http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios120/120newft/120t/1
20t7/sftrst.htm
Thanks,
Darek
"Daniel C. Young" wrote:
> Don't forget the memory requirements for soft inbound. I know of someone
> whose router crapped out b/c of lack of memory when he did a soft inbound
> reset. Good thing it was just a lab router.
>
> You're right, it does make it faster. But I wonder if proctors would have a
> problem if we configure something that was not specifically asked.
>
> Daniel C. Young
> Sr. Network Engineer
> CCNP (ATM, Security & Voice Specialist),
> CCDP, CCSE, MCSE+I
>
> SBC Internet Data Center
> (949) 221-1928 Work
> (714) 350-8945 Cell
> young@pobox.com
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of crl
> Sent: Thursday, May 24, 2001 2:05 PM
> To: Groupstudy
> Subject: BGP Inbound Soft-Reconfiguration and the Lab
>
> I guess this is half a tip / half a question...
>
> I find that when doing BGP stuff, I always enable inbound soft config on
> all peerings in my lab. This doesn't affect the routing tables or the
> ability to get any particular scenario configured, but it makes it much
> quicker for me to test my changes.
>
> Above is the "tip" portion of this message... Now for the question... if
> the lab instructions don't specifically say not to use
> soft-reconfiguration inbound, does anybody see a problem with enabling
> it? I'd think of it much along the same lines as creating an alias for
> show ip route...
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