From: Timothy Ouellette (timoue@xxxxxxxx)
Date: Fri Sep 14 2001 - 22:58:28 GMT-3
-e-,
i'm familar with those commands you mentioned and also the clock rate
command/dce or dte ends. What I'm a little unsure of is in the bootcamp
labs, the diagram says that r7 (the frame switch) should have both it's
s0 and s1 set as DTE. Well, when I try to use the frame route commands
i get an error stating I cannot use this with 2 DTE devices. So, just
for giggles, i configured both interfaces as DCE and put both r1 and r2
on physical serials and it worked. Now I just need to go back and
change r1 to use a sub-int and that small part of lab should be okay.
I'm guessing that there was maybe a typo in the lab?
BTW: I am very very pleased at the quality of this mailing list. I was
just added a couple of days ago and am ecstatic about it.
You guys rock!!!
Tim
routerjocky wrote:
>
> on the frame switch, all your frame-relay switched serial interfaces should
> include "frame-relay interface-type dce". Read the frame relay switch
> configuration that I sent you very carefully. Although frame relay switch
> config is not part of the lab, you will need to know how to read one.
>
> The DTE that they're talking about is the cable section - with
> back-to-back's, you have a DTE and DCE cable. One requires a clock rate
> statement, one doesn't. I trust you'll figure out which is which.
>
> BTW, I haven't searched yet, but I trust this subject has been covered often
> in the Lab archives.
>
> hth
> -e-
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Timothy Ouellette" <timoue@home.com>
> To: "routerjocky" <elouie@yahoo.com>; <ciscolab@groupstudy.com>
> Sent: Friday, September 14, 2001 5:47 PM
> Subject: Re: CCBootcamp #1 question
>
> > Yeah, that's kinda where I am stuck right now. Per the diagram it says
> > s0 on router r7 should be a DTE and so should s1 on router r7. In that
> > case when I try to do a frame route between two DTE's I get an error.
> >
> > Maybe this is an error with the diagram and all the interfaces on router
> > r7 should be DCE? or are they throwing a curve ball at me?
> >
> > Also, is router r7 supposed to have an ip anywhere on it (say
> > 10.10.1.4/16 since that is not on the diagram anywhere?)
> >
> > They don't want l3 to l2 mappings such as frame relay map ip statements,
> > but frame route statements are okay.
> >
> > Sorry for the beginner type questions, but for some reason I seem to
> > have forgotten all of this good stuff :(
> >
> > Tim
> >
> >
> > routerjocky wrote:
> > >
> > > Yup. don't use subints on your frame relay switch. the subints belong
> on
> > > the end routers, and they'll take on any DLCI's that the frame switch
> > > advertises on that interface.
> > >
> > > Take a look at this frame relay switch configuration example:
> > >
> > > http://www.fatkid.com/html/401_advanced_ospf.html
> > >
> > > Click on Frame Relay Switch button
> > >
> > > ----- Original Message -----
> > > From: "Timothy Ouellette" <timoue@home.com>
> > > To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
> > > Sent: Friday, September 14, 2001 4:11 PM
> > > Subject: CCBootcamp #1 question
> > >
> > > > Rather than explain the whole scenario of CCIEBootcamp lab #1, I was
> > > > wondering if any of you good folks had any pointers(gotchas) for this
> > > > lab. I am currently trying to use sub-int's on my FR switch to have
> the
> > > > spoke sites communicate with each other but it's not working so well.
> > > > Can anyone drop me a hint or two for this? Thanks a bunch!
> > > >
> > > > Tim
> > > > **Please read:http://www.groupstudy.com/list/posting.html
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Thu Jun 13 2002 - 10:32:18 GMT-3