From: Paul Jin (PJin@xxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sat Jul 27 2002 - 23:01:18 GMT-3
Jason,
You have a 4500-M router.
You can tell by the revision code from your show ver.
Main difference should be faster CPU and more memory capacities between the
routers.
Check this link for more detail.
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/63/arch_4000.shtml
<http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/63/arch_4000.shtml>
- Paul
-----Original Message-----
From: Jason Cash [mailto:cash2001@swbell.net]
Sent: Saturday, July 27, 2002 7:26 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Cisco 4000/4500/4500M
I recently purchased a Cisco 4000 (as indicated in the auction);
however, upon rcv'ing the routers, it look in the 'sh ver' and diplays
the following:
fs#sh ver
Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) 4500 Software (C4500-JS-M), Version 12.1(15), RELEASE SOFTWARE
(fc1)
Copyright (c) 1986-2002 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Mon 13-May-02 18:42 by kellythw
Image text-base: 0x60008958, data-base: 0x60FD0000
ROM: System Bootstrap, Version 5.2(7b) [mkamson 7b], RELEASE SOFTWARE
(fc1)
BOOTLDR: 4500 Bootstrap Software (C4500-BOOT-M), Version 10.3(7),
RELEASE SOFTWARE (f
c1)
fs uptime is 5 minutes
System returned to ROM by power-on
System image file is "flash:c4500-js-mz.121-15.bin"
cisco 4500 (R4K) processor (revision B) with 32768K/8192K bytes of
memory.
Processor board ID 03771215
R4700 CPU at 100Mhz, Implementation 33, Rev 1.0
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)
4 Serial network interface(s)
128K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
16384K bytes of processor board System flash partition 1 (Read/Write)
8192K bytes of processor board System flash partition 2 (Read/Write)
4096K bytes of processor board Boot flash (Read/Write)
This would indicate that the device is a 4500. So I then wondered if
the device was a 4500M. It was successful in loading the 4500 IOS image
(c4500-a3jk8s-mz.122-10b.bin).
My question is two parts. First, do I have a 4500M of a regular 4500
and what are the differences between the two? I know that the 4500M
supports a 12.2 code whereas the 4500 does not. Thanks again and here
is a 'sh ver' with the 4500M IOS loaded:
fs#sh
00:02:12: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from console by console ver
Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) 4500 Software (C4500-A3JK8S-M), Version 12.2(10b), RELEASE
SOFTWARE (fc1)
Copyright (c) 1986-2002 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Thu 11-Jul-02 13:35 by pwade
Image text-base: 0x60008948, data-base: 0x6120C000
ROM: System Bootstrap, Version 5.2(7b) [mkamson 7b], RELEASE SOFTWARE
(fc1)
BOOTLDR: 4500 Bootstrap Software (C4500-BOOT-M), Version 10.3(7),
RELEASE SOFTWARE (f
c1)
fs uptime is 2 minutes
System returned to ROM by reload at 12:59:10 UTC Sun Jun 2 1996
System image file is "flash:c4500-a3jk8s-mz.122-10b.bin"
cisco 4500 (R4K) processor (revision B) with 32768K/8192K bytes of
memory.
Processor board ID 03771215
R4700 CPU at 100Mhz, Implementation 33, Rev 1.0
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)
4 Serial network interface(s)
128K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
16384K bytes of processor board System flash partition 1 (Read/Write)
8192K bytes of processor board System flash partition 2 (Read/Write)
4096K bytes of processor board Boot flash (Read/Write)
Configuration register is 0x2102
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