RE: OT: Default Privilege Levels

From: Brian Dennis (brian@5g.net)
Date: Fri Sep 13 2002 - 19:55:32 GMT-3


Are you referring to this site?

http://boerland.com/dotu/

Brian Dennis, CCIE #2210 (R&S/ISP Dial)

-----Original Message-----
From: Danny.Wang@alderwoods.com [mailto:Danny.Wang@alderwoods.com]
Sent: Friday, September 13, 2002 3:43 PM
To: Brian Dennis
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com; nobody@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: OT: Default Privilege Levels

Unless he's looking for some undocumented command. I've seen a web site
before, just could not find it now.

To see the availabe command's privilege level you're using, enter ? at
the
command line when logged in at that privilege level if there is router
availabe :-)

 

                      Brian Dennis

                      <brian@5g.net> To:
ccielab@groupstudy.com
                      Sent by: cc:

                      nobody@groupstudy Subject: RE: OT: Default
Privilege Levels
                      .com

 

 

                      09/13/2002 02:33

                      PM

                      Please respond to

                      Brian Dennis

 

 

I think he was asking if there is somewhere where each command's
privilege level is documented.

The only thing that I've seen is in the documentation they use the term
EXEC and privileged EXEC which I interpret as level 1 and level 15.

Brian Dennis, CCIE #2210 (R&S/ISP Dial)

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Danny.Wang@alderwoods.com
Sent: Friday, September 13, 2002 1:59 PM
To: Frank Jimenez
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: OT: Default Privilege Levels

By default, there are three privilege levels on the router:
      privilege level 1 = non-privileged (prompt is router>), the
default
      level for login
      privilege level 15 = privileged (prompt is router#), the level
after
      going into enable mode
      privilege level 0 = seldom-used, but includes 5 commands: disable,
      enable, exit, help, and logout

Levels 2-14 are not used in a default configuration, but commands that
are
normally at level 15 can be moved down to one of those levels and
commands
that are normally at level 1 can be moved up to one of those levels.
Obviously, this security model involves some administration on the
router.
To determine the privilege-level as a logged in user, type the show
privilege command.

                      "Frank Jimenez"

                      <franjime@cisco.c To:
<ccielab@groupstudy.com>
                      om> cc:

                      Sent by: Subject: OT: Default
Privilege Levels
                      nobody@groupstudy

                      .com

                      09/13/2002 01:33

                      PM

                      Please respond to

                      "Frank Jimenez"

All,
Anyone know of a resource that shows the default privilege levels of IOS
commands?

Thanks,
Frank Jimenez, CCIE #5738
franjime@cisco.com



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Mon Oct 07 2002 - 07:43:51 GMT-3