RE: dealing with fastrack (Kazaa et.al.)

From: Church, Chuck (cchurch@USTA.com)
Date: Wed Oct 02 2002 - 15:58:00 GMT-3


Yes. I'm fully capable of creating access lists. As mentioned, the only
router at my disposal is a 2501 with 4 mb flash. If you've ever configured
NBAR on a router, you'd know it's fairly CPU-intensive. I don't think it'll
run well, to say the least. The goal anyway was not to use plain-old port
blocking, but NBAR, where you set the DSCP based on layer 4 information.
Have you ever tried making sense of an deb ip pack on an interface that has
2 IP addresses, is policy routing, and NATing? If I had a 2 interface
router, it'd be trivial. Please get the whole story next time...

Chuck Church
CCIE #8776, MCNE, MCSE
Sr. Network Engineer
Magnacom Technologies
140 N. Rt. 303
Valley Cottage, NY 10989
845-267-4000

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Ciscomonkey@aol.com
Sent: Wednesday, October 02, 2002 1:48 PM
To: cchurch@MAGNACOM.com
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: dealing with fastrack (Kazaa et.al.)

Are you not a CCIE? You can not even configure access-lists on your home
router? Maybe it is time you gave your CCIE back to Cisco! Throw a sniffer
on your hub and watch the ports that Kazaa is using.



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