Re: file?

From: Jennifer Bellucci (Jennifer_bellucci@hotmail.com)
Date: Wed Dec 11 2002 - 12:23:28 GMT-3


Are you studying for the lab?

If come across the term "router specific" then they are referring to that
particular router. Like configure..configure a loopback interface that is
specific to a router or configure a loopback interface that reflects the local
router characteristics. In a lab they ask you to configure R1 as a NTP server,
the NTP server is being configured on R1 and the commands are being entered on
R1, right? If we were to configure the command:

!
int s0
clock rate 500000
ip add 10.0.100.1 255.255.128.0
encap frame
frame lmi-type ansi
no ip split
no shut
!

1. is "clock rate 500000" command configured on R1 router specific or not?
Does it effect R2 (remote router) ?
2. is the ip add router specific/local...can you use the same address on
another interface, try entering it on a router, what happens?(using a standard
config)
3. if I enter 'Encap Frame' on a router, does the same command get entered
automatically on the remote router?

Now Network-wide..when you configure a OSPF network with 3 routers, do enter
the command 'router ospf x' on all 3 routers? When you configure a BGP peering
between 2 BGP routers, can you do it without using 'router bgp x' command?

I am not being rude, but you really need to read a dictionary...not all words
are Cisco/network 'specific'. Cisco did not dream up these words. Take the
words apart..specific: meaning single, individual, local, confined, singular,
island, targeted, aimed, geared towards.
The meaning of 'wide'...broad, extensive, open, ample, spacious.

Hope you understand the meaning of the words now, if you don't sorry I can't
help you any more.

Later, Jbell
  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Abdallah Al-Suwailem
  To: Jennifer Bellucci
  Sent: Wednesday, December 11, 2002 10:15 AM
  Subject: Re: file?

  Thanks for your attention and NO you didn't answer the question.

  Best Regards

  Abdallah

  Jennifer Bellucci wrote:

    Have I answered this? My e-mail organisation has gone down.
      ----- Original Message -----
      From: Abdallah Al-Suwailem
      To: Jennifer Bellucci
      Sent: Thursday, December 05, 2002 8:51 PM
      Subject: Re: file?

      Sorry for interrupt, can you clarify it more ?

      Thanks

      Abdallah

      Jennifer Bellucci wrote:

router-specific being just on that router and nothing else, like a island.
Network-wide means across the network. should distinguish if this means
across specific protocol like OSPF network-wide or generally across the
network, in which case - all devices that make up the implementation.
If u need more clarity, let me know and mail me offline.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Hung, Sing-Yu" <Sing-Yu.Hung@pccw.com>
To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Wednesday, December 04, 2002 1:29 PM
Subject: file?

  Hi,

I just failed in the first attempt. By the way can anyone tell me
what is the difference between Router-specific config file and
    Network-wide
  config file?

Bradford Hung

 Pacific Century CyberWorks
 Tel: 288 33125
.



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