Re: The hardware clock

From: Master Simon (peter@whittle-systems.demon.co.uk)
Date: Thu Jun 26 2003 - 18:51:45 GMT-3


Jim,

As far as I recollect only the 4000 family 4500, 4700 have a battery
clock in the lower end boxes.

2500s do not have battery backed calendar clocks nor do 26xx nor 3640s.
You can set the time and date as per Scott's posting but if you turn the
power off you will loose the clock.

Peter

In message <00ee01c33bf4$76313060$70259ed0@CCIECISSP>, Scott Morris
<swm@emanon.com> writes
>There's a 'clock' command, but I'm not aware of a 'calendar' command.
>
>From exec prompt:
>
>Router# clock set hh:mm:ss 1 April 1999
>
>Scott
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
>ccie2be
>Sent: Thursday, June 26, 2003 11:02 AM
>To: Group Study
>Subject: The hardware clock
>
>
>Hi all,
>
>Based on Cisco's documentation, most Cisco devices have a battery
>powered hardware clock which can be set using the calendar command. I
>have a bunch of cisco 2500's in my lab but none of them support the
>calendar command.
>
>Does this mean 2500's don't have a hardware clock or are there other
>commands I need to use to set the hardware clock?
>
>FYI: These same routers support the command clock set which I understand
>to be the way to set the software clock.
>
>Thanks, Jim
>
>
>_______________________________________________________________________
>You are subscribed to the GroupStudy.com CCIE R&S Discussion Group.
>
>Subscription information may be found at:
>http://www.groupstudy.com/list/CCIELab.html
>
>
>_______________________________________________________________________
>You are subscribed to the GroupStudy.com CCIE R&S Discussion Group.
>
>Subscription information may be found at:
>http://www.groupstudy.com/list/CCIELab.html

-- 
Master Simon


This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Fri Jul 04 2003 - 11:11:11 GMT-3