From: Anand Singh (anandksi@cisco.com)
Date: Thu Jan 06 2005 - 20:07:40 GMT-3
Hello Mark,
I leaned it here at cisco :) I guess "NVGENED" is a distorted form of
nvegen. It doesn't seem to be gramitically correct (but when I am :). I did
a search on cisco website for "nvgen" and got many links with that
word..Here is one :)
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/iosswrel/ps5207/products_feature_guid
e09186a00801eea11.html
"Cisco IOS Software Configuration Storage
In the Cisco IOS software configuration model, the configuration state is
maintained in a distributed manner, with each component storing its own
configuration state. To retrieve configuration information, the software
must poll every component to collect the distributed information. This
configuration state retrieval operation is performed by a process known as
nonvolatile generation (NVGEN), and it is used by command line interpreter
(CLI) commands such as show running-configuration, write memory, and copy
system:running-configuration to display or copy the running system
configuration. When invoked, NVGEN queries each system component and each
instance of interface or other configuration objects. A running
configuration file is constructed as NVGEN traverses the system performing
these queries."
Thanks
-Anand
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On
> Behalf Of Mark Lasarko
> Sent: Thursday, January 06, 2005 2:48 PM
> To: anandksi@cisco.com; ccielab@groupstudy.com; ccie2be@nyc.rr.com
> Subject: RE: Opinions wanted
>
> nvgened... Very cool word Anand!
> I never heard that one before :)
> But... How is it pronounced?
>
> Thanx for sharing - Do you (or others, of course) have any
> additional detail on the origins of 'nvgened"?
> I am a bit curious as it does not appear in any of my
> resources for the English language.
>
> Take care,
> ~M
>
>
> >>> "Anand Singh" <anandksi@cisco.com> 1/6/2005 5:14:10 PM >>>
> Hi Tim,
>
> Ususally default values are not nvgened (don't show up in
> running config so it doesn't matter even if you type it or
> not), there can be exceptions though :) You can use show
> commands to verify it anyway...
>
> I wouldn't worry about configuring any default values if I am
> sure but I can execute a show command to cross-check myself.
>
> Thanks
> -Anand
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]
> On Behalf
> > Of ccie2be
> > Sent: Thursday, January 06, 2005 2:03 PM
> > To: Group Study
> > Subject: Opinions wanted
> >
> > Hi guys,
> >
> > In the real lab, if they tell you that a certain parameter
> should be
> > set to a specific value
> >
> > and then you see that the value they're telling you to set is the
> > default value for that parameter,
> >
> > do you think I should explicitly set that parameter to it's default
> > value?
> >
> > Here's a dumb example:
> >
> > By default, the max-reserved-bandwidth is 25%. If the
> problem states
> > that
> >
> > max-reserved-bandwidth should be set to 25%, do you think I should
> > enter the command
> >
> > to set max-reserved-bandwidth to it's default value?
> >
> > TIA, Tim
> >
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