From: ccie2be (ccie2be@nyc.rr.com)
Date: Wed Jun 15 2005 - 19:03:59 GMT-3
Hey Bob,
I'm a strong believer in giving credit where credit is due. And, you
probably don't get nearly enough credit for all the help you provide to the
GS community.
I know that if it weren't for you and some of the others on GS like Scott
Morris, Marvin Greenlee, the Brian's, and many others, I wouldn't be
anywhere near as far along as I am now.
So, THANK YOU again.
tim
_____
From: Bob Sinclair [mailto:bsinclair@netmasterclass.net]
Sent: Wednesday, June 15, 2005 3:06 PM
To: ccie2be
Subject: Re: Stopping a tcl script
Tim,
Thanks for the plug! Killing failed pings is a big help. I do not know any
way to kill the whole script, but would love to find one. Other than
perhaps telnet back in and kill the session. Along that line - treat tcl
like you would treat printing on an old DOS box -- Save First!
Bob Sinclair
CCIE #10427, CCSI 30427, CISSP
www.netmasterclass.net
----- Original Message -----
From: ccie2be <mailto:ccie2be@nyc.rr.com>
To: Group Study <mailto:ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Cc: Bob <mailto:bsinclair@netmasterclass.net> Sinclair
Sent: Wednesday, June 15, 2005 3:03 PM
Subject: Stopping a tcl script
Hey guys,
I just discovered that I can use the standard, cntl, shift, 6 sequence to
stop pings within a tcl script but suppose..
there are 100's of pings that I realize will fail. I wouldn't want to sit
there a try to stop each ping. I want to stop the whole script.
Anybody know how I can do that?
TIA, Tim
PS: In case you missed the post from Bob Sinclair (I think this gem was
from him), today I collected ip addresses using his method and it was much
faster.
I used to do show ip int brief and then do lots of editing.
Now, I use show ip alias and do a lot less editing.
Thanks, bob, for that little gem.
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