RE: LAB exam SP

From: Koen Zeilstra (koen@koenzeilstra.com)
Date: Thu Mar 15 2007 - 03:54:34 ART


If we are talking RFC 3330, that is a whole bunch of numbers to memorize!

0.0.0.0/8
10.0.0.0/8
14.0.0.0/8
24.0.0.0/8
39.0.0.0/8
127.0.0.0/8
128.0.0.0/16
169.254.0.0/16
172.16.0.0/12
191.255.0.0/16
192.0.0.0/24
192.0.2.0/24
192.88.99.0/24
192.168.0.0/16
198.18.0.0/15
223.255.255.0/24
224.0.0.0/4
240.0.0.0/4

Are you sure there's is no information to be found on the doc CD about
this? In my opionion a SP CCIE should know every tiny biy of all
the techniques and protocols on the blue print but NOT memorize lists like
this.

Cheers,

Koen

On Mon, 5 Mar 2007, Marvin Greenlee wrote:

| In general, it's usually not that they specifically remove command options,
| or syntax information, but individual IOS versions may vary as far as what
| they will support.
|
| RFCs have always been fair game when they have been relevant to the track.
| RFC 1918 and 3330, for example, used to be explicitly listed on the SP
| blueprint. Most people are familiar with 1918, but 3330 is not as well
| known. It's definitely one that would be relevant to the track. RFC 2827,
| for example, is explicitly listed on the security lab blueprint, but could
| also apply to service provider environments.
|
| There are often multiple ways that a task can be achieved. Successfully
| navigating through a CCIE lab usually requires knowing multiple methods to
| complete a specific task.
|
|
|
|
| Marvin Greenlee, CCIE #12237 (R&S, SP, Sec)
| Senior Technical Instructor - IPexpert, Inc.
| "When Will You Be an IP Expert?"
| marvin@ipexpert.com
| http://www.IPexpert.com
|
| -----Original Message-----
| From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
| sheherezada@gmail.com
| Sent: Monday, March 05, 2007 5:56 AM
| To: Suzan S.
| Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
| Subject: Re: LAB exam SP
|
| Some routers may have help disabled for some command subsets or even
| some configuration options may be disabled (sorry, can not disclsose
| examples). One idea is to check the syntax on another router from the
| lab.
|
| And yes, I had one question that specifically referred to a RFC I did
| not know. There was no mention about this RFC in the doc CD (double
| checked after I exited the lab), so this was not fair.
|
| Another dirty trick is that they may ask things with very shady
| completion criteria (think of optimization or something), so actually
| you have no clue except your best practice knowledge. For one of
| these questions I confirmed my understanding with the proctor twice,
| got two different answers, and finally ended up with no points.
|
| Cheers,
|
| Mihai
| CCIE #16616
|
| On 3/1/07, Suzan S. <suzan_ccie@yahoo.com> wrote:
| > Dears,
| >
| > Anyone knows about the lab exam, can we use the help for each command
| > and use ? to see the following command used.
| >
| > Do we have to know each Rfc
| > number and content to configure the senarios in the lab if the service
| > requested only through the Rfc number.
| >
| > Thank you
| >
| > Regards
| > Suzan
| >
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