From: Joseph Brunner (joe@affirmedsystems.com)
Date: Tue Aug 14 2007 - 09:16:28 ART
Yes, 14 and all the other difficulty "10" labs are quite fun. That made me
scratch my head a bit also. Are you reading the WHOLE packet prior to
beginning? IF you did you would "spot the issues" and blow these out of the
gate (like remembering your traffic filtering exercises can block routing
protocols, etc.)
One cool thing about the IE WB VOL II., I actually use RMON events/alarms in
production networks now ;)
Joe
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Herbert Maosa
Sent: Tuesday, August 14, 2007 8:06 AM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: IEWB Lab 14 Evil
Group,
I dont know who has gone through this lab ( IEWB 4.0 Lab 14 ), but I think
it is evil, possibly in a good way. My grief is on task 3.1, which requires
you to have read and understood the EIGRP requirements before you decide to
configure PPPoFR. From the actual CCIE Lab perspective, is this expected,
ie, to make early decissions on how to configure your LAN and WAN based on
future IGP requirements?
I had to spend a lot of time ( hours ) figuring out how to apply two
different MD5 passwords on a multipoint FR interface for different EIGRP
neighbors, only to go back to my WAN config at this late stage to change it
to use PPPoFR. I think this is quire evil of Brian !!
Herbert.
-- Kindest regards, hm
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Sat Sep 01 2007 - 11:32:11 ART