From: ISolveSystems (support@isolvesystems.com)
Date: Sat Sep 01 2007 - 16:09:33 ART
Hi Scott,
May I know where the best place to buy cheap 3560?
Thanks.
On 9/1/07, Scott Vermillion <scott_ccie_list@it-ag.com> wrote:
>
> Joe,
>
> I know you're busy preparing for your upcoming lab, so you've probably
> been ignoring my "blog" over on the board.  With much help from the
> Brians, I have a Dynamips-based router server up and running with four
> physical 3560 switches.  So I can indeed have two "routers" talking over
> a multi-hop dot1q trunk chain.
>
> I suppose you have a point on the interface problem thing.  I don't wish
> that on anybody during their lab.  Sure, it's an everyday thing that you
> might have to deal with in real life, but I think the lab has enough
> built-in stress w/out that kind of nonsense!
>
> Regards,
>
> Scott
>
>   -------- Original Message --------
>   Subject: RE: Dynagen folks...
>   From: "Joseph Brunner" <joe@affirmedsystems.com>
>   Date: Sat, September 01, 2007 3:52 am
>   To: "'Scott Vermillion'" <scott_ccie_list@it-ag.com>,  "'Cisco
>   certification'" <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
>
>   Things that can go wrong with the real gear, and only with the real
>   gear...
>
>   Will burn your time bad in the real lab to try and fix (loops, bad
>   interfaces, two routers talking together through 3 switches over a
>   dot1q-tunnel, etc)
>
>   I'm not saying you can't learn the technologies on the dynagen, but
>   I'm
>   saying spend some practices sessions on a full 10 piece rack.
>
>   That's all
>
>   Happy Dynagening...
>
>   -Joe
>
>   -----Original Message-----
>   From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf
>   Of
>   Scott Vermillion
>   Sent: Saturday, September 01, 2007 12:38 AM
>   To: Cisco certification
>   Subject: RE: Dynagen folks...
>
>   I am a true Dynamips/Dynagen believer and have built my lab prep
>   "rack"
>   around it/them. Please explain, Joe, how I will fail the CCIE lab
>   because of it ("nothing else can prepare you for the real thing")?
>   What
>   is it about that "feel" that makes the difference (can you go "feel"
>   the
>   routers during the practical? Can you "feel" the routers in that
>   remote
>   rack?)?
>
>   This has the potential to become the next "CCIE vs. college degree"
>   topic, me thinks. It's probably not a very good use of bandwidth,
>   come
>   to think of it LOL, but I can't resist asking you to elaborate on
>   these
>   seemingly unfounded generalizations. I would prefer that you answer
>   with
>   "I have hardware routers and I also run Dynamips/Dynagen on a machine
>   of
>   sufficient horsepower, and here are the things I can do on the former
>   that I can't do on the latter *that matter in the lab* (i.e. don't
>   tell
>   me about toggling the power switch...yawn...you can't do that in the
>   lab
>   anyway by all accounts I've ever heard).
>
>   I'll start, going the opposite direction:
>
>   I run Dynamips/Dynagen on a machine of sufficient horsepower, and I
>   can
>   directly capture traffic from a router interface into a .cap file and
>   scrutinize every one and zero using open source WireShark. When I
>   want
>   to do that w/ physical routers, I have to use Ethernet (no serial)
>   and
>   set up a span port on a switch or put a hub in between the two
>   routers,
>   with a machine running WireShark hanging off of the hub (and I'm
>   obviously in HDX at this point, which means the test environment is
>   different than the non-test environment). Otherwise, I'm limited to
>   only
>   debug. I, of course, acknowledge that you're limited to only debug in
>   the lab, but in your preparation for the lab, it's powerful to have
>   such
>   a tool at your disposal so that you can truly understand what's going
>   on
>   under the hood when you see certain debug output.
>
>   BTW, I'm told Juniper has this capability to write .cap files on
>   physical
>   routers, but I cannot personall y verify. I have never heard of such
>   a
>   capability on Cisco routers, but I'd love to be proven wrong.
>
>   There are more, of course, but I've already stated many of them in
>   other
>   recent threads and posts...
>
>   -------- Original Message --------
>   Subject: Dynagen folks...
>   From: "Joseph Brunner" <joe@affirmedsystems.com>
>   Date: Fri, August 31, 2007 9:53 pm
>   To: "'Cisco certification'" <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
>
>   Nothing feels as good as the real thing. And else nothing can prepare
>   you
>   for the real thing.
>
>   (Remember if you only have had sex with a condom, your still a
>   virgin, LOL)
>
>   Check out the Brian's racks!
>
>   http://www.affirmedsystems.com/photos/IERACKS.JPG
>
>   Rack12R6#sh vers
>
>   Cisco IOS Software, 2800 Software (C2800NM-ADVENTERPRISEK9-M),
>   Version
>   12.4(13a), RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc1)
>
>   Technical Support: http://www.cisco.com/techsupport
>
>   Copyright (c) 1986-2007 by Cisco Systems, Inc.
>
>   Compiled Tue 06-Mar-07 17:01 by prod_rel_team
>
>   ROM: System Bootstrap, Version 12.4(13r)T, RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc1)
>
>   Rack12R6 uptime is 6 hours, 4 minutes
>
>   System returned to ROM by power-on
>
>   System image file is "flash:c2800nm-adventerprisek9-mz.124-13a.bin"
>
>   This product contains cryptographic features and is subject to United
>
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>
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>
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>
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>
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>
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>
>   A summary of U.S. laws governing Cisco cryptographic products may be
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>   at:
>
>   http://www.cisco.com/wwl/export/crypto/tool/stqrg.html
>
>   If you require further assistance please contact us by sending email
>   to
>
>   export@cisco.com.
>
>   Cisco 2811 (revision 53.50) with 196608K/65536K bytes of memory.
>
>   Processor board ID FTX1101A1Z0
>
>   2 FastEthernet interfaces
>
>   1 Serial(sync/async) interface
>
>   1 Virtual Private Network (VPN) Module
>
>   DRAM configuration is 64 bits wide with parity enabled.
>
>   239K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
>
>   253160K bytes of USB Flash usbflash1 (Read/Write)
>
>   62720K bytes of ATA CompactFlash (Read/Write)
>
>   Configuration register is 0x2142 (will be 0x2102 at next reload)
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