RE: BAD Santa,

From: Joseph Brunner (joe@affirmedsystems.com)
Date: Wed Dec 19 2007 - 17:33:03 ART


Sorry to hear it, but I'm not sorry for you. You are a man, and you did what
you could do this time. Next time the results will be different, if you make
it happen.

I failed (more than once). I never lost hope.

Here is what I did to help myself (other than drink)

1. Go through the doc cd a little better. You will find that if you really
know the doc cd well enough, the answers to the lab exam trigger a memory to
something to you read. Your "timely verification" will be as simple as going
to the place where you remember something was!

2. read the solutions guide to Internetwork expert's labs & the IPEXPERT
proctor's guide. Get inside these guys minds. Why would they say something,
they way they do? What makes Brian, Brian & Scott tick? How can I think like
they do about the requirements, solutions, and verification steps

3. what can I do do read the questions more carefully? Do I need to make a
little list? Do I need to have a better strategy for verification?

I can tell you my failures were more related to poor strategy than poor
comprehension of the technologies. I knew I needed to work on strategy and I
passed when my strategy was as strong as my reading of the doc cd, and my
time in the lab. My final push, was this "No matter what I'm doing at 2pm,
no matter how much more of the test remains- STOP begin detailed
verification of the WHOLE THING FROM THE BEGINNING. Forget the esoteric 2
points in IP SERVICES, MULTICAST, etc. or something weird I can't get. Go
back to the basics to pick up points on stuff I didn't catch 100% the first
time around. I picked up enough points with this strategy. I will serve me
well for my next 3 stars, Security, Voice, and Wireless (in that order).

Joe
#19366

-----Original Message-----
From: Cecil Wilson [mailto:Cecil.Wilson@flextronics.com]
Sent: Wednesday, December 19, 2007 1:11 PM
To: Joseph Brunner; suri tk; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: BAD Santa,

 Hello
  One of my biggest problem is been able to verify my answers, (in a
timely manner)

-Is there a link, or book etc, that would help with this issue?
-If I had to purchase 2 workbooks? Which ones would you recommended

- I just did my lab in RTP, lets just say santa was NOT good to me

Thanks for ALL suggestions

Cecil G. Wilson
IT Network Services
Office: (901) 215-2710
Cell: (901) 601-6201
VoIP 104-2710
FLEX Logistics
cecil.wilson@flextronics.com

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Joseph Brunner
Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2007 11:19 AM
To: 'suri tk'; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: Simple IPv6 question

Is this frame-relay? Sounds like you need to map some global unicast
addresses

R1
Int s3/1
Frame-relay map ipv6 2001::2 301 broadcast

Etc.

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
suri tk
Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2007 12:03 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Simple IPv6 question

Hi All,

I have a very simple IPv6 question.

I have two routers connected back-to-back on a serial link.

router1 (serial3/1) ------------------------------------( serial0/0/0)
router2

But i am not able to ping the global unicast address from one side to on
the other.

I think its something elementary, but not able to figure out what ?.

Please help me to understand this.

Thanks,

Surendra

========================================================================
====
=
=========

router1#sh run int ser 3/1

interface Serial3/1

 no ip address

 ipv6 address 2001:0:0:1::/64 eui-64

 ipv6 enable

router1#sh ipv6 route

IPv6 Routing Table - 5 entries

Codes: C - Connected, L - Local, S - Static, R - RIP, B - BGP

       U - Per-user Static route

       I1 - ISIS L1, I2 - ISIS L2, IA - ISIS interarea, IS - ISIS
summary

       O - OSPF intra, OI - OSPF inter, OE1 - OSPF ext 1, OE2 - OSPF ext
2

       ON1 - OSPF NSSA ext 1, ON2 - OSPF NSSA ext 2

       D - EIGRP, EX - EIGRP external

C 2001:0:0:1::/64 [0/0]

     via ::, Serial3/1

L 2001::1:212:43FF:FEC9:A620/128 [0/0]

     via ::, Serial3/1

L FF00::/8 [0/0]

     via ::, Null0

router2#sh run int ser 0/0/0

interface Serial0/0/0

 no ip address

 ipv6 address 2001:0:0:2::/64 eui-64

 ipv6 enable

 no fair-queue

 clock rate 64000

end

router2#sh ipv6 route

IPv6 Routing Table - 3 entries

Codes: C - Connected, L - Local, S - Static, R - RIP, B - BGP

       U - Per-user Static route, M - MIPv6

       I1 - ISIS L1, I2 - ISIS L2, IA - ISIS interarea, IS - ISIS
summary

       O - OSPF intra, OI - OSPF inter, OE1 - OSPF ext 1, OE2 - OSPF ext
2

       ON1 - OSPF NSSA ext 1, ON2 - OSPF NSSA ext 2

       D - EIGRP, EX - EIGRP external

C 2001:0:0:2::/64 [0/0]

     via ::, Serial0/0/0

L 2001::2:213:C4FF:FEDC:4CB0/128 [0/0]

     via ::, Serial0/0/0

L FF00::/8 [0/0]

     via ::, Null0

router2#ping ipv6 2001::1:212:43FF:FEC9:A620

Type escape sequence to abort.

Sending 5, 100-byte ICMP Echos to 2001::1:212:43FF:FEC9:A620, timeout is
2 seconds:

.....

Success rate is 0 percent (0/5)

router2#



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