Thanks Joe. That is what I was thinking regarding the technology based
configuration snippets.
I should have worded the subject title of this thread a little better. Of
course it is impossible to memorize every command and expect to just plug
them in the router for a given problem.
I was more wanting to find out what documentation you guys were doing from a
configuration point of view.
To be honest I think the best place to be looking for guidance in the case I
do not remember certain commands is the DOC-CD. Personal notes are not going
to help me in the LAB :) This has the benefit of knowing exactly where
everything is and being able to find it very quickly when the big bad LAB
comes.
Thanks for the replies guys.
Cheers,
-Aaron.
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody_at_groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody_at_groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of Joe
Astorino
Sent: Tuesday, 31 May 2011 11:11 AM
To: Aaron Riemer
Cc: Cisco certification
Subject: Re: memorizing commands
The first thing is that there is no substitution for learning the
technologies. Don't think of the CCIE as a memorization exam, because it is
not a memorization exam. When you learn the technologies and master them,
the commands come easier because you actually understand what you are
doing. On the other hand, it would be foolish to say you don't have to
memorize commands. Even if you know the technology, you still obviously
need to remember what to type.
With that being said, what helped me out a lot was something I called my
"configuration templates" I always said you need to know how to configure
every single technology on the blueprint at least enough to get it up and
running off the top of your head. You have to get SO good and SO fast with
these basic configurations that they are second nature. The way you develop
that kind of raw speed and accuracy is repetition. The more you do it, the
faster you will be. My configuration templates were based on this idea.
Essentially, I took every technology and I typed out in a document how I
would configure that technology. Not all the bells and whistles and
optional commands, just the baseline out of the box templated
configuration. Then I had a little reference guide. The other thing I did
was I would randomly pick topics off the blueprint and see if I could write
a raw base configuration for that topic. Sit down on your lunch or whatever
and pick one...if you can't write a base configuration off the top of your
head you are not ready.
Example: If I was looking at frame-relay I would have a base configuration
template that looked something like this
P2P
-----
int s0/0
encap frame
no frame inv
no ip address
no shut
!
int s0/0.101 point-to-point
frame-relay interface-dlci 101
ip address x.x.x.x y.y.y.y
-- Regards, Joe Astorino CCIE #24347 Blog: http://astorinonetworks.com "He not busy being born is busy dying" - Dylan Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.netReceived on Tue May 31 2011 - 12:25:30 ART
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