Posts Tagged ‘ccnp’
Cisco CCNA / CCNP Certification Exam: Frame Relay Encapsulation Types
When you’re studying to pass the Cisco CCNA and CCNP certification exams, you quickly learn that there’s always something else to learn. (You’ll really pick up on this in your CCIE studies, trust me!) Today we’ll take a look at an often-overlooked topic in Frame Relay, the encapsulation type. You don’t exactly change this on a daily basis in production networks (not if you want to stay employed, anyway!), but it’s an important exam topic that you must be familiar with.
The DCE and DTE must agree on the LMI type, but there’s another value that must be agreed upon by the two DTEs serving as the endpoints of the VC. The Frame encapsulation can be left at the default of Cisco (which is Cisco-proprietary), or it can be changed to the industry-standard IETF, as shown below. If a non-Cisco router is the remote endpoint, IETF encapsulation must be used. Note that the default of Cisco isn’t listed as an option by IOS Help, so you better know that one by heart!
R1(config)#int s0
R1(config-if)#encap frame ?
ietf Use RFC1490/RFC2427 encapsulation
R1(config-if)#encap frame ietf
What if a physical interface is in use and some remote hosts require Cisco encapsulation and others require IETF? The encapsulation type can be configured on a per-PVC basis as well. One encap type can be used on the interface, and any map statements that require a different encap type can have that specified in the appropriate map statement. In the following example, all PVCs will use the default Cisco encapsulation type except for PVC 115. The frame map statement using that PVC has ietf specified.
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Cisco CCNA / CCNP Certification Exam: Caller ID Screening And Callback
As a CCNA and/or CCNP candidate, you’ve got to be able to spot situations where Cisco router features can save your client money and time. For example, if a spoke router is calling a hub router and the toll charges at the spoke site are higher than that of the hub router, having the hub router hang up initially and then call the spoke router back can save the client money (and make you look good!)
A popular method of doing this is using PPP callback, but as we all know, it’s a good idea to know more than one way to do things in Cisco World! A lesser-known but still effective method of callback is Caller ID Screening & Callback. Before we look at the callback feature, though, we need to know what Caller ID Screening is in the first place!
This feature is often referred to simply as “Caller ID”, which can be a little misleading if you’ve never seen this service in operation before. To most of us, Caller ID is a phone service that displays the source phone number of an incoming call. Caller ID Screening has a different meaning, though. Caller ID Screening on a Cisco router is really another kind of password – it defines the phone numbers that are allowed to call the router.
The list of acceptable source phone numbers is created with the isdn caller command. Luckily for us, this command allows the use of x to specify a wildcard number. The command isdn caller 555xxxx results in calls being accepted from any 7-digit phone number beginning with 555, and rejected in all other cases. We’ll configure R2 to do just that and then send a ping from R1 to R2. To see the results of the Caller ID Screening, debug dialer will be run on R1 before sending the ping. I’ve edited this output, since the output you see here will be repeated fire times – once for each ping packet.
R2(config-if)#isdn caller 555xxxx
R1#debug dialer
Dial on demand events debugging is on
R1#ping 172.12.12.2
Type escape sequence to abort.
Sending 5, 100-byte ICMP Echos to 172.12.12.2, timeout is 2 seconds:
03:30:25: BR0 DDR: Dialing cause ip (s=172.12.12.1, d=172.12.12.2)
03:30:25: BR0 DDR: Attempting to dial 8358662.
Success rate is 0 percent (0/5)
R1 doesn’t give us any hints as to what the problem is, but we can see that the pings definitely aren’t going through. On R2, show dialer displays the number of screened calls.
R2#show dialer
BRI0 – dialer type = ISDN
Dial String Successes Failures Last DNIS Last status
8358661 1 0 00:03:16 successful
7 incoming call(s) have been screened.
0 incoming call(s) rejected for callback.
The callback option mentioned in the last line shown above enables the router to reject a phone call, and then call that router back seconds later.
R2 will now be configured to initially hang up on R1, and then call R1 back.
R2(config-if)#isdn caller 8358661 callback
R1 will now ping R2. The pings aren’t returned, but seconds later R2 calls R1 back.
R1#ping 172.12.12.2
Success rate is 0 percent (0/5)
R1#
03:48:12: BRI0: wait for isdn carrier timeout, call id=0×8023
R1#
03:48:18: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface BRI0:1, changed state to up
R1#
03:48:18: BR0:1 DDR: dialer protocol up
R1#
03:48:19: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface BRI0:1, changed state to up
R1#
03:48:24: %ISDN-6-CONNECT: Interface BRI0:1 is now connected to 8358662 R2
show dialer on R2 shows the reason for the call to R1 is a callback return call.
R2#show dialer
BRI0 – dialer type = ISDN
Dial String Successes Failures Last DNIS Last status
8358661 3 0 00:00:48 successful
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Cisco CCNA / CCNP Certification Exam: Cabling Your Home Lab
More CCNA and CCNP candidates than ever before are putting together their own home labs, and there’s no better way to learn about Cisco technologies than working with the real thing. Getting the routers and switches is just part of putting together a great CCNA / CCNP home lab, though. You’ve got to get the right cables to connect the devices, and this is an important part of your education as well. After all, without the right cables, client networks are going to have a hard time working!
For your Cisco home lab, one important cable is the DTE/DCE cable. These cables have two major uses in a home lab. To practice directly connecting Cisco routers via Serial interfaces (an important CCNA skill), you’ll need to connect them with a DTE/DCE cable. Second, if you plan on having a Cisco router act as a frame relay switch in your lab, you’ll need multiple DTE/DCE cables to do so. (Visit my website’s Home Lab Help section for a sample Frame Relay switch configuration.) Read the rest of this entry »
Cisco CCNA / CCNP Certification Exam: Attending A Video Boot Camp
When you’re studying for the CCNA and CCNP exams, you’ve got a lot of different choices when it comes to training. One popular choice is choosing one of the many “boot camps” and five-day in-person courses that are out there. I’ve taught quite a few of these, and while many of them are good, they do have drawbacks.
Of course, one is cost. Many employers are putting the brakes on paying for CCNA and CCNP boot camps, and most candidates can’t afford to pay thousands of dollars for such a class. Then you’ve got travel costs, meals, and having to possibly burn your own vacation time to take the class. Add in time away from your family and boot camps become impractical for many CCNA / CCNP candidates.
Another issue is fatigue. I enjoy teaching week-long classes, but let’s face facts – whether you’re training for the CCNA or CCNP exams, you’re going to get a lot of information thrown at you in just a few days. You’re going to be mentally and physically exhausted at the end of the week, and that’s when some boot camps actually have you take the exam! You’ve got to be refreshed and rested when you take the exam to have your best chance of success.
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