Cisco CCNA / CCNP Home Lab Tutorial: The 2501 Router
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Your BSCI exam and CCNP certification success depend on mastering BGP, and a ig part of that is knowing how and when to use the many BGP attriutes. And for those of you with an eye on the CCIE, elieve me - you've got to know BGP attriutes like the
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QoS is a big topic on your BCMSN and CCNP exams, and for good reason. As more and more traffic flows through today's networks, accurately plying QoS to both your routers and switches becomes more important. Note the phrase "accurately
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CCNA exam success deends artially on knowing the details of ISDN, and there are lenty of them! To hel you review for your CCNA exam, here are a few ISDN details that you must know on exam day. (They hel in the real world, too ? and there are still
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OSPF route ibution is an important topic on the BSCI exam, and it's a topic full of details and defaults that you need to know for the exam room and the job. To help you pass the BSCI exam, here's a quick review of some of the OSPF route
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EIGRP is a major subject of the CCNA exam, and Cisco goes into even more detail with EIGRP on your CCNP exams. Part of that detail is the purpose and configuration of EIGRP stub routers. A problem with EIGRP comes in when a successor is
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Multicasting is a vital topic on your BCMSN, CCNP, and CCIE exams, and it can also be very confusing when you first start studying it. Multicasting uses concepts that are unlike anything you've run into in your routing protocol studies, and that can
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I know from experience that part of the excitement and anxiety of putting together your own CCNA / CCNP home lab is deciding what to buy! While you can make a workable home lab out of almost any combination of Cisco routers and switches, some routers
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If a Layer Two switch doesn't have the capabilities to run IGMP Snooping, it will be able to run CGMP - Cisco Group Membership Protocol. CGMP allows the multicast router to work with the Layer Two switch to eliminate unnecessary multicast forwarding.
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QoS - Quality o Service - is a huge topic on both the BCMSN exam and real-world networks. QoS is so big today that Cisco's created separate specialist certiications that cover nothing but QoS! It can be an overwhelming topic at irst, but master the
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To be truly prepared for your CCNA and CCNP exams, you need real hands-on experience with real Cisco routers and switches. However, a production network is a really bad place to practice your configurations, but an excellent way to get fired and/or
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Ever since you picked up your first CCNA book, you've heard about multicasting, ten a fair idea of what it is, and you've memorized a couple of reserved multicasting addresses. Now as you prepare to pass the BCMSN exam and become a CCNP, you've
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To pass e CCNA exam, you've got to know how to work wi IGRP and EIGRP unequal-cost load balancing. You may not see much IGRP in production networks anymore, but you'll see a lot of EIGRP, and part of fine-tuning your EIGRP network is making sure
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While routers accept and generate broadcasts, they do not forward them. This can be quite a problem when a broadcast needs to get to a device such as a DHCP or TFTP server that's on one side of a router with other subnets on the other side.
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RIP isn't exactly the most complex routing protocol on the CCNA exam, but that makes it easy to overlook some of the important you must keep in mind in order to pass the exam! To help you review for the exam, here are just a few of those
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Passing the CCNA is tough, and one of the toughest parts is keeping all the acronyms straight! Frame Relay has plenty of those, and today we're going to examine what DLCIs do and how they're mapped on a Cisco router. Frame Relay VCs use
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The most common method of configuring ISDN is with dialer maps, but dial information can also be configured on a logical interface. To pass the CCNA exam, you must know how to configure and troubleshoot both dialer maps and dialer
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In this CCNA case study, we'll take some basic switching and trunking theory and put it into action. We have two routers (R2 and R3) along with two switches (SW1 and SW2). R2 is connected to SW1 at fast 0/2, and R3 is connected to SW2 at fast 0/3. Both
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To pass the BSCI exam, you need to know the difference between IRDP and HSRP. While they have the same basic function, the operation and configuration of each are totally different. The aim of both is to allow hosts to quickly discover a
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To be truly prepared for your CCNA and CCNP exams, you need real hands-on experience with real Cisco routers and switches. However, a production network is a really bad place to practice your configurations, but an excellent way to get fired and/or
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One f the first things yu learned abut Frame is that the LMI als serves as a keepalive, r a heartbeat - and if three cnsecutive LMIs are missed, the line prtcl ges dwn. There's a limitatin t LMI as a keepalive, thugh. The LMI is exchanged
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Whether you're on the road to the CCNA, CCNP, MCSE, or you're on any other computer certification track, the odds are that sooner or later, you're gog to fail an exam. It's happened to almost all of us, yours truly cluded. What you have to keep
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ISDN is a huge topic on both your Cisco CCNA and BCRAN CCNP exams. While many ISDN topics seem straightforward, it?s the details that make the difference in the exam room and working with ISDN in production networks. Configuring and troubleshooting
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To pass e CCNA exam, you've got to know how to work wi IGRP and EIGRP unequal-cost load balancing. You may not see much IGRP in production networks anymore, but you'll see a lot of EIGRP, and part of fine-tuning your EIGRP network is making sure
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