Archive for the 'CCIE' Category

Jul 04 2008

Re-certified

Published byBrad Hedlund under CCIE

I passed the 350-001 Routing & Switching Exam to re-certify my CCIE status.  This was the new 3.1 version of the test with 105 questions.  I can tell you that this test is no walk in the park, they have definitely cranked up the difficulty here.  Word of advice:  Know your OSPF cold!

3 responses so far

Jan 06 2008

CCIE R&S Written Test Study Notes – Part 1

Published byBrad Hedlund under CCIE

Well, it’s that time again. Time to re-certify my CCIE R&S certification by passing the written test. To prepare for the re-certification test I am reading from the book CCIE Routing and Switching Exam Guide Volume 3 (a very good book!).
The bottom line is this: The CCIE Routing and Switching written exam [...]

One response so far

Nov 27 2007

Switchport Configurations Explained

Published byBrad Hedlund under CCIE, Switching

It always helps me to think of the English translation when trying to memorize and understand some the Cisco IOS settings I think are important.
Here are some Cisco IOS switchport configurations translated into English:
‘switchport mode trunk‘ says: “Always trunk on this end, and I will send DTP to attempt to negotiate a trunk on the [...]

4 responses so far

Nov 27 2007

VLAN Trunking using IEEE 802.1Q

Published byBrad Hedlund under CCIE, Switching

IEEE 802.1Q (sometimes referred to as 1Q or DOT1Q) is a industry standards based implementation of carring traffic for multiple VLANs on a single trunking interface between two Ethernet switches. 802.1Q is for Ethernet networks only.
Unlike ISL , 802.1Q does not encapsulate the original Ethernet frame.
For Ethernet V2 frames, 802.1Q inserts a new 4-byte [...]

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Nov 26 2007

VLAN Trunking using ISL

Published byBrad Hedlund under CCIE, Switching

Inter-Switch Link (ISL) is a Cisco specific implementation of trunking multiple VLANs between two Cisco switches where a single interface will carry traffic for more than one VLAN. ISL was designed to work with Ethernet, FDDI, Token Ring, and ATM.
ISL completely encapsulates the original Ethernet frame by adding a new 26 byte header and [...]

3 responses so far

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