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Log from #cisco at freenode 2006-07-25
[12:02]<fnffj_>hello cisco geek
[12:03]<fnffj_>what is the compression protocol who uses the MAX of CPU between mppc, predictor and stac ?
[12:03]<fnffj_>for a ppp link
[12:25]<fnffj_>why when I apply no peer neighbor-route on a ppp link (serial0), shutdown then no shutdown, the routing table is populated with it's neighbor
[12:25]<fnffj_>i can see new routes added when serial0 is comming up : C 172.16.0.0/16 is directly connected, Serial0 ; IA 192.168.0.0/24 [110/74] via 172.16.0.2, 00:00:07, Serial0
[12:25]<fnffj_> 192.168.1.0/30 is subnetted, 2 subnets
[12:26]<fnffj_>means to i don't see what the purpose of this command, someone what is used for ?
[12:26]<fnffj_>*someone knows what is used for ?*
[13:26]<fnffj_>is this message important : BGP: Import timer expired. Walking from 1 to 1 ?
[13:44]<fnffj_>Catfive, what is the purpose of this message ?
[13:44]<fnffj_>because i only use very basic bgp configuration over frame-relay
[13:45]<fnffj_>do you know if i can modify bgp consideration to not show this msg
[13:50]<fnffj_>what are the purpose of system:vfiles directory and it's content ?
[14:01]<crvpyvn>uh, turn off BGP debugging?
[14:01]<-- svgvsdyzgjvr xrs>/dev/null")
[14:02]<fnffj>...
[14:08]<csxdvd>hi
[14:12]<fnffj>hihi
[14:34]<vd2r>bonsai kitten is no longer :(
[14:39]<vd2r>two (seemingly) simple questions. doesn't seem that you can add comments in config files for static routes (similar to descriptions on interfaces). how do you guys document those changes? and two, do you guys use some sort of procedure to determine priority of individual customers? (like an SLA for individuals to determine who really NEEDS service?)
[14:54]<csxdvd>anyone tried to do CME billing?
[15:04]<jnfnwzllnzcn>tmbg: all customers NEED service :-p
[15:04]<jnfnwzllnzcn>obviously
[15:06]<vd2r>heh. from their point of view.
[15:06]<vd2r>helps to know who you need to restore first though.
[15:49]<wgdw_>good morning everyone.
[15:50]<vd2r>morning
[15:55]<csxdvd>morning
[15:55]<wgdw_>I so badly need coffee.. Im just not mentaly prepared for the day yet
[15:55]<csxdvd>or rather afternoon if you look at it from my point of view :)
[15:56]<wgdw_>d00d I wish I had your perspective.
[15:57]<csxdvd>it's a matter of time zone
[15:57]<csxdvd>;)
[15:57]<wgdw_>:)
[15:57]<csxdvd>i'm up and running for last 9 hours
[16:07]<pgrguv>I'm trying to configure SNMPv3 on a cat3550-EMI, but I keep getting 'user unknown'. snmpv1 does work. The same commands on a 2950 also got me a working SNMPv3 configuration. (snmp view readview internet included; snmp-server group readonly v3 auth read readview; snmp-server user myuser readview v3 auth md5 <password>)
[16:10]<pgrguv>Do I have to have a 'remote copy of te snmp engine' because this switch/router is doing snmp on several interfaces?
[16:13]<-- 2yd2nzy xrs fuyv>http://iownmymusic.org/ http://iownmydvds.org/ .")
[16:28]<suddnzwo>Can someone explain the relationship between H.323, SIP, and RTP, to me, please?
[16:32]<csxdvd>h.323 is a standard that defines protocols used for audio-video communication.
[16:33]<csxdvd>SIP - session initiation protocol - it's name tells everything you need to know
[16:34]<csxdvd>it handles session initiation, but not data transfer, and here we have RTP
[16:34]<csxdvd>RTP - real time protocol - it handles sending data in realtime
[16:37]<suddnzwo>So SIP and RTP are part of the H.323 standard?
[16:38]<suddnzwo>In a hierarchy, is H.323 at the top and both SIP and RTP below H.323 ?
[16:41]<csxdvd>no
[16:41]<csxdvd>SIP is next standard after h.323
[16:42]<suddnzwo>So one uses either H.323 and RTP, or SIP and RTP?
[16:42]<csxdvd>h.323 is older solution
[16:42]<suddnzwo>(H.323 and S/RTP) or (SIP and S/RTP)
[16:43]<suddnzwo>Thnaks
[16:43]<csxdvd>as far as i know (i can be wrong) - rtp is connected to sip rather
[16:44]<csxdvd>i don't use h.323 so don't know exactly
[16:45]<suddnzwo>I am somewhat certain you can use H.323 and RTP.
[16:45]<suddnzwo>I just was not sure if H.323 was an umbrella for SIP or if they were "competitors"
[16:46]<suddnzwo>Thank you for the help.
[16:47]<[ryfgzrg]>sup
[16:47]<krdqurv>what's the command to see which switch failed on a stackport of 3750s?
[16:47]<krdqurv>greetings btw
[17:07]<wgdw_>kshyvy, you dont happen to write text books do you ;)
[17:07]<wgdw_>nice off the cuff explanation...
[17:08]<wgdw_>KamQuat, is there such a thing ?
[17:08]<wgdw_>Im thinking ping might be a good source if you dont have snmp running on your network
[17:16]<gndyvx>show int status
[17:39]<dzzc1livn>hey loather
[17:40]<dzzc1livn>loather-work,
[17:40]<ald>sigh
[17:40]<ald>okay, why so many packet errors on HP jetdirect printers?
[17:40]<ald>it's always those things
[17:40]<wgdw_>thats what they do...
[17:41]<ald>xnyx_, so it seems
[17:41]<ald>do they just suck in ways nothing else does? is it not fixable?
[17:42]<wgdw_>hmmm thats a realy good definition...
[17:42]<wgdw_>"they suck in ways nothing else does"
[17:42]<wgdw_>sounds like my ex-gf
[17:42]<wgdw_>the trouble is, too many people knew that as well ;)
[17:42]<wgdw_>hehe
[17:49]<gndyvx>.wz 80210
[17:49]<gndyvx>whoops
[18:10]<szz2fjvnz>what is the role of the native vlan in a switched network ?
[18:12]<gndyvx>untagged frames go across it
[18:13]<gndyvx>i'll take that back... frames on that vlan are not tagged
[18:14]<vcul>except for isl, which are tagged with vlan id 1
[18:14]<szz2fjvnz>ok so the router does not know what to do with them ?
[18:14]<gndyvx>the term native vlan has no meaning with isl
[18:14]<gndyvx>saablover: no
[18:14]<szz2fjvnz>hmmm I am asking this question because of this
[18:14]<gndyvx>so lets say my native vlan is 1, frames aross the trunk on vlan 1 are left untagged
[18:15]<szz2fjvnz>native vlan = the vlan when no vlans are configured ?
[18:15]<gndyvx>no
[18:15]<gndyvx>native vlan's only refer to dot1q trunks
[18:16]<szz2fjvnz>so what is the use to have untagged frames on a trunk ?
[18:16]<gndyvx>couple of reasons, if the device on the other side doesn't understand dot1q, the native vlan will continue to work
[18:17]<gndyvx>you can also use a non local native vlan to prevent it from stp issues
[18:17]<gndyvx>with my AP's i can set the native vlan to 150 on the switch side and leave them at vlan 1 on the other side
[18:17]<gndyvx>since there is no vlan tag on them no one cares
[18:18]<gndyvx>but i think the main reason is the first one







