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www.ciscopress.com Routers and Routing Basics CCNA 2 Chapter 3 1
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www.ciscopress.com Configuring a Router Configuring a Router for Basic Routing Reviewing the Configuration Modes Configuring Ethernet and Serial Interfaces Configuring Hostnames and Passwords Examining Operational Status Using show Commands Changing the Configuration Documenting the Router Configuration Configuring Interface Descriptions Configuring Login Banners Configuring Local Host Tables Backing Up the Configuration Summary 2
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www.ciscopress.com Configuring a Router for Basic Routing Internetwork with Two Routers Used in Basic Router Configuration 3
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www.ciscopress.com Reviewing the Configuration Modes Step 1 The user logs in from the console, moves to enable mode, and then enters configuration mode by using the configure terminal privileged mode EXEC command. Step 2 The user changes the hostname using the hostname fred global configuration command. Step 3 The user incorrectly tries to use the ip address 172.16.1.251 255.255.255.0 command. This command is an interface mode subcommand that must be issued from interface mode. Step 4 The user moves to interface configuration mode using the interface Fastethernet 0/0 command and then correctly uses the ip address interface subcommand. Step 5 The user presses Ctrl-z to exit configuration mode, moving back to enable mode. 4
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www.ciscopress.com Router Configuration Modes and Command Prompts 5
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www.ciscopress.com Configuring Ethernet and Serial Interfaces 6
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www.ciscopress.com Configuring Clock Rate on a Serial Link Clock rate command includes the speed in bits per second (bps), but a Router supports only specific speeds like 1200, 2400, 9600, 19,200, 38,400, 56,000, 64,000, 72,000, 125,000, 148,000, 500,000, 800,000, 100,0000, 1,300,000, 2,000,000, or 4,000,000 bps. –It is set only on the DCE router Routers do not allow just any speed. For example, the clock rate 64000 command would be accepted, but the clock rate 65000 command would be rejected. To find the speeds supported on a particular type of router, use the clock rate ? command in serial interface configuration mode. 7
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www.ciscopress.com Configuring Routes Routing Tables on Routers R1 and R2—Connected Routes Only 8
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www.ciscopress.com Configuring Routes (Continued) Routing Tables on Routers R1 and R2—Connected Routes Only 9
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www.ciscopress.com Summarizing the Working Configurations for R1 and R2 10
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www.ciscopress.com Configuring a Router’s Hostname 11
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www.ciscopress.com User and Enable Mode Passwords 12 Console, Aux, VTY, and Enable Passwords
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www.ciscopress.com Configuring Console, Aux, and VTY Passwords 13
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www.ciscopress.com Two commands that can define the enable password If only one of the two commands (enable secret or enable password) is configured, but not both, IOS expects the user to enter the password as defined in that single configuration command. If both the enable secret and enable password commands are configured, the router expects the password as defined in the enable secret command. The router will not accept the password defined in the enable password command. If neither the enable secret nor enable password command is configured, the behavior varies. If the user is at the console, the router automatically allows the user access to enable mode. If the user is not at the console, the router rejects the enable command. 14
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www.ciscopress.com Examining Operational Status Using show Commands 15
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www.ciscopress.com Examining Operational Status Using show Commands (Continued) 16
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www.ciscopress.com Examining Operational Status Using show Commands (Continued) 17
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www.ciscopress.com Popular show commands 18
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www.ciscopress.com Popular show commands (Continued) 19
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www.ciscopress.com Changing the Configuration After configuration changes have been made, you should look at the running configuration using the show running-config command. For the simple changes reenter the command in the correct configuration mode. If a command was configured but was not needed, get into the same configuration mode and issue the same command prefaced by the word no. What to Do if the Configuration Is Incorrect 20
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www.ciscopress.com Changing the Configuration (Continued) 21
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www.ciscopress.com Changing the Configuration (Continued) 22
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www.ciscopress.com To remove the password and login commands from the console line, use the word no in front. –Router1(config-if)#Line con 0 –Router1(config-line)#no password height –Router1(config-line)#no login Start over completely by erasing the startup-config file using the erase startup- config command and then reloading the router. Use copy startup-config running-config command or the copy tftp running- config command to copy the configuration file from a TFTP server, respectively, into the running-config file. Copy running-config startup-config command should be used to save a copy of the new configuration in the startup-config file in NVRAM. Changing the Configuration (Continued) 23
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www.ciscopress.com Documenting the Router Configuration The network should be well documented by the network engineers. Engineers should define a standard for their internetworks about how the routers (and switches) are configured. The creation of standards for network consistency helps reduce network complexity, unplanned downtime, and events that may affect network performance. 24
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www.ciscopress.com Configuring Interface Descriptions 25
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www.ciscopress.com Configuring Interface Descriptions (Continued) 26
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www.ciscopress.com Configuring Login Banners 27
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www.ciscopress.com Configuring Local Host Tables 28
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www.ciscopress.com Configuring Local Host Tables (Continued) 29
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www.ciscopress.com Backing Up the Configuration Movement of files using the copy command between tree locations: The running configuration file in RAM The startup configuration file in NVRAM A TFTP server in the network 30
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www.ciscopress.com Copying to TFTP Server 31
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www.ciscopress.com Copying from TFTP Server 32
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www.ciscopress.com Where to Keep the Backup Configuration Files Three places in which you might want to save the configuration files: 1.A TFTP server 2.A network (file) server 3.A disk in a safe place 33
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www.ciscopress.com Command Summary for Copying and Looking at Configuration Files 34
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www.ciscopress.com Configuration Command Summary 35
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www.ciscopress.com Configuration Command Summary (Continued) 36
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www.ciscopress.com Configuration Command Summary (Continued) 37
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