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Posts tagged Lab
Free Cisco Lab
Nov 14th
Strech, the owner of PacketLife is now offering lab time for free. From his site:
Lab gear is broken into multiple “device blocks” to allow for multiple users to use independent portions of the lab simultaneously. Users can reserve one, several, or all of these blocks at once (however, a user may only have one unexpired reservation at any given time).
Block A
* 1x Cisco 2811 (with 2x WIC-2T)
* 2x Cisco 1841 (with 1x WIC-2T)
* 1x Cisco Catalyst 3550-24
* 1x Cisco Catalyst 3550-24 (with Inline Power)
* 1x Cisco ASA 5505
Block B
* 1x Cisco 2811 (with 2x WIC-2T)
* 2x Cisco 1841 (with 1x WIC-2T)
* 1x Cisco Catalyst 3550-24
* 1x Cisco Catalyst 3550-24 (with Inline Power)
BGP Backdoor Lab
Nov 12th
In this article we’ll be going over the BGP Backdoor feature. This is used in cases where two systems are connected via an IGP, but also receiving routes to the same system through BGP. I stumbled across this feature while checking out one of the labs on Darren’s Blog. The only way I could think of to complete one of his criteria was changing the Administrative Distance of either BGP or the IGP. That is essentially what this feature does, but on a route-by-route basis instead of changing the AD of an entire protocol. I asked Darren if that was the only solution and he pointed me to “BGP Backdoor”. As usual, I will be including my Dynagen/GNS3 .net file at the end of this post. Here is our topology:
Let’s go through the config:
R1
hostname R1 ! interface Serial0/0 ip address 10.1.1.1 255.255.255.0 ! interface Serial0/1 ip address 10.1.3.1 255.255.255.0 ! router bgp 65000 no synchronization bgp log-neighbor-changes neighbor 10.1.1.2 remote-as 65525 neighbor 10.1.3.2 remote-as 65535 no auto-summary |
New Dynamips Server
Nov 7th
Dell was running a deal on the PowerEdge T110 a couple weeks ago, so I decided to grab one as an upgrade to the T100 I was currently using for Dynamips on ESX.
Server specs:
X3430 Xeon Processor, 2.4 GHz 8M Cache
4GB DDR3 1333 RAM
500GB HDD
The T110 doesn’t support ESX (yet?), so I just did a straight install of Ubuntu 9.10. This thing is a beast, I brought up the completed MPLS and BGP lab I posted awhile back. Running at full steam it’s only using ~25% of the CPU. I’m pretty excited. This should be able to handle anything I can throw at it. Now I just need to find some more CCIE labs…
Update: ESXi is now supported on the T110 as of the ESXi4 U1 release.
Great MPLS and BGP Lab
Oct 12th
I got this over at Networking-Forum.com, a member named Fred created it, he was even kind enough to provide the Visio diagram, IP scheme spreadsheet and, most importantly, the .net file for Dynagen/GNS3. I spent a lot of my Saturday working on this beast. I thought I should share it here as it is great practice for MPLS VPNs and BGP along with some OSPF, NAT, IPSEC and GRE exposure.
Internet
* The two Internet routers should serve as transit AS’s. No other routers should permit transit traffic.
* Internet sites (modeled by loopbacks) should be accessible by all lan IP’s.


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