Tag Archive for Bryant

Tips On Buying A Cisco CCNA / CCNP Home Lab Kit

Buying a CCNA / CCNP home lab is the best way to be totally prepared for your Cisco exams. Most home labs are put together one router or switch at a time, but many CCNA / CCNP candidates prefer to buy kits where you get multiple routers and switches, along with all the cables and other connection devices you’ll need.

While this is a good idea, keep a few things in mind when purchasing Cisco home lab kits.

Don’t buy anything you don’t need. The problem is that when you’re first starting out with your Cisco home lab, you don’t know everything that you need. (I sure didn’t!) Keep in mind that you only need one transceiver per AUI port on a Cisco router, so if you’re getting routers with two AUI ports in all, you don’t need five transceivers in the kit. It doesn’t hurt to have one spare, but three is a little too much.

More importantly, don’t buy kits with old CCNA or CCNP study guides included. I’ve seen kits with books that were three years old and were of no use to the candidate. If you see a kit that looks good but includes books or manuals you just don’t want, ask the vendor for a price that doesn’t include the books. It never hurts to ask.

Watch the IOS version. Unless you’ve got access to IOS upgrades, you’ll be working with the IOS version that’s on the routers and switches when you buy the kit for a while. You don’t necessarily need the latest and greatest IOS version for CCNA study, but don’t buy routers with IOS versions beginning with “10″ unless you have an IOS to upgrade them with. (And make sure the routers have enough memory to handle the IOS you plan on putting on them.)

Purchasing a Cisco CCNA / CCNP Home Lab is one of the best investments in your career that you will ever make. Exercise just a bit of caution when purchasing your kit, and you’ll be on your way to true Cisco success, in the exam room and on your network!

CCNA / CCNP Home Lab Tutorial: The VLAN.DAT File

CCNA and CCNP candidates who have their own Cisco residence labs usually e mail me about an odd state of affairs that occurs once they erase a swap’s configuration. Their startup configuration is gone, as they anticipate, but the VLAN and VTP info is still there!

Sounds strange, doesn’t it? Let’s take a look at an example. On SW1, we run present vlan temporary and see on this abbreviated output that there are three extra vlans in use:

Switch#show vlan br

10 VLAN0010 active

20 VLAN0020 active

30 VLAN0030 active

The reason is that this vlan and VTP information is actually kept in the VLAN.DAT file in Flash memory, and the contents of Flash are kept on a reload. The file has to be deleted manually.

There’s a little trick to deleting this file. The switch will prompt you twice to ask if you really want to get rid of this file. Don’t type “y” or “yes”; just accept the defaults by hitting the return key. If you type “y”, the router attempts to delete a file named “y”, as shown here:

Switch#delete vlan.dat

Delete filename [vlan.dat]? y

Delete flash:y? [confirm]

%Error deleting flash:y (No such file or directory)

Switch#delete vlan.dat

Delete filename [vlan.dat]?

Delete flash:vlan.dat? [confirm]

Switch#

The best way to prepare for CCNA and CCNP exam success is by working on real Cisco equipment, and by performing lab tasks over and over. Repetition is the mother of skill, and by truly erasing your VLAN and VTP information by deleting the vlan.dat file from Flash, you’ll be building your Cisco skills to the point where your CCNA and CCNP exam success is a certainty.