Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
enable Command
exit Command
disable Command
logout Command
Setup Mode
Keyboard Help
show Commands
Configuring a Router
Configuring a Single Cisco Router
Router Modes
Password Encryption
Saving Configurations
Erasing Configurations
show Commands
EXEC Commands in Configuration Mode: The do Command
Configuration Example: Basic Router Configuration
Boston Router
Routing
Static Routing
Configuring a Static Route on a Router
Buffalo Router
Bangor Router
RIP
The ip classless Command
Acapulco Router
Mazatlan Router
EIGRP
Configuring Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (EIGRP)
EIGRP Auto-Summarization
Load Balancing: variance
Bandwidth Use
Authentication
Verifying EIGRP
Troubleshooting EIGRP
Austin Router
Houston Router
Single Area OSPF
Configuring OSPF: Mandatory Commands
Loopback Interfaces
Router ID
DR/BDR Elections
Houston Router
Galveston Router
Switching
Configuring a Switch
Help Commands
Command Modes
Verifying Commands
Resetting Switch Configuration
Setting Passwords
Setting IP Addresses and Default Gateways
Router-on-a-Stick
Inter-VLAN Communication Tips
ISP Router
CORP Router
L2Switch1 (Catalyst 2960)
STP and EtherChannel
Spanning Tree Protocol
Verifying STP
Optional STP Configurations
PortFast
BPDU Guard
Different types of spanning tree can be configured on a Cisco switch. The options vary
according to the platform:
• Per-VLAN Spanning Tree (PVST)—There is one instance of spanning tree for each
VLAN. This is a Cisco proprietary protocol.
• Per-VLAN Spanning Tree Plus (PVST+)—Also Cisco proprietary. Has added
extensions to the PVST protocol.
• Rapid PVST+—This mode is the same as PVST+ except that it uses a rapid
convergence based on the 802.1w standard.
• Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol (MSTP)—IEEE 802.1s. Extends the 802.1w
Rapid Spanning Tree (RST) algorithm to multiple spanning trees. Multiple VLANs
can map to a single instance of RST. You cannot run MSTP and PVST at the same
time.
Extended System ID