proxy.com
Index Page About Us Privacy ToS Place Your Link Add Your Article
Search:   
 

How to Exchange Links With Other Sites

Tips on the best methods to use to exchange links with other web sites. Free link exchange program a ... - John Lynch
 

What Makes a Good Cleaning Supplies Website?

There are so many different topics when it comes to cleaning. The first question you have to ask you ... - Lee Harris
 

The Red Herring that is Google Pagerank

Google likes to offer all kinds of neat little tips and clues regarding how it views sites. Google P ... - Halstatt Pires
 
 

The Shrek Model of Web Design

Websites are like onions, since websites have layers. Ogres are like onions, since Ogres have layers ... - Christine Anderssen
 

Earn Big Money With The Google Adsense Goldmine

Top Internet marketers earn in excess of $10,000 a month with Adsense, and you can too. - P. Wolbers
 

Marking Your Spot in Cyberspace. - 3 Keys To Making Your Site Memorable!

As significate as landing on the moon was, your spot in cyberspace can be just as memorable. I find ... - Anthony Jewell
 

Product Marketing for Internet Based Home Businesses

Product marketing and how to increase traffic to their web pages in order to increase sales. - Paul Jesse
 

Four Ways to Invest in the Web

This article describes how to use the internet as a business. Discussed are four simple ways to earn ... - Bradley Smith
 
 

Index Page » Computers & Software » Computer Certification
 

Cisco CCNA Exam Tutorial: Directly Connected Serial Interfaces

 

To pass the CCNA exam, you've got to master quite a few services and routing protocols that may be new to you. Between RIP, IGRP, EIGRP, OSPF, and switching, there are hundreds of details you've got to absorb! It's easy to spend all your time on those topics and not pay proper attention to "easier" technologies, and then all of a sudden on exam day you can't quite remember the details of those particular services.

One setup you've got to be more than familiar with is directly connecting serial interfaces on Cisco routers. This is also a valuable skill to have in your home lab, since it allows you to add segments to your network setup.

A Cisco serial interface is operating as a DTE by default. The problem is that when you take a cable and connect two routers directly by their serial interfaces (with a DTE/DCE cable, that is!), they're both waiting for the other to send them a clock rate. One of the interfaces must act as the DCE and that interface must send the clock rate.

If you can see the DTE/DCE cable, you can tell by looking which router has the DCE interface connected to it - the letters "DTE" or "DCE" will either be molded into the connector itself, or if it's an older cable there should be a little piece of tape on the cable that tells you what the interface type is. But what if you have no access to the cable, or there are other cables all around it and you can't see what type it is?

Run the command "show controller serial x", with x representing the interface number the cable's connected to. There will be quite a bit of output from this command, but the information you need is right at the top:

R1#show controller serial 1

HD unit 1, idb = 0x1DBFEC, driver structure at 0x1E35D0

buffer size 1524 HD unit 1, V.35 DTE cable

I left off the 16 or so rows of information that comes after this, but this is the information we need right now. If R1's got the DTE cable end, the other router should have the DCE end:

R3#show controller serial 1

HD unit 1, idb = 0x1C44E8, driver structure at 0x1CBAC8

buffer size 1524 HD unit 1, V.35 DCE cable

We know now that R3 needs to supply a clock rate to R1. There's a hint of a problem in just that little bit of command output - do you see what it is? Let's run show interface serial1 to get more information.

R3#show int s1

Serial1 is up, line protocol is down

The line protocol is down because there is no clockrate being supplied by R3. If there has been, we would have seen that in the output of show controllers serial 1.

This is simple enough to fix, though! We'll use the command clockrate 56000 on R3's serial1 interface, and the line protocol will soon come up.

R3(config)#int s1

R3(config-if)#clockrate 56000

1w2d: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Serial1, changed state to up

This is a simple concept, but there are a few details you must keep in mind! For a home lab configuration, you'll need a DTE/DCE cable to make this work. If you cannot see the cable connectors, run show controllers serial x to see if the router has the DTE or DCE end of the cable attached. On the interface with the DCE attached, use the clockrate command to bring the line protocol up. It's just that simple!

Author: Chris Bryant
 
Author Bio:

Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933, is the owner of The Bryant Advantage , home of free CCNA and CCNP tutorials! Pass the CCNA exam with Chris Bryant!

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Cisco CCNA Exam Tutorial: Directly Connected Serial Interfaces
 
Self-Employment in the Age of the Computer
 
Product Marketing for Internet Based Home Businesses
 
All About Cheap Web Hosting
 
How to Automate Web Applications and Web Sites Quickly and Easily by Recording Web Browser Activity
 
Internet Marketing's Next "Action Hero" - Sterling Valentine
 
Software Review Blog: Web Marketing Tool Reviews
 
Easy Does It With Robotic Lawn Mowers
 
6 Biggest Mistakes In Submitting An Article
 
Junior's Cheesecakes, From Brooklyn to San Francisco Through Cyberspace
 
 
 

Related Links
(If you have a website related to this article, we would be happy to add it for free in this section.)

 
A flexible pay per click advertising company
Boost your website's online visibility with a pay per click company whose optimization strategy includes techniques for improving pay per click campaigns and search engine rankings.
 
 
Add Url
 
 

News & Events

 

Outdoor & Sports

 

Computers & Software

 

People & Communities

 

Shopping Online

 

Fashion & Lifestyle

 

Online & Indoor Games

 

Academics & Education

 

Realty & Property

 

Creative Arts

 

Business & Commerce

 

Entertainment

 

Automobile & Automotive

 

Family & Home

 

Travel & Vacation

 

Healthcare & Medicine

 

Cooking & Drinking

 

Finance & Investment

 

Teens & Kids

 

Technology & Science

 

Hygiene & Health

 

Government & Politics

 

Employment & Careers

 

Self Management

 
   Index Page >> Privacy >> ToS
© 2006-2008 www.proxyarticles.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.