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CCNA Cisco Certified Network Associate Study Guide - FTP Server

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364 Chapter 7 � Managing a <strong>Cisco</strong> Internetwork<br />

Summary<br />

clns ISO CLNS Trace<br />

ip IP Trace<br />

ipx IPX Trace<br />

oldvines Vines Trace (<strong>Cisco</strong>)<br />

vines Vines Trace (Banyan)<br />

<br />

If you try to use trace with IPX or AppleTalk, you will receive an error that the<br />

command is not supported. These protocols will be supported in the near<br />

future.<br />

The trace command shows the hop or hops that a packet traverses on its<br />

way to a remote device. Here is an example of its use:<br />

Todd2509#trace 2501b<br />

Type escape sequence to abort.<br />

Tracing the route to 2501b.lammle.com (172.16.10.2)<br />

1 2501b.lammle.com (172.16.10.2) 16 msec * 16 msec<br />

Todd2509#<br />

You can see that the packet went through only one hop to find the<br />

destination.<br />

In this chapter, you learned how <strong>Cisco</strong> routers are configured and how<br />

to manage the configuration. The following router internal information was<br />

covered in this chapter:<br />

� The internal components of a <strong>Cisco</strong> router<br />

� The router boot sequence<br />

� The configuration register and how to change it<br />

� Password recovery

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