This post starts a new type of review post for #ICND2 or #CCNA: the icky EUI-64 drill. It’s icky for two reasons: it requires you to think in binary, and it rhymes. The goal: Starting with a MAC [...]
IPv6 addressing is in the new ICND1 100-101 and CCNA 200-120 exams, and the previous post posed a related question. Today’s post wraps the topic, showing the answer. Check out the question before [...]
You take a new #CCENT or #CCNA practice exam, and see a few questions about IPv6 addresses. You focused on the basic format – how to abbreviate, how to expand, and what the prefix length means. [...]
IPv6 was formerly in the ICND2 side of #CCNA, but now it’s in the ICND1/#CCENT side. ICND1 includes more than a few IPv6 topics, but the first and often most intimidating topic is the most basic [...]
This post answers an earlier config VM piece that asked you to confiugre some IPv6 static routes. (Turns out I forgot to post the answer, so… here it is!) Since it has been so long, if you’re [...]
This blog post begins with a router triangle, IPv6 addresses, and working interfaces. All routers can ping their own IPv6 addresses, but the routers only know their own IPv6 connected routes. [...]
This blog post simply lists the answers to the earlier lab exercise from a few days ago. This post makes no sense without the first one, so don’t look until you read the other post. No guile, no [...]
This blog post creates one of what may be many posts in a concept called the Config Museum. Years from now, this concept may really be a museum of configuration exercises and answers. But just [...]