👤certskills
🕔09:50, 1.Apr 2017
Short and icky sweet: this post lists answers for the icky EUI-64 drill 1 for #ICND2 and #CCNA. The problems require you to find the IPv6 address a host or router would use, given a prefix, MAC address, and assuming
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👤certskills
🕔08:50, 1.Apr 2017
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 address and
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👤certskills
🕔09:10, 17.Aug 2016
This most recent lab asked you to configure a bunch of static IPv6 routes on the same router. Some had the exact same destination subnet, and some created host routes that overlapped with other static routes. And all were assigned
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👤certskills
🕔09:08, 20.May 2013
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 flipping the page! Link to the question
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👤certskills
🕔09:08, 17.May 2013
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. Then the practice exam
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👤certskills
🕔10:12, 15.May 2013
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 feature: IPv6 addressing. Today’s
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👤certskills
🕔17:30, 24.Jan 2012
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 thinking “huh?”, click
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👤certskills
🕔07:00, 5.Nov 2011
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. Your job: Add static IPv6 routes for the LAN
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👤certskills
🕔08:49, 2.Nov 2011
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 tricks, just
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