122 CHAP 10 LABS

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You have an SFO router and an LAX router connected in a back-to-back configuration as shown in the diagram. The current configuration has one or more problems. The routers should have the following configuration: Addresses on the 10.0.0.68/30 network are used for the serial connection. The clock rate should be set to 56000. HDLC encapsulation is used. In this lab, your task is to: Use the following commands to diagnose the problem:show ip interfaceshow interfacesshow controllers Correct any issues you find. When you're finished, the status of each interface should be up, and you should be able to ping each router from the other router interface.

1. Explore SFO. Select SFO. Press Enter to get started. At the SFO> prompt, type enable and press Enter. At the SFO# prompt, type show ip interface brief and press Enter to verify the configuration of the Serial0/1/0 interface.The status indicates a Layer 2 problem with the serial link. A Layer 2 problem is typically caused by a mismatched encapsulation type. At the SFO# prompt, type show interfaces s0/1/0 and press Enter. Notice that the encapsulation for this SFO is set to PPP. 2. Explore LAX. Select LAX. Press Enter to get started.At the LAX> prompt, type enable and press Enter. At the LAX# prompt, type show interfaces s0/1/1 and press Enter. Notice that the encapsulation for SFO is set to HDLC. 3. On SFO, configure the Serial0/1/0 interface to use HDLC as follows: At the SFO# prompt, type conf t and press Enter. At the SFO(config)# prompt, type int s0/1/0 and press Enter. At the SFO(config-if)# prompt, type encapsulation hdlc and press Enter. Press Ctrl + Z. At the SFO# prompt, type show interfaces s0/1/0 and press Enter to verify that HDLC encapsulation is being used. At the SFO# prompt, type ping 10.0.0.73 and press Enter to verify connectivity with the LAX Serial0/1/1 interface. A failed ping test indicates a Layer 3 problem. 4. Verify the following TCP/IP configuration on both routers: At the SFO# prompt, type show interfaces and press Enter. At the LAX# prompt, type show interfaces and press Enter. Make sure both interfaces are assigned an IP address. Make sure both interfaces are using the same subnet mask. Make sure the IP address assigned to both interfaces is on the same subnet. 5. On LAX, assign the IP address 10.0.0.70/30 to the s0/1/1 interface.At the LAX# prompt, type conf t and press Enter. At the LAX(config)# prompt, type int s0/1/1 and press Enter. At the LAX(config-if)# prompt, type ip address 10.0.0.70 255.255.255.252 and press Enter. Press Ctrl + Z. 6. From both routers, verify that you can ping the other router. At the LAX# prompt, type ping 10.0.0.69 and press Enter. At the SFO# prompt, type ping 10.0.0.70 and press Enter.

You have just connected two routers through their serial ports in a back-to-back configuration. You've already configured IP addresses on the Fa0/0 and Fa0/1 interfaces for both routers and have configured a static route on each router for the networks accessible through the other router. You need to complete the configuration by configuring the serial link between the two routers. Remember that a 30-bit mask has a magic number of 4. Valid subnets are 192.168.2.0, 192.168.2.4, 192.168.2.8, etc. The seventh subnet is 192.168.2.24. The first valid address on that subnet is 192.168.2.25. The last valid address on that subnet is 192.168.2.26. A 30-bit mask uses a mask value of 255.255.255.252. In this lab, your task is to: Assign an IP address to each serial interface. Use the seventh subnet on network 192.168.2.0 using a 30-bit mask:For S0/0/0 on RouterA, assign the first address on the subnet.For S0/0/1 on RouterB, assign the last address on the subnet. Use the show controllers command to identify the DCE device. On the DCE interface, configure a clock rate of 9600 using the clock rate command. Bring both interfaces up. Save the changes on both routers.

1. Find the DCE interface. Select RouterA. Press Enter to get started. At the RouterA> prompt, type show controllers s0/0/0 and press Enter. Select RouterB. Press Enter to get started. At the RouterB> prompt, type show controllers s0/0/1 and press Enter. RouterB has the DCE interface. 2. Configure RouterB. At the RouterB> prompt, type enable and press Enter. At the RouterB# prompt, type config t and press Enter. At the RouterB(config)# prompt, type interface s0/0/1 and press Enter. At the RouterB(config-if)# prompt, type ip address 192.168.2.26 255.255.255.252 and press Enter. At the RouterB(config-if)# prompt, type clock rate 9600 and press Enter. At the RouterB(config-if)# prompt, type no shutdown and press Enter. Press Ctrl + Z. At the RouterB# prompt, type copy run start and press Enter. Press Enter to begin building the configuration. 3. Configure RouterA. At the RouterA> prompt, type enable and press Enter. At the RouterA# prompt, type config t and press Enter. At the RouterA(config)# prompt, type interface s0/0/0 and press Enter. At the RouterA(config-if)# prompt, type ip address 192.168.2.25 255.255.255.252 and press Enter. At the RouterA(config-if)# prompt, type no shutdown and press Enter. Press Ctrl + Z. At the RouterA# prompt, type copy run start and press Enter. Press Enter to begin building the configuration.

You have a single router that connects your private network to the internet. You have two subnets on the private network, and the internet connection is through the Serial0/0/0 interface. Your ISP has given you six outside addresses that you can use for NAT configuration. You can use addresses 70.0.0.64 through 70.0.0.69. All hosts on your private network must be allowed internet access using those six addresses. There should be no limit to the number of clients on the private network that can access the internet at the same time. In this lab, your task is to: Designate both FastEthernet interfaces as inside NAT interfaces. Configure the Serial0/0/0 interface as an outside NAT interface. Create a standard access list number 50 that allows both inside networks.Fa0/0 is on network 192.168.1.0/24, and Fa0/1 is on network 192.168.2.0/24.With the access-list command, use a wildcard mask of 0.0.0.255. Create a NAT pool named my_addrs identifying the six addresses.With the ip nat pool command, identify the first and last addresses in the range that can be used for NAT.Use the netmask parameter to configure the addresses using a 29-bit mask.A 29-bit mask has the binary form of 255.255.255.248. You will use this value with the netmaskparameter of ip nat pool command. Use the ip nat inside source command to link the access list with the address pool.Use the list parameter to identify the access list number.Use the pool parameter to identify the address pool name (my_addrs).Use the overload parameter so that all the private clients have simultaneous access and are not limited to the number of outside addresses. Without this parameter, only six inside clients have internet access at a time. Save your changes to the startup-config file.

1. Select Fiji. Press Enter to get started. At the Fiji> prompt, type enable and press Enter. At the Fiji# prompt, type config t and press Enter. At the Fiji(config)# prompt, type interface fa0/0 and press Enter. At the Fiji(config-if)# prompt, type ip nat inside and press Enter. At the Fiji(config-if)# prompt, type interface fa0/1 and press Enter. At the Fiji(config-if)# prompt, type ip nat inside and press Enter. At the Fiji(config-if)# prompt, type interface s0/0/0 and press Enter. At the Fiji(config-if)# prompt, type ip nat outside and press Enter. At the Fiji(config-if)# prompt, type access-list 50 permit 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.255 and press Enter. At the Fiji(config)# prompt, type access-list 50 permit 192.168.2.0 0.0.0.255 and press Enter. At the Fiji(config)# prompt, type ip nat pool my_addrs 70.0.0.64 70.0.0.69 netmask 255.255.255.248 and press Enter. At the Fiji(config)# prompt, type ip nat inside source list 50 pool my_addrs overload and press Enter. Press Ctrl + Z. At the Fiji# prompt, type copy run start and press Enter. Press Enter to begin building the configuration.

You have two routers connected in a back-to-back configuration as shown in the diagram. The current configuration has one or more problems. The routers should have the following configuration: Addresses on the 10.0.0.68/30 network are used for the serial connection. The clock rate should be set to 56000. In this lab, your task is to: Use the following commands to diagnose the problem:show ip interfaceshow interfacesshow controllers Correct any issues you find. When you're finished, the status of each interface should be up, and you should be able to ping each router from the other router interface.

1. Troubleshoot SFO. Select SFO. Press Enter to get started. At the SFO> prompt, type enable and press Enter. At the SFO# prompt, type show ip interface brief and press Enter to verify the configuration of the Serial0/1/0 interface.The status indicates a Layer 1 problem with the serial link. A Layer 1 problem can be caused by: A disconnected cable. A missing clock rate. The device on the other end turning off or shutting down. 2. At the SFO# prompt, type show controllers s0/1/0 and press Enter to see which interface is the DCE interface. The output (DTE V.35) indicates that Serial0/1/0 is the DTE interface.Because the configuration on the SFO router appears to be correct, continue troubleshooting on the LAX router. 3. Troubleshoot LAX. Select LAX. Press Enter to get started. At the LAX> prompt, type enable and press Enter. At the LAX# prompt, type show ip interface brief and press Enter. The status for Serial0/1/1 is administratively down. Take the necessary actions to correct the problem on the LAX router. At the LAX# prompt, type show interfaces s0/1/1 and press Enter to verify the configuration. Notice that the status is down. Verify that the encapsulation type is set correctly. At the LAX# prompt, type show controllers s0/1/1 and press Enter. The line DCE V.35, clock rate 0 indicates that the device is the DCE device, but the clock rate has not been set. At the LAX# prompt, type conf t and press Enter. At the LAX(config)# prompt, type int s0/1/1 and press Enter. At the LAX(config-if)# prompt, type clock rate 56000 and press Enter to configure the clock rate on the Serial0/1/1 interface. At the LAX(config-if)# prompt, type no shutdown and press Enter to bring the router up. Press Ctrl + Z. At the LAX# prompt, type show interfaces s0/1/1 and press Enter to verify the configuration. At the LAX# prompt, type ping 10.0.0.69 and press Enter to make sure that the two devices can communicate.

In this lab, you'll explore how various actions affect the status of the serial interface. The SFO router is connected to the LAX router using the serial interfaces indicated in the network diagram. The serial interfaces have not been configured. In this lab, your task is to: Use the show interfaces command on both routers and answer Question 1. Remove the shutdown from both interfaces and answer Question 2. Use the show controllers s0/1/0 command on SFO and answer Question 3. Set the clock rate to 9600 on SFO and answer Question 4. View the running-config on SFO and answer Question 5. Set the clock rate to 9600 on LAX. Use the show interfaces command on both router and answer Questions 6-7. Use the show ip interface command on both router and answer Question 8. Change the encapsulation to PPP on SFO and answer Question 9. Change the encapsulation back to HDLC on SFO.

1. Use the show interfaces command on both routers. Select SFO. Press Enter to get started. At the SFO> prompt, type enable and press Enter. At the SFO# prompt, type show interfaces and press Enter to verify the configuration of the Serial0/1/0 interface. Select LAX. Press Enter to get started. At the LAX> prompt, type enable and press Enter. At the LAX# prompt, type show interfaces and press Enter to verify the configuration of the Serial0/1/1 interface. Answer Question 1. (The status of the interfaces on both routers is administratively down. This indicates that the interfaces were shut down.) 2. Remove the shutdown from both interfaces. At the SFO# prompt, type conf t and press Enter. At the SFO(config)# prompt, type int s0/1/0 and press Enter. At the SFO(config-if)# prompt, type no shutdown and press Enter to bring the router up. Press Ctrl + Z.At the SFO# prompt, type show interfaces and press Enter. At the LAX# prompt, type conf t and press Enter. At the LAX(config)# prompt, type int s0/1/1 and press Enter. At the LAX(config-if)# prompt, type no shutdown and press Enter to bring the router up. Press Ctrl + Z.At the LAX# prompt, type show interfaces and press Enter. Answer Question 2. (Both interfaces are down, line protocol is down.) 3. Use the show controllers s0/1/0 command on SFO. At the SFO# prompt, type show controllers s0/1/0 and press Enter. Answer Question 3. (The entry DTE V.35 indicates a DTE cable is connected to the SFO router.) 4. Set the clock rate on SFO. At the SFO# prompt, type conf t and press Enter. At the SFO(config)# prompt, type int s0/1/0 and press Enter. At the SFO(config-if)# prompt, type clock rate 9600 and press Enter to configure the clock rate on the Serial0/1/0 interface. Press Ctrl + Z. At the SFO# prompt, type show interfaces and press Enter. Answer Question 4. (No, setting the clock rate on the SFO router does not affect the interface status because the clock rate is set on the DCE device.) 5. View the running-config on SFO. At the SFO# prompt, type show running-config and press Enter. Answer Question 5. (The clock rate is not actually set for the interface because it is a DTE interface.) 6. Set the clock rate on LAX. At the LAX# prompt, type conf t and press Enter. At the LAX(config)# prompt, type int s0/1/1 and press Enter. At the LAX(config-if)# prompt, type clock rate 9600 and press Enter to configure the clock rate on the Serial0/1/0 interface. 7. Use the show interfaces command on both router. Press Ctrl + Z. At the LAX# prompt, type show interfaces and press Enter. At the SFO# prompt, type show interfaces and press Enter. Answer Questions 6-7. (Setting the clock rate changes the status to Serial0/1/0 is up, line protocol is up.) (HDLC) 8. Use the show ip interface command on both router. At the SFO# prompt, type show ip interface and press Enter. At the LAX# prompt, type show ip interface and press Enter. Answer Question 8. (Neither interface has an IP address assigned.) 9. Change the encapsulation to PPP on SFO. At the SFO# prompt, type conf t and press Enter. At the SFO(config)# prompt, type int s0/1/0 and press Enter. At the SFO(config-if)# prompt, type encapsulation ppp and press Enter. Press Ctrl + Z. At the SFO# prompt, type show interfaces and press Enter. Answer Question 9. (The status changes to Serial0/1/0 is up, line protocol is down.) At the SFO# prompt, type conf t and press Enter. At the SFO(config)# prompt, type int s0/1/0 and press Enter. At the SFO(config-if)# prompt, type encapsulation hdlc and press Enter.

You're working with a single active router connected to four other routers through serial interfaces. You need to gather information about the serial connections between the routers. In this lab, your task is to answer the following questions using the CLI: What is the bandwidth of s0/0/0? Which interface is shut down? Which interface has a Layer 1 problem? Which interface is a DCE interface? Which interface is not assigned an IP address?

In the top right corner, select Answer Questions. Select Router to open the CLI. Press Enter to get started. At the prompt, type enable and press Enter to go to privileged mode. Type show interface and press Enter. Answer Questions 1-2. 1544000 Serial0/0/1 Type show ip interface brief and press Enter. Answer Question3. Serial0/1/1 Type show controllers and press Enter to configure the enable password. Answer Question 4. Serial0/1/0 Type show interface and press Enter. Answer Question 5 Serial0/1/0

You have a single router connected to the internet through its Serial0/0/0 interface. The router is used to create a screened subnet. Internal hosts accessible through the Fa0/0 interface should be able to be contacted by other hosts on the internet. You want to use NAT to translate the inside local address to an inside global address. In this lab, your task is to: Configure Fa0/0 interface as an inside NAT interfaces. Configure Serial0/0/0 interface as a outside NAT interfaces. Use the ip nat inside source static command to configure four static NAT mappings to map an inside local address to an inside global address as follows:ServerInside Local AddressInside Global AddressWeb server192.168.1.220.11.15.65DNS server192.168.1.320.11.15.66FTP server192.168.1.420.11.15.67Mail server192.168.1.520.11.15.68 Save your changes to the startup-config file.

Select Router. Press Enter to get started. At the Router> prompt, type enable and press Enter. At the Router# prompt, type config t and press Enter. At the Router(config)# prompt, type int fa0/0 and press Enter. At the Router(config-if)# prompt, type ip nat inside and press Enter. At the Router(config-if)# prompt, type int s0/0/0 and press Enter. At the Router(config-if)# prompt, type ip nat outside and press Enter. At the Router(config-if)# prompt, type ip nat inside source static 192.168.1.2 20.11.15.65 and press Enter. At the Router(config)# prompt, type ip nat inside source static 192.168.1.3 20.11.15.66 and press Enter. At the Router(config)# prompt, type ip nat inside source static 192.168.1.4 20.11.15.67 and press Enter. At the Router(config)# prompt, type ip nat inside source static 192.168.1.5 20.11.15.68 and press Enter. Press Ctrl + Z. At the Router# prompt, type copy run start and press Enter. Press Enter to begin building the configuration.

You have a small network connected to the internet as shown in the diagram. Previously, you've used private addressing for your network. Now you'd like to use NAT to share a single IP address for all hosts on the private network. In this lab, your task is to: Change the IP address assigned on the Fa0/0 interface to use the last address in the 172.16.0.0/24 subnet. This changes the inside network to use private addressing. Designate Fa0/0 as a NAT inside interface. Designate Serial0/0/0 as a NAT outside interface. Create a standard access list number 1 that permits all source addresses on the 172.16.0.0/24 network. Use the ip nat inside source command to configure NAT to use the access list number 1 and the Serial0/0/0 interface. Include the overload parameter. This configures NAT to translate all inside host addresses on the 172.16.0.0/24 network to the public IP address assigned to the Serial0/0/0 interface. Save your changes to the startup-config file.

Select Router. Press Enter to get started. At the Router> prompt, type enable and press Enter. At the Router# prompt, type config t and press Enter. At the Router(config)# prompt, type interface fa0/0 and press Enter. At the Router(config)# prompt, type ip address 172.16.0.254 255.255.255.0 and press Enter. At the Router(config-if)# prompt, type ip nat inside and press Enter. At the Router(config-if)# prompt, type interface s0/0/0 and press Enter. At the Router(config-if)# prompt, type ip nat outside and press Enter. At the Router(config-if)# prompt, type exit and press Enter. At the Router(config)# prompt, type access-list 1 permit 172.16.0.0 0.0.0.255 and press Enter. At the Router(config)# prompt, type ip nat inside source list 1 interface s0/0/0 overload and press Enter. Press Ctrl + Z. At the Router# prompt, type copy run start and press Enter. Press Enter to begin building the configuration.


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