brombulec wrote: » Just got the PDF CCNP Certificate from Cisco. 300-101 cleared with almost 900 points - the most sneaky, twisted exam in my history. Simulations without 'copy run start', questions about things that I'll never use in production. Anyway - passed, CCNP closed.
brombulec wrote: » It's a habit - copy run start after each major change. You'll see that this command is crucial on the other cisco exams
brombulec wrote: » All CCNA (RS,Sec,DC) exams, ROUTE/SWITCH. It's better to write config than create a config and ignore these three short words.
Keith, I agree with you and Scott that saving your configuration in a real world environment is a must. We even push that in the courses at both the CCNA and CCNP levels. We also push that you should save a backup copy to flash before you make changes so you can do a quick recovery with the config replace command. However the exam is a different world. I am part of the exam team so I have an inside view. The simulations tries to replicate the IOS environment, but we have pick which commands we support based on what is need to evaluate the candidate. Saving a configuration is not need by the simulation to complete the grading and I don’t think it would be fair to fail a candidate just because they forgot to save their config in the middle of an exam. My reason for attempting to dispel the myth is we get numerous complaints from candidates that they failed the exam because the sim was broken and they know this because they could not save their configuration. Upon review their exam results it is apparent that just they failed. Many times they got partial credit for the simulation. As this myth spins out of control, I am afraid that we may have candidates who are aborting the simulation before they complete it because they tried to save their config and have heard that if you cannot save your configuration the sim is broken. The last thing I want is to have a candidate give up one an exam they could have passed because of misinformation. We have tried to covey that saving your configuration is not need to successfully compete the sim with the “command not supported message” and even a “This command is not needed to successfully compete this simulation” message. Yet the complaints that the sim are broken because you cannot save your configuration continue to come in. Hopefully this group can help get the word out that unless the copy command is supported you don't need to sve your configuration to complete the simulation. Phil
First, let me say that I support the exams for the CCNA and CCNP track so I have an inside view. Second, nothing I am about to say violates my non-disclosure agreement. Several times a week we get customer support cases from candidates say that they failed the exam. Their complaints center on their belief that they got no points on a simulation because either they could not save their configuration or they knew the simulation was broken because they could not save their configuration. I cannot say for all of the other track, but in the CCNA and CCNP track there are only a couple of simulations that require the candidate to save their configuration. The instructions for these simulations clearly indicate that the configuration must be saved. For over eight years I have been trying to **** the “you must save your config” myth. There is enough stress in an exam without making an issue where there isn’t one.
As for "wr mem" VS. "copy running stat", it is no secret that the only place saving the configuration is in the blueprint is in the CCNA domain. From that it is save to assume that the only place that saving a configuration is tested is in the CCNA track. We (Learing@Cisco) don't try to trick a candidate, so if it is required that the configuration be save it will be called out in the configuration. If you need save the configuration, either command will be accepted.
ande0255 wrote: » @ ShortStop - Are you saying that someone might lose points for doing a 'wr' on their configs on a simulation because it was not a requirement?