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Slowhand wrote: » You'll be the hero of the IT department the first time someone bricks a Cisco device in production because you'll be prepared to hop in and fix it.
veritas_libertas wrote: » It's painful the first time, but trust me, you won't do it again
tiersten wrote: » Pfft. People do it one and a half times! Half of 9600 and then again at 115200
PhildoBaggins wrote: » Well I was going to bed early but I decided to upgrade one of my 2900xl switches since it didnt support from of the VLAN commands my other 2900's support. Long story short I ended up wiping it out and putting it into an un-recoverable state. After playing around for about 2 hours I have now wiped and upgraded all 3 of my switches using xmodem. I feel accomplished...its my first IOS format/reload lol. Now I can do it in just as much time it takes to transfer at 115200 baud.
tiersten wrote: » Newer devices have TFTP support in ROMMON so it isn't quite as painful if you wipe those out. Still good to know and experience a proper XMODEM upload tho.
chmorin wrote: » One would think a new 3750 would support it, but guess how surprised we where sending an IOS over xmodem.
tiersten wrote: » Hmm... Thinking about it. I've only ever used TFTP in ROMMON from routers. Can you even do TFTP in ROMMON on a switch?
jovan88 wrote: » Hahah I hear you man , bricking a 2600xm had me sending an IOS over ymodem hours of fun... literally, hours
bcall64 wrote: » There is nothing like having a real lab to break. It gives you true real world experience.
Netwurk wrote: » Very true. I sometimes feel like I'm at work when something major breaks in my lab. Only difference is that my job is not on the line when I'm trying to fix something.
bcall64 wrote: » It makes it so much more fun when your job isn't on the line doesn't it? You can be a pure geek when it's your baby.
Slowhand wrote: » We never learn quite as much as when we really break something and have to fix it.
Slowhand wrote: » I don't know, I tend to feel a lot more accomplished when I averted a major disaster at work, as opposed to figuring out the same problem in my lab. There's something exhilarating about "surviving in the trenches", isn't there?
Netwurk wrote: » I like it when everything is running smoothly and I have time to browse TechExams
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