Information Technology Reference
In-Depth Information
Table 2-3
Addressing Table for Lab 2-1
Device
Interface
IP Address
Subnet Mask
Default Gateway
R1
Fa0/0
172.16.3.1
255.255.255.0
S0/0/0
172.16.2.1
255.255.255.0
R2
Fa0/0
172.16.1.1
255.255.255.0
S0/0/0
172.16.2.2
255.255.255.0
S0/0/1
192.168.1.2
255.255.255.0
R3
FA0/0
192.168.2.1
255.255.255.0
S0/0/1
192.168.1.1
255.255.255.0
PC1
NIC
172.16.3.10
255.255.255.0
172.16.3.1
PC2
NIC
172.16.1.10
255.255.255.0
172.16.1.1
PC3
NIC
192.168.2.10
255.255.255.0
192.168.2.1
Task 1: Cable, Erase, and Reload the Routers
Cable a network that is similar to the one in the topology diagram shown in Figure 2-10.
Step 1.
Clear the configuration on each router.
Step 2.
Clear the configuration on each of the routers using the erase startup-config command
and then reload the routers. Answer no if asked to save changes.
Task 2: Perform Basic Router Configuration
Note: If you have difficulty with any of the commands in this task, see “Lab 1-1: Cabling a Network and Basic
Router Configuration (1.5.1).”
Use global configuration commands.
Step 1.
On the routers, enter global configuration mode and configure the basic global configura-
tion commands, including the following:
hostname
no ip domain-lookup
enable secret
Configure the console and virtual terminal line passwords on each of the routers:
Step 2.
password
login
Add the logging synchronous command to the console and virtual terminal lines.
Step 3.
This command is helpful in both lab and production environments and uses the following
syntax:
Router(config-line)# logging synchronous
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