CCNA2 Lab 7 3 8 en
CCNA2 Lab 7 3 8 en
CCNA2 Lab 7 3 8 en
Objective
• Observe unequal-cost load balancing.
• Tune IGRP networks by using advanced debug commands.
Background/Preparation
Cable a network similar to the one in the diagram. Any router that meets the interface requirements
displayed on the above diagram, such as 800, 1600, 1700, 2500, 2600 routers, or a combination,
may be used. Please refer to the chart at the end of the lab to correctly identify the interface
identifiers to be used based on the equipment in the lab. The configuration output used in this lab is
produced from 1721 series routers. Any other router used may produce a slightly different output.
The following steps are intended to be executed on each router unless specifically instructed
otherwise.
Start a HyperTerminal session as performed in the Establishing a HyperTerminal session lab.
Note: Go to the erase and reload instructions at the end of this lab. Perform those steps on all
routers in this lab assignment before continuing.
1-6 CCNA 2: Routers and Routing Basics v 3.1 - Lab 7.3.8 Copyright 2003, Cisco Systems, Inc.
Step 1 Configure the hostname and passwords on the routers
a. On the routers, enter the global configuration mode and configure the hostname as shown in the
chart. Then configure the console, virtual terminal and enable passwords. If there are problems
doing this, refer to the Configuring router passwords lab. Next configure the interfaces according
to the chart. If there are problems doing this, refer to the Configuring Host Tables lab. Finally
configure IGRP routing on the routers using the Autonomous System (AS) of 34. If there are
problems doing this, refer to the Configuring IGRP lab. Make sure to copy the running-
config to the startup-config on each router.
b. Because the IGRP metric includes bandwidth in its calculation, bandwidth must be manually
configured on the serial interfaces in order to ensure accuracy. For the purposes of this lab, the
alternative paths to network 192.168.41.0 from the MAD router are not of unequal cost until the
appropriate bandwidths are set.
c. Use the show interface command output to verify the correct bandwidth settings and the
show ip interface command to ensure that fast switching is disabled.
d. Can the bandwidth of Ethernet interfaces be set manually? _________________________________
Step 3 Configure the hosts with the proper IP address, subnet mask and default gateway
a. Test the configuration by pinging all interfaces from each host. If the pinging is not successful,
troubleshoot the configuration.
2-6 CCNA 2: Routers and Routing Basics v 3.1 - Lab 7.3.8 Copyright 2003, Cisco Systems, Inc.
MAD(config)#router igrp 34
MAD(config-router)#variance 10
d. According to the help feature, what is the maximum variance value? _________________________
e. Check the MAD routing table. It should have two routes to network 192.168.33.0 with unequal
metrics.
f. What is the IGRP metric for the route to 192.168.33.0 through serial 0? ______________________
g. What is the IGRP metric for the route to 192.168.33.0 through serial 1? ______________________
MAD
Route connected IP address Through Network / Interface
MIL
Route connected IP address Through Network / Interface
3-6 CCNA 2: Routers and Routing Basics v 3.1 - Lab 7.3.8 Copyright 2003, Cisco Systems, Inc.
Step 7 Verify per-destination load balancing
a. After verifying per-packet load balancing, configure the router to use per-destination load
balancing. Both serial interfaces must use fast switching so that the route-cache can be used
after the initial table lookup.
b. Use the command ip route-cache on both serial interfaces of the MAD router.
c. Use the show ip interface to verify that fast switching is enabled.
d. Is fast switching enabled? ______________________________________________________________
The routing table is consulted only once per destination. Therefore, packets that are part of a packet
train to a specific host will all follow the same path. Only when a second destination forces another
table lookup or when the cached entry expires will the alternate path be used.
e. Use the debug ip packet command and ping across the network. Note which serial
interface the packet was sent out on.
f. Use the debug ip packet command and ping across the network. Note which serial
interface the packet was sent out on.
g. Examine and record part of the debug output.
h. Which serial interface was the packet sent out on? ________________________________________
Upon completion of the previous steps, log off by typing exit and turn the router off.
4-6 CCNA 2: Routers and Routing Basics v 3.1 - Lab 7.3.8 Copyright 2003, Cisco Systems, Inc.
Erasing and reloading the router
Enter into the privileged exec mode by typing enable.
If prompted for a password, enter class. If “class” does not work, ask the instructor for assistance.
Router>enable
At the privileged exec mode, enter the command erase startup-config.
Router#erase startup-config
The responding line prompt will be:
Erasing the nvram filesystem will remove all files! Continue?
[confirm]
Press Enter to confirm.
The response should be:
Erase of nvram: complete
Now at the privileged exec mode, enter the command reload.
Router(config)#reload
The responding line prompt will be:
System configuration has been modified. Save? [yes/no]:
Type n and then press Enter.
The responding line prompt will be:
Proceed with reload? [confirm]
Press Enter to confirm.
In the first line of the response will be:
Reload requested by console.
After the router has reloaded the line prompt will be:
Would you like to enter the initial configuration dialog? [yes/no]:
Type n and then Enter.
The responding line prompt will be:
Press RETURN to get started!
Press Enter.
The router is ready for the assigned lab to be performed.
5-6 CCNA 2: Routers and Routing Basics v 3.1 - Lab 7.3.8 Copyright 2003, Cisco Systems, Inc.
Router Interface Summary
Router Ethernet Ethernet Serial Serial Interface
Model Interface #1 Interface #2 Interface #1 Interface #2 #5
800 (806) Ethernet 0 (E0) Ethernet 1 (E1)
1600 Ethernet 0 (E0) Ethernet 1 (E1) Serial 0 (S0) Serial 1 (S1)
1700 FastEthernet 0 (FA0) FastEthernet 1 (FA1) Serial 0 (S0) Serial 1 (S1)
2500 Ethernet 0 (E0) Ethernet 1 (E1) Serial 0 (S0) Serial 1 (S1)
2600 FastEthernet 0/0 FastEthernet 0/1 (FA0/1) Serial 0/0 (S0/0) Serial 0/1
(FA0/0) (S0/1)
In order to find out exactly how the router is configured, look at the interfaces. This will identify the type of router
as well as how many interfaces the router has. There is no way to effectively list all of the combinations of
configurations for each router class. What is provided are the identifiers for the possible combinations of interfaces
in the device. This interface chart does not include any other type of interface even though a specific router may
contain one. An example of this might be an ISDN BRI interface. The string in parenthesis is the legal abbreviation
that can be used in IOS command to represent the interface.
6-6 CCNA 2: Routers and Routing Basics v 3.1 - Lab 7.3.8 Copyright 2003, Cisco Systems, Inc.