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Setup Mode
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[2] basic-5ess....AT&T 5ESS switch type for the US/Canada
[3] basic-dms100..Northern DMS-100 switch type for
US/Canada
[4] basic-net3....NET3 switch type for UK and Europe
[5] basic-ni......National ISDN switch type
[6] basic-ts013...TS013 switch type for Australia
[7] ntt...........NTT switch type for Japan
[8] vn3...........VN3 and VN4 switch types for France
Choose ISDN BRI Switch Type [2]:2
The next section of the Extended Setup is configuring the interfaces. We
only have two Fast Ethernet interfaces on this router: FastEthernet 0/0
and FastEthernet 0/1. I'll go over various types of router interfaces later in
this chapter.
Configuring interface parameters:
Do you want to configure FastEthernet0/0 interface?
[yes]:[Enter]
Use the 100 Base-TX (RJ-45) connector? [yes]:[Enter]
Operate in full-duplex mode? [no]: y and [Enter]
Configure IP on this interface? [yes]:[Enter]
IP address for this interface: 1.1.1.1
Subnet mask for this interface [255.0.0.0]: 255.255.0.0
Class A network is 1.0.0.0, 16 subnet bits; mask is /16
Do you want to configure FastEthernet0/1 interface?
[yes]:[Enter]
Use the 100 Base-TX (RJ-45) connector? [yes]:[Enter]
Operate in full-duplex mode? [no]:y and [Enter]
Configure IP on this interface? [yes]:[Enter]
IP address for this interface: 2.2.2.2
Subnet mask for this interface [255.0.0.0]: 255.255.0.0
Class A network is 2.0.0.0, 16 subnet bits; mask is /16
This configuration is very basic, I know, but it will allow you to get a
router up and running quickly. Notice the mask is displayed as /16, which
means 16 out of 32 bits are being used.
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