Author Archives: Denise "Fish" Fishburne
Author Archives: Denise "Fish" Fishburne
It is “that” time again. Time to start studying for one of the CCxE (CCIE/CCDE) re-certifications. Got my 1st CCIE back in 1997. A couple years later my CCIE SNA/IP. Then back in 2009 I passed my “favorite E” – the CCDE. And now? I’ll tell you a secret that I actually haven’t told anyone at all except for my wife. — I am so tired of studying for the writtens. I prefer spending my time getting my hands dirty in the lab at work in CPOC, learning new technologies, reading pcap files, technically reviewing books, writing blogs, making youtubes, CiscoLive….. Anything but studying… yet again…. just to pass a CCxE written. Especially now with the 10% “evolving technologies” add. For the past few months I’ve been trying so hard to get myself to sit down and do some studying. It has really been a struggle to get myself to study and I have rescheduled my exam twice so far. It has just been really hard to find the motivation when there are so many other things I’d prefer to be doing.
To make matters worse, each and every time I actually Continue reading
Okay… so just some major geeky fun in the lab. I had lots of fun doing it… so why not share it with you and let you in on some geeky fun? Thirty-eight minute YouTube with a PDF guide book. Little bit of this… little bit of that.
Breakdown of YouTube sections and corresponding approximate timestamps:
Playing in the lab and want to impair a link with delay or loss? I use WAN Bridge – its simple and free.
So say I’m testing an SD-WAN brownout/impairment avoidance solution in my lab. For example, Cisco’s IWAN. I’m going to need something to impair links with delay or loss. I like WAN Bridge. Why? Because its simple, easy, and free.
There has been one thing I’ve struggled with in the past year about. Every time I needed an impairment point this burned up 2 NICs on my UCS equipment. Why? Cause I couldn’t seem to figure out how to load one NIC on a UCS as a trunk port with multiple VLANs on it and have multiple WAN bridges with just 1 trunk on a switch.
So that meant, for a recent CPOC that I was doing, if I really wanted 6 impairment points (red circles in diagram below) I was going to need to eat up 12 NICs on my UCS.
There had to be a better way…..
My friend, David Prall, was convinced it “should” work. I was equally convinced that I had tried it before and Continue reading
In MPLS Fun in the Lab: Add the Multicast in the Cloud – Part 5 we added the support in the cloud for multicast and for MVPN. As I mentioned in that blog, I intentionally left something out so we... Read More ›
The post mVPN Fun in the Lab: Troubleshooting the MVPN Cloud – Part 6 of 6 appeared first on Networking with FISH.
Time to do our next blog in this “MPLS Fun in the Lab” blog series. This time we will focus on how I had the SP cloud configured in order to be able to support the customer’s multicast the way... Read More ›
The post mVPN Fun in the Lab: Add Multicast in the Cloud – Part 5 of 6 appeared first on Networking with FISH.
Time to add multicast to our MPLS series! Woot! In this blog we will start simple. We will focus on adding multicast to the customer portion of the network. In the NEXT blog I will show you how I have... Read More ›
The post mVPN Fun in the Lab: Add the Multicast at the Customer – Part 4 of 6 appeared first on Networking with FISH.
In our last blog (MPLS Fun in the Lab: Connect a Customer – Part 2) we added a customer to our MPLS cloud and we got a ping successfully across. Now? Now we Follow the Labels of that successful ping.... Read More ›
The post mVPN Fun in the Lab: Following the Labels – Part 3 of 6 appeared first on Networking with FISH.
In our last blog (MPLS Fun in the Lab: Building the MPLS Cloud – Part 1) we built our MPLS cloud. Now… we are ready to connect a customer! Connect the Customer We will connect the customer in 5 steps... Read More ›
The post mVPN Fun in the Lab: Connect a Customer – Part 2 of 6 appeared first on Networking with FISH.
As I mentioned in the previous blog (Building a MPLS L3VPN Unicast and Mcast Cloud – Overview) what we are going to do first and foremost is create the MPLS core. Want some snippets of the configs? MPLS Part 1.zip... Read More ›
The post mVPN Fun in the Lab: Building the MPLS Cloud – Part 1 of 6 appeared first on Networking with FISH.
Hope you have TONS of fun with this blog series! I needed to build a full MPLS cloud with L3VPN unicast and multicast for a CPOC. ? Figured what the heck… bring y’all along for a “knowledge sharing ride-along”. Ultimately... Read More ›
The post MPLS Fun in the Lab: Building a MPLS L3VPN Unicast and Multicast Cloud (6 Part Blog Series) appeared first on Networking with FISH.
When we left me at the end of Fun in the Lab: Setting up 3 Phones – Part 1 Prep Work …. (1) I had cloned an already existing CUCM VM and (2) I was stuck on the CUCM Licensing portion.
Today’s Mission
Today’s Mission (should I choose to accept it) is to license my CUCM.
My mission will involve –
I’m still hoping I will eventually come across some cookies. Why? Because all my UC friends keep telling me I should “check out the dark side (UC)” and that “they have cookies”. Just in case they are telling you this. I need to let you know I have found NONE so far and I think they aren’t telling the truth.
PLAY TIME!
The licensing error message that came up on the CUCM said 2 things
For those of you who know me I always kid that I’m afraid of UC. But a few things conspired together to make me decide to attempt the plunge.
On average I usually think about my career at least 1 time every year and do an honest and deep “career inventory taking”. More often (sometimes 2-3 times a year) if my job or environment is changing a lot. Are the questions I ask myself each time the same? No. Why? Well cause time has passed. What do I mean by this? This means that over the years what I’ve seen is that my 1 year plan, 3 year plan, 5 year plan and 10 year plans have changed as I have changed.
For example ~26 years ago (when I was 25 years old) my plan was to become CEO of IBM by the time I was 35. LOL! (But that is a whole other blog: What’s at the “Top” of Your Ladder?) Obviously, between then (when I was 25) and now my annual “career planning inventory” questions and my focus on what I want as the “wins” in a job for me….. have radically changed.
What do I mean by “my focus on what I want as the ‘wins’ in a job?” Well, again, when I was Continue reading
Went on an customer “ride-along” with Advanced Services this week. Customer’s requirement was that the DMVPN headend have 2 physical interfaces for High Availability. These 2 interfaces need to be the same subnet because they are going into 2 firewalls: one active/one standby. So now what?
Tom Kunath (Advanced Services) thought “Well…. what about using backup interface command?” Hmmmm that does seem to be the perfect tool in the Cisco CLI toolbox for this very situation.
Time to play in the lab!!!
So now let’s try it and see how per-tunnel QoS will work with it.
Class-Maps and Policy-Maps
NOTE: Snuck these configs from the QoS Chapter of the upcoming CiscoPress IWAN book a super dear friend of mine (David Prall) is co-authoring.
Apply to Tunnels
Okay…. so far so good. Now let’s run some traffic. I’ll send EF and AF41.
Send Traffic
Kay… so far so good. I also have both being sent at the same bps from the traffic generator so I wanted to check this also.
Time to Fail Primary Link!
Before I congest and see if the applied PerTunnel QoS can also drop. Let’s make sure Continue reading
CiscoLive 2016 LasVegas was my absolute favorite CiscoLive EVER! They just keep getting better and better and better every year! I so adore my “Nerd Herd” friends.
I was going to write a blog.. but I just couldn’t find the words……
So please enjoy my friend’s blog (@amyengineer) reblogged here.
Fish
Putting together a wrap up post on Cisco Live US always makes me smile, and 2016 is no exception. As many of you know, this CLUS marked 5 years since Tom and a small group of engineers first bonded over networking nerdiness and an addiction to 140 characters. We’ve followed and helped each other through […]
via 2016 Cisco Live, US – Geeks for life. — Just another day at the office…
In honor of Father’s Day coming up soon… I’d like to pass a gift along that my Dad gave me. The gift of the “7Ps”. The “7 Ps” The 7Ps apparently started off (according to wikipedia) as a British... Read More ›
The post Router-IDs and the “7Ps” appeared first on Networking with FISH.
Put your detective hat on your head and your Network Detective badge on your lapel. It is time to SOLVE for the Case of the Failed IPv6 Ping.
Let’s review where we left off in our Part 1 of this case — “Case of the Failed IPv6 Ping – Part1: Facts and Clues“. At the end of Part 1…..we were ON R1 and unable to ping the IPv6 address of our directly connected interface gig0/0/3, 2001:db8:14:1::1.
As you recall the facts were as below. Interface up/up, OSPFv3 configured properly, proper IPv6 address configured on interface gig0/0/3. Still, we cannot ping R1’s directly connected IPv6 address from anywhere including from R1 itself.
Totally confused. Time to just stare at the list above, absorb the oddness, and think.
Wait one second!!!! “No valid route for destination” ??? Even the ping from R1 said that?
“That can’t be true“, I think to myself while I type show ipv6 route connected.
What the????….. Why don’t I have R1’s gig0/0/3 interface in the routing table? It is up/up and with the proper IPv6 address configured. Now Continue reading
Put your detective hat on your head and your Network Detective badge on your lapel. It is time for the Case of the Failed IPv6 Ping.
Part #1 – We hit the crime scene together and we work methodically together to
Part #2 – I give you what the problem ended up being.
Ready? Let’s PLAY!
It all started when I was going to do a post on IPv6 Multicasting. I grabbed 3 ASR1K and got them all prepped: cards, code, cables, configurations. Name the routers R1, R2, and R3. Add a couple Spirent TestCenter ports for traffic and sniffing , configure them, and we are good to go.
Time for “pre-flight check”, as it were.
Oh… crap… that didn’t work.
Let’s go to the active crime scene!
Well that didn’t work did it? Let’s check the routing table on R3.
From R3’s IPv6 routing table we see
“Hey Fish, how good are you at BFD? None of my BFD neighbors will come up.” Two simple sentences and I am “hooked.” I love troubleshooting! Troubleshooting is just a blast for me! It’s like being a Network Detective trying... Read More ›
The post Network Detective Series: Troubleshooting Method Ride-A-Long appeared first on Networking with FISH.
Ever since my blog, CiscoLive 2016: ‘Summer Camp for Geeks’, I’ve been getting questions about what my personal CLUS schedule typically looks like for the week. CiscoLive 2016 will be my 11th CiscoLive US (“#CLUS”) and my 13th CiscoLive in general.
It is my favorite work week of the ENTIRE year. And I look forward to it a great deal. At the same time…. it is not even one full week and one can miss so much they wished they hadn’t missed because the time flies by so quickly. And yes… I have learned this the hard way.
So… first things first – I came up with the list of things that are prioritizes to me for the week.
All that said…… Here ya go. My CiscoLive (CLUS) schedule for the week.